gwarming82
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Your understanding of electricity is confused. A power source, whether battery or from mains AC, produces a voltage. The voltage can be sustained as more current is drawn from it but you can't use the voltage and the current independantly. The battery isn't 3.8V and 1.2A, it is probably 3.8V with a 1.2A limit. Batteries are usually specified as having an 'Amp Hour' (AH) rating rather than just Amps which also introduces the concept of how many hours the current can be drawn for. If your battery is really 3.8V with 1.2AH rating it means you can draw 1.2A for one hour or 0.6A for two hours or 0.12A for 10 hours before the voltage drops to an end point.
Also consider what you are asking your circuits to produce. The actual usage of power is measured in Watts, that is calculated by the voltage multiplied by the current. I'm afraid no circuit with an input power of 3.8 * 1.2 = 4.56W will give an output of 5.0 * 2.0 = 10W out. That would imply an efficiency of over 200% !! Even well designed regulator circuits can only achieve ~95%.
Brian.
Your understanding of electricity is confused. A power source, whether battery or from mains AC, produces a voltage. The voltage can be sustained as more current is drawn from it but you can't use the voltage and the current independantly. The battery isn't 3.8V and 1.2A, it is probably 3.8V with a 1.2A limit. Batteries are usually specified as having an 'Amp Hour' (AH) rating rather than just Amps which also introduces the concept of how many hours the current can be drawn for. If your battery is really 3.8V with 1.2AH rating it means you can draw 1.2A for one hour or 0.6A for two hours or 0.12A for 10 hours before the voltage drops to an end point.
Also consider what you are asking your circuits to produce. The actual usage of power is measured in Watts, that is calculated by the voltage multiplied by the current. I'm afraid no circuit with an input power of 3.8 * 1.2 = 4.56W will give an output of 5.0 * 2.0 = 10W out. That would imply an efficiency of over 200% !! Even well designed regulator circuits can only achieve ~95%.
Brian.
If you start with 3.8V/1.2Ah and step it up to 5V then its current for one hour will be less than 5V/(3.8V x 1.2Ah)= 1.1A but probably 0.8A.
If you start with 3.8V/1.2Ah and step it down to 1V then you get less than 1V/3.8V x 1.2A)= 4.6A but probably 3.4A for one hour.
If you stepup the 1V/3.4Ah to 5V then you get less than (1V x 3.4Ah)/5V= 0.7A but probably 0.5A for one hour.
If you want 5A at 3A for one hour then you need a battery that is 3.8V/5.3Ah.
If you want 5V at 3A you need 15W and a battery that can provide it for one hour would be a 5V and 3Ah. That means it provides 5V across it's terminals and can sustain 3 Amps load for one hour. In practice you will not find any battery that can hold constant voltage under load then suddenly 'die', the voltage gradually drops so the rating might for example be specified as 5V 3Ah with a 4V end voltage. In other words it tells you the end voltage under the specified load current after the specified time.So do you mean If i want 5V at 3A for one hour then i need a battery that is 3.8V/5.3Ah? If so then can i recharge the same battery again using the stepped voltage and current? And can not i recharge the battery not only for one hour but again and again when i need in this way?
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