Input Type | V IN (MIN) (V) |
V IN (MAX) (V) |
IOUT (A) |
Single/Multiple Output |
VOUT (V) |
POUT (W) |
Isolated/Non-Isolated | Topology |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
DC | 2.3 | 2.7 | 50m | Single | 3.3 | 0.165 | Non-Isolated | Boost |
Supercapacitors are increasingly being used in a number of applications in electric vehicles, transportation equipment, industrial machinery and utility grids. In the MAXREFDES1215, a supercapacitor-based energy harvester is demonstrated using the MAX17220. The circuit uses a supercapacitor to provide backup energy. The first stage of the circuit charges a supercapacitor, and the second stage of the circuit regulates the voltage from the supercapacitor to supply various sensors with a steady output voltage. In this system, the MAX17220 is used for regulating the output voltage from the supercapacitor.
The MAX17220 is an ultra-low quiescent current boost (step-up) DC-DC converter with a 225mA peak inductor current limit and True Shutdown™. True Shutdown disconnects the output from the input with no forward or reverse current. The output voltage is selectable using a single standard 1% resistor. MAX17220 has post-startup enable transient protection (ETP), allowing the output to remain regulated for input voltages down to 400mV, depending on load current. The MAX17220 offers ultra-low quiescent current, small total solution size, and high efficiency throughout the entire load range. These features make this product especially suitable for use in battery-powered medical equipment, low-power wireless communication products, primary-cell and secondary-cell portable systems, and tiny, low-power IoT sensors.
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This document describes the hardware shown above and provides a detailed systematic technical guide to designing a supercapacitor-based energy harvester using the MAX17220 nanoPower IC. The reference design has been built and tested, details of which follow later in this document.
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