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  3. New library to read Arduino VCC supply level without resistors for battery powered sensor nodes that do not use a voltage regulator but connect directly to the batteries ;-)

New library to read Arduino VCC supply level without resistors for battery powered sensor nodes that do not use a voltage regulator but connect directly to the batteries ;-)

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supplyvcc
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  • daulagariD Offline
    daulagariD Offline
    daulagari
    Hero Member
    wrote on last edited by daulagari
    #53

    As long as you connect VCC direct to the battery I do not understand why people opt for using an external voltage divider optionally with a FET to reduce standby current. Additional components and current consumption while only a possible small improvement in accuracy.

    For the voltage divider the ADC reading is 1023 x R2 / (R1 + R2) x Vcc

    For the 1.1 Volt reference the reading is 1023 x 1.1/Vcc

    If you are using +/- 10% resistors (or the FET resistance is not measured correct or varies), the accuracy is more or less matching the (uncalibrated) bandgap reference method.

    YveauxY Z 2 Replies Last reply
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    • daulagariD daulagari

      As long as you connect VCC direct to the battery I do not understand why people opt for using an external voltage divider optionally with a FET to reduce standby current. Additional components and current consumption while only a possible small improvement in accuracy.

      For the voltage divider the ADC reading is 1023 x R2 / (R1 + R2) x Vcc

      For the 1.1 Volt reference the reading is 1023 x 1.1/Vcc

      If you are using +/- 10% resistors (or the FET resistance is not measured correct or varies), the accuracy is more or less matching the (uncalibrated) bandgap reference method.

      YveauxY Offline
      YveauxY Offline
      Yveaux
      Mod
      wrote on last edited by Yveaux
      #54

      @daulagari I guess the discussion depends on whether you have a software-mindset or a hardware-mindset.
      The software guys currently seem to form a minority on this board...
      I still think, after all discussions and distractions, that this way of measuring can be very usefull, when you understand the limitations.

      http://yveaux.blogspot.nl

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      • AnticimexA Offline
        AnticimexA Offline
        Anticimex
        Contest Winner
        wrote on last edited by
        #55

        I have not studied what support for measuring Vcc is built into the Arduino, but if there are support for doing that, I am sure it should be adequate. Regarding the external circuitry, my point is just that if you are going for an external solution, you might just as well design it to consume a minimum amount of current, as that is a one-shot optimization. Yes, it is a couple of extra components, but to me, that outweigh the limitations of the simple voltage divider in the long run.
        Personally, I would even consider a battery management unit. Such a thing should be able to handle both charging (if you want that feature) as well as readback (with battery health compensation).

        Do you feel secure today? No? Start requiring some signatures and feel better tomorrow ;)

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        • daulagariD Offline
          daulagariD Offline
          daulagari
          Hero Member
          wrote on last edited by
          #56

          @Yveaux

          I guess the discussion depends on whether you have a software-mindset or a hardware-mindset.

          Being on this forum you are likely not having a hardware- or software-mindset only ;-)

          @Anticimex:

          I have not studied what support for measuring Vcc is built into the Arduino

          I think a study is not needed, the ADC ref power is VCC and there is a 1.1 V bandgap in the Arduino that you can measure; that's the whole trick.

          Yes, somewhat more funky like a battery management unit can for sure make sense.

          AnticimexA 1 Reply Last reply
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          • daulagariD daulagari

            @Yveaux

            I guess the discussion depends on whether you have a software-mindset or a hardware-mindset.

            Being on this forum you are likely not having a hardware- or software-mindset only ;-)

            @Anticimex:

            I have not studied what support for measuring Vcc is built into the Arduino

            I think a study is not needed, the ADC ref power is VCC and there is a 1.1 V bandgap in the Arduino that you can measure; that's the whole trick.

            Yes, somewhat more funky like a battery management unit can for sure make sense.

            AnticimexA Offline
            AnticimexA Offline
            Anticimex
            Contest Winner
            wrote on last edited by
            #57

            @daulagari I see. Then as the whole topic suggests, it should suffice to use internal functionality to determine battery level if batt level = vcc. But some form of external circuitry is required if vcc is regulated. And I don't see a big reason to put a lot of effort into making a high precision solution for monitoring battery of "our" small nodes. But the current proposal of a simple voltage divider is a bit too wasteful imo (off topic).

            Do you feel secure today? No? Start requiring some signatures and feel better tomorrow ;)

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            • daulagariD daulagari

              As long as you connect VCC direct to the battery I do not understand why people opt for using an external voltage divider optionally with a FET to reduce standby current. Additional components and current consumption while only a possible small improvement in accuracy.

              For the voltage divider the ADC reading is 1023 x R2 / (R1 + R2) x Vcc

              For the 1.1 Volt reference the reading is 1023 x 1.1/Vcc

              If you are using +/- 10% resistors (or the FET resistance is not measured correct or varies), the accuracy is more or less matching the (uncalibrated) bandgap reference method.

              Z Offline
              Z Offline
              Zeph
              Hero Member
              wrote on last edited by
              #58

              @daulagari said:

              As long as you current VCC direct to the battery I do not understand why people opt for using an external voltage divider

              For the voltage divider the ADC reading is 1023 x R2 / (R1 + R2) x Vcc

              For the 1.1 Volt reference the reading is 1023 x 1.1/Vcc

              An external voltage divider is useful only if you are NOT connecting the measured battery directly to VCC (ie: useful only if you are using a regulator of some sort between VBatt and VCC - whether linear, buck or boost).

              Your first calculation doesn't take the reference in to account. The reading is really:
              1023/Vref x R2 / (R1+R2) * VBatt. If VBatt is also VCC and VRef is also VCC, then the ADC reading is based only on the constant resistor ratio, independent of battery power (VBatt and VRef cancel out if both are VCC).

              So when using the default VCC as Vref, the Vbatt voltage divider is only useful when VCC is NOT VBatt.. in that case, if VBatt is the same as VCC, using an external divider is not an alternate technique with wasted components, it's just a non-starter period.

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              • daulagariD Offline
                daulagariD Offline
                daulagari
                Hero Member
                wrote on last edited by
                #59

                @Zeph: Fully agreed.

                Your first calculation doesn't take the reference in to account. The reading is really:
                1023/Vref x R2 / (R1+R2) * VBatt.

                My formula's were for the case VCC = Vbatt but yes your formula is more generic but reduces to the same when VCC = Vbatt.

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                • YveauxY Yveaux

                  Hi there!

                  Inspired by the Blog entry at http://provideyourown.com/2012/secret-arduino-voltmeter-measure-battery-voltage/ I decided to write a simple Arduino library to measure VCC level without any external components!
                  This library can be used to measure the VCC level from e.g. battery powered sensors that do not use a voltage regulator but are powered directly from the batteries and send the battery level to the gateway.

                  The trick is to use the AVR's internal 1.1V reference to measure AVcc. This does not require an external voltage divider.

                  The Vcc component can report the VCC level either in volts, or in percentage. Reporting in percentage is a nice way to report the battery level in MySensors!
                  For example:

                  #include <Vcc.h>
                  const float VccExpected   = 3.0;
                  const float VccCorrection = 2.860/2.92;  // Measured Vcc by multimeter divided by reported Vcc
                  Vcc vcc(VccCorrection);
                  
                  static int oldBatteryPcnt = 0;
                  void loop()
                  {
                  	int batteryPcnt = (int)vcc.Read_Perc(VccExpected);
                  	if (oldBatteryPcnt != batteryPcnt)
                  	{
                  		gw.sendBatteryLevel(batteryPcnt);
                  		oldBatteryPcnt = batteryPcnt;
                  	}
                  }
                  

                  Deviations can easily be corrected for by running one of the example sketches and at the same time measure VCC with a multimeter.
                  The correction factor should be entered as (VCC multimeter/VCC reported) in the constructor of the Vcc component (the VccCorrection parameter in the example above).
                  See the example sketches and code for more info.

                  The library can be found at: https://github.com/Yveaux/arduino_vcc
                  Or download as ZIP: https://github.com/Yveaux/arduino_vcc/archive/master.zip

                  Have fun!

                  DammeD Offline
                  DammeD Offline
                  Damme
                  Code Contributor
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #60

                  @Yveaux The only comment i have to this lib now then I'm using it is that you should not use floats but int instead, and just have an imaginary decimal point and divide at later stage to save program memory..
                  And talking about this, I should probably start a new thread talking about optimizations, There are some to be done in the mysensors-lib also..

                  YveauxY 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • DammeD Damme

                    @Yveaux The only comment i have to this lib now then I'm using it is that you should not use floats but int instead, and just have an imaginary decimal point and divide at later stage to save program memory..
                    And talking about this, I should probably start a new thread talking about optimizations, There are some to be done in the mysensors-lib also..

                    YveauxY Offline
                    YveauxY Offline
                    Yveaux
                    Mod
                    wrote on last edited by Yveaux
                    #61

                    @Damme I'm fully aware of the use of floating point and the penalties that come with it, don't worry.
                    But I just poored existing code into a library. I didn't put any effort in optimizing it.
                    Btw Arduino sketches tend to be very inefficient on resource usage, starting by using a 16 bit int type...

                    http://yveaux.blogspot.nl

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                    • RJ_MakeR Offline
                      RJ_MakeR Offline
                      RJ_Make
                      Hero Member
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #62

                      Thread Rival ... ;-)

                      So in trying to understand and improve battery life (currently using V div on Step Reg. Vin (VBatt) in my sensors, why can't I just measure the VCC on AO without the V div as VBAT will never exceed VCC,?

                      Trying to figure out what fundamental I'm missing here....

                      RJ_Make

                      YveauxY 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • RJ_MakeR RJ_Make

                        Thread Rival ... ;-)

                        So in trying to understand and improve battery life (currently using V div on Step Reg. Vin (VBatt) in my sensors, why can't I just measure the VCC on AO without the V div as VBAT will never exceed VCC,?

                        Trying to figure out what fundamental I'm missing here....

                        YveauxY Offline
                        YveauxY Offline
                        Yveaux
                        Mod
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #63

                        @ServiceXp So you want to connect VCC of the ATMega to ana analog input pin to read the supply level?
                        If this is your idea, then the ATMega will measure the voltage on an analog input relative to the supply voltage. If the supply voltage of the ATMega starts to drop, the relative voltage measured on the analog input will not change w.r.t. VCC.
                        By using a voltage divider you bring the voltage to be measured within 0,..,1.1V range (roughly). The ATMega has an internal 1.1V voltage reference which will remain stable when VCC drops, and thus can be used to meaure the supply level using a voltage divider.

                        http://yveaux.blogspot.nl

                        RJ_MakeR 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • YveauxY Yveaux

                          @ServiceXp So you want to connect VCC of the ATMega to ana analog input pin to read the supply level?
                          If this is your idea, then the ATMega will measure the voltage on an analog input relative to the supply voltage. If the supply voltage of the ATMega starts to drop, the relative voltage measured on the analog input will not change w.r.t. VCC.
                          By using a voltage divider you bring the voltage to be measured within 0,..,1.1V range (roughly). The ATMega has an internal 1.1V voltage reference which will remain stable when VCC drops, and thus can be used to meaure the supply level using a voltage divider.

                          RJ_MakeR Offline
                          RJ_MakeR Offline
                          RJ_Make
                          Hero Member
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #64

                          @Yveaux said:

                          @ServiceXp So you want to connect VCC of the ATMega to ana analog input pin to read the supply level?
                          If this is your idea, then the ATMega will measure the voltage on an analog input relative to the supply voltage. If the supply voltage of the ATMega starts to drop, the relative voltage measured on the analog input will not change w.r.t. VCC.
                          By using a voltage divider you bring the voltage to be measured within 0,..,1.1V range (roughly). The ATMega has an internal 1.1V voltage reference which will remain stable when VCC drops, and thus can be used to meaure the supply level using a voltage divider.

                          1. No; vBatt to AO; MCU will be powered by Step Up Reg. vOut.

                          2. The MCU supply voltage will never be lower then vBatt. (in the case of 2 AA Batteries). vBatt will always be lower then MCU VCC, In all reality MCU VCC will never change in a significant way, until Step Up Reg drops out.

                          3. think it's this v1.1 ref. that may be confusing me, but it just seems like this method should work with out the V div for sensors using 2 AA batteries or any <3.3v power source. ;-)

                          RJ_Make

                          YveauxY 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • RJ_MakeR RJ_Make

                            @Yveaux said:

                            @ServiceXp So you want to connect VCC of the ATMega to ana analog input pin to read the supply level?
                            If this is your idea, then the ATMega will measure the voltage on an analog input relative to the supply voltage. If the supply voltage of the ATMega starts to drop, the relative voltage measured on the analog input will not change w.r.t. VCC.
                            By using a voltage divider you bring the voltage to be measured within 0,..,1.1V range (roughly). The ATMega has an internal 1.1V voltage reference which will remain stable when VCC drops, and thus can be used to meaure the supply level using a voltage divider.

                            1. No; vBatt to AO; MCU will be powered by Step Up Reg. vOut.

                            2. The MCU supply voltage will never be lower then vBatt. (in the case of 2 AA Batteries). vBatt will always be lower then MCU VCC, In all reality MCU VCC will never change in a significant way, until Step Up Reg drops out.

                            3. think it's this v1.1 ref. that may be confusing me, but it just seems like this method should work with out the V div for sensors using 2 AA batteries or any <3.3v power source. ;-)

                            YveauxY Offline
                            YveauxY Offline
                            Yveaux
                            Mod
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #65

                            @ServiceXp OK, I didn't really get your description in the previous post them.
                            When VCC is stable due to to the step up converter then it should also work to just reference analog input to vcc. This way your measuring range is 0,..,vcc, which is a lot more then 0,..,1.1v

                            http://yveaux.blogspot.nl

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                            • Mark SwiftM Offline
                              Mark SwiftM Offline
                              Mark Swift
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #66

                              Thread revival.

                              I have a sensor powered by 2 AA batteries, does this still stand as a simple way to obtain their status? It was super easy to implement!

                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • ? Offline
                                ? Offline
                                A Former User
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #67

                                Would this library also work on a WEMOS D1, which is powered by a esp8266?

                                Paai

                                YveauxY 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • ? A Former User

                                  Would this library also work on a WEMOS D1, which is powered by a esp8266?

                                  Paai

                                  YveauxY Offline
                                  YveauxY Offline
                                  Yveaux
                                  Mod
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #68

                                  @Hans-Paijmans no, it's avr only

                                  http://yveaux.blogspot.nl

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                                  • mfalkviddM Offline
                                    mfalkviddM Offline
                                    mfalkvidd
                                    Mod
                                    wrote on last edited by mfalkvidd
                                    #69

                                    On esp, ESP.getVcc() can be used. More info: https://www.letscontrolit.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=130

                                    Edit: use MySensors' hwCPUVoltage() instead. See below for more information.

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                                    • MiKaM Offline
                                      MiKaM Offline
                                      MiKa
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #70

                                      Hi,
                                      possible to read also internal VCC for SAMD21 and NRF5 platform core?
                                      MiKa

                                      YveauxY mfalkviddM 2 Replies Last reply
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                                      • MiKaM MiKa

                                        Hi,
                                        possible to read also internal VCC for SAMD21 and NRF5 platform core?
                                        MiKa

                                        YveauxY Offline
                                        YveauxY Offline
                                        Yveaux
                                        Mod
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #71

                                        @MiKa no, it's avr only

                                        http://yveaux.blogspot.nl

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                                        • MiKaM MiKa

                                          Hi,
                                          possible to read also internal VCC for SAMD21 and NRF5 platform core?
                                          MiKa

                                          mfalkviddM Offline
                                          mfalkviddM Offline
                                          mfalkvidd
                                          Mod
                                          wrote on last edited by mfalkvidd
                                          #72

                                          @MiKa use hwCPUVoltage(), this works for AVR, SAMD and ESP8266. ESP8266 requires defining MY_SPECIAL_DEBUG though.

                                          MiKaM 1 Reply Last reply
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