David Johnson, Consultant, Littleton, CO
Many portable electronic devices could benefit from a visual indication when their battery requires replacement. Typical low-battery indicators simply turn on an LED when the battery voltage drops below a certain value. Such circuits actually accelerate the battery’s extinction by drawing excessive current. The circuit in Figure 1 draws a mere 1 m A in its standby mode and averages only 20 m A when activated. The low current imposes a minimal burden on any battery circuit. An off-the-shelf, undervoltage sensor IC (IC1) monitors the battery voltage. The IC changes state when the voltage drops below approximately 2.4V. This voltage is the typical end-of-life level for a two-cell zinc battery. The monitor IC connects to a two-transistor oscillator that produces an efficient LED-flashing circuit. When the undervoltage IC changes state, the flasher circuit comes alive. Because the LED receives short, 2-msec pulses every two seconds, the average current drain is lower than 20 m A. (DI #1972)
Read More Source :http://www.edn.com/archives/1997/010297/01di_04.htm
Related Links
More Low Battery detector circuit
More battery level indicator
Level Detector by IC LM741
LED Voltmeter for car battery by LM324
Low Battery Voltage Indicator by IC 8211
LED Chaser by IC 4017 + IC 555
Super Flashing Light by C1061
Nite Rider Lights by IC 4017 + IC 555
This entry was posted on Wednesday, August 1st, 2007 at 9:48 pm and is filed under battery charger, LED Flasher.



