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As far as i know its because the characteristics of the laser diode are those that are required at whichever temperature, and if the ambient temperature may sometimes be high, then we will have to pick a high regulation temperature.........in other words, its constant temperature that we seek, and as low as possible....but as you know, the peltier cannot cool stuff below the ambient temperature, or below the temperature of the place to where heat is being removed to..Why would you want to add heat to a laser diode?
I would presume you would agree that the way to drive it would be with a sync buck driver......and inverting the low state and feeding it to the other diagonal pair of fets?...when the peltier current was required to be zero, then the duty cycle would be 0.5 for both diagonal pairs.....or 0.46 when dead times were taken into account.Full bridge switcher is the usual topology for bipolar peltier supply
Thanks, i am sure it is workable, but there's the situation of near zero current, where you would be switching between those two modes repeatedly, and this may cause instability.Full bridge: How I´d do it:
cooling: Left_low_side=ON, right side = PWM. The higher the duty cycle, the more cooling
heating: right_low_side=ON, left side = PWM. The higher the duty cycle, the more heating
Yes, an iterative ramping type of correction that slows down as the error becomes less might be the best approach.
A Peltier is not happy changing from heating mode to cooling modes in either direction.
cease heater power "just enough before you get where
you're going"
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