scrabble80
Bioengineer
- Jun 2, 2009
- 2
Hi,
I have a small circuit that needs to be powered at 3.6V and draws a continuous 35mA current.. The problem is that in the circuit is also a CC2420 transceiver with a max. absolute rating of 3.6V.
I was thinking of combining 3 x 1.2V NiMH cells I already have to make the 3.6V battery but I am worried that the voltage of the fully charged cell connected to the circuit (potentially around 4V, as 1.2V is the 'nominal' voltage for a NiMH cell) might fry the transceiver. I'm I justified in thinking this ?
I understand that the battery voltage will drop when its connected to the load but its the first few seconds of operation that worry me.
I have a small circuit that needs to be powered at 3.6V and draws a continuous 35mA current.. The problem is that in the circuit is also a CC2420 transceiver with a max. absolute rating of 3.6V.
I was thinking of combining 3 x 1.2V NiMH cells I already have to make the 3.6V battery but I am worried that the voltage of the fully charged cell connected to the circuit (potentially around 4V, as 1.2V is the 'nominal' voltage for a NiMH cell) might fry the transceiver. I'm I justified in thinking this ?
I understand that the battery voltage will drop when its connected to the load but its the first few seconds of operation that worry me.