A simple NiCd charger can be built using ‘junk box’ components and an
inexpensive LM317 or 78xx voltage regulator. Using a current limiter
composed of R3 and a transistor, it can charge as many cells as desired
until a ‘fully charged’ voltage determined by the voltage regulator is
reached, and it indicates whether it is charging or has reached the
fully charged state. If the storage capacitor (C1) is omitted, pulsed
charging takes place. In this mode, a higher charging current can be
used, with all of the control characteristics remaining the same. The
operation of the circuit is quite simple. If the cells are not fully
charged, a charging current flows freely from the voltage regulator,
although it is limited by resistor R3 and transistor T1.
The
limit is set by the formula Imax ≈ (0.6 V) ÷ R3 For Imax = 200 mA, this
yields R3 = 3 Ω. The LED is on if current limiting is active, which also
means that the cells are not yet fully charged. The potential on the
reference lead of the voltage regulator is raised by approximately 2.9 V
due to the voltage across the LED. This leads to a requirement for a
certain minimum number of cells. For an LM317, the voltage between the
reference lead and the output is 1.25 V, which means at least three
cells must be charged (3 × 1.45 V > 2.9 V + 1.25 V). For a 78xx with a
voltage drop of around 3 V (plus 2.9 V), the minimum number is four
cells.
Circuit diagram.
When the cells are almost fully charged, the current gradually drops, so
the current limiter becomes inactive and the LED goes out. In this
state, the voltage on the reference lead of the regulator depends only
on voltage divider R1/R2. For a 7805 regulator, the value of R2 is
selected such that the current through it is 6 mA. Together with the
current through the regulator (around 4 mA), this yields a current of
around 10 mA through R1. If the voltage across R1 is 4 V (9 V – 5 V),
this yields a value of 390 Ω. The end-of-charge voltage can thus be set
to approximately 8.9 V. As the current through the regulator depends on
the device manufacturer and the load, the value of R1 must be adjusted
as necessary. The value of the storage capacitor must be matched to
the selected charging current. As already mentioned, it can also be
omitted for pulse charging.
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