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ISL6292
Data Sheet December 17, 2007 FN9105.9
Li-ion/Li Polymer Battery Charger
The ISL6292 is an integrated single-cell Li-ion or Li-polymer battery charger capable of operating with an input voltage as low as 2.4V. This charger is designed to work with various types of AC adapters or a USB port. The ISL6292 operates as a linear charger when the AC adapter is a voltage source. The battery is charged in a CC/CV (constant current/constant voltage) profile. The charge current is programmable with an external resistor up to 2A. The ISL6292 can also work with a current-limited adapter to minimize the thermal dissipation, in which case, the ISL6292 combines the benefits of both a linear charger and a pulse charger. The ISL6292 features charge current thermal foldback to guarantee safe operation when the printed circuit board is space limited for thermal dissipation. Additional features include preconditioning of an over-discharged battery, an NTC thermistor interface for charging the battery in a safe temperature range, automatic recharge, and thermally enhanced QFN or DFN packages.
Features
* Complete Charger for Single-Cell Li-ion Batteries * Very Low Thermal Dissipation * Integrated Pass Element and Current Sensor * No External Blocking Diode Required * 1% Voltage Accuracy * Programmable Current Limit up to 2A * Programmable End-of-Charge Current * Charge Current Thermal Foldback * NTC Thermistor Interface for Battery Temperature Monitor * Accepts Multiple Types of Adapters or USB BUS Power * Guaranteed to Operate at 2.65V After Start-Up * Ambient Temperature Range: -20C to +70C * Thermally-Enhanced QFN Packages * Handheld Devices, including Medical Handhelds * PDAs, Cell Phones and Smart Phones
Pinouts
ISL6292 (16 LD QFN) TOP VIEW
VBAT VBAT VIN VIN
* Portable Instruments, MP3 Players * Self-Charging Battery Packs * Stand-Alone Chargers * USB Bus-Powered Chargers
12 VBAT 11 TEMP 10 IMIN 9 IREF
16 15 14 13 VIN 1 FAULT 2 STATUS 3 TIME 4 5 GND 6 TOEN 7 EN 8 V2P8
* Pb-Free Available (RoHS Compliant)
Related Literature
* Technical Brief TB363 "Guidelines for Handling and Processing Moisture Sensitive Surface Mount Devices (SMDs)" * Technical Brief TB379 "Thermal Characterization of Packaged Semiconductor Devices" * Technical Brief TB389 "PCB Land Pattern Design and Surface Mount Guidelines for QFN Packages"
ISL6292 (10 LD DFN) TOP VIEW
VIN FAULT STATUS TIME GND 1 2 3 4 5 10 VBAT 9 8 7 6 TEMP IREF V2P8 EN
1
CAUTION: These devices are sensitive to electrostatic discharge; follow proper IC Handling Procedures. 1-888-INTERSIL or 1-888-468-3774 | Intersil (and design) is a registered trademark of Intersil Americas Inc. Copyright Intersil Americas Inc. 2003-2007. All Rights Reserved All other trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners.
ISL6292 Ordering Information
PART NUMBER ISL6292-1CR3* ISL6292-1CR3Z* (Note) ISL6292-2CR3* ISL6292-2CR3Z* (Note) ISL6292-1CR4* ISL6292-1CR4Z* (Note) ISL6292-2CR4* ISL6292-2CR4Z* (Note) ISL6292-1CR5* ISL6292-1CR5Z* (Note) ISL6292-2CR5* ISL6292-2CR5Z* (Note) ISL6292EVAL1Z ISL6292EVAL2 PART MARKING 92-1 921Z 92-2 922Z 629 2-1CR4 629 21CR4Z 629 2-2CR4 629 22CR4Z 629 2-1CR5 6292-1CR5Z 629 2-2CR5 6292-2CR5Z TEMP. RANGE (C) -20 to +70 -20 to +70 -20 to +70 -20 to +70 -20 to +70 -20 to +70 -20 to +70 -20 to +70 -20 to +70 -20 to +70 -20 to +70 -20 to +70 PACKAGE 10 Ld 3x3 DFN 10 Ld 3x3 DFN (Pb-free) 10 Ld 3x3 DFN 10 Ld 3x3 DFN (Pb-free) 16 Ld 4x4 QFN 16 Ld 4x4 QFN (Pb-free) 16 Ld 4x4 QFN 16 Ld 4x4 QFN (Pb-free) 16 Ld 5x5 QFN 16 Ld 5x5 QFN (Pb-free) 16 Ld 5x5 QFN 16 Ld 5x5 QFN (Pb-free) PKG. DWG. # L10.3x3 L10.3x3 L10.3x3 L10.3x3 L16.4x4 L16.4x4 L16.4x4 L16.4x4 L16.5x5B L16.5x5B L16.5x5B L16.5x5B
Evaluation Board for the 3x3 DFN Package Part Evaluation Board for the 4x4 QFN Package Part
*Add "-T" suffix for tape and reel. Please refer to TB347 for details on reel specifications. NOTE: These Intersil Pb-free plastic packaged products employ special Pb-free material sets; molding compounds/die attach materials and 100% matte tin plate PLUS ANNEAL - e3 termination finish, which is RoHS compliant and compatible with both SnPb and Pb-free soldering operations. Intersil Pb-free products are MSL classified at Pb-free peak reflow temperatures that meet or exceed the Pb-free requirements of IPC/JEDEC J STD-020.
2
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292
Absolute Maximum Ratings
Supply Voltage (VIN) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3V to 7V Output Pin Voltage (BAT). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3V to 5.5V Signal Input Voltage (TOEN, TIME, IREF, IMIN) . . . . . -0.3V to 3.2V Output Pin Voltage (STATUS, FAULT) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3V to 7V Charge Current (For 4x4 or 5x5 QFN Packages) . . . . . . . . . . . 2.1A Charge Current (For 3x3 DFN Package) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1.6A
Thermal Information
Thermal Resistance (Junction to Ambient) JA (C/W) JC (C/W) 5x5 QFN Package (Notes 1, 2) . . . . . . 34 4 4x4 QFN Package (Notes 1, 2) . . . . . . 41 4 3x3 DFN Package (Notes 1, 2) . . . . . . 46 4 Maximum Junction Temperature (Plastic Package) . . . . . . . +150C Maximum Storage Temperature Range . . . . . . . . . .-65C to +150C Pb-free reflow profile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .see link below http://www.intersil.com/pbfree/Pb-FreeReflow.asp
Recommended Operating Conditions
Ambient Temperature Range . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .-20C to +70C Supply Voltage, VIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.3V to 6.5V
CAUTION: Do not operate at or near the maximum ratings listed for extended periods of time. Exposure to such conditions may adversely impact product reliability and result in failures not covered by warranty.
NOTES: 1. JA is measured in free air with the component mounted on a high effective thermal conductivity test board with "direct attach" features. See Tech Brief TB379. 2. JC, "case temperature" location is at the center of the exposed metal pad on the package underside. See Tech Brief TB379.
Electrical Specifications
Typical values are tested at VIN = 5V and +25C Ambient Temperature, maximum and minimum values are guaranteed over 0C to +70C Ambient Temperature with a supply voltage in the range of 4.3V to 6.5V, unless otherwise noted. SYMBOL TEST CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS
PARAMETER POWER-ON RESET Rising VIN Threshold Falling VIN Threshold STANDBY CURRENT VBAT Pin Sink Current VIN Pin Supply Current VIN Pin Supply Current VOLTAGE REGULATION Output Voltage Output Voltage Dropout Voltage Dropout Voltage CHARGE CURRENT Constant Charge Current Trickle Charge Current Constant Charge Current Trickle Charge Current Constant Charge Current Trickle Charge Current End-of-Charge Threshold RECHARGE THRESHOLD Recharge Voltage Threshold Recharge Voltage Threshold
3.0 2.11
3.4 2.4
4.0 2.65
V V
ISTANDBY IVIN IVIN
VIN floating or EN = LOW VBAT floating and EN pulled low VBAT floating and EN floating
-
30 1
3.0 -
A A mA
VCH VCH
ISL6292-1 ISL6292-2 VBAT = 3.7V, 0.5A, 4x4 or 5x5 package VBAT = 3.7V, 0.5A, 3x3 package
4.059 4.158 -
4.10 4.20 140 175
4.141 4.242 -
V V mV mV
ICHARGE ITRICKLE ICHARGE ITRICKLE ICHARGE ITRICKLE
RIREF = 80k, VBAT = 3.7V RIREF = 80k, VBAT = 2.0V IREF Pin Voltage > 1.2V, VBAT = 3.7V IREF Pin Voltage > 1.2V, VBAT = 2.0V IREF Pin Voltage < 0.4V, VBAT = 3.7V IREF Pin Voltage < 0.4V, VBAT = 2.0V RIMIN = 80k
0.9 400 85
1.0 110 450 45 10 110
1.1 520 100 135
A mA mA mA mA mA mA
VRECHRG VRECHRG
ISL6292-2 ISL6292-1
-
4.0 3.90
-
V V
3
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292
Electrical Specifications
Typical values are tested at VIN = 5V and +25C Ambient Temperature, maximum and minimum values are guaranteed over 0C to +70C Ambient Temperature with a supply voltage in the range of 4.3V to 6.5V, unless otherwise noted. (Continued) SYMBOL TEST CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS
PARAMETER TRICKLE CHARGE THRESHOLD Trickle Charge Threshold Voltage TEMPERATURE MONITORING Low Battery Temperature Threshold High Battery Temperature Threshold Battery Removal Threshold Charge Current Foldback Threshold Current Foldback Gain OSCILLATOR Oscillation Period LOGIC INPUT AND OUTPUT TOEN Input High TOEN and EN Input Low IREF and IMIN Input High IREF and IMIN Input Low STATUS/FAULT Sink Current
VMIN
2.7
2.8
3.0
V
VTMIN VTMAX VRMV TFOLD GFOLD
V2P8 = 3.0V V2P8 = 3.0V V2P8 = 3.0V
1.45 0.36 85 -
1.51 0.38 2.25 100 100
1.57 0.40 115 -
V V V C mA/C
tOSC
CTIME = 15nF
2.4
3.0
3.6
ms
2.0 1.2 Pin Voltage = 0.8V 5
-
0.8 0.4 -
V V V V mA
Typical Operating Performance
4.2015 4.2010 4.2005 VBAT (V) 4.2000 RIREF = 40k
The test conditions for the Typical Operating Performance are: VIN = 5V, TA = +25C, RIREF = RIMIN = 80k, VBAT = 3.7V, Unless Otherwise Noted.
4.210 4.208 4.206 4.204 VBAT (V) 4.202 4.200 4.198 4.196 CHARGE CURRENT = 50mA
4.1995 4.1990 4.1985 4.1980 4.1975 0 0.3 0.6 0.9 1.2 1.5 CHARGE CURRENT (A)
4.194 4.192 4.190 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 TEMPERATURE (C)
FIGURE 1. CHARGER OUTPUT VOLTAGE vs CHARGE CURRENT
FIGURE 2. CHARGER OUTPUT VOLTAGE vs TEMPERATURE
4
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292 Typical Operating Performance
4.30 CHARGE CURRENT = 50mA CHARGE CURRENT (A) 4.25 VBAT (V)
The test conditions for the Typical Operating Performance are: VIN = 5V, TA = +25C, RIREF = RIMIN = 80k, VBAT = 3.7V, Unless Otherwise Noted. (Continued)
2.0 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 USB500 USB100 3.0 3.2 3.4 3.6 VBAT (V) 3.8 4.0 0.5A 1A 2A
1.5A
4.20
4.15
4.10 4.2
0 4.5 4.8 5.1 5.4 VIN (V) 5.7 6.0 6.3
FIGURE 3. CHARGER OUTPUT VOLTAGE vs INPUT VOLTAGE CHARGE CURRENT = 50mA
FIGURE 4. CHARGE CURRENT vs OUTPUT VOLTAGE
1.6 1.4 CHARGE CURRENT (A) 1.2 1.0 1.0A 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 TEMPERATURE (C) 0.5A 1.5A CHARGE CURRENT (A)
2.0 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 USB100 4.3 4.5 4.7 4.9 5.1 5.3 5.5 5.7 5.9 6.1 6.3 6.5 VIN (V) 0.5A USB500 1A 1.5A 2A
FIGURE 5. CHARGE CURRENT vs AMBIENT TEMPERATURE
FIGURE 6. CHARGE CURRENT vs INPUT VOLTAGE
2.930
3.00 2.95
V2P8 VOLTAGE (V)
2.928
V2P8 VOLTAGE (V)
V2P8 PIN LOADED WITH 2mA
2.90 2.85 2.80 2.75 2.70
2.926
2.924
2.922
2.920 3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0 VIN (V)
5.5
6.0
6.5
0
2
4
6
8
10
V2P8 LOAD CURRENT (mA)
FIGURE 7. V2P8 OUTPUT vs INPUT VOLTAGE
FIGURE 8. V2P8 OUTPUT vs ITS LOAD CURRENT
5
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292 Typical Operating Performance
700 650 600 550 rDS(ON) (m) rDS(ON) (m) 500 450 400 3x3 DFN 350 300 300 250 200 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 TEMPERATURE (C) 4x4 QFN 280 260 3.0 360 3x3 DFN 340 320 4x4 QFN THERMAL FOLDBACK STARTS NEAR +100C
The test conditions for the Typical Operating Performance are: VIN = 5V, TA = +25C, RIREF = RIMIN = 80k, VBAT = 3.7V, Unless Otherwise Noted. (Continued)
420 400 380 500mA CHARGE CURRENT, RIREF = 40k
3.2
3.4
3.6 VBAT (V)
3.8
4.0
FIGURE 9. rDS(ON) vs TEMPERATURE AT 3.7V OUTPUT
FIGURE 10. rDS(ON) vs OUTPUT VOLTAGE USING CURRENT LIMITED ADAPTERS
1.8 VBAT LEAKAGE CURRENT (A) VIN QUIESCENT CURRENT (A) 1.6 1.4 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0 20 40 60 80 100 120
50 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 TEMPERATURE (C) 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 EN = GND
TEMPERATURE (C)
FIGURE 11. REVERSE CURRENT vs TEMPERATURE
FIGURE 12. INPUT QUIESCENT CURRENT vs TEMPERATURE
32 VIN QUIESCENT CURRENT (mA) 30 VIN QUIESCENT CURRENT (A) 28 26 24 22 20 18 16 14 12 10 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0 5.5 6.0 6.5 EN = GND
1.10 1.05 1.00 0.95 0.90 0.85 0.80 4.3 BOTH VBAT AND EN PINS FLOATING
4.6
4.9
5.2
5.5
5.8
6.1
6.4
VIN (V)
VIN (V)
FIGURE 13. INPUT QUIESCENT CURRENT vs INPUT VOLTAGE WHEN SHUTDOWN
FIGURE 14. INPUT QUIESCENT CURRENT vs INPUT VOLTAGE WHEN NOT SHUTDOWN
6
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292 Typical Operating Performance
28 24 STATUS PIN CURRENT (mA) 20 16 12 8 4 0 0.0
The test conditions for the Typical Operating Performance are: VIN = 5V, TA = +25C, RIREF = RIMIN = 80k, VBAT = 3.7V, Unless Otherwise Noted. (Continued)
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
STATUS PIN VOLTAGE (V)
FIGURE 15. STATUS/FAULT PIN VOLTAGE vs CURRENT WHEN THE OPEN-DRAIN MOSFET TURNS ON
Pin Descriptions
VIN (Pin 1, 15, 16 for 4x4, 5x5; Pin 1 for 3x3)
VIN is the input power source. Connect to a wall adapter.
EN (Pin 7 for 4x4, 5x5; Pin 6 for 3x3)
EN is the enable logic input. Connect the EN pin to LOW to disable the charger or leave it floating to enable the charger.
FAULT (Pin 2)
FAULT is an open-drain output indicating fault status. This pin is pulled to LOW under any fault conditions.
V2P8 (Pin 8 for 4x4, 5x5; Pin 7 for 3x3)
This is a 2.8V reference voltage output. This pin outputs a 2.8V voltage source when the input voltage is above POR threshold and outputs zero otherwise. The V2P8 pin can be used as an indication for adapter presence.
STATUS (Pin 3)
STATUS is an open-drain output indicating charging and inhibit states. The STATUS pin is pulled LOW when the charger is charging a battery.
IREF (Pin 9 for 4x4, 5x5; Pin 8 for 3x3)
This is the programming input for the constant charging current.
Time (Pin 4)
The TIME pin determines the oscillation period by connecting a timing capacitor between this pin and GND. The oscillator also provides a time reference for the charger.
IMIN (Pin 10 for 4x4, 5x5; N/A for 3x3)
IMIN is the programmable input for the end-of-charge current.
GND (Pin 5)
GND is the connection to system ground.
TEMP (Pin 11 for 4x4, 5x5; Pin 9 for 3x3)
TEMP is the input for an external NTC thermistor. The TEMP pin is also used for battery removal detection.
TOEN (Pin 6 for 4x4, 5x5; N/A for 3x3)
TOEN is the TIMEOUT enable input pin. Pulling this pin to LOW disables the TIMEOUT charge-time limit for the fast charge modes. Leaving this pin HIGH or floating enables the TIMEOUT limit.
VBAT (Pin 12, 13, 14 for 4x4, 5x5; Pin 10 for 3x3)
VBAT is the connection to the battery. Typically a 10F Tantalum capacitor is needed for stability when there is no battery attached. When a battery is attached, only a 0.1F ceramic capacitor is required.
7
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292 Typical Applications
Typical Application Circuit For 4x4 or 5x5 QFN Package Options
5V Wall Adapter
VIN VBAT
1 F C1
1k R1 D1
TOEN
1k R2
1 F C2
V2P8
ISL6292
D2
FAULT STATUS E N V2P8 IREF IMIN TEMP
Battery Pack
RU
RT
T
1 F C3
TIME
GND
R IMIN 80 k
R IREF 80 k
C TIME 15nF
8
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292 Typical Applications (Continued)
Typical Application Circuit For 3x3 DFN Package Option
5V Wall Adapter
VIN VBA T
1 F C1
1k R1 D1
1k R2 D2
1 F C2
T
ISL6292
(3X3 DFN)
TEMP FAULT STATUS V2P8 E N TIME IREF GND
Battery Battery Pac Pack k
RT RU 1 F C3
C TIME 15nF
R IREF 80 k
VIN C1 Temperature Monitoring IT QSEN 100000:1 Current Mirror ISEN
QMAIN
VBAT
References VRECHRG VPOR VMIN VCH
V2P8
VIN
VBAT
Input_OK
+ VPOR + 100mV -
IREF RIREF IMIN RIMIN
IR Current References IMIN
+ CA CHRG + VA -
+ -
VCH + Trickle/Fast ISEN + V2P8 Under Temp LOGIC MIN_I
Recharge Minbat
VMIN + STATUS VRECHRG
STATUS
TEMP
NTC Interface
Over Temp Batt Removal FAULT FAULT
TOEN TIME GND OSC COUNTER Input_OK EN
NOTE: For the 3x3 DFN package, the TOEN pin is left floating and the IMIN pin is connected to the V2P8 pin internally. FIGURE 16. BLOCK PROGRAM
9
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292 Theory of Operation
The ISL6292 is an integrated charger for single-cell Li-ion or Li-polymer batteries. The ISL6292 functions as a traditional linear charger when powered with a voltage-source adapter. When powered with a current-limited adapter, the charger minimizes the thermal dissipation commonly seen in traditional linear chargers. As a linear charger, the ISL6292 charges a battery in the popular constant current (CC) and constant voltage (CV) profile. The constant charge current IREF is programmable up to 2A (1.5A for the 3x3 DFN package) with an external resistor or a logic input. The charge voltage VCH has 1% accuracy over the entire recommended operating condition range. The charger always preconditions the battery with 10% of the programmed current at the beginning of a charge cycle, until the battery voltage is verified to be above the minimum fast charge voltage, VMIN. This low-current preconditioning charge mode is named trickle mode. The verification takes 15 cycles of an internal oscillator whose period is programmable with the timing capacitor. A thermal-foldback feature removes the thermal concern typically seen in linear chargers. The charger reduces the charge current automatically as the IC internal temperature rises above +100C to prevent further temperature rise. The thermal-foldback feature guarantees safe operation when the printed circuit board (PCB) is space limited for thermal dissipation. A TEMP pin monitors the battery temperature to ensure a safe charging temperature range. The temperature range is programmable with an external negative temperature coefficient (NTC) thermistor. The TEMP pin is also used to detect the removal of the battery. The charger offers a safety timer for setting the fast charge time (TIMEOUT) limit to prevent charging a dead battery for an extensively long time. The TIMEOUT limit can be disabled as needed by the TOEN pin. The trickle mode is limited to 1/8 of TIMEOUT and cannot be disabled by the TOEN pin.
Trickle Mode Constant Current Mode Constant Voltage Mode Inhibit
The charger automatically re-charges the battery when the battery voltage drops below a recharge threshold. When the wall adapter is not present, the ISL6292 draws less than 1A current from the battery. Three indication pins are available from the charger to indicate the charge status. The V2P8 outputs a 2.8VDC voltage when the input voltage is above the power-on reset (POR) level and can be used as the power-present indication. This pin is capable of sourcing a 2mA current, so it can also be used to bias external circuits. The STATUS pin is an open-drain logic output that turns LOW at the beginning of a charge cycle until the end-of-charge (EOC) condition is qualified. The EOC condition is: the battery voltage rises above the recharge threshold and the charge current falls below a user-programmable EOC current threshold. Once the EOC condition is qualified, the STATUS output rises to HIGH and is latched. The latch is released at the beginning of a charge or re-charge cycle. The open-drain FAULT pin turns low when any fault conditions occur. The fault conditions include the external battery temperature fault, a charge time fault, or the battery removal. Figure 17 shows the typical charge curves in a traditional linear charger powered with a constant-voltage adapter. From top to bottom, the curves represent the constant input voltage, the battery voltage, the charge current and the power dissipation in the charger. The power dissipation PCH is given by Equation 1:
P CH = ( V IN -V BAT ) I CHARGE (EQ. 1)
where ICHARGE is the charge current. The maximum power dissipation occurs during the beginning of the CC mode. The maximum power the IC is capable of dissipating is dependent on the thermal impedance of the printed-circuit board (PCB). Figure 17 shows (with dotted lines) two cases that the charge currents are limited by the maximum power dissipation capability due to the thermal foldback.
Trickle Mode Constant Current Mode Constant Voltage Mode Inhibit
VIN VCH VMIN
Input Voltage Battery Voltage
VIN VCH VMIN
Input Voltage Battery Voltage
IREF Charge Current IREF/10 P1 P2 P3 Power Dissipation
IREF ILIM Charge Current IREF/10
P1 P2
TIMEOUT
Power Dissipation
TIMEOUT
FIGURE 17. TYPICAL CHARGE CURVES USING A CONSTANT-VOLTAGE ADAPTER
FIGURE 18. TYPICAL CHARGE CURVES USING A CURRENTLIMITED ADAPTER
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
10
ISL6292
When using a current-limited adapter, the thermal situation in the ISL6292 is totally different. Figure 18 shows the typical charge curves when a current-limited adapter is employed. The operation requires the IREF to be programmed higher than the limited current ILIM of the adapter, as shown in Figure 18. The key difference of the charger operating under such conditions occurs during the CC mode. The Block Diagram (Figure 16) aids in understanding the operation. The current loop consists of the current amplifier CA and the sense MOSFET QSEN. The current reference IR is programmed by the IREF pin. The current amplifier CA regulates the gate of the sense MOSFET QSEN so that the sensed current ISEN matches the reference current IR. The main MOSFET QMAIN and the sense MOSFET QSEN form a current mirror with a ratio of 100,000:1, that is, the output charge current is 100,000 times IR. In the CC mode, the current loop tries to increase the charge current by enhancing the sense MOSFET QSEN, so that the sensed current matches the reference current. On the other hand, the adapter current is limited, the actual output current will never meet what is required by the current reference. As a result, the current error amplifier CA keeps enhancing the QSEN as well as the main MOSFET QMAIN, until they are fully turned on. Therefore, the main MOSFET becomes a power switch instead of a linear regulation device. The power dissipation in the CC mode becomes Equation 2:
P CH = r DS ( ON ) I CHARGE
2
The two indication pins, STATUS and FAULT, indicate a LOW and a HIGH logic signal respectively. Figure 19 illustrates the start-up of the charger between t0 to t2. The ISL6292 has a typical rising POR threshold of 3.4V and a falling POR threshold of 2.4V. The 2.4V falling threshold guarantees charger operation with a current-limited adapter to minimize the thermal dissipation.
Charge Cycle
A charge cycle consists of three charge modes: trickle mode, constant current (CC) mode, and constant voltage (CV) mode. The charge cycle always starts with the trickle mode until the battery voltage stays above VMIN (2.8V typical) for 15 consecutive cycles of the internal oscillator. If the battery voltage drops below VMIN during the 15 cycles, the 15-cycle counter is reset and the charger stays in the trickle mode. The charger moves to the CC mode after verifying the battery voltage. As the battery-pack terminal voltage rises to the final charge voltage VCH, the CV mode begins. The terminal voltage is regulated at the constant VCH in the CV mode and the charge current is expected to decline. After the charge current drops below IMIN (programmable for the 4x4 and 5x5 package and programmed to 1/10 of IREF for the 3x3 package; see "End-of-Charge (EOC) Current" on page 13 for more detail), the ISL6292 indicates the end-of-charge (EOC) with the STATUS pin. The charging actually does not terminate until the internal timer completes its length of TIMEOUT in order to bring the battery to its full capacity. Signals in a charge cycle are illustrated in Figure 19 between points t2 to t5.
(EQ. 2)
where rDS(ON) is the resistance when the main MOSFET is fully turned on. This power is typically much less than the peak power in the traditional linear mode. The worst power dissipation when using a current-limited adapter typically occurs at the beginning of the CV mode, as shown in Figure 18. Equation 1 applies during the CV mode. When using a very small PCB whose thermal impedance is relatively large, it is possible that the internal temperature can still reach the thermal foldback threshold. In that case, the IC is thermally protected by lowering the charge current, as shown with the dotted lines in the charge current and power curves. Appropriate design of the adapter can further reduce the peak power dissipation of the ISL6292. See"Applications Information" on page 11 for more information. Figure 19 illustrates the typical signal waveforms for the linear charger from the power-up to a recharge cycle. More detailed Applications Information is given in the following.
VIN
POR Threshold
V2P8
Charge Cycle
Charge Cycle
STATUS
FAULT
15 Cycles to 1/8 TIMEOUT
VBAT
VRECHRG 2.8V VMIN IMIN
15 Cycles
ICHARGE t0 t1 t2 t3 t4 t5
t6 t7
t8
Applications Information
Power on Reset (POR)
The ISL6292 resets itself as the input voltage rises above the POR rising threshold. The V2P8 pin outputs a 2.8V voltage, the internal oscillator starts to oscillate, the internal timer is reset, and the charger begins to charge the battery.
FIGURE 19. OPERATION WAVEFORMS
11
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292
The following events initiate a new charge cycle: * POR, * a new battery being inserted (detected by TEMP pin), * the battery voltage drops below a recharge threshold after completing a charge cycle, * recovery from an battery over-temperature fault, * or, the EN pin is toggled from GND to floating. Further description of these events are given later in this data sheet.
Disabling TIMEOUT Limit
The TIMEOUT limit for the fast charge modes can be disabled by pulling the TOEN pin to LOW or shorting it to GND. When this happens, the charger becomes a current-limited LDO (low-dropout) supply with its voltage regulated at the final charge voltage VCH and the current limit determined by the IREF pin. If the LDO load current drops below the end-ofcharge current (refer to "End-of-Charge (EOC) Current" on page 13), the STATUS pin will indicate. The trickle charge time limit, however, is not disabled even when the TOEN pin is pulled to LOW. The charger operates in the trickle mode at the beginning of a charge cycle even if the TIMEOUT is disabled. Leaving the TOEN pin floating is recommended to enable the TIMEOUT. Driving the TOEN pin above 3.0V is not recommended.
Recharge
After a charge cycle completes, charging is prohibited until the battery voltage drops to a recharge threshold, VRECHRG (see "Electrical Specifications" on page 3). Then a new charge cycle starts at point t6 and ends at point t8, as shown in Figure 19. The safety timer is reset at t6.
Charge Current Programming
The charge current is programmed by the IREF pin. There are three ways to program the charge current: 1. Driving the IREF pin above 1.3V 2. Driving the IREF pin below 0.4V, 3. or using the RIREF as shown in "Typical Applications" on page 8. The voltage of IREF is regulated to a 0.8V reference voltage when not driven by any external source. The charging current during the constant current mode is 100,000 times that of the current in the RIREF resistor. Hence, depending on how IREF pin is used, the charge current is:
I REF = 500mA 5 0.8V ---------------- x 10 ( A ) R IREF 100mA V IREF > 1.3V R IREF V IREF < 0.4V (EQ. 5)
Internal Oscillator
The internal oscillator establishes a timing reference. The oscillation period is programmable with an external timing capacitor, CTIME, as shown in Typical Applications. The oscillator charges the timing capacitor to 1.5V and then discharges it to 0.5V in one period, both with 10A current. The period tOSC is:
t OSC = 0.2 10 C TIME
6
( sec onds ) (EQ. 3)
A 1nF capacitor results in a 0.2ms oscillation period. The accuracy of the period is mainly dependent on the accuracy of the capacitance and the internal current source.
Total Charge Time
The total charge time for the CC mode and CV mode is limited to a length of TIMEOUT. A 22-stage binary counter increments each oscillation period of the internal oscillator to set the TIMEOUT. The TIMEOUT can be calculated as:
TIMEOUT = 2
22
C TIME t OSC = 14 ----------------1nF
( minutes )
(EQ. 4)
The 500mA current is a guaranteed maximum value for the high-power USB port, with the typical value of 450mA. The 100mA current is also a guaranteed maximum value for the low-power USB port. This design accommodates the USB power specification. The internal reference voltage at the IREF pin is capable of sourcing less than 100A current. When pulling down the IREF pin with a logic circuit, the logic circuit needs to be able to sink at least 100A current. When the adapter is current limited, it is recommended that the reference current be programmed to at least 30% higher than the adapter current limit (which equals the charge current). In addition, the charge current should be at least 350mA so that the voltage difference between the VIN and the VBAT pins is higher than 100mV. The 100mV is the offset voltage of the input-output voltage comparator shown in the block diagram on page 9.
A 1nF capacitor leads to 14 minutes of TIMEOUT. For example, a 15nF capacitor sets the TIMEOUT to be 3.5 hours. The charger has to reach the end-of-charge condition before the TIMEOUT, otherwise, a TIMEOUT fault is issued. The TIMEOUT fault latches up the charger. There are two ways to release such a latch-up: either to recycle the input power, or toggle the EN pin to disable the charger and then enable it again. The trickle mode charge has a time limit of 1/8 TIMEOUT. If the battery voltage does not reach VMIN within this limit, a TIMEOUT fault is issued and the charger latches up. The charger stays in trickle mode for at least 15 cycles of the internal oscillator and, at most, 1/8 of TIMEOUT, as shown in Figure 19.
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FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292
End-of-Charge (EOC) Current
The end-of-charge current IMIN sets the level at which the charger starts to indicate the end of the charge with the STATUS pin, as shown in Figure 19. The charger actually does not terminate charging until the end of the TIMEOUT, as described in "Total Charge Time" on page 12. The IMIN is set in two ways, by connecting a resistor between the IMIN pin and ground, or by connecting the IMIN pin to the V2P8 pin. When programming with the resistor, the IMIN is set in Equation 6.
V REF 4 0.8V I MIN = 10000 ---------------- = ---------------- x10 ( A ) R IMIN R IMIN (EQ. 6)
2.8V Bias Voltage
The ISL6292 provides a 2.8V voltage for biasing the internal control and logic circuit. This voltage is also available for external circuits such as the NTC thermistor circuit. The maximum allowed external load is 2mA.
NTC Thermistor
The ISL6292 uses two comparators (CP2 and CP3) to form a window comparator, as shown in Figure 22. When the TEMP pin voltage is "out of the window," determined by the VTMIN and VTMAX, the ISL6292 stops charging and indicates a fault condition. When the temperature returns to the set range, the charger re-starts a charge cycle. The two MOSFETs, Q1 and Q2, produce hysteresis for both upper and lower thresholds. The temperature window is shown in Figure 21.
2.8V
where RIMIN is the resistor connected between the IMIN pin and the ground. When connected to the V2P8 pin, the IMIN is set to 1/10 of IREF, except when the IREF pin is shorted to GND. Under this exception, IMIN is 5mA. For the ISL6292 in the 3x3 DFN package, the IMIN pin is bonded internally to V2P8.
Charge Current Thermal Foldback
Over-heating is always a concern in a linear charger. The maximum power dissipation usually occurs at the beginning of a charge cycle when the battery voltage is at its minimum but the charge current is at its maximum. The charge current thermal foldback function in the ISL6292 frees users from the over-heating concern. Figure 20 shows the current signals at the summing node of the current error amplifier CA in the Block Diagram shown on page 9. IR is the reference and IT is the current from the Temperature Monitoring block. The IT has no impact on the charge current until the internal temperature reaches approximately +100C; then IT rises at a rate of 1A/C. When IT rises, the current control loop forces the sensed current ISEN to reduce at the same rate. As a mirrored current, the charge current is 100,000 times that of the sensed current and reduces at a rate of 100mA/C. For a charger with the constant charge current set at 1A, the charge current is reduced to zero when the internal temperature rises to +110C. The actual charge current settles between +100C to +110C.
IR
VTMIN (1.4V) VTMIN- (1.2V) TEMP Pin Voltage
VTMAX+ (0.406V) VTMAX (0.35V) 0V Under Temp Over Temp
FIGURE 21. CRITICAL VOLTAGE LEVELS FOR TEMP PIN
2.8V
V2P8 R1 40K
ISL6292
Battery Removal CP1
+
VRMV
R2 60K VTMIN To TEMP Pin R3 75K TEMP Q1
RU
Under Temp
CP2
+
IT
Over Temp
CP3 -
+
VTMAX Q2
R4 25K
RT
R5 4K
ISEN
GND
100OC
Temperature
FIGURE 22. THE INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL CIRCUIT FOR THE NTC INTERFACE
FIGURE 20. CURRENT SIGNALS AT THE AMPLIFIER CA INPUT
Usually the charge current should not drop below IMIN because of the thermal foldback. For some extreme cases (if that does happen) the charger does not indicate end-of-charge unless the battery voltage is already above the recharge threshold. 13
As the TEMP pin voltage rises from low and exceeds the 1.4V threshold, the under temperature signal rises and does not clear until the TEMP pin voltage falls below the 1.2V falling threshold. Similarly, the over-temperature signal is given when the TEMP pin voltage falls below the 0.35V threshold and does
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292
not clear until the voltage rises above 0.406V. The actual accuracy of the 2.8V is not important because all the thresholds and the TEMP pin voltage are ratios determined by the resistor dividers, as shown in Figure 22. The NTC thermistor is required to have a resistance ratio of 7:1 at the low and the high temperature limits, that is:
R COLD ------------------- = 7 R HOT (EQ. 7)
For applications that do not need to monitor the battery temperature, the NTC thermistor can be replaced with a regular resistor of a half value of the pull-up resistor RU. Another option is to connect the TEMP pin to the IREF pin that has a 0.8V output. With such connection, the IREF pin can no longer be programmed with logic inputs.
Battery Removal Detection
The ISL6292 assumes that the thermistor is co-packed with the battery and is removed together with the battery. When the charger senses a TEMP pin voltage that is 2.1V or higher, it assumes that the battery is removed. The battery removal detection circuit is also shown in Figure 22. When a battery is removed, a FAULT signal is indicated and charging is halted. When a battery is inserted again, a new charge cycle starts.
This is because at the low temperature limit, the TEMP pin voltage is 1.4V, which is 1/2 of the 2.8V bias. Thus:
R COLD = R U (EQ. 8)
where RU is the pull-up resistor as shown in Figure 22. On the other hand, at the high temperature limit the TEMP pin voltage is 0.35V, 1/8 of the 2.8V bias. Therefore:
RU R HOT = ------7 (EQ. 9)
Indications
The ISL6292 has three indications: the input presence, the charge status, and the fault indication. The input presence is indicated by the V2P8 pin while the other two indications are presented by the STATUS pin and FAULT pin respectively. Figure 23 shows the V2P8 pin voltage vs the input voltage. Table 2 summarizes the other two pins.
Various NTC thermistors are available for this application. Table 1 shows the resistance ratio and the negative temperature coefficient of the curve-1 NTC thermistor from Vishay (http://www.vishay.com) at various temperatures. The resistance at +3C is approximately seven times the resistance at +47C, which is shown in Equation 10:
R 3C ---------------- = 7 R 47C (EQ. 10)
3.4V 2.4V
Therefore, if +3C is the low temperature limit, then the high temperature limit is approximately +47C. The pull-up resistor RU can choose the same value as the resistance at +3C.
TABLE 1. RESISTANCE RATIO OF VISHAY'S CURVE-1 NTC TEMPERATURE (C) 0 3 5 25 45 47 50 RT/R25C 3.266 2.806 2.540 1.000 0.4368 0.4041 0.3602 NTC (%/C) 5.1 5.1 5.0 4.4 4.0 3.9 3.9
V2P8 VIN
2.8V
FIGURE 23. THE V2P8 PIN OUTPUT vs THE INPUT VOLTAGE AT THE VIN PIN. VERTICAL: 1V/DIV, HORIZONTAL: 100ms/DIV
Shutdown
The ISL6292 can be shutdown by pulling the EN pin to ground. When shut down, the charger draws typically less than 30A current from the input power and the 2.8V output at the V2P8 pin is also turned off. The EN pin needs to be driven with an open-drain or open-collector logic output, so that the EN pin is floating when the charger is enabled.
TABLE 2. STATUS INDICATIONS FAULT STATUS (EQ. 12) High High INDICATION Charge completed with no fault (Inhibit) or Standby
The temperature hysteresis can be estimated. At the low temperature, the hysteresis is approximately estimated in Equation 11:
1.4V-1.2V T hysLOW ------------------------------- 3 1.4V 0.051 ( C ) (EQ. 11)
where 0.051 is the NTC at +3C. Similarly, the high temperature hysteresis is estimated in Equation 12:
0.406V-0.35V T hysHIGH ------------------------------------- 4 0.35V 0.039 ( C )
where the 0.039 is the NTC at +47C.
*Both outputs are pulled up with external resistors.
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FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292
TABLE 2. STATUS INDICATIONS FAULT STATUS High Low Low High INDICATION Charging in one of the three modes Fault
Working with Current-Limited Adapter
As described earlier, the ISL6292 minimizes the thermal dissipation when running off a current-limited AC adapter, as shown in Figure 18. The thermal dissipation can be further reduced when the adapter is properly designed. The following demonstrates that the thermal dissipation can be minimized if the adapter output reaches the full-load output voltage (point B in Figure 24) before the battery pack voltage reaches the final charge voltage (4.1V or 4.2V). The assumptions for the following discussion are: the adapter current limit = 750mA, the battery pack equivalent resistance = 200m, and the charger ON-resistance is 350m. When charging in the constant-current region, the pass element in the charger is fully turned on. The charger is equivalent to the ON-resistance of the internal P-Channel MOSFET. The entire charging system is equivalent to the circuit shown in Figure 25A. The charge current is the constant current limit ILIM, and the adapter output voltage can be easily found out as calculated in Equation 13:
V Adapter = I LIM r DS ( ON ) + V PACK (EQ. 13)
*Both outputs are pulled up with external resistors.
Input and Output Capacitor Selection
Typically any type of capacitors can be used for the input and the output. Use of a 0.47F or higher value ceramic capacitor for the input is recommended. When the battery is attached to the charger, the output capacitor can be any ceramic type with the value higher than 0.1F. However, if there is a chance the charger will be used as an LDO linear regulator, a 10F tantalum capacitor is recommended.
Current-Limited Adapter
Figure 24 shows the ideal current-voltage characteristics of a current-limited adapter. VNL is the no-load adapter output voltage and VFL is the full load voltage at the current limit ILIM. Before its output current reaches the limit ILIM, the adapter presents the characteristics of a voltage source. The slope rO represents the output resistance of the voltage supply. For a well regulated supply, the output resistance can be very small, but some adapters naturally have a certain amount of output resistance. The adapter is equivalent to a current source when running in the constant-current region. Being a current source, its output voltage is dependent on the load, which, in this case, is the charger and the battery. As the battery is being charged, the adapter output rises from a lower voltage in the current-voltage characteristics curve, such as point A, to higher voltage until reaching the breaking point B, as shown in Figure 24. The adapter is equivalent to a voltage source with output resistance when running in the constant-voltage region; because of this characteristic. As the charge current drops, the adapter output moves from point B to point C, shown in Figure 24. The battery pack can be approximated as an ideal cell with a lumped-sum resistance in series, also shown in Figure 24. The ISL6292 charger sits between the adapter and the battery.
VNL VFL rO VNL ILIM A ILIM RPACK VCELL C rO = (VNL - VFL)/ILIM B VPACK
where VPACK is the battery pack voltage. The power dissipation in the charger is given in Equation 2, where ICHARGE = ILIM. A critical condition of the adapter design is that the adapter output reaches point B in Figure 24 at the same time as the battery pack voltage reaches the final charge voltage (4.1V or 4.2V), that is:
V Critical = I LIM r DS ( ON ) + V CH (EQ. 14)
For example, if the final charge voltage is 4.2V, the rDS(ON) is 350m, and the current limit ILIM is 750mA, the critical adapter full-load voltage is 4.4625V. When the above condition is true, the charger enters the constant-voltage mode simultaneously as the adapter exits the current-limit mode. The equivalent charging system is shown in Figure 25C. Since the charge current drops at a higher rate in the constant-voltage mode than the increase rate of the adapter voltage, the power dissipation decreases as the charge current decreases. Therefore, the worst case thermal dissipation occurs in the constant-current charge mode. Figure 25A shows the I-V curves of the adapter output, the battery pack voltage and the cell voltage during the charge. The 5.9V no-load voltage is just an example value higher than the full-load voltage. The cell voltage 4.05V uses the assumption that the pack resistance is 200m. Figure 26A illustrates the adapter voltage, battery pack voltage, the charge current and the power dissipation in the charger respectively in the time domain.
FIGURE 24. THE IDEAL I-V CHARACTERISTICS OF A CURRENT LIMITED ADAPTER
15
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292
Adapter VADAPTER Adapter VPACK rO VADAPTER
Adapter
Charger RDS(ON)
Charger RDS(ON) VPACK
Charger VADAPTER 4.2V DC Output I VPACK
rO
ILIM
I
VNL RPACK Battery Pack
I
VNL
RPACK Battery Pack
VCELL
RPACK Battery Pack
VCELL
VCELL
FIGURE 25A. THE EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT IN FIGURE 25B. THE EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT IN FIGURE 25C. THE EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT WHEN THE PACK VOLTAGE REACHES THE RESISTANCE-LIMIT THE CONSTANT CURRENT THE FINAL CHARGE VOLTAGE REGION REGION FIGURE 25. THE EQUIVALENT CIRCUIT OF THE CHARGING SYSTEM WORKING WITH CURRENT LIMITED ADAPTERS
If the battery pack voltage reaches 4.2V (or 4.1V) before the adapter reaches point B in Figure 24, a voltage step is expected at the adapter output when the pack voltage reaches the final charge voltage. As a result, the charger power dissipation is also expected to have a step rise. This case is shown in Figure 18 as well as Figure 27C. Under this condition, the worst case thermal dissipation in the charger happens when the charger enters the constant voltage mode. If the adapter voltage reaches the full-load voltage before the pack voltage reaches 4.2V (or 4.1V), the charger will experience the resistance-limit situation. In this situation, the ON-resistance of the charger is in series with the adapter output resistance. The equivalent circuit for the resistance-limit region is shown in Figure 25B. Eventually, the battery pack voltage will reach 4.2V (or 4.1V) because the adapter no-load voltage is higher than 4.2V (or 4.1V), then Figure 25C becomes the equivalent circuit until charging ends. In this case, the worst-case thermal dissipation also occurs in the constantcurrent charge mode. Figure 26B shows the I-V curves of the adapter output, the battery pack voltage and the cell voltage for the case VFL = 4V. In the case, the full-load voltage is lower than the final charge voltage (4.2V), but the charger is still able to fully charge the battery as long as the no-load voltage is above 4.2V. Figure 26B illustrates the adapter voltage, battery pack voltage, the charge current and the power dissipation in the charger respectively in the time domain. Based on the previous discussion, the worst-case power dissipation occurs during the constant-current charge mode if the adapter full-load voltage is lower than the critical voltage given in Equation 14. Even if that is not true, the power dissipation is still much less than the power dissipation in the traditional linear charger. Figures 28 and 29 are scope-captured waveforms to demonstrate the operation with a current-limited adapter. The waveforms in Figure 28 are the adapter output voltage (1V/div), the battery voltage (1V/div), and the charge current (200mA/div) respectively. The time scale is 1ks/div. The
adapter current is limited to 600mA and the charge current is programmed to 1A. Note that the voltage difference is only approximately 200mV and the adapter voltage tracks the battery voltage in the CC mode. Figure 28 also shows the resistance-limit mode before entering the CV mode.
5.9V
VADAPTER VPACK VCELL 4.4625V 4.2V 4.05V
4.2V
0.75A
FIGURE 26A.
VPACK VNL 4.2V VCELL VADAPTER 4.2V 4.0V 3.775V 3.625V
0.55A
0.75A
FIGURE 26B. FIGURE 26. THE I-V CHARACTERISTICS OF THE CHARGER WITH DIFFERENT CURRENT LIMITED ADAPTERS
Figure 29 shows the actual captured waveforms depicted in Figure 27C. The constant charge current is 750mA. A step in the adapter voltage during the transition from CC mode to CV mode is demonstrated.
16
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292
VIN VPACK
VIN
VPACK
VIN
VPACK
Charge Current Power TIME
Const. Cur Constant Voltage
Const. Cur Res Limit
Charge Current Power TIME
Constant Voltage
Charge Current Power TIME
Const. Cur Constant Voltage
FIGURE 27A.
FIGURE 27B.
FIGURE 27C.
FIGURE 27. THE OPERATING CURVES WITH THREE DIFFERENT CURRENT LIMITED ADAPTERS
IREF Programming Using Current-Limited Adapter
The ISL6292 has 10% tolerance for the charge current. Typically the current-limited adapter also has 10% tolerance. In order to guarantee proper operation, it is recommended that the nominal charge current be programmed at least 30% higher than the nominal current limit of the adapter.
CV Mode
Board Layout Recommendations
The ISL6292 internal thermal foldback function limits the charge current when the internal temperature reaches approximately +100C. In order to maximize the current capability, it is very important that the exposed pad under the package is properly soldered to the board and is connected to other layers through thermal vias. More thermal vias and more copper attached to the exposed pad usually result in better thermal performance. On the other hand, the number of vias is limited by the size of the pad. The exposed pads for the 5x5 and 4x4 QFN packages are able to have 9 and 5 vias respectively. The 3x3 DFN package allows 8 vias be placed in two rows. Since the pins on the 3x3 DFN package are on only two sides, as much top layer copper as possible should be connected to the exposed pad to minimize the thermal impedance. Refer to the ISL6292 evaluation boards for layout examples.
CC Mode
Resistance Limit Mode
FIGURE 28. SCOPE CAPTURED WAVEFORMS SHOWING THE THREE MODES
1h u or
FIGURE 29. SCOPE CAPTURED WAVEFORMS SHOWING THE CASE THAT THE FULL-LOAD ADAPTER VOLTAGE IS HIGHER THAN THE CRITICAL VOLTAGE
17
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292 Dual Flat No-Lead Plastic Package (DFN)
2X 0.15 C A A D 2X 0.15 C B
L10.3x3
10 LEAD DUAL FLAT NO-LEAD PLASTIC PACKAGE MILLIMETERS SYMBOL A A1 MIN 0.80 0.18 1.95 1.55 0.25 0.30 NOMINAL 0.90 0.20 REF 0.23 3.00 BSC 2.00 3.00 BSC 1.60 0.50 BSC 0.35 10 5 0.40 1.65 2.05 0.28 MAX 1.00 0.05 NOTES 5,8 7,8 7,8 8 2 3 Rev. 3 6/04 NOTES: 1. Dimensioning and tolerancing conform to ASME Y14.5-1994. 2. N is the number of terminals. 3. Nd refers to the number of terminals on D. 4. All dimensions are in millimeters. Angles are in degrees. 5. Dimension b applies to the metallized terminal and is measured between 0.15mm and 0.30mm from the terminal tip. 6. The configuration of the pin #1 identifier is optional, but must be located within the zone indicated. The pin #1 identifier may be either a mold or mark feature. 7. Dimensions D2 and E2 are for the exposed pads which provide improved electrical and thermal performance. 8. Nominal dimensions are provided to assist with PCB Land Pattern Design efforts, see Intersil Technical Brief TB389.
E 6 INDEX AREA TOP VIEW B
A3 b D D2 E E2
0.10 C
e k L
A 0.08 C C SEATING PLANE SIDE VIEW A3
N Nd
7 (DATUM B) 6 INDEX AREA (DATUM A) 1 2 D2
8
D2/2 NX k E2 E2/2
NX L N 8 N-1 NX b e (Nd-1)Xe REF. BOTTOM VIEW 5 0.10 M C A B
C L 0.415 NX (b) 5 SECTION "C-C" C NX b (A1) 0.200 L NX L e CC TERMINAL TIP
FOR ODD TERMINAL/SIDE
18
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292 Quad Flat No-Lead Plastic Package (QFN) Micro Lead Frame Plastic Package (MLFP)
L16.4x4
16 LEAD QUAD FLAT NO-LEAD PLASTIC PACKAGE (COMPLIANT TO JEDEC MO-220-VGGC ISSUE C) MILLIMETERS SYMBOL A A1 A2 A3 b D D1 D2 E E1 E2 e k L L1 N Nd Ne P 0.25 0.50 1.95 1.95 0.23 MIN 0.80 NOMINAL 0.90 0.20 REF 0.28 4.00 BSC 3.75 BSC 2.10 4.00 BSC 3.75 BSC 2.10 0.65 BSC 0.60 16 4 4 0.60 12 0.75 0.15 2.25 2.25 0.35 MAX 1.00 0.05 1.00 NOTES 9 9 5, 8 9 7, 8 9 7, 8 8 10 2 3 3 9 9 Rev. 5 5/04 NOTES: 1. Dimensioning and tolerancing conform to ASME Y14.5-1994. 2. N is the number of terminals. 3. Nd and Ne refer to the number of terminals on each D and E. 4. All dimensions are in millimeters. Angles are in degrees. 5. Dimension b applies to the metallized terminal and is measured between 0.15mm and 0.30mm from the terminal tip. 6. The configuration of the pin #1 identifier is optional, but must be located within the zone indicated. The pin #1 identifier may be either a mold or mark feature. 7. Dimensions D2 and E2 are for the exposed pads which provide improved electrical and thermal performance. 8. Nominal dimensions are provided to assist with PCB Land Pattern Design efforts, see Intersil Technical Brief TB389. 9. Features and dimensions A2, A3, D1, E1, P & are present when Anvil singulation method is used and not present for saw singulation. 10. Depending on the method of lead termination at the edge of the package, a maximum 0.15mm pull back (L1) maybe present. L minus L1 to be equal to or greater than 0.3mm.
19
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007
ISL6292 Quad Flat No-Lead Plastic Package (QFN) Micro Lead Frame Plastic Package (MLFP)
L16.5x5B
16 LEAD QUAD FLAT NO-LEAD PLASTIC PACKAGE (COMPLIANT TO JEDEC MO-220VHHB ISSUE C) MILLIMETERS SYMBOL A A1 A2 A3 b D D1 D2 E E1 E2 e k L L1 N Nd Ne P 0.25 0.35 2.95 2.95 0.28 MIN 0.80 NOMINAL 0.90 0.20 REF 0.33 5.00 BSC 4.75 BSC 3.10 5.00 BSC 4.75 BSC 3.10 0.80 BSC 0.60 16 4 4 0.60 12 0.75 0.15 3.25 3.25 0.40 MAX 1.00 0.05 1.00 NOTES 9 9 5, 8 9 7, 8 9 7, 8 8 10 2 3 3 9 9 Rev. 1 10/02 NOTES: 1. Dimensioning and tolerancing conform to ASME Y14.5-1994. 2. N is the number of terminals. 3. Nd and Ne refer to the number of terminals on each D and E. 4. All dimensions are in millimeters. Angles are in degrees. 5. Dimension b applies to the metallized terminal and is measured between 0.15mm and 0.30mm from the terminal tip. 6. The configuration of the pin #1 identifier is optional, but must be located within the zone indicated. The pin #1 identifier may be either a mold or mark feature. 7. Dimensions D2 and E2 are for the exposed pads which provide improved electrical and thermal performance. 8. Nominal dimensions are provided to assist with PCB Land Pattern Design efforts, see Intersil Technical Brief TB389. 9. Features and dimensions A2, A3, D1, E1, P & are present when Anvil singulation method is used and not present for saw singulation. 10. Depending on the method of lead termination at the edge of the package, a maximum 0.15mm pull back (L1) maybe present. L minus L1 to be equal to or greater than 0.3mm.
All Intersil U.S. products are manufactured, assembled and tested utilizing ISO9000 quality systems. Intersil Corporation's quality certifications can be viewed at www.intersil.com/design/quality
Intersil products are sold by description only. Intersil Corporation reserves the right to make changes in circuit design, software and/or specifications at any time without notice. Accordingly, the reader is cautioned to verify that data sheets are current before placing orders. Information furnished by Intersil is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by Intersil or its subsidiaries for its use; nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties which may result from its use. No license is granted by implication or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Intersil or its subsidiaries.
For information regarding Intersil Corporation and its products, see www.intersil.com 20
FN9105.9 December 17, 2007


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