Hi all,
I am just thinking about developing a circuit to charged a 12 Volt battery and the charging circuit will be porwered by a second battery
Hi all,
I am just thinking about developing a circuit to charged a 12 Volt battery and the charging circuit will be porwered by a second battery
Hi Uche,
I'm a master power electronics engineer and I specialize in DC-DC converters, solar charge converters, DC-AC Inverters, Power Supplies, and battery chargers. Yes, you can charge a battery from another battery, if that's what you're asking. I don't know why you need it isolated. However, I've got to agree with D2113F with reference to your other replies to this post. To me, it sounds like a perpetual motion machine wheras you have two batteries that are each connected to relays that can switch the individual batteries to either a load or to a a charging circuit fed by the other battery. Here is the problem. Battery-1 is connected to a load and is discharged to the point that you want to rechage it from the other battery that's been idle. Battery-2 recharges Battery-1 thru a dc-dc converter with a control to ensure that it's not overcharged. Now, Battery-2 is discharged and Battery-1 is charged, therefore, the relay or relays setup the circuit such that Battery-1 recharges Battery-2 and now Battery-1 is again discharged. Hopefully, you see where I'm going with this. It's an (almost) endless loop of the batteries charging and discharging each other. And if you powered a load first, discharging Battery-1, then recharged it with Battery-2, Battery-2 is now discharged and you can power the load only one more time with Battery-1. But now, you can no longer recharge Battery-1 with Battery-2 since Battery-2 is discharged, The only way around this is if you have some additional power from another Battery, or a Solar Cell, or from an AC-DC Power Supply to put the lost energy back into the system.
One of the first things you should have learned in physics is that there is no such thing as a perpetual motion machine. Since you used the energy in Battery-1 to power the load and the energy in Battery-2 to recharge Battery-1, and since you used-up the energy in Battery-1 again powering the load after the recharge, you are out of energy as both Battery-1 and Battery-2 are discharged. Does this make any sense to you? I hope so, but if not, please feel free to reply here or send me a message using the Element-14 internal messaging system.
Best regards,
Kamran Kazem
Thanks Kamran,
I purely Understood your points and explanation, well this project I am trying to embark on is not actually like a perpectual motion law in physics, That is why I would like to introduce Isolalated circuit for the charging curent like another source of current to the battery, It will look like perpectual motion but indirectly its not, because there would be continue montoring on the battery 1 and battery 2 voltage level, and this will determined the MCU to make decision on when to simutanueosly trigger a relay to swap the lead of the battery 1 fully charged to power a load and at the same time turn ON charging on the almost empty battery 2 and this will continue in a loop.
Well I may completely wrong with this thinking.
Thanks for your Contribution.
Regards Agbi1
Thanks Kamran,
I purely Understood your points and explanation, well this project I am trying to embark on is not actually like a perpectual motion law in physics, That is why I would like to introduce Isolalated circuit for the charging curent like another source of current to the battery, It will look like perpectual motion but indirectly its not, because there would be continue montoring on the battery 1 and battery 2 voltage level, and this will determined the MCU to make decision on when to simutanueosly trigger a relay to swap the lead of the battery 1 fully charged to power a load and at the same time turn ON charging on the almost empty battery 2 and this will continue in a loop.
Well I may completely wrong with this thinking.
Thanks for your Contribution.
Regards Agbi1