@pradeep.g.belchada:
How can I do it? The circuit output should maintain constant voltage instead of current.
@crutschow:
“What you show is a constant voltage output regulator, not a constant current.”
Yes, the main source is constant current and desired output is regulated dc voltage.
@tgootee:
“It seems like a strange idea. Does the digital circuit consume a constant current? And how would you keep the voltage within the required range for the IC power pins?”
No. and the problem is how to do it.
“And yeah, that's not a constant-current supply. The 5-volt regulator would try to keep the output at a constant 5 Volts. The input constant-current source makes no sense, because the regulator will not consume a constant 1 Amp.”
What would happen is practice?
“Most circuits with ICs need the power supply voltage to stay about the same, but need the power supply to be an agile source of current that can change quickly, to supply current when needed, as needed. Digital IC's, in particular, often draw current as pulses. So they need to be able to have fast-changing transient current available. For that, you use decoupling capacitors at each power pin, since drawing fast-changing currents through the power supply conductors would cause voltage spikes to be induced across the parasitic inductances of the conductors themselves, and also the correct current amplitude might not arrive at the IC's power pin at the correct time. V = L di/dt so even small-amplitude transient currents could create large voltage spikes, if the current amplitude changed very fast. So put a small 0.01 to 0.1 uF X7R ceramic capacitor very close to each power pin (within 2 mm) and then connect it to a nearby ground, and also connect a 10 uF or larger electrolytic in parallel with the small cap, at each IC power pin. They will act as small point-of-load power supplies, to supply the fast transient currents that the ICs will need.”
You are right but decoupling cap applicable when the regulator, regulate output voltage. How can I do it at first?
@albbg:
“I don't know why you need a so strange circuit. However in principle it could work even if the power dissipation have to be verified to be inside the maximum allowed.”
I need it because I have a led driver in my system with no cost.
I see that you specified the current source as a 3W, 200 mA with a maximum voltage of 20V (that is inside the range of the 7805). But in the sketch you wrote 1A: which one is correct?
Furthermore you specified the load as 5V, 100mA, but in the sketch I see a resistor of 470 ohm that is about 10 mA: which one is correct?
Sorry, the component values in the schematic are not correct. I use it only for showing the idea and the written parameters are correct.