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EnerChip™ EH Energy Harvesting Module |
"Cymbet and Digi-Key introduce the EnerChip™ EH Energy Harvesting Module" |
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| CBC5300 – the EnerChip™ EH module is a drop in power solution for Solar Energy Harvesting (EH) applications. This module is a self-contained power module in a 24-pin DIP configuration. The CBC5300 module is designed to accept a wide range of energy transducer inputs, store the harvested power, and deliver managed power to the target system. The purpose of this module is to enable system designers to quickly develop energy harvesting applications. The CBC5300 board has two control lines that can be connected to a microcontroller (MCU) for the purpose of conserving available energy, using incoming power efficiently, and extending EnerChip battery life. | ![]() |
Features The CBC5300 board has two control lines that can be connected to a microcontroller (MCU) for the purpose of conserving available energy, using incoming power efficiently, and extending EnerChip battery life. The information below describes the functionality of the connector pins. VIN - The CBC5300 module accepts a wide range of inputs from various energy harvesting transducers. This input accepts operating voltages from 0.25 volts to 4 volts DC. VOUT - is the DC output voltage from the CBC5300 and is approximately 3.5V depending on load current. BATOFF - is typically controlled by a microcontroller I/O line. When driven high, the on-board EnerChips will be disconnected from the charging source of the CBC5300. This feature allows all available power to be delivered to the load rather than to charging the EnerChips, a useful mode when limited transducer power is available or when higher operating current is required from the system. When BATOFF is driven low, the interaction between the charging source and the CBC5300 behaves normally. In other words, when BATOFF is low the EnerChips will always be charging when sufficient input power is available. CHARGE - is an output signal from the CBC5300 that will be forced low under one of two conditions. First is when transducer output is very low and a low level indicates that the EnerChips have been charged. Second, it will be driven low when transducer output power is more than sufficient to operate the boost converter and charge the EnerChips at peak rate, regardless of the state of charge of the EnerChips. Programming an MCU timer to allow enough charging time to elapse after the assertion of CHARGE will ensure that the EnerChips are fully charged before using them to deliver power to the system. The advantage is that the system is then aware of the minimum reservoir of energy available in the event transducer power goes to zero. Applications
Specifications
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