SLYY231A March   2024  – March 2024 BQ25171-Q1 , BQ25622 , BQ25638 , LMQ66430-Q1 , LMR36502 , TPS37-Q1 , TPS62903-Q1 , TPSM365R15

 

  1.   1
  2.   Overview
  3.   At a glance
  4.   The importance of nano-IQ in different power applications
  5.   Achieving nano IQ in industrial BMS monitors
  6.   Achieving nano IQ in automotive BMS monitors
    1.     Achieving nano IQ in industrial home automation chargers
  7.   Achieving nano IQ in automotive BMS chargers
  8.   Achieving nano IQ in voltage supervisors
  9.   Achieving nano IQ in industrial and personal electronics DC/DC converters
  10.   Achieving nano IQ in automotive DC/DC converters
  11.   Conclusion
  12.   References
  13.   Additional resources

Achieving nano IQ in voltage supervisors

In standby mode, automotive OEMs have a 100µA budget for all of the electronics sitting on the supply voltage rail, which could include supply supervisors, load switches, protection transient voltage suppression diodes and DC/DC converters. Nano-IQ levels in voltage supervisors can help automotive OEMs meet this system-level standby-mode IQ budget. While the standby IQ is lowered, the voltage supervisor device cannot relax its standby fault response time. Functional safety requirements specify the device’s fault response, characterized by the fault-tolerant time interval from detection to reporting a failure, to scale from the 100µs range to the sub-10µs range.

Conventional supply voltage supervisor solutions with a 1.5% threshold detection accuracy have used a configurable potential divider with discrete resistors on the printed circuit board (PCB). To reduce system IQ, the values of these discrete resistors need to be scaled up to several tens of megaohms. Since PCB designers do not typically add high-impedance sense-resistor ladders to their boards given area constraints, the resistor ladders are integrated onto the die of the TPS37-Q1 window supervisor. Low IQ becomes possible on the reference path by duty-cycling the voltage reference and storing the reference on a capacitor, and by constructing the internal sense-resistor ladder as a nonlinear resistor ladder reconfigured between a constant-resistance region into a constant-current region to create a very high-impedance sense ladder at higher voltages.

Wide-VIN window supervisors such as the TPS37-Q1 need to handle voltage swings between external high-voltage input and internal subregulated voltages. Dynamic circuits detect both rise and fall transitions to boost the performance of the level shifters between the external high voltage and internal regulated domains into a temporary turbo mode to improve system response times while still supporting low IQ.