Hello everyone,
I'm in need of some sort of charge circuit that takes a low-voltage high-current input (think something like a 6S 100C lithium battery, the kind that outputs ~25V at hundreds of amps) and uses this power input to charge a 400V 11000uF capacitor extremely quickly (i.e. under half a second). For safety I'd like to charge it to ~380 V or 800 J of energy.
If my math is correct, a 4A constant-current charge that cuts off at 400 V will be enough to charge one of these in approximately half a second (1600 W into 800 J in half a second). I highly doubt there's an off-the-shelf component that can even remotely do this.
For testing, I bought
this DC-DC boost converter, but it never rises above 3A of current even though it should be able to do 20. Not sure why, either I'm doing something wrong or the listing is wrong.
By the looks of it, I'm basically going to be building a DC-DC power supply, but I've never done anything like this. Is this even possible without spending thousands of dollars?
For what it's worth, I'm not opposed to doing anything shady. Ideas include putting a bunch of low-voltage constant current sources in series, or using constant-current AC LED drivers with a rectifier.