ElectronicLoad: Difference between revisions

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== Platform IO ==
== Platform IO ==
platformio is a kind of build environment.
It takes out the guesswork/manual steps of using the Arduino environment to pick the right board, libraries and options.
All of this can now be specified in text files (e.g. platformio.ini).
You can install it with pip (which can be installed with you distro's package manager):
  pip install platformio
=== Cheat sheet for platformio commands ===
=== Cheat sheet for platformio commands ===
Instead of typing platformio you can just type pio.


To compile and upload the firmware:
To compile and upload the firmware:
Line 64: Line 72:
To run the serial monitor:
To run the serial monitor:
   pio run --target monitor
   pio run --target monitor
or
  pio device monitor

Revision as of 22:53, 28 April 2018

Project ElectronicLoadV2
ElectronicLoadV2.png
Software voor Electronic Load R2
Status Completed
Contact bertrik
Last Update 2018-04-28

Intro

Status: the software works! (but there are always more features to add ...)

This page is about software I'm writing for my brother who is developing an 'electronic load'. An electronic load is a thing that draws current from a power source in a well-defined way.

A possible use case for an electronic load is to discharge a battery with a constant current, while recording the voltage so you can make a nice discharge graph.

Another user case is to test a solar panel, drawing variable current from it while measuring the voltage, to find the point where it delivers most power.

Perhaps yet another use case is just to measure current drawn by a specific device at a high time resolution, and determine the amount of charge used per use cycle.

Design

Hardware

For the hardware design, see http://sikken.nl/electronicloadr2.html

The basic principle of operation is that the electronic load has a circuit with a mosfet controlled by a microcontroller to draw a configurable constant current. The mosfet is attached to a heatsink that dissipates the power as heat.

The microcontroller can set the desired current, measure the actual current and measure the voltage. This way we can also do other modes than just constant current:

  • constant power mode: from the voltage measured, we can calculate the current required to draw a constant power
  • constant resistance mode: from the voltage measured, we can calculate the current to emulate a specific resistance

Software

The source code is on github.

Building blocks:

  • USB serial port, to receive commands from the user
  • command interpreter, to transform user input into actions
  • measurement loop, that continuously calculates voltage and current, and integrates them (from mA to mAh for example)
  • control loop, that maintains the desired behaviour (constant current, power, resistance)
  • logging logic, to log measured values to the output
  • sequencing logic, to perform the steps needed for particular measurement mode, e.g. solar panel characterisation

Random thoughts

Features to implement:

  • sequencer for stepping through a specific range of currents at a specific speed
  • operating modes:
    • add sequenced modes: special sequences for measuring a PV-cell, measuring a battery, measuring a Peltier?
    • automatic max power point determination?
  • calibration
    • automatic if possible, e.g. set current to 0, measure current, use this as an offset?
    • manual if required
    • save calibration values in non-volatile memory and load them at startup
  • automatically reset cumulative counters when starting a log
  • conversion from SI units to other units, like mAh, Wh, etc?

Platform IO

platformio is a kind of build environment. It takes out the guesswork/manual steps of using the Arduino environment to pick the right board, libraries and options. All of this can now be specified in text files (e.g. platformio.ini).

You can install it with pip (which can be installed with you distro's package manager):

 pip install platformio

Cheat sheet for platformio commands

Instead of typing platformio you can just type pio.

To compile and upload the firmware:

 pio run --target upload

To run the serial monitor:

 pio run --target monitor

or

 pio device monitor