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SOLAR

GARDEN
LIGHT
How a Solar Garden Light works
Two different circuits and how they work
Both circuits can be converted to 5v regulated output.
See: Power Supply 5v Solar
No kits are available for this discussion.
The complete Garden Light
can be bought for less than $5.00!!
These are the pages on SOLAR CHARGERS:
1. Solar Charger
2. Solar Light - this page
3. 5v Solar Power Supply - Circuit 1
4. 5v Solar Power Supply - Circuit 2
5. Solar Charger - Push Pull circuit
6. Solar 5v Supply using 2 Garden Lights
See also an article on hand-cranked generator
Circuit 1
Both Solar Garden Light circuits in this article perform 2 functions:
1. They charge a battery and
2. Turn on a high-bright white (or yellow) LED at dusk and off during daylight hours.
The two circuits are completely different in design and we will see how different designers
tackle the same problem.
Firstly we will discuss the circuit above. It is called Circuit 1.
Firstly we will discuss the circuit above. It is called Circuit 1.
Here's the clever part: The circuit doesn't deliver a DC voltage to the LED but a high-
frequency pulse. This creates the same brightness from the LED (as a constant DC voltage)
while needing less than 50% of the energy. It also allows a single cell to be used.
Also, the circuit does not have a dropper resistor for the LED and this further increases the
efficiency.
The third clever idea is the use of a single rechargeable cell - even though the white LED
requires 2.3v.
And the final clever feature is the use of 4 solar cells to charge the rechargeable cell.
By using a single cell, it is only necessary for the solar panel to produce a voltage above 1.2v
for charging to occur. This can be achieved with 3 cells, but if an additional cell is included,
the voltage from the panel will rise above 1.2v when the day is not very sunny and thus the
battery will be charged almost all the time during the day.
On a very dull day the charge current will be as low as 1mA and increase to over 9mA under
very bright sunlight.
The solar panel also performs another function. It turns the LED on and off.
As soon as the voltage from the panel rises above 0.7v, the circuit detects this and turns off
the oscillator. This means energy from the battery is not used during the day.
The first transistor is called a "cut-off transistor." It turns off the oscillator section by robbing
the base of "turn-on voltage."
When the LED is illuminated, the circuit consumes 10mA, and if you work out the number of
night-hours to daylight hours, you will see the LED will illuminate for about 6 hours. This is
sufficient for most applications.
CURRENT LIMIT RESISTOR
Although a current-limiting resistor between a solar panel and a battery is technically needed,
it is not necessary if the battery will not be overcharged. In our case, the solar cells will not
overcharge the battery.
THE SOLAR CELL
The SOLAR CELL actually consists of a number of cells as each cell only generates about
0.5v to 0.6v.
The Solar Cell in our model consists of 4 cells and produces approx 2v with bright sunlight.
The short-circuit current produced is about 30mA and although this is not the correct way to
determine the current capability of the cell, it has been given to help you select a suitable cell
(or set of cells). The current will drop considerably when the solar cell is connected to a 1.2v
battery via a diode and our project delivered 8mA.
HOW THE CIRCUIT WORKS
The circuit consists of two stages. The first stage is a "switch" or cut-off device. It detects a
voltage above 0.7v from the solar panel and the resistance between its collector-emitter
terminals reduces to a very small value.
The 10k resistor allows the voltage on the solar panel to rise above 0.7v during bright
sunlight, while the 100k discharges the 100p when the voltage is very low and the capacitor
holds a charge to keep the transistor turned on when the voltage is "high".
When the resistance between the collector-emitter terminals of the first transistor is low, it is
turned ON, and the second transistor does not get enough voltage on its base for it to operate
as an oscillator.
The function of each component
The purpose of the first transistor is to keep the second stage OFF when the solar cell detects
sunlight.
This allows the energy from the solar cell to be passed to the rechargeable battery.
The second transistor is an oscillator.
To see how it works we remove the first transistor.
The second transistor works by itself. The components in the circuit are: the transistor, the
two chokes, the 6k8 resistor, the 1n2 capacitor and the LED.
An oscillator needs feedback called POSITIVE FEEDBACK. Positive feedback creates noise
or "oscillation" in a correctly designed circuit.
An oscillator must be self-starting and the circuit in this project starts to oscillate by detecting
a voltage on the base.
The transistor amplifies this and a larger waveform (larger voltage- change) appears on the
collector. This is then passed to the base so that oscillation continues.
For oscillation to occur, the feedback signal must be delayed by a small amount of time.
This small amount of time determines the frequency and the feedback signal has another
feature (or characteristic). It is presented to the base with an opposite polarity to that on the
collector. To be more precise, the voltage must be moving in the opposite direction. This is
called "180 out of phase."
This is achieved by the inductor and the 1n2 capacitor. We all know a capacitor creates time
to charge, but an inductor also has a delay-factor.
A resistor does not have a delay-factor, as a voltage at one end of it will appear immediately
at the other end, so we can explain the delay-time for an inductor by connecting an inductor in
series with a resistor.
There have been many technical descriptions on how an inductor delays a signal, but never a
simplified description.
Here is a simple way to understand how an inductor creates a delay.
In the following animation, you will see how the signal (the voltage) is delayed:
The main feature of this animation is to show an inductor effectively GROWS when an applied
voltage is delivered to it by producing a back-voltage and thus the voltage at its other end
does not change until the core is saturated. This understanding is most important in the circuit
we are discussing as the top lead of the inductor is taken from a low-voltage to a high voltage
by the action of the transistor when it is turning ON and OFF. As the top lead is taken from
one voltage-level to the other, the lead connected to the capacitor does not see this rapid
change, but continues in the cyclic process of charging and discharging the capacitor. That's
why this circuit is so difficult to understand.
Let's look at the characteristic is the inductor in more detail:
The voltage applied to the inductor starts at zero. As it rises, the turns of wire on it produce
magnetic flux that cuts the other turns and this action produces a voltage that opposes the
incoming voltage, and a surprising thing happens. The resulting forward voltage is very small
incoming voltage, and a surprising thing happens. The resulting forward voltage is very small
and this causes very little current to flow. Thus the voltage across the resistor does not
change. This is similar to saying the waveform does not appear at the other end of the
inductor. As the waveform rises further, (the applied voltage increases) the core of the
inductor becomes saturated. At this point it cannot produce any more flux. The opposing
voltage (produced by the expanding flux) is reduced and this allows a higher current to flow.
This causes an increase in the voltage across the resistor. If the resistor is replaced by a
capacitor, the capacitor would see a delay before it starts to charge. When the inductor is
combined with a capacitor, the two components form a circuit that delays the signal to the
base by 180 and the circuit oscillates at a frequency of about 500kHz.
The operation of this circuit can be found in text books under the heading Hartley Oscillator.
But it's a bit more complicated than first meets the eye as the inductor in the positive rail
assists in the generation of the waveform.
Thus the circuit is beyond the scope of our discussion.
The only two things you need to understand are:
The in-rush of current for a capacitor and an inductor.
When a capacitor is connected to a voltage-source, the initial in-rush of current is high and it
gradually decreases to zero as it charges.
When an inductor is connected to a supply, the initial in-rush of current is small and gradually
increases.
The waveforms across the capacitor and LED are shown in the following diagrams:
The other feature we can discuss is the function of the top 0.47mH inductor.
When the transistor turns off, the magnetic flux in collapses and it produces a high voltage.
This voltage is high enough to illuminate the LED and the graph shows that when the LED is
removed from the circuit, the voltage produced by the inductor has a peak of about 3.5v. The
area under the peak represents energy and this is absorbed by the LED to produce light. The
LED also reduces the peak to 2.3v as this is the maximum voltage (or characteristic voltage)
of a white, super-bright LED.
Make an effort to buy a Solar Garden Light from a $2 shop and pull it apart, just to see how it
works. If you have a CRO, you will be able to view the waveform on the 1n2 capacitor and
across the LED. The waveform across the capacitor is an incredible 10v p-p with part of the
waveform going negative by 4v. During the negative excursion, the transistor is turned off and
the magnetic flux produced by the current-flow in the top inductor collapses very quickly and
produces a high voltage that has an opposite polarity to the energising voltage.
This voltage is passed to the LED and light is produced.
The short pulses of energy delivered to the LED occupy about 20% of the total time but the
energy they deliver produces a light-output equal to a constant DC voltage. By delivering
short pulses, only about 30% of the energy is needed to produce the same illumination as a
constant voltage.
Now we will cover circuit 2:
Circuit 2
Solar Garden Light-2 consists of three transistors. The first two transistors form a positive-
feedback amplifier and the third transistor is a common-emitter amplifier.
The circuit only needs the first two transistors to create an oscillator.
The circuit turns on when the photo resistor fails to detect light and its resistance effectively
goes very high. This allows the 47k base resistor to turn on the transistor. The voltage rises
on the base as the 100n charges and the transistor turns on.
This action turns on the BC 557 transistor and the voltage on the collector rises.
This increases the current into the base of the first transistor via the 100k resistor and the two
transistors would stay in this state if it were not for the 330p capacitor.
The 330p also pulls the base of the BC 557 towards the 0v rail and this assists in turning on
the BC 557.
This occurs when the the first two transistors turn on as the emitter-follower third transistor is
also turned on during this action.
The 330p is pulled low during this action and it quickly charges. When it becomes charged,
the "turn-on" current for the BC 557 is reduced and it turns off slightly.
This action reduces the current through the 100k feed-back resistor and the first two
transistors begin to turn off.
The third transistor is also turned off and the current flowing through the inductor is reduced.
This causes the magnetic flux to collapse and produce a voltage in the opposite direction.
In the first instance, the voltage on the top of the inductor was more-positive than the voltage
on the lead connected to the collector.
When the current is reduced, the voltage collapses and produces a voltage that is negative at
the top lead and positive at the lead connected to the collector.
This is exactly the same as connecting a battery to the positive rail of the project with its
negative on the top rail and positive to the collector.
This produces a very high voltage on the collector of the transistor and is passed to the base
of the BC 557 via the 330p. The BC 557 is effectively turned off completely. The result is the
first two transistor are fully turned off and the third transistor is also fully tuned off.
This is exactly the same as removing the third transistor from the circuit.
The inductor produces a voltage (in the form of a spike) that is higher than 2.1v to illuminate
the high-bright yellow LED - in fact it is much higher but the LED converts this energy to light.
You cannot measure this voltage with a multimeter as the voltage is produced in the form of
spikes.
If you remove the LED, a CRO will show the spikes are higher than 40v.
This makes the circuit ideal for converting to a 5v supply as shown in our other article: Power
Supply 5v Solar.
NOTE:
An email from a reader asks about the inductors:
http://www.prc68.com/I/EOG.shtml
If you have a circuit as shown in the following photo, that is is powered by 3 AA cells, the
circuit does not need any inductors as the 4.5v is sufficient to illuminate white LEDs.
CONCLUSION
Both circuits are much more complex than you would expect, in such a simple product. But
that's the miracle of electronics.
You will see the same level of sophistication in many products, such as talking birthday cards,
toys, LED torches, etc.
There may be other circuits in these Garden Lights as the author has seen at least 10
different types.
The main thing to look for is the size of the solar panel.
The solar panel in Circuit 1 produced a current of 25mA with full sunlight. The current
produced by the solar panel in circuit 2 was 50mA. It had twice the amount of active surface.
This is just another product that costs less than buying the individual parts from an electronics
store.
Now you can see why the hobby of electronics is dying, just when electronics is e-x-p-a-n-d-i-
n-g! But that's no reason to give up. There is still an enormous demand for new ideas and
gadgets.
Next time you see a Garden Light glowing at night in a garden, you will appreciate the amount
of work that has gone into the design of the circuit.
Colin Mitchell
8/12/2007

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