Thanks for the input again. Some more info:
Again, if you do not need the super high speed PWM, ignore everything else and just use the photo-voltaic directly between source and gate on the mosfet. No other parts needed anywhere. Just a resistor on the LED side of the photo-voltaic.
I saw someone mentioned PWM. I won't be doing any PWM, nor involve a micro in this project - just a basic on/off control straight from a comparator output when the battery drops below a certain value.....at least that's the plan. The idea is to prevent erratic behavior on the downstream devices when the voltage drops below a certain threshold and also prevent too deep a discharge.
Then:
What kind of a battery will you be using? Lead acid?
Yes, I'm planning on using 2 12v/20Ah SLAs in series, since I already have them on hand. I know SLAs are fairly resilient and can take some abuse with little to no risks, esp. when compared to LiIon cells, but I wouldn't want to abuse them and go ham on them either.
The
LM9061 also seems a viable option for driving the cut-off FET, all things considered.
As far as photovoltaics are concerned (whether on their own or in combination with a separate driver), during my searches I came across a
FDA217. I haven't done any deep dives into the datasheets to work out how it performs vs. the suggested
VOM121, but what the FDA has going for it is definitely the package: a DIP is MUCH more suited for my particular case, since I will be hand-assembling onto perfboard. I CAN technically botch-solder SMDs there as well somehow, but......y'know......
EDIT: I may be wrong after all.....the speed difference between the FDA and the VOM is significant and I suppose it's directly proportional to the output voltage each produces. 8.4v is a tad on the low side, but it's faster....makes sense.