Build a Simple Solar Relay Circuit Diagram.With extended periods of bright sunshine and warm weather, even
relatively large storage batteries in solar-power systems can become
rather warm. Consequently, a circuit is usually connected in parallel
with the storage battery to either connect a high-power shunt (in order
to dissipate the excess solar power in the form of heat) or switch on a
ventilation fan via a power FET, whenever the voltage rises above
approximately 14.4 V. However, the latter option tends to oscillate,
since switching on a powerful 12-V fan motor causes the voltage to drop
below 14.4 V, causing the fan to be switched off. In the absence of an
external load, the battery voltage recovers quickly, the terminal
voltage rises above 14.4 V again and the switching process starts once
again, despite the built-in hysteresis.
A solution to this problem is provided by the circuit shown here, which
switches on the fan in response to the sweltering heat produced by the
solar irradiation instead of an excessively high voltage at the battery
terminals. Based on experience, the risk of battery overheating is only
present in the summer between 2 and 6 pm. The intensity of the sunlight
falling within the viewing angle of a suitably configured ‘sun probe’ is
especially high precisely during this interval. This is the operating
principle of the solar relay.
The trick to this apparently rather simple circuit consists of using a
suitable combination of components. Instead of a power FET, it employs a
special 12-V relay that can handle a large load in spite of its small
size. This relay must have a coil resistance of at least 600 Ω, rather
than the usual value of 100-200 Ω. This requirement can be met by
several Schrack Components relays (available from, among others, Conrad
Electronics). Here we have used the least expensive model, a type RYII
8-A printed circuit board relay. The light probe is connected in series
with the relay. It consists of two BPW40 photo-transistors wired in
parallel.
The type number refers to the 40-degree acceptance angle for incident
light. In bright sunlight, the combined current generated by the two
photo-transistors is sufficient to cause the relay to engage, in this
case without twitching. Every relay has a large hysteresis, so the fan
connected via the a/b contacts will run for many minutes, or even until
the probe no longer receives sufficient light. The NTC thermistor
connected in series performs two functions. First, it compensates for
changes in the resistance of the copper wire in the coil, which
increases by approximately 4 percent for every 10 ºC increase in
temperature, and second, it causes the relay to drop out earlier than it
otherwise would (the relay only drops out at a coil voltage of 4 V).
Depending on the intended use, the 220-Ω resistance of the thermistor can be modified by connecting a 100-Ω resistor in series or a 470-Ω resistor in parallel. If the photo-transistors are fastened with the axes of their incident-angle cones in parallel, the 40-degree incident angle corresponds to 2 pm with suitable solar orientation. If they are bent at a slight angle to each other, their incident angles overlap to cover a wider angle, such as 70 degrees. With the tested prototype circuit, the axes were oriented nearly parallel, and this fully met our demands. The automatic switch-off occurs quite abruptly, just like the switch-on, with no contact jitter. This behavior is also promoted by the NTC thermistor, since its temperature coefficient is opposite to that of the ‘PTC’ relay coil and approximately five times as large.
This yields exactly the desired effect for energizing and DE-energising
the relay: a large relay current for engagement and a small relay
current for disengagement. Building the circuit is actually
straightforward, but you must pay attention to one thing. The
photo transistors resemble color less LEDs, so there is a tendency to
think that their ‘pinning’ is the same as that of LEDs, with the long
lead being positive and the short lead negative. However, with the BPW40
the situation is exactly the opposite; the short lead is the collector
lead. Naturally, the back-emf diode for the relay must also be connected
with the right polarity. The residual current on cloudy days and at
night is negligibly small.
Sourced By: www.streampowers.blogspot.com
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