Saturday, March 25, 2017

One-part AVR-controlled "boost converter"

I built a crappy AVR-controlled boost converter with just one part (an inductor) that can blink a blue LED when you power it at 2.3 V. See the video here:

I did this because there was a challenge on a cool electronics blog that I follow.

The "boost converter" is pretty crappy because it does not produce a stedy voltage and it is only useful when the input voltage is between 2.3 V and 2.5 V. Below that, my AVR ATmega328P seems to stop running. Above that, the blue LED is on all the time (though it does get noticeably brighter when I run the boost).

In this system, VCC is only boosted by about 0.7 V; it can go a little bit higher if I use more I/O lines, but it can't go much higher than that because of the blue LED. If I take the blue LED away, I see shorter but more extreme boosts on VCC. With one I/O line, I see a boost of 1.2 V. With two I/O lines, I see a boost of 1.7 V, and it seems like the sudden boost causes issues for the AVR and it usually resets after one or two boosts. With three I/O lines, I see a very sharp boost of 2.0 V for 2 us, and it consistently causes the AVR to reset.

Update: I received a shirt from Josh for winning the contest. I like it!

The shirt is gray, has a picture of an inductor, and says: Winner! Josh.com Boost Converter Design Contest