SLLSFA9B July   2020  – June 2021 DRV8106-Q1

PRODUCTION DATA  

  1. Features
  2. Applications
  3. Descriptions
  4. Revision History
  5. Pin Configuration
    1.     DRV8106-Q1_RHB Package (VQFN) Pin Functions
  6. Specifications
    1. 6.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings
    2. 6.2 ESD Ratings
    3. 6.3 Recommended Operating Conditions
    4. 6.4 Thermal Information
    5. 6.5 Electrical Characteristics
    6. 6.6 Timing Requirements
    7. 6.7 Timing Diagrams
    8. 6.8 Typical Characteristics
  7. Detailed Description
    1. 7.1 Overview
    2. 7.2 Functional Block Diagram
    3. 7.3 Feature Description
      1. 7.3.1 External Components
      2. 7.3.2 Device Interface Variants
        1. 7.3.2.1 Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI)
        2. 7.3.2.2 Hardware (H/W)
      3. 7.3.3 Input PWM Modes
        1. 7.3.3.1 Half-Bridge Control
      4. 7.3.4 Smart Gate Driver
        1. 7.3.4.1 Functional Block Diagram
        2. 7.3.4.2 Slew Rate Control (IDRIVE)
        3. 7.3.4.3 Gate Drive State Machine (TDRIVE)
      5. 7.3.5 Doubler (Single-Stage) Charge Pump
      6. 7.3.6 Wide Common Mode Differential Current Shunt Amplifier
      7. 7.3.7 Pin Diagrams
        1. 7.3.7.1 Logic Level Input Pin (DRVOFF, IN1/EN, nHIZx, nSLEEP, nSCS, SCLK, SDI)
        2. 7.3.7.2 Logic Level Push Pull Output (SDO)
        3. 7.3.7.3 Logic Level Open Drain Output (nFAULT)
        4. 7.3.7.4 Quad-Level Input (GAIN)
        5. 7.3.7.5 Six-Level Input (IDRIVE, VDS)
      8. 7.3.8 Protection and Diagnostics
        1. 7.3.8.1  Gate Driver Disable and Enable (DRVOFF and EN_DRV)
        2. 7.3.8.2  Fault Reset (CLR_FLT)
        3. 7.3.8.3  DVDD Logic Supply Power on Reset (DVDD_POR)
        4. 7.3.8.4  PVDD Supply Undervoltage Monitor (PVDD_UV)
        5. 7.3.8.5  PVDD Supply Overvoltage Monitor (PVDD_OV)
        6. 7.3.8.6  VCP Charge Pump Undervoltage Lockout (VCP_UV)
        7. 7.3.8.7  MOSFET VDS Overcurrent Protection (VDS_OCP)
        8. 7.3.8.8  Gate Driver Fault (VGS_GDF)
        9. 7.3.8.9  Thermal Warning (OTW)
        10. 7.3.8.10 Thermal Shutdown (OTSD)
        11. 7.3.8.11 Offline Short Circuit and Open Load Detection (OOL and OSC)
        12. 7.3.8.12 Fault Detection and Response Summary Table
    4. 7.4 Device Function Modes
      1. 7.4.1 Inactive or Sleep State
      2. 7.4.2 Standby State
      3. 7.4.3 Operating State
    5. 7.5 Programming
      1. 7.5.1 SPI Interface
      2. 7.5.2 SPI Format
      3. 7.5.3 SPI Interface for Multiple Slaves
        1. 7.5.3.1 SPI Interface for Multiple Slaves in Daisy Chain
    6. 7.6 Register Maps
      1. 7.6.1 STATUS Registers
      2. 7.6.2 CONTROL Registers
  8. Application and Implementation
    1. 8.1 Application Information
    2. 8.2 Typical Application
      1. 8.2.1 Design Requirements
      2. 8.2.2 Detailed Design Procedure
        1. 8.2.2.1 Gate Driver Configuration
          1. 8.2.2.1.1 VCP Load Calculation Example
          2. 8.2.2.1.2 IDRIVE Calculation Example
        2. 8.2.2.2 Current Shunt Amplifier Configuration
        3. 8.2.2.3 Power Dissipation
      3. 8.2.3 Application Curves
  9. Power Supply Recommendations
    1. 9.1 Bulk Capacitance
  10. 10Layout
    1. 10.1 Layout Guidelines
    2. 10.2 Layout Example
  11. 11Device and Documentation Support
    1. 11.1 Documentation Support
      1. 11.1.1 Related Documentation
      2. 11.1.2 Receiving Notification of Documentation Updates
    2. 11.2 Support Resources
    3. 11.3 Trademarks
    4. 11.4 Electrostatic Discharge Caution
    5. 11.5 Glossary
  12. 12Mechanical, Packaging, and Orderable Information

Package Options

Refer to the PDF data sheet for device specific package drawings

Mechanical Data (Package|Pins)
  • RHB|32
Thermal pad, mechanical data (Package|Pins)
Orderable Information

Gate Drive State Machine (TDRIVE)

The TDRIVE component of the smart gate drive architecture is an integrated gate drive state machine that provides automatic dead time insertion, parasitic dV/dt gate coupling prevention, and MOSFET gate fault detection.

The first component of the TDRIVE state machine is an automatic dead time handshake. Dead time is the period of body diode conduction time between the switching of the external high-side and low-side MOSFET to prevent any cross conduction or shoot through. The DRV8106-Q1 uses VGS monitors to implement a break and then make dead time scheme by measuring the external MOSFET VGS voltage to determine when to properly enable the external MOSFETs. This scheme allows the gate driver to adjust the dead time for variations in the system such as temperature drift, aging, voltage fluctuations, and variation in the external MOSFET parameters. An additional fixed digital dead time (tDEAD_D) can be inserted if desired and is adjustable through the SPI registers.

The second component focuses on preventing parasitic dV/dt gate charge coupling. This is implemented by enabling a strong gate current pulldown (ISTRONG) whenever the opposite MOSFET in the half-bridge is switching. This feature helps remove parasitic charge that couples into the external MOSFET gate when the half-bridge switch node is rapidly slewing.

The third component implements a gate fault detection scheme to detect an issue with the gate voltage. This is used to detect pin-to-pin solder defects, a MOSFET gate failure, or a gate stuck high or stuck low voltage condition. This is done by using the VGS monitors to measure the gate voltage after the end of the tDRIVE time. If the gate voltage has not reached the proper threshold, the gate driver will report the corresponding fault condition. To ensure a false fault is not detected, a tDRIVE time should be selected that is longer than the time required to charge or discharge the MOSFET gate. The tDRIVE time does not impact the PWM minimum duration and will terminate early if another PWM command is received.

GUID-0CFF7359-EDBA-4480-ADA1-66279930A398-low.gifFigure 7-5 TDRIVE State Machine