In many power supplies, there's CV & CC indicators. What does they mean?
3 Answers
They are acronyms and stand for "Constant Voltage" or "Constant Current".
They usually are associated with a LED or an indicator of some kind, as you suggest. When you use a power supply you usually set the desired voltage and the maximum current. When you connect the load two things can happen:
- The load requires more current than the maximum you set
- The load requires at most the maximum current you set
In the first case the PSU become a current source: the current is limited to what you set and voltage drops accordingly, that's CC for you. In the second case what is costant is the voltage, so that's CV.
As an example, consider this case: you set the voltage at 10V and set the maximum current at 1A, then you hook up a load that is over \$10\Omega\$ . As you know that requires at most 1A, so the voltage is constant while the current can vary between 0A and 1A. If you then hook up a lower impedance load it would require a higher current, but now the current protection kicks in so the current is limited to 1A, and it is constant, while voltage varies between 10V and 0V.
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\$\begingroup\$ Thx, but I also got an OVP setting (over voltage protection). What does that do? When will the power cut-off? Although the name, does it also protects against 'over amps'? \$\endgroup\$ Dec 6, 2015 at 21:07
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\$\begingroup\$ The ovp is probably on the input and protects the psu from mains fluctuations \$\endgroup\$ Dec 6, 2015 at 22:05
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\$\begingroup\$ I can enable and disable OVP, that make no sense.What you mean is maybe just a fuse. It has also a fuse. \$\endgroup\$ Dec 7, 2015 at 13:48
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1\$\begingroup\$ Snap some good pictures and ask a new question then... \$\endgroup\$ Dec 7, 2015 at 15:25
"CV" stands for "constant voltage", and "CC" stands for "constant current". Most types of load need constant voltage to operate, so if the "CV" LED is lit, it means the PSU works fine with your load.
The PSU has a physical limit on how much current it can supply. If the load attempts to draw more, the PSU decreases the output voltage to keep the current consumed at its maximum, not beyond it. This mode is called "constant current". The PSU behaves as a current source, so that it changes its output voltage to keep its current constant.
Some types of rechargeable batteries require mixed mode charge, where the charge starts at constant current and finishes at constant voltage. Li-Ion ones are a good example. So the battery chargers designed for such batteries can have this kind of indication.
There is an excellent presentation on CC-CV by Maria Cortez of Texas Instruments with visuals, sound, and printed transcript that really helped me wrap my head around the concepts. (If you want to jump to the discussion, try starting at minute 1:37.)
https://training.ti.com/introduction-battery-management-part-3-li-ion-battery-charging