I am powering a 5V microcontroller (arduino clone, atmega328p) using a 9V block and a buck converter.
Now I want to let the microcontroller occasionally measure the battery voltage, so I can get an idea of how full it is.
My first idea was to use a simple voltage divider:
I've chosen the resistor values so that:
the voltage at the measure output is < 1.1V, to be able to use the 1.1V internal reference of the atmega's ADC
R1 || R2 < 10kΩ, since the atmega datasheet says "The ADC is optimized for analog signals with an output impedance of approximately 10 kΩ or less"
This is great and all, but what bothers me is that this circuit will constantly draw ~100µA from the battery.
So, my next thought was to add a mosfet to the divider, to switch it on only while measuring:
This is obviously bad, because now when the mosfet is off, the ADC input sees the whole battery voltage.
To address that issue, I've added a second mosfet into the measure path:
This works, and it does not draw any current, except while measuring.
However, it's quite a few parts.
So I'm curious if anyone has an idea how to do this with just a single mosfet.
It seems to me like it should be possible, but I haven't figured out how.
Oh, and if I'm doing something stupid here, please tell me :)
increase the resistors by a factor of 100 or so and add a very small cap across the lower one. The cap inside the ADC is absolutely tiny, pF at best. So a 100nF cap would easily do the trick and supply the voltage as required.