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Things you can do with diodes

(lcamtuf.substack.com)
325 points zdw | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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Cymen ◴[] No.45806433[source]
Also missing solar heating from diodes:

> This topic seems to be broadly misunderstood. It is 100% verified fact by both myself and others (including university researchers) that diode strings can produce more heat (or watt-hours, BTU) from a given solar panel than a bare resistance element.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=42XIbHA9Dv0

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petermcneeley ◴[] No.45807086[source]
where is this 'extra' heating coming from?
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1. labcomputer ◴[] No.45807110{3}[source]
I suspect (didn't watch) it's just that a diode makes a crude MPPT tracker (since a PV array is just a bunch diodes arranged to collect photons at the P-N junctions). The benchmark is probably "non-variable resistor".
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2. Scoundreller ◴[] No.45808106[source]
my thought was that a diode removes all the current from its voltage drop (aka: why your LED will burn out if it gets uncontrolled current). A resistor will never remove all the current going through it.

Maybe we're saying the same thing in different ways.

3. Tuna-Fish ◴[] No.45811793[source]
You suspect correctly.

For people who don't know much about solar panels mystified about this:

Solar panels are not ideal voltage sources, their internal impendance varies depending on temperature and the amount of light falling on the panels. Because the point of maximum power in the circuit is achieved when the internal and external impendances are matched, a simple resistive circuit is inefficient and results in the panel converting less light into electricity. If you had a variable resistor, you could adjust it over the day to match the panel, but it is of course easier to use a semiconductor device that does this for you. Any halfway decent battery charger setup or PV inverter has one, but if you are building your own heating system, just stringing together a bunch of diodes might sound stupid, but totally works.