I needed to add a solar panel with 5Wp to a 12 V 2000 mAh battery. I found the following requirements:
- Small and simple
- Limit the voltage to 13,8 V
- When the solar cell does not deliver power, the reverse current from the battery should be < 100 µA
- The circuit itself should have low quiescent current
- The circuit should be able to handle 500 mA from the solar panel
I came up with a solution using a simple LDO linear regulator LT1129 as it states “No Reverse Output Current” in the datasheet. But this is only valid up to 6 V, so I have added an additional diode at the output to limit reverse current.
The size of the board is 35 mm x 25 mm. I approximated it to be able to handle 1 W of power dissipation. I did not populate electrolytic capacitors on the board.

When the battery is not fully charged and so the output is lower than 13,8 V, the power dissipated by the regulator is, in first order approximation, simply the dropout voltage times the charge current. For 500 mA this is about 170 mW. No problem.
But when the voltage of the charging battery has reached 13,8 V the input may go higher, while the output stays constant. Then, with a strong enough panel, the dissipated power could easily exceed 1 W. Here I have added an NTC glued on the SO8 package of the LDO regulator. When the temperature reaches 60°C the diode D2 starts to conduct and the output voltage is lowered by up to 2 V at 100 °C. A lower output voltage will decrease the charge current until a thermal steady state is reached.
This is a thermal image when dissipating about 0,8 W. The charge current has regulated to a value that heats up the circuit by a constant value.

It is a simple solution that works for my purpose quite nicely. I need it for powering beehive scales.
I thought it would be interesting to share because it is smaller than available solutions. Most of available solutions are switcher circuits, which are not needed for such low power panels while others are discrete circuits needing more space and have higher quiescent current.
The measured efficiency is about 70 % at 1 mA input current and about 95 % above 10 mA input current.
