The invention relates to a charging circuit for charging two batteries that comprises a mains transformer with a primary and a secondary winding, both end terminals of the secondary winding are connected with terminals of identical polarity of respective capacitive circuits and each of the capacitive circuits comprises at least one electrolytic capacitor of high capacitance value and a diode connected in reverse direction, and at least the other terminal of one of the capacitive circuits is connected with a common point of two diodes connected in series with each other.
In the international publication WO 01/06614 a battery charger circuit of the above described type is described, wherein the actual charging voltage is the vectorial sum of the voltages of a charged electrolytic capacitor and of an energized inductance. The energized inductance is realized by the secondary winding of a mains transformer. The circuit utilizes both half periods of the mains voltage and provides a unique high-current charging. The fact that one component of the output voltage is constituted by the voltage on a charged capacitor provides a certain flexibility for the charging, since any short circuit that might occur in the battery cannot damage the charger, and the charging process itself is sufficiently controlled by the actual battery voltage.
This circuit has several preferred properties but one drawback lies in that owing to the full-wave operation a high number of components is used, although for several other charging applications a simpler and cheaper but similarly flexible charger circuit would be sufficient even if it could provide a slower charging and would be inappropriate for being used as a fast charger.
The control of this conventional charger was realized among other ways by changing the capacitance value of the electrolytic capacitors used. In view of the high current peaks that take place during operation the insertion of such capacitors requires the use of special semiconductor switches that can slightly limit the current peaks. Such a preferable semiconductor switching circuit is described in the international publication WO 2005/078888.
The charging of batteries with high storage capacity is generally required at professional users where a larger number of batteries are used and where the efficiency of the charging of batteries is not only decided by the time and energy required for charging a particular battery but it is also taken into account if a battery charger is capable of charging simultaneously more than one battery. In this respect a charging circuit can be regarded equivalent with a different other battery charger that can fully charge two batteries in double time if its energy consumption is the same as that of the first charger. Of these two types of battery charging circuits the version which is simpler and cheaper will be the preferred one.
The object of the invention is to provide a battery charger circuit for charging two batteries which from the point of view of the previously outlined comparison is at least as good as the charger circuit described in the aforementioned international publication WO 01/06614 and it can be used preferably in larger users because it can charge two batteries at the same time.
This objective has been solved by providing a charging circuit for charging two batteries that comprises a mains transformer with a primary and a secondary winding, both end terminals of the secondary winding are connected with terminals of identical polarity of respective capacitive circuits and each of the capacitive circuits comprises at least one electrolytic capacitor of high capacitance value and a diode connected in reverse direction, and at least the other terminal of one of the capacitive circuits is connected with a common point of two diodes connected in series with each other, furthermore the two remaining free electrodes of these two diodes are coupled to at least two of the altogether four terminals of the two batteries, and the second terminal of the other capacitive circuit with opposite polarity is connected directly or through a further diode to the fourth battery terminal.
In an embodiment which is capable of charging two substantially identical storage capacities the two batteries are connected in series with each other, and the two end terminals of the series arrangement is connected to the free ends of these two diodes and the second terminal of the other capacitive circuit is coupled to the interconnected terminals of the two batteries.
For the sake of creating optimum conditions for the correct operation the charging circuit further comprises an equalizer circuit that provides respective adjustable loads to the batteries for decreasing any sensed voltage difference between the terminal voltages thereof.
In a preferable embodiment the capacitive circuits have substantially identical capacitance values.
In a further embodiment designed for charging two independent batteries the two free electrodes of the two diodes are connected the two terminals of one of the batteries, and one of these terminals is grounded, furthermore the second terminal of the second capacitive circuit is connected to a common point of two further diodes connected in series, and of the two free ends of these two further diodes the first free end is connected to the ground and to a first terminal of the second battery, and the other free end is coupled to the second terminal of the second battery.
In the capacitive circuits the at least one capacitor has a capacitance of at least 100 μF but preferably much higher, and at least one further electrolytic capacitor of similarly high capacitance can be connected in parallel with the first capacitor by means of respective controlled semiconductor switches.
For adjusting the power and the output voltage it is preferable if at least one of the windings of the transformer has a plurality of tapped winding terminals selectable by respective associated switches.
The invention will now be described in connection with preferable embodiments thereof, wherein reference will be made to the accompanying drawings.
In the drawing:
The battery charger circuit shown in
It should be noted that during the charging process attention should be paid to keep the charged states of the two batteries B1, B2 preferably on identical level which has a greater significance at the end region of the charging process, i.e. when the batteries have almost been fully charged. For achieving this condition it is advisable to connect an equalizer circuit EQ which monitors the instantaneous voltages of both batteries an in case the voltage on one battery is higher than that n the other, it connects a load on the battery with higher voltage, wherein the load depends also on the voltage difference. The load will be disconnected if the two battery voltages will again be equal. Such equalizers are per se known circuits and their actual design does not belong to the present invention.
In
The operation of the charging circuit of
The operation of the circuit shown in
A limitation of the application of the charging circuit of
For such independent charging tasks the solution shown in
A circuit variation of this second embodiment is shown in
The charging circuit according to the invention is an ideal solution for users that apply a plurality of batteries, because a single charging circuit can charge two batteries simultaneously with full utilization of the available energy and the number of components is only half compared to the case of using a single conventional battery charging circuit.
A further advantage lies in that with the battery to be charged always an electrolytic capacitor with high capacitance is connected in series and this property is the source of a number of preferred properties including the applicability of the charger circuit, the shape of the charging pulses and finally the automatic control of the charging process as a function of the actual battery voltage.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
P0700299 | Apr 2007 | HU | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/HU08/00039 | 4/24/2008 | WO | 00 | 10/23/2009 |