Electrical – Help with decoupling capacitors not working

decoupling-capacitordesignpower supply

I am powering a SIM800 module which looks like this:
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This module is rated between 3.6v and 4.4v and can draw upto 2A.
I have this hooked up to a single 18650 LiON battery. According to the datasheet these are designed to run from this kind of battery. The problem I am having is that when it powers up, the moment it joins the GPRS network, the module will reset. This I presume is because of the extra power requirement as it joins the network. Reading the datasheet it suggests a decoupling network. At the moment I have it like this with the SIM800 next to the battery and the decoupling network off to the side.
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This doesnt seem to make any difference and the SIM800 just resets as soon as it joins the GPRS network. I am wondering if it should be like this with the network at the end of the decoupling capacitors or doesnt it make any difference? I have soldered this part so it's not easy to try this configuration so wanted to ask the question first. If it doesnt make any difference what am I doing wrong??
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If I have it hooked up to a bench power supply I get the same problem but if I push the voltage up to 4.3v it seems stable so I am sure my problem is with the decoupling somewhere.

Best Answer

This is a fairly typical problem for modern radios. If you check the datasheet, all their recommended power supplies contain a 330uF cap. The same datasheet says the module makes impulse loading of 2 A at 5 ms period.

Now consider this: 2 A at 4V is a 2 Ohms load. If you have just a 100uF cap, the RC is 2e-4 s, or 200 us. The load duration is 577 us. This means that your 100 uF capacitor will discharge nearly completely during the RF transmission pulse. Of course the feed from battery will somewhat help, but still... You need to increase the local bypass capacitance at least 10-fold, with low ESR caps, maybe several 100-uF ceramic caps, then you might make it work.