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Questions relating to designing PCBs
#199000
I am using a PB137 battery-charger chip as a float-charger for a 12V 4.5AH Sealed Lead Acid Battery. I started by using the circuit shown on page 5 (Section 3 Application) of the PB137 Data Sheet (see: http://www.kynix.com/uploadfiles/pdf65976/PB137ACV.pdf), where it holds the float voltage at 13.70V. That works as advertised.

I have encountered a problem which runs contrary to the advertised feature that "Reverse leakage current less than 10uA" as shown on page 1 of the DS and Irev Reverse Leakage Current shown in Table 4.

For testing, I have used a current-limited regulated DC bench supply set to about 18V for the input source. I added the bypass caps as shown in the applications schematic. I connected the output to the SLA, and the charging current tapers nicely toward zero as the battery accumulates charge, settling out to near 13.70V.

However, the problem shows up if the input supply is disconnected (or set to zero volts). The DS implies that this is ok; that the current that flows backwards from the battery into the output terminal of the PB137 should be less than 10uA.

What actually happens is that the initial reverse leakage current is about 50mA, which then rapidly increases to over 0.4A as the PB137 goes into thermal runaway and meltdown. The energy to blow up the PB137 comes from the battery.

This is not a fluke; I have blown up three PB137s in an attempt to understand on what is going on. They all got seriously hot, melted and now show a short between all three leads. These were all from the same batch of ten ST branded parts that I bought from Digikey. So my question for the forum: has anybody else experienced this?

I have a workaround but it is not too elegant. I added a Si rectifier (1N4002) in series with the output lead (cathode toward the battery), which drops the output voltage by about 0.7V, but prevents any reverse current from flowing from the battery into the regulator output.

To compensate for the low output voltage, I added a small-signal Si diode (1N914) in the PB137 ground lead, cathode to ground. The regulator quiescent current (4 to 8mA) forward biases the diode, and raises the regulator output voltage by about 0.6V, which results in a final battery float voltage of ~13.5V, which I like better than the 13.7V from the intrinsic PB137, which is a bit too high for forever floating SLAs in my experience...

Any other suggestions?
#199005
However, the problem shows up if the input supply is disconnected (or set to zero volts). The DS implies that this is ok;
The data sheet makes this claim for Vi=floating (disconnected), which is not equivalent to setting the power supply to zero volts.

I would put the diode in series with the input power supply, not the regulator output.
#199032
Thanks for the suggestion: Here are the results:

Image

Question is: why would ST put out such a poorly specified product? Even if the input pin is "floating", I have seen the device go into the reverse-current induced thermal runaway. If the input pin comes from a wall-wart or other power supply that goes to zero volts (because the ACpower fails, for example), the reverse-current destruction of the PB137 is inevitable...