2021-06-09 08:33 AM
I am testing a L7815CV to charge a 12V Battery (I will use this in a solar system with a 20W solar panel where the input voltage might range from 0-22V and Imax=1.3A)
My questions:
PS: temperature of the L7815CV was always below 60 Celsius during the tests.
2021-06-14 01:23 PM
What is the schematics of your battery charger with the L7815?
Are you using input and output capacitors, what is their type and value and how far are they mounted from the L7815?
Do you use a heat sink on the L7815 and what does it look like resp. what thermal resistance does is provide?
Generally the L7815 needs a voltage difference (dropout voltage) of at least 2V, i.e. you need to provide at least 14V to charge a 12V battery.
But you should keep in mind that it is a linear regulator, which means that it has to burn the entire dropout voltage. With an input voltage of 22V and 1.3A charging current, the resulting power is (22V-12V)*1.3A = 13W, which requires a thick heat sink.
Anyway, it looks like your L7815 is in limiting mode, maybe because your circuit is starting to oscillate due to a lack of capacitors or long wires with a lot of inductance.
The L7815 under most circumstances protects itself, as long as your input voltage is below the maximum value of 35V, so lifetime is usually not an issue. Some exceptions apply, like possible input short-circuits, which can damage the internal power section, so an external protection diode would be necessary (see datasheet, fig. 28). Please read section 6.1. of the datasheet for details of the internal protection.
Regards
/Peter