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USB Port-Powered Li-Ion/Li-Polymer Battery Charging

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Application Note
136 KB (8 pages)
October 20, 2004
 

Scott Dearborn
Microchip Technology

The Universal Serial Bus (USB) allows many computer peripherals to be easily swapped without having to turn off the computer. Today, a variety of handheld, battery-operated peripherals provide USB ports to facilitate data transfer to and from a host computer. With the introduction of the new USB 2.0 specification, CD/DVD players, MP3 players, cameras, personal data assistants and even cell phones can transfer data at rates up to 480 Mbps. These peripherals are, in some instances, self-powered. As a result, many of these peripherals do not take full advantage of the USB port. Often overshadowed by the data interface is the power capability that a USB port provides. Microchip's MCP73853/55 and MCP73861 advanced, fully-integrated, single-cell Li-Ion/Li-Polymer charge-management devices allow these peripherals to utilize the full power of the USB port.

This application note describes how, with the MCP73853/55, harnessing the power of the USB port for battery charging becomes extremely simple.

 
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