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Forum Reverse polarity protection circuit & output backward flow control
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  • reverse polarity protection
Related

Reverse polarity protection circuit & output backward flow control

tim687
tim687 over 8 years ago

I am building my own (2 channel) lab bench. This is the conversion board I'm using to convert 12V (input) to 1-24V (one for each channel).

 

In the product description they say

Input reverse connect protection: No (If necessary, please input series schottky diode)
Output control flow backward: No (If used for battery charging or load is bring electricity load, please on the output side series schottky diode)

This does mean that there is no reverse polarity input protection (that is not needed anyways), but does this mean that there is reverse polarity output protection?

In the datasheet of the LTC3780 I found the following pin descriptions in the pinout:

 

SENSE+ (Pin 3/Pin 1):

The + Input to the Current Sense

and Reverse Current Detect Comparators. The ITH

pin voltage and built-in offsets between SENSE– and SENSE+ pins,

in conjunction with RSENSE, set the current trip threshold.

SENSE– (Pin 4/Pin 2):

The (–) Input to the Current Sense

and Reverse Current Detect Comparators.

 

Is this the reverse polarity protection feature and output backward flow control I'm looking for?

 

If yes, I don't have to design the circuitry to protect the output, if no, could you provide a solution which can accept variable voltages?

This is one solution I found very interesting due to the indicator LED and the 'no power loss' (claim).

Due to inefficiency of a schottky diode I am only going to use it if necessary.

 

Thanks in advance for helping me out!

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  • michaelkellett
    michaelkellett over 8 years ago +1 suggested
    This board will make a truly dreadful bench supply - unless you only want it to work light bulbs or heaters then please think again. I recently helped a customer trouble shoot a new design where they had…
  • rachaelp
    rachaelp over 8 years ago in reply to michaelkellett +1 suggested
    Michael Kellett wrote: For a general purpose bench supply you can't beat a decent linear design - just learn to live with the size, weight and heat MK You can also do a hybrid design to try and get the…
  • michaelkellett
    michaelkellett over 8 years ago in reply to tim687 +1 suggested
    Hello Tim, The noise is un-fixable by any reasonable means - it consists of bursts of very large amplitude 50-130 MHz decaying sine bursts as the power devices switch. We put at least 160 hours of engineering…
Parents
  • michaelkellett
    0 michaelkellett over 8 years ago

    This board will make a truly dreadful bench supply - unless you only want it to work light bulbs or heaters then please think again.

     

    I recently helped  a customer trouble shoot a new design where they had used the LTC3780 - the network connections would not work dues to power supply noise.

     

    I made two different versions of test boards, bought  a board  a bit like yours from Amazon and also tested the Linear Technology demo board - all of the boards were still very very noisy - quite unusable for a general purpose bench supply.

     

    The conversion efficiency that can be achieved with this chip is great - but the noise is a huge issue.

     

    We moved over to using buck only switchers on the original board (since we didn't have to have the LTC3780's boost capability) and this worked much better.

     

    For  a general purpose bench supply you can't beat a decent linear design - just learn to live with the size, weight and heat image

     

    MK

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  • tim687
    0 tim687 over 8 years ago in reply to michaelkellett

    Hi Micael,

     

    The noise is something which I guess can be fixed with a few capacitors? Unfortunately I need the boost capability of the LTC3780. I am using a server powersupply as a 12V provider that will go into the LTC board. I do have a few (couple of hunderd) capacitors laying around that I can use to smooth out the output of the power supply.

     

    Is there any formula or rule of thumb to picking the right capacitor for a variable voltage/amperage output?

     

    Thanks,

     

    Tim

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  • michaelkellett
    0 michaelkellett over 8 years ago in reply to tim687

    Hello Tim,

     

    The noise is un-fixable by any reasonable means - it consists of bursts of very large amplitude 50-130 MHz decaying sine bursts as the power devices switch. We put at least 160 hours of engineering time, two pcb iterations  and 2 test board designs into this. We added every possible external filter and tried countless different capacitor and inductor filter combinations. We had a 1GHz scope and a spectrum analyzer to help as well. We just could not get the power devices to switch cleanly.

     

    The pictures are our test board, issue 1 and 2 (note the increase in filtering) and the cheap board from Amazon (which we tweaked to no avail). I don't have a picture of the official demo board. The best one is our own with the extra filters (450mV p-p at about 75 MHz) but the the high frequency noise couples into pcb ground planes and finds its way round filters. The LT demo board gave about 800mV p-p at 90MHz. In both cases the noise takes the form of short (a few cycles) bursts of rapidly decaying HF sine waves.

    In the end we took the 'easy' option and completely re-designed the whole power supply image

    image

     

    image

    image

     

    MK

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  • tim687
    0 tim687 over 8 years ago in reply to michaelkellett

    Michael Kellett wrote:

    image

     

    MK

    This is a similar board that I ordered. (see link in the first post). It's not just the LTC3780. Does this one have noise issues too?

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  • tim687
    0 tim687 over 8 years ago in reply to michaelkellett

    Michael Kellett wrote:

    image

     

    MK

    This is a similar board that I ordered. (see link in the first post). It's not just the LTC3780. Does this one have noise issues too?

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  • michaelkellett
    0 michaelkellett over 8 years ago in reply to tim687

    Tim Koers wrote:

     

    This is a similar board that I ordered. (see link in the first post). It's not just the LTC3780. Does this one have noise issues too?

     

    Oh yes - every board I've seen with this chip has noise issues - the different layouts and switching devices alter the ringing frequencies a bit but the output noise is huge - the Chinese board from Amazon was the worst (and had other issues as well) but all 6 boards I've seen (including LT's own) were dreadful.

     

    MK

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