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Raspberry Pi Forum PowerBoost Low Battery Output to Safely Shutdown Raspberry Pi
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  • gpio
  • raspberry_pi
  • adafruit powerboost 1000c
Related

PowerBoost Low Battery Output to Safely Shutdown Raspberry Pi

andywest
andywest over 7 years ago

I've got an Adafruit PowerBoost 1000C and I'd like to connect the LBO (Low Battery Output) to a Raspberry Pi GPIO pin to detect low battery and shut down safely. I'm using a 2500 mAh battery.

 

What I think I want is this:

 

PowerBoost LBO -> diode -> resistor -> GPIO

 

I have a few questions about this:

 

  1. I'm using the diode to prevent current flow back into LBO, which I've read can cause the low battery LED to light up at the wrong time. I have some 1N914 / 1N4148 switching diodes. Are these appropriate for the task?
  2. What resistor value do I want to use? I think Ohm's law is relevant here, but I'm not totally sure what values to plug in and why.
  3. Is it better to have the diode before the resistor like above, or should I reverse those? Does it matter?

 

I saw a recommendation not to source or sink more than 0.5mA into an input pin. In that case, it seems like a 10Kohm resistor would be appropriate (4.2V / 10000Ω = 0.00042A) since 4.2 is the voltage of a fully-charged LiPo and 0.42mA is close to 0.5mA. Am I thinking about this correctly?

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  • larsks
    0 larsks over 6 years ago

    I tried Shabaz's idea of putting a 100K resistor between LBO and ground in order to connect the LBO output to a Pi.

     

    Prior to adding the resistor, I read about 5V at the LBO pin.  The docs say "By default it is pulled high to BAT", but since BAT reads 4.2V I'm a little confused. I see that on the schematic Vbat is not actually the battery voltage (that's Vlipo), so maybe this is just some confusion between the PCB labels and the schematic (so the pin labelled BAT on the PCB is actually Vlipo, and LBO actually tracks Vbat, which is exposed on the pin labelled Vs).

     

    After adding a 100K resistor between the LBO pin and ground, I see:

     

    - The LOW LED goes on immediately.

    - I read about 4.2V at the LBO pin.

     

    That doesn't seem to match the discussion here. Does this seem unexpected, or am I just misreading this thread?

     

    Thanks!

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  • gigs2go
    0 gigs2go over 6 years ago in reply to larsks

    I just measured my brand-new powerboost. VBat was 4.1V, LBO was 3.86V and 5V was 5.18V

    Would this be because of the internal resistor for the LBO?

    I just found this thread and, like the original poster, I'm software-based and electronically illiterate ... but wanting to learn!

    I'd definitely like to use the pin as input for my pi and trigger a soft shutdown in a timely fashion, but I'm still confused as to the values of resistors to use.

    Thanks

     

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  • gigs2go
    0 gigs2go over 6 years ago in reply to larsks

    I just measured my brand-new powerboost. VBat was 4.1V, LBO was 3.86V and 5V was 5.18V

    Would this be because of the internal resistor for the LBO?

    I just found this thread and, like the original poster, I'm software-based and electronically illiterate ... but wanting to learn!

    I'd definitely like to use the pin as input for my pi and trigger a soft shutdown in a timely fashion, but I'm still confused as to the values of resistors to use.

    Thanks

     

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