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Power & Energy
Forum Power sensing circuit
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Related

Power sensing circuit

pjshah72
pjshah72 over 5 years ago

Hi All,

 

I am with EE back-ground and recently I had question in interview regarding “How to sense/know when device needs power?”.


So, basically I had a good interview on different topics and one of them was MOSFET.
I answered mostly all questions properly until this question comes up.
Interviewer asked me: “If you are making power supply for a laptop and when laptop goes in to sleep that time your supply should not provide full power (may be negligible). And when you on the laptop or started working on it at that time your supply should provide required power.”
How can you design circuit which sense/detects when device needs power?

 

Can any one of you help me on this? I would really appreciated any input.


Thank you,

pj

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Top Replies

  • dougw
    dougw over 5 years ago +2 suggested
    It sounds like you need to start with a sensor that detects when the computer needs power and when it doesn't. Many laptops have a switch that senses when the display/lid closes and generates a signal…
  • jw0752
    jw0752 over 5 years ago +2 suggested
    Hi Pujan, I am not an expert but it seems to me that this may have been a trick question. If the electronics of the computer are making the decision to go into sleep or low power mode does the power supply…
  • pjshah72
    pjshah72 over 5 years ago in reply to dougw +2
    Thank you Douglas Wong for your detailed reply. I completely understood what you have mentioned related to signal which controlled through CPU and that drives power supply. Now next question to follow…
Parents
  • aswinvenu
    0 aswinvenu over 5 years ago

    Hi Pujan,

       I think there is a misconception here. Power modes are achieved not by limiting the supply current from the supply but by reducing the conception from the load. Let me elaborate it for you.

    In your case you wanted to achieve sleep mode. Then CPU gives commands to most of the peripheral controllers to go to sleep mode after that CPU itself will go into a state (no clocking)

    where it wait for an external interrupt to wakeup. So its doesn't work like, say, right now your system draws 3Amps and you wanted to achieve low power mode and you limit the current from the source to 0.1Amps "No"!

    But power supplies in computers are very intelligent they are called PMIC ( Power Management Integrated Circuits) They will take one input and generate multiple rails of LDO(Low Dropout Regulators) and DCDC Converters.This chip will be hooked to an I2C bus or some other communication bus to the CPU. All the peripherals will be powered from this IC. CPU will have the absolute control over all the functionality of these ICs. CPU can shutdown any rails using I2C commands.

    In your case you can use a MOSFET to turn on or off the rails to a peripheral and there by achieve low power.

     

    Regards,

    Aswin

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  • pjshah72
    0 pjshah72 over 5 years ago in reply to aswinvenu

    Great explanation Aswin Venu. I really appreciated how you have clearly explained.

    I am very much familiar with I2C, SPI etc protocols that makes communication between peripherals. I have never worked on PMIC so would like to understand more in detail, specially with circuit/block dia-gram and/or videos if possible.

     

    Now let's say if I am using MOSFET then there is no I2C as MOSFET is an analog component. So in this case, how would you tell MOSFET to operate?

     

    Thanks once again,

    Pujan

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  • pjshah72
    0 pjshah72 over 5 years ago in reply to aswinvenu

    Great explanation Aswin Venu. I really appreciated how you have clearly explained.

    I am very much familiar with I2C, SPI etc protocols that makes communication between peripherals. I have never worked on PMIC so would like to understand more in detail, specially with circuit/block dia-gram and/or videos if possible.

     

    Now let's say if I am using MOSFET then there is no I2C as MOSFET is an analog component. So in this case, how would you tell MOSFET to operate?

     

    Thanks once again,

    Pujan

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