devonsc said:Oh no! I do not have sufficient points to download the notes you recommended...Any way of accessing the E-book you suggested? Need help here, rushing to complete my project...Please?
Advice needed...
use a mosfet which has small rds on, make small enough the resistance of boost enductance(increasing thickness of the wire )...schottky good choice..and your switching frequency should be 50khz((+)or(-)10khz)
1. Use high quality, low ESR electrolitic capacitors,
2. Use a Mosfet with very low ON resistance,
3. The coil/transformer that you use, can be wound with more than one wires in parallel in order to form the desired guage. With this I mean, instead of using a single 1mm wire, you can use 5 wires of 0,2mm and wound all together, like a multicore wire. This method, decreases the resistance of the wire because at high frequencies you have the so called skin effect. Current travels at the skin of the conductor, the surface.
The surface of the 5 wires of 0,2mm is more than that of the single 1mm wire.
I always talk about insulated wire, the one that is proper for the coils.
If the switching frequency is higher, the size of the DC/DC converter will be smaller.devonsc said:Real sorry if this is nonsense, I have very limited electronic knowledge. Regarding the switching of a boost DC/DC converter, does it mean that the faster the switching time, the better it is?
When DC/DC converter, e.g. buck converter, works in 'continuous' mode, the inductor current is continuous (see figure (1)). When DC/DC converter works in 'discontinuous' mode, the inductor is discontinuous, meaning the inductor current is zero at certain portion of each cycle (see figure (2)).devonsc said:I would like to ask about something that I've miss-out in developing the DC/DC converter. Recently, I come across something called operating the converter under continuos mode or discontinuos mode. But I don't really get what is/are the differences between these two. Do you guys mind to brief me on this matter? Please?
When the switching frequency is higher (20kHz), standard power diode, e.g. 1N1401, can not be used anymore because of the 'reverse recovery' problem. In higher switching frequency application, you need to choose fast recovery diode.devonsc said:I'm not sure if I'm allow to ask this here...about the term Reverse Recovery Time, I found this term in the diode's datasheet. Was wondering if this one of the parameters that I should take into consideration while selecting my diode? Does this parameter have anything to do with the switching time?
devonsc said:I've selected BAT48 due to the low forward voltage. Am I in the right track?
first things first. lower switching frequency is better - always! people like converters to work >20kHz so you can't hear them whine under heavy load, but for your application it doesn't really matter.
One note - you will need a driver IC in order to switch that mosfet. PIC cannot do it alone. Peak current into the gate should be about 1A in order to get fast switching.
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