To further protect the external circuitry during a
prolonged over current condition, the LM5088-2 provides a current limit timer to
disable the switching regulator and provide a delay before restarting (hiccup mode).
The number of current limit events required to trigger the restart mode is
programmed by an external capacitor at the RES pin. During each PWM cycle, as shown
in Figure 7-8, the LM5088 either sinks current from or sources current into the RES capacitor.
If the emulated current ramp exceeds the 1.2-V current limit threshold, the present
PWM cycle is terminated and the LM5088 sources 50 µA into the RES pin capacitor
during the next PWM clock cycle. If a current limit event is not detected in a given
PWM cycle, the LM5088 disables the 50-µA source current and sinks 27 µA from the RES
pin capacitor during the next cycle. In an overload condition, the LM5088 protects
the converter with cycle-by-cycle current limiting until the voltage at RES pin
reaches 1.2 V. When RES reaches 1.2 V, a hiccup mode sequence is initiated as
follows:
- The SS capacitor is fully discharged.
- The RES capacitor is discharged with 1.2 µA
- Once the RES capacitor reaches 0.2 V, a normal soft-start sequence begins. This provides a time delay before restart.
- If the overload condition persists after restart, the cycle repeats.
- If the overload condition no longer exists after restart, the RES pin is held at ground by the 27-µA discharge current source and normal operation resumes.
The overload protection timer is very versatile and can be configured for the following modes of protection:
- Cycle-by-Cycle only: The hiccup mode can
be completely disabled by connecting the RES pin to GND. In this configuration,
the cycle-by-cycle protection limits the output current indefinitely and no
hiccup sequence occurs.
- Delayed Hiccup: Connecting a capacitor to
the RES pin provides a programmed number of cycle-by-cycle current limit events before
initiating a hiccup mode restart, as previously described. The advantage of this
configuration is that a short term overload does not cause a hiccup mode restart but
during extended overload conditions, the average dissipation of the power converter is
very low.
- Externally Controlled Hiccup: The RES pin
can also be used as an input. By externally driving the pin to a level greater than the
1.2-V hiccup threshold, the controller is forced into the delayed restart sequence. For
example, the external trigger for a delayed restart sequence could come from an
overtemperature protection or an output overvoltage sensor.