Artlav
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Greetings.
Let's say i want to make an 220VAC inverter from a battery pack in the 72V-100V range.
The converter would need 15V and/or 5V to power the electronics and gate drivers.
How can these voltages be obtained from a 100VDC battery?
A brute force approach would be to make a tap in the battery pack at about 24V level, and regulate down from there, but i wonder if there is some sort of common non-battery-specific solution to this problem.
There are LDOs that go up to 125V, so one way would be to bear the heat dissipation from these, or use one to power a smaller step-down converter that would give the main use voltage.
However, i've found electric vehicles and large backup systems that use battery packs in 200-300V range, where there are no ICs at all.
There i can only think of going 101 and using an astable multivibrator of HV bipolar transistors to drive a common step-down transformer. Crude, but might well be effective.
So, the question is - how that sort of a problem is being solved usually?
Or is the "brute-force" approach the usual one?
Let's say i want to make an 220VAC inverter from a battery pack in the 72V-100V range.
The converter would need 15V and/or 5V to power the electronics and gate drivers.
How can these voltages be obtained from a 100VDC battery?
A brute force approach would be to make a tap in the battery pack at about 24V level, and regulate down from there, but i wonder if there is some sort of common non-battery-specific solution to this problem.
There are LDOs that go up to 125V, so one way would be to bear the heat dissipation from these, or use one to power a smaller step-down converter that would give the main use voltage.
However, i've found electric vehicles and large backup systems that use battery packs in 200-300V range, where there are no ICs at all.
There i can only think of going 101 and using an astable multivibrator of HV bipolar transistors to drive a common step-down transformer. Crude, but might well be effective.
So, the question is - how that sort of a problem is being solved usually?
Or is the "brute-force" approach the usual one?