SLVSFO2 July   2020  – MONTH  DRV8353M

PRODUCTION DATA  

  1. Features
  2. Applications
  3. Description
  4. Revision History
  5. Device Comparison Table
  6. Pin Configuration and Functions
    1.     Pin Functions—40-Pin DRV8353M Devices
  7. Absolute Maximum Ratings
  8. ESD Ratings
  9. Recommended Operating Conditions
  10. 10Thermal Information
  11. 11Electrical Characteristics
  12. 12SPI Timing Requirements
  13. 13Detailed Description
    1. 13.1 Overview
    2. 13.2 Functional Block Diagram
    3. 13.3 Feature Description
      1. 13.3.1 Three Phase Smart Gate Drivers
        1. 13.3.1.1 PWM Control Modes
          1. 13.3.1.1.1 6x PWM Mode (PWM_MODE = 00b or MODE Pin Tied to AGND)
          2. 13.3.1.1.2 3x PWM Mode (PWM_MODE = 01b or MODE Pin = 47 kΩ to AGND)
          3. 13.3.1.1.3 1x PWM Mode (PWM_MODE = 10b or MODE Pin = Hi-Z)
          4. 13.3.1.1.4 Independent PWM Mode (PWM_MODE = 11b or MODE Pin Tied to DVDD)
        2. 13.3.1.2 Device Interface Modes
          1. 13.3.1.2.1 Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI)
          2. 13.3.1.2.2 Hardware Interface
        3. 13.3.1.3 Gate Driver Voltage Supplies and Input Supply Configurations
        4. 13.3.1.4 Smart Gate Drive Architecture
          1. 13.3.1.4.1 IDRIVE: MOSFET Slew-Rate Control
          2. 13.3.1.4.2 TDRIVE: MOSFET Gate Drive Control
          3. 13.3.1.4.3 Propagation Delay
          4. 13.3.1.4.4 MOSFET VDS Monitors
          5. 13.3.1.4.5 VDRAIN Sense and Reference Pin
      2. 13.3.2 DVDD Linear Voltage Regulator
      3. 13.3.3 Pin Diagrams
      4. 13.3.4 Low-Side Current-Shunt Amplifiers
        1. 13.3.4.1 Bidirectional Current Sense Operation
        2. 13.3.4.2 Unidirectional Current Sense Operation (SPI only)
        3. 13.3.4.3 Amplifier Calibration Modes
        4. 13.3.4.4 MOSFET VDS Sense Mode (SPI Only)
      5. 13.3.5 Gate Driver Protective Circuits
        1. 13.3.5.1 VM Supply and VDRAIN Undervoltage Lockout (UVLO)
        2. 13.3.5.2 VCP Charge-Pump and VGLS Regulator Undervoltage Lockout (GDUV)
        3. 13.3.5.3 MOSFET VDS Overcurrent Protection (VDS_OCP)
          1. 13.3.5.3.1 VDS Latched Shutdown (OCP_MODE = 00b)
          2. 13.3.5.3.2 VDS Automatic Retry (OCP_MODE = 01b)
          3. 13.3.5.3.3 VDS Report Only (OCP_MODE = 10b)
          4. 13.3.5.3.4 VDS Disabled (OCP_MODE = 11b)
        4. 13.3.5.4 VSENSE Overcurrent Protection (SEN_OCP)
          1. 13.3.5.4.1 VSENSE Latched Shutdown (OCP_MODE = 00b)
          2. 13.3.5.4.2 VSENSE Automatic Retry (OCP_MODE = 01b)
          3. 13.3.5.4.3 VSENSE Report Only (OCP_MODE = 10b)
          4. 13.3.5.4.4 VSENSE Disabled (OCP_MODE = 11b or DIS_SEN = 1b)
        5. 13.3.5.5 Gate Driver Fault (GDF)
        6. 13.3.5.6 Overcurrent Soft Shutdown (OCP Soft)
        7. 13.3.5.7 Thermal Warning (OTW)
        8. 13.3.5.8 Thermal Shutdown (OTSD)
        9. 13.3.5.9 Fault Response Table
    4. 13.4 Device Functional Modes
      1. 13.4.1 Gate Driver Functional Modes
        1. 13.4.1.1 Sleep Mode
        2. 13.4.1.2 Operating Mode
        3. 13.4.1.3 Fault Reset (CLR_FLT or ENABLE Reset Pulse)
    5. 13.5 Programming
      1. 13.5.1 SPI Communication
        1. 13.5.1.1 SPI
          1. 13.5.1.1.1 SPI Format
    6. 13.6 Register Maps
      1. 13.6.1 Status Registers
        1. 13.6.1.1 Fault Status Register 1 (address = 0x00h)
        2. 13.6.1.2 Fault Status Register 2 (address = 0x01h)
      2. 13.6.2 Control Registers
        1. 13.6.2.1 Driver Control Register (address = 0x02h)
        2. 13.6.2.2 Gate Drive HS Register (address = 0x03h)
        3. 13.6.2.3 Gate Drive LS Register (address = 0x04h)
        4. 13.6.2.4 OCP Control Register (address = 0x05h)
        5. 13.6.2.5 CSA Control Register (address = 0x06h)
        6. 13.6.2.6 Driver Configuration Register (address = 0x07h)
  14. 14Application and Implementation
    1. 14.1 Application Information
    2. 14.2 Typical Application
      1. 14.2.1 Primary Application
        1. 14.2.1.1 Design Requirements
        2. 14.2.1.2 Detailed Design Procedure
          1. 14.2.1.2.1 External MOSFET Support
            1. 14.2.1.2.1.1 MOSFET Example
          2. 14.2.1.2.2 IDRIVE Configuration
            1. 14.2.1.2.2.1 IDRIVE Example
          3. 14.2.1.2.3 VDS Overcurrent Monitor Configuration
            1. 14.2.1.2.3.1 VDS Overcurrent Example
          4. 14.2.1.2.4 Sense-Amplifier Bidirectional Configuration
            1. 14.2.1.2.4.1 Sense-Amplifier Example
          5. 14.2.1.2.5 Single Supply Power Dissipation
          6. 14.2.1.2.6 Single Supply Power Dissipation Example
        3. 14.2.1.3 Application Curves
  15. 15Power Supply Recommendations
    1. 15.1 Bulk Capacitance Sizing
  16. 16Layout
    1. 16.1 Layout Guidelines
    2. 16.2 Layout Example
  17. 17Device and Documentation Support
    1. 17.1 Device Support
      1. 17.1.1 Device Nomenclature
    2. 17.2 Documentation Support
      1. 17.2.1 Related Documentation
    3. 17.3 Receiving Notification of Documentation Updates
    4. 17.4 Support Resources
    5. 17.5 Trademarks
    6. 17.6 Electrostatic Discharge Caution
    7. 17.7 Glossary
  18. 18Mechanical, Packaging, and Orderable Information

Package Options

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

Amplifier Calibration Modes

To minimize DC offset and drift over temperature, a DC calibration mode is provided and enabled through the SPI register (CSA_CAL_X). This option is not available on hardware interface devices. When the calibration setting is enabled the inputs to the amplifier are shorted and the load is disconnected. DC calibration can be done at any time, even when the half-bridges are operating. For the best results, do the DC calibration during the switching OFF period to decrease the potential noise impact to the amplifier. A diagram of the calibration mode is shown below. When a CSA_CAL_X bit is enabled, the corresponding amplifier goes to the calibration mode.

GUID-B8178D2C-E8F1-4868-A486-A80867D1DFF2-low.gifFigure 13-27 Amplifier Manual Calibration

In addition to the manual calibration method provided on the SPI devices versions, the DRV8353M family of devices provide an auto calibration feature on both the hardware and SPI device versions in order to minimize the amplifier input offset after power up and during run time to account for temperature and device variation.

Auto calibration occurs automatically on device power up for both the hardware and SPI device options. The power up auto calibration starts immediately after the VREF pin crosses the minimum operational VREF voltage. 50 us should be allowed for the power up auto calibration routine to complete after the VREF pin voltage crosses the minimum VREF operational voltage. The auto calibration functions by doing a trim routine of the amplifier to minimize the amplifier input offset. After this the amplifiers are ready for normal operation.

For the SPI device options, auto calibration can also be done again during run time by enabling the AUTO_CAL register setting. Auto calibration can then be commanded with the corresponding CSA_CAL_X register setting to rerun the auto calibration routine. During auto calibration all of the amplifiers will be configured for the max gain setting in order to improve the accuracy of the calibration routine.