So how does it work. The circuit shows a half wave voltage doubler. During the negative half cycle of the sinusoidal input waveform, diode D1 is forward biased and conducts charging up the pump capacitor, C1 to the peak value of the input voltage, (Vp). Because there is no return path for capacitor C1 to discharge into,. By adding an additional single diode-capacitor stage to the half-wave voltage doubler circuit above, we can create another voltage multiplier circuit that increases its input voltage. The first voltage multiplier stage doubles the peak input voltage and the second stage doubles it again, giving a DC output equal to four times the peak voltage value (4Vp) of the sinusoidal input signal. Also, using large value.
It is in fact a improved capacitor filtration circuit (rectifier circuit) that tends to make a DC output voltage several times more than twice the AC peak input. Within this segment, we will be looking into full-wave voltage doubler, half-wave voltage doubler, voltage tripler last but not least quadrupler.
Voltage Multiplier Circuits are devices that are designed to generate an output voltage that is a multiple of the input voltage. They are often used to achieve higher voltage levels than older circuits that were developed in the past, especially in situations where efficiency and compact design are very critical.
Then we have seen that Voltage Multipliers are simple circuits made from diodes and capacitors that can increase the input voltage by two, three, or four times and by cascading together individual half or full stage multipliers in series to apply the desired DC voltage to a given load without the need for a step-up transformer.
How do you calculate a voltage multiplier circuit?
The actual output voltage will be Us = 2 x Vc - Uripple. When measured with a multimeter, the reading will be Us = 2 x Vc - Uripple/2 because the multimeter will add the average of the ripple voltage. The second circuit serves as the basis for all the voltage multiplier circuits that we will see later.
Through simulations and practical testing circuit, the circuit is tested. The CW voltage Multiplier circuit is found to be beneficial for our application of using this circuit as a substitute for the buck-boost circuit which was earlier used in Mosquito zapper rackets.
One alternative approach is to use a diode voltage multiplier circuit which increases or “steps-up” the voltage without the use of a transformer.