I was just wondering if a piezoelectric igniter could be used to supply current to devises instead of batteries.
Example: The piezo is wired into a camera circuit board to supply some current instead of a battery.
Piezo question
- thespeedycicada
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no i dont think so.Its essentially static electricity so you might just fry the circuit.
- thespeedycicada
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i dont think the core youre talking about is plastic it might be the ceramic that creates the charge.
- jimmy101
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The core is ceramic or quartz, the only wires in a piezo are the ones that are connected to the top and bottom of the crystal. Smack the crystal and it generates a voltage across it's two ends.
It would be possible, but very inefficient, to use a typical piezo sparker to power a device. The output of a BBQ piezo is several KV at very low current. To get that down into a useable voltage range you would need a step down transformer (which is easy enough to do).
The voltage pulse from a BBQ piezo only last for something like 0.001 second. To make use of that short pulse you would need a way to save the energy (after you've stepped down the voltage with a transformer). So, connect it to a capacitor as the energy storage device.
So, lets see, a 100:1 step-down transformer and a 50V or so high capacitance cap (perhaps 100uF), click the piezo many times and measure the voltage that is built up on the cap.
Ooops, forgot one thing, the transformer will produce both a positive and negative voltage spike from the positive voltage spike of the piezo. So you need a diode in series between the transformer and cap to keep the negative spike from canceling out any voltage that the positive spike stored in the cap.
It would be possible, but very inefficient, to use a typical piezo sparker to power a device. The output of a BBQ piezo is several KV at very low current. To get that down into a useable voltage range you would need a step down transformer (which is easy enough to do).
The voltage pulse from a BBQ piezo only last for something like 0.001 second. To make use of that short pulse you would need a way to save the energy (after you've stepped down the voltage with a transformer). So, connect it to a capacitor as the energy storage device.
So, lets see, a 100:1 step-down transformer and a 50V or so high capacitance cap (perhaps 100uF), click the piezo many times and measure the voltage that is built up on the cap.
Ooops, forgot one thing, the transformer will produce both a positive and negative voltage spike from the positive voltage spike of the piezo. So you need a diode in series between the transformer and cap to keep the negative spike from canceling out any voltage that the positive spike stored in the cap.
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- paaiyan
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Basically, it ain't worth it.jimmy101 wrote:The core is ceramic or quartz, the only wires in a piezo are the ones that are connected to the top and bottom of the crystal. Smack the crystal and it generates a voltage across it's two ends.
It would be possible, but very inefficient, to use a typical piezo sparker to power a device. The output of a BBQ piezo is several KV at very low current. To get that down into a useable voltage range you would need a step down transformer (which is easy enough to do).
The voltage pulse from a BBQ piezo only last for something like 0.001 second. To make use of that short pulse you would need a way to save the energy (after you've stepped down the voltage with a transformer). So, connect it to a capacitor as the energy storage device.
So, lets see, a 100:1 step-down transformer and a 50V or so high capacitance cap (perhaps 100uF), click the piezo many times and measure the voltage that is built up on the cap.
Ooops, forgot one thing, the transformer will produce both a positive and negative voltage spike from the positive voltage spike of the piezo. So you need a diode in series between the transformer and cap to keep the negative spike from canceling out any voltage that the positive spike stored in the cap.
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On an unrelated note but you got me thinking, the mechanism that does the smacking could be lifted from the ignitor and used to smack open the schraders that I use to actuate my mini-pistons, hmmm...jimmy101 wrote:Smack the crystal and it generates a voltage across it's two ends.
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