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Basic UPS Power
Supply
source:
Andy Collinson
Description
This circuit is a simple form of the commercial UPS, the circuit
provides a constant regulated 5 Volt output and an unregulated 12 Volt
supply. In the event of electrical supply line failure the battery takes
over, with no spikes on the regulated supply.
Notes:
This circuit can be adapted for other regulated and unregulated voltages
by using different regulators and batteries. For a 15 Volt regulated
supply use two 12 Volt batteries in series and a 7815 regulator. There
is a lot of flexibility in this circuit.
TR1 has a primary matched to the local electrical supply which is 240
Volts in the UK. The secondary winding should be rated at least 12 Volts
at 2 amp, but can be higher, for example 15 Volts. FS1 is a slow blow
type and protects against short circuits on the output, or indeed a
faulty cell in a rechargeable battery. LED 1 will light ONLY when the
electricity supply is present, with a power failure the LED will go out
and output voltage is maintained by the battery. The circuit below
simulates a working circuit with mains power applied:
Between terminals VP1 and VP3 the nominal unregulated supply is
available and a 5 Volt regulated supply between VP1 and VP2. Resistor R1
and D1 are the charging path for battery B1. D1 and D3 prevent LED1
being illuminated under power fail conditions. The battery is designed
to be trickle charged, charging current defined as :-
(VP5 - 0.6 ) / R1
where VP5 is the unregulated DC power supply voltage.
D2 must be included in the circuit, without D2 the battery would charge
from the full supply voltage without current limit, which would cause
damage and overheating of some rechargeable batteries. An electrical
power outage is simulated below:
Note that in all cases the 5 Volt regulated supply is
maintained constantly, whilst the unregulated supply will vary a few
volts.
Standby Capacity
The ability to maintain the regulated supply with no electrical supply
depends on the load taken from the UPS and also the Ampere hour capacity
of the battery. If you were using a 7A/h 12 Volt battery and load from
the 5 Volt regulator was 0.5 Amp (and no load from the unregulated
supply) then the regulated supply would be maintained for around 14
hours. Greater A/h capacity batteries would provide a longer standby
time, and vice versa.
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