increases the voltages stay sort of the same but the amount of current you can draw goes
up! If you can keep the DC/DC converter operating on the red line, that's the maximum
power.
However, there are some side effects to using a MPPT design.
First is that DC/DC converters are expensive, and adding a DC/DC converter to a LiPo
charger chip increases the cost by 2x. For small panels, if the MPPT increases the
efficiency by 30% but you can double the panel size for the same price increase, it might be
easier to just go with a larger panel.
Second is that DC/DC converters are not necessarily more efficient than a linear converter
at low voltages and currents. At the voltages we're talking about, a 6V panel charging a 4V
battery, the max power point will tend to be around 5V - only a volt above the battery.
Considering there's a 0.5V drop with the input diode, the added inefficiency of a DC/DC
converter is about equivalent to the extra voltage drop used by the linear charger. For this
reason, you tend to see MPPT controllers only for multi-ampere chargers for big lead acid
batteries and really big panels.
So the upshot is...
If your panel voltage is ~1V above your battery charging voltage, your current draw is under
an Ampere, and you control the current draw to keep the voltage steady at around the 'max
power voltage' (the red line up above), it's possible to get near-MPPT performance, without
the complexity of a DC/DC converter, and without the high price. That's what the design of
this charger does.
Why a special solar charger?
We've had a lot of customers that are interested in making solar powered projects, so we
wanted to make a lipo charger board that is specifically designed with Solar & USB
charging in mind. We'll explain why...
Most people try to plug a solar panel directly into a lipo charger and while it sort of works,
the battery takes forever to charge because the efficiency is terrible! That's because most
lipo chargers are meant to plug into a USB port or wall, and are very simple in their design.
USB ports supply 5V at up to 500mA and they're pretty solid - the voltage doesn't change
much even at the max current draw. So when you plug a charger into a computer with a
USB port, they just draw 500mA or so and happily chug away. Same goes for wall
adapters. The voltage and current limits are kept steady.
Solar panels are a little different, the voltage and current vary constantly depending on
sunlight available. They are unstable! That instability confuses battery chargers, which