Making a 5V DC Power Supply for Microcontroller: Possible Damage?

AI Thread Summary
Creating a 5V DC power supply for a microcontroller using a 220V to 15V transformer, followed by a capacitor and a 7805 regulator, raises concerns about potential damage to the microcontroller due to increased secondary current. The secondary current is influenced by the load resistance and the turns ratio of the transformer, with real-world factors like resistance losses affecting maximum output current. Safety measures are crucial in the design to prevent shock and fire hazards, especially when connecting to AC mains. Essential safety features should be included to meet standards for approval, even in hobby projects. Proper design considerations are necessary to ensure user safety and prevent circuit damage.
asad1111
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i want to make a 5v dc power supply for microcontroller i know how to make it i am going to use a 220v to 15v transformer and then by using capacitor and 7805 regulator ic i will convert it to 5v my question is as in transformer pout=pinput (ideally) by decresing the voltage from 220 to 15 the secondary current will increase can it damage the circuit(microcontroller[/SIZE])?
 
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Did you just neglect to mention the rectifer you will need between the transformer and the regulator?
 
Yes i forgot ofcouurse a bridge rectifier
 
asad1111 said:
i want to make a 5v dc power supply for microcontroller i know how to make it i am going to use a 220v to 15v transformer and then by using capacitor and 7805 regulator ic i will convert it to 5v my question is as in transformer pout=pinput (ideally) by decresing the voltage from 220 to 15 the secondary current will increase can it damage the circuit(microcontroller[/SIZE])?


The secondary current is defined by the secondary voltage and the secondary load resistance, not by the transformer turns ratio. The max secondary current that can be drawn is defined partially by the turns ratio.

BTW, you also did not mention the safety circuitry that you have included in the design and construction of your power supply. Without very specific safety measures and circuits, your power supply presents a shock and fire hazard.

Can you tell us what mandatory safety features you have included in your design?
 
berkeman said:
The max secondary current that can be drawn is defined partially by the turns ratio.
can you elaborate what partially means here and also what kind of safety equipment do you recommend?
 
asad1111 said:
can you elaborate what partially means here and also what kind of safety equipment do you recommend?

For an ideal transformer, the turns ratio and the max input primary current would dictate the max secondary current that could be drawn. For a real transformer, however, there are resistance losses in the windings and core losses that lower the potential max output current from that ideal number.

I'm not asking about safety "equipment", I'm asking about what design features are necessary in any equipment that connects to the AC mains, in order to help safeguard agains shock and fire hazards. What kinds of things would UL (in the United States) look for in your design if you submitted it for a safety approval? You need to include those things even in a hobby design, or you put yourself and other users of the power supply at risk...
 
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