Inside most solar-powered garden lights is an ingenious little circuit comprising a rechargeable battery, solar cell,inductor, LED and a little IC that does all the magic: 1. when voltage is detected from the solar cell, the LED is off and the battery will charge 2. as the solar cell voltage drops off (gets dark), the chip runs a. I'm using an Energizer HR03with a nominal voltage of 1.2V. I bought a pack of 2 with a charger (which I hopefully don't need!): The inductance will determine the current available to drive the LED load. According to the QX5252 datasheet, indicative values are as follows for a. When the voltage generated by the solar cell falls below about 0.2V, the boost converter switches on. Here's the waveform of the. I've followed the typical application schematic from the datasheet:the circuit simply connects the solar cell and battery to their respective pins,.