




Joe Perez wrote:"Big" diodes are not especially cheap, however they do exist.
http://www.newark.com/powerex/r7s02012x ... 20Products
http://www.mouser.com/ProductDetail/Inf ... i6Ap5N0%3d


heathyoung wrote:Have you considered mosfets as ideal diodes?

heathyoung wrote:Have you considered mosfets as ideal diodes?

full-throttle wrote:heathyoung wrote:Have you considered mosfets as ideal diodes?
Won't work, the the fets would just sort the two packs together
And paralleling diodes won't work either FYI




dnmum:if both of your packs are the same voltage, and both are lifepo4, then you should be able to use them in parallel...
chilledoutuk: but whats wrong with one pack charging the other...


full-throttle wrote:@ rkosiorek: I know what the "ideal diodes" are http://www.ti.com/lit/an/slva139/slva139.pdf
I've used the P-ch circuit as reverse polarity protection
It won't work in this case since each pack will turn the fet on and subsequently short the two packs together
A circuit based on fets would work as long as there's logic in place to turn the highest pack on only - but that is not an "ideal diode" anymore

rkosiorek wrote:well "true ideal diodes" with a proper controller do not allow reverse current under any circumstances.
page 6 in your linkIn the event of a power supply failure, such as if the output of a fully loaded supply is suddenly shorted to ground, reverse current temporarily flows through the MOSFET that is on. This current is sourced from any load capacitance and from the other supplies. The LTC4357 quickly responds to this condition turning off the MOSFET in about 500ns, thus minimizing the disturbance to the output bus.
full-throttle wrote:A circuit based on fets would work as long as there's logic in place to turn the highest pack on only

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