Hi there!
I'm trying to use a XL6009-based boost converter (HW432) to charge a 2S LiPo. Input voltage is 5V, Output voltage is 8.4V fed into a BMS. When testing the circuit it does seem to work, but the boost converter gets way too hot way too quickly. (The XL6009 IC reaches 80°C in under a minute)
It is drawing 5V @ ~1.5A / ~7.5W from the 5V input, but only around 100mA at the output, which is the best hint I have to what is going wrong right now.
For measuring I have a mid-range multimeter, an IR thermometer and an old 20Mhz Oscilliscope available.
The best guesses I came up with:
- The BMS tries to draw too much current overloading the boost circuit. If so, how and where would I limit the current (before or after the boost circuit)? Since I am using a regular usb port as input, I assumed that would be the limiting factor before the boost converter.
- There is current flowing back from the LiPo cells into the boost converter, messing with the circuit. I tried to put a diode in place to rule that out, with no change in behavior.
Any ideas / solutions / help would be greatly appreciated.
Best regards
Jens aka Forsaken
PS: After a lot of digging I found multiple tests of the module concluding the module should be able to handle around 15W before requiring heatsinking/cooling, so that should not be the issue. e.g.: