The battery cabinet for base station is a special cabinet to provide uninterrupted power supply for communication base stations and related equipment, which can be placed with various types of lead-acid batteries or lithium iron phosphate batteries to provide power supply for base stations and related equipment to ensure continuous operation of base stations without interruption of services under extreme conditions, help customers to improve the comprehensive service capability of upgrading communication system platforms and meet customer needs.
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What is a multi-output power supply design?
Multiple output designs may also employ a complex regulation scheme which senses multiple outputs to control the feedback loop. Voice-over-Internet-Protocol (VoIP), Digital Subscriber Line (DSL), and Third-generation (3G) base stations all necessitate varying degrees of complexity in power supply design.
What types of power systems are used in communications infrastructure equipment?
Communications infrastructure equipment employs a variety of power system components. Power factor corrected (PFC) AC/DC power supplies with load sharing and redundancy (N+1) at the front-end feed dense, high efficiency DC/DC modules and point-of-load converters on the back-end.
What is a -48V back-up battery converter?
The -48V back-up battery converter is similar in construction and complexity to the single-output, high-power VoIP converter previously discussed. The power factor corrected (PFC) AC/DC produces the supply voltage for the 3G Base station's RF Power amplifier (typ. +27V) and the bus voltage for point-of-load converters.
A preferred power supply architecture for DSL applications is illustrated in Fig. 2. A push-pull converter is used to convert the 48V input voltage to +/-12V and to provide electrical isolation. Synchronous buck converters powered off of the +12V rail generate various low-voltage outputs.
Do VoIP converters need power supply circuit topologies?
VoIP converters generally require power supply circuit topologies that are performance-driven (highly efficient with minimal conducted line current), easy to use and cost-effective with a small footprint and low profile. A number of topologies can be designed to meet these requirements to some degree.
Selection criteria for the power supply topology in multi-output DSL converters include requirements for performance (high efficiency and tight load and line regulation), simplicity, low cost and a small footprint with a low profile. High performance is achieved by selecting the appropriate topology and control circuit.