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Vishay - The Next Generation of Industry 4.0

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mouser.com/vishay / 9 ENYCAP and LoRa™ RF Transmission The equivalent series resistance (ESR) of ENYCAP devices was intensively tested for use in radio applications. The voltage drop across the capacitor is proportional to the ESR and the current. For example, it would be proportional with a 2.5W ESR per 1.4V cell for the 15F ENYCAP or 7.5W per 1.4V cell for the 4F version. Even the 4F/4.2V three-cell version, specified at a conservative 22.5W internal resistance in the datasheet, exhibits a voltage drop of only 0.7V at room temperature and pulse loading. Thus, an ESR of 5W can be calculated in the first 50ms. The measured currents on the 4.1V side were 80mA to 125mA; the IoT sensor contained a buck converter that converted to the best transceiver voltage. OOK, FSK, and LoRa™ burst were transmitted; after these the circuit waited to receive a response. The readily available V-Harvester reference board combines the TEMD5080X01 photovoltaic (PV) cell with the ENYCAP HVC196 4F/4.2V capacitor to build a platform for attaching Vishay's low-power optical proximity or ambient light sensors at the configurable interface, such as the VCNL36826/21, VEML6030/35, or a comparable device. These sensors consume around 2μA to 8μA by sampling every 300ms to 4.1s. Many of these sensors start running at 1.7V already. Figure 3: Testing of internal resistance (ESR). (Source: Vishay)

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