A6261 Protected LED Array Driver Features and Benefits Description Total LED drive current up to 400 mA Current shared equally up to 100 mA by up to 4 strings 6 to 50 V supply Low dropout voltage LED output short-to-ground and thermal protection Disable on open LED detection option Enable input for PWM control Current slew rate limit during PWM Current set by reference resistor Automotive K-temperature range (-40C to 150C) The A6261 is a linear, programmable current regulator providing up to 100 mA from each of four outputs to drive arrays of high brightness LEDs. The regulated LED current from each output, accurate to 5%, is set by a single reference resistor. Current matching in each string is better than 10% without the use of ballast resistors. Driving LEDs with constant current ensures safe operation with maximum possible light output. Output control is provided by an enable input, giving direct control for PWM applications. Outputs can be connected in parallel or left unused as required. Short detection is provided to protect the LEDs and the A6261 during a short-to-ground at any LED output pin. An open LED in any of the strings disables all outputs, but can be overridden. Shorted LED output pins or open LEDs are indicated by a fault flag. Packages 10-pin MSOP with exposed thermal pad (suffix LY) A temperature monitor is included to reduce the LED drive current if the chip temperature exceeds a thermal threshold. The device packages are a 10-pin MSOP (LY) and a 16-pin TSSOP (LP), both with exposed pad for enhanced thermal dissipation. They are lead (Pb) free, with 100% matte tin leadframe plating. 16-pin TSSOP with exposed thermal pad (suffix LP) Not to scale Typical Application Diagram + Power input VIN A6261 PWM dimming input EN LA1 FF LA2 IREF LA3 THTH LA4 GND - A6261A-DS, Rev. 6 A6261 Protected LED Array Driver Selection Guide Part Number Ambient Operating Temperature, TA (C) Packing A6261ELPTR-T A6261KLPTR-T -40 to 85 -40 to 125 4000 pieces per 13-in. reel 4000 pieces per 13-in. reel A6261KLYTR-T -40 to 125 4000 pieces per 13-in. reel Package 16-pin TSSOP with exposed thermal pad, 4.4 x 5 mm case 10-pin MSOP with exposed thermal pad, 3 x 3 mm case Absolute Maximum Ratings1 Characteristic Rating Unit -0.3 to 50 V Pin EN -0.3 to 50 V Pins LA[1:4] -0.3 to 50 V Pin FF -0.3 to 50 V Pins IREF, THTH -0.3 to 6.5 V Load Supply Voltage Symbol Ambient Operating Temperature Range2 TA Maximum Continuous Junction Temperature TJ(max) Transient Junction Temperature TtJ Storage Temperature Range Tstg 1With Notes VIN E temperature range -40 to 85 C K temperature range -40 to 125 C 150 C 175 C -55 to 150 C Over temperature event not exceeding 10 s, lifetime duration not exceeding 10 h, guaranteed by design characterization respect to GND. by power dissipation. 2Limited Thermal Characteristics*may require derating at maximum conditions, see application information Characteristic Symbol Test Conditions* LP package Package Thermal Resistance (Junction to Ambient) RJA LY package Package Thermal Resistance (Junction to Pad) Value Unit 34 C/W 43 C/W On 4-layer PCB based on JEDEC standard 48 C/W On 2-layer PCB with 2.5 in.2 of copper area each side 48 C/W 2 C/W On 4-layer PCB based on JEDEC standard On 2-layer PCB with 3.8 RJP in.2 of copper area each side *To be verified by characterization. Additional thermal information available on the Allegro(R) website. Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. 115 Northeast Cutoff Worcester, Massachusetts 01615-0036 U.S.A. 1.508.853.5000; www.allegromicro.com 2 A6261 Protected LED Array Driver Functional Block Diagram +V VIN Current Regulators Control Logic EN LA1 THTH IREF Temp Comp Temp Monitor Slew Limit LA2 LA3 Current Reference LA4 FF Fault Control RTH RREF PAD GND Pin-out Diagrams Terminal List Table Number NC 1 16 NC NC 2 15 NC Name LP THTH 3 14 FF EN 13 9 Enable FF 14 10 Fault output IREF 4 GND 5 PAD 13 EN 12 VIN LY Function LA1 6 11 LA4 GND 5 3 Ground reference LA2 7 10 LA3 IREF 4 2 Current reference NC 8 9 NC LA1 6 4 LED anode (+) connection 1 LA2 7 5 LED anode (+) connection 2 LA3 10 6 LED anode (+) connection 3 LA4 11 7 LED anode (+) connection 4 NC 1,2,8, 9,15,16 - No connection; connect to GND - - Exposed thermal pad LP Package 10 FF THTH 1 9 EN IREF 2 GND 3 PAD 8 VIN LA1 4 7 LA4 PAD LA2 5 6 LA3 THTH 3 1 Thermal threshold VIN 12 8 Supply LY Package Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. 115 Northeast Cutoff Worcester, Massachusetts 01615-0036 U.S.A. 1.508.853.5000; www.allegromicro.com 3 A6261 Protected LED Array Driver ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS1 Valid at TJ= -40C to 150C, VIN = 7 to 40 V, unless otherwise noted Characteristics Symbol Test Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Unit Supply and Reference VIN Functional Operating Range2 6 - 50 V - - 10 mA - 10 A 20 30 s VIN Quiescent Current IINQ LA[1:4] connected to VIN VIN Sleep Current IINS EN = GND, VIN = 16 V - Startup Time tON VIN > 7 V to ILA1 < -5 mA, RREF = 125 5 Current Regulation Reference Voltage Reference Current Ratio Current Accuracy3 Current Matching4 Output Current VIREF GH EILAx EIMLAx ILAx 0.7 mA < IREF < 8.8 mA 1.15 1.2 1.25 V ILAx / IREF - 12.5 - - -10 mA > ILAx > -100 mA -5 4 5 % -20 mA > ILAx > -100 mA, VLAx match to within 1 V - 5 10 % EN = high - GH x IREF - - -105 -100 -95 mA IREF = 8 mA, EN = high Maximum Output Current ILAxmax Minimum Drop-out Voltage VDO Output Disable Threshold VODIS Current Slew Time IREF = 9.2 mA, EN = high - - -110 mA VIN - VLAx , ILAx = -100 mA - - 800 mV VIN - VLAx , ILAx = -40 mA - - 660 mV VIN - VLAx 65 - 160 mV Current rising or falling between 10% and 90% 50 80 110 s - - 0.8 V Logic Inputs FF and EN Input Low Voltage Input High Voltage VIL VIH 2 - - V Input Hysteresis (EN pin) VIhys 150 350 - mV Pull-Down Resistor (EN pin) RPD - 50 - k Output Low Voltage (FF pin) VOL - - 0.4 V IOL = 1 mA Protection Short Detect Voltage VSCD Measured at LAx 1.2 - 1.8 V Short Circuit Source Current ISCS Short present LAx to GND -2 -0.8 -0.5 mA VSCR Measured at LAx Short Release Voltage - - 1.9 V Short Release Voltage Hysteresis VSChys VSCR - VSCD 200 - 500 mV Open Load Detect Voltage VOCD VIN - VLAx 170 - 450 mV Open Load Detect Delay tOCD - 2 - ms Thermal Monitor Activation Temperature TJM 95 115 130 C ISEN = 50% -3.5 -2.5 -1.5 %/C TJL TJ at ISEN = 25% 120 135 150 C Overtemperature Shutdown TJF Temperature increasing - 170 - C Overtemperature Hysteresis TJhys Recovery = TJF - TJhys - 15 - C Thermal Monitor Slope Thermal Monitor Low Current Temperature dISEN/dTJ TJ with ISEN = 90% 1For input and output current specifications, negative current is defined as coming out of (sourcing) the specified device pin. 2Function is correct but parameters are not guaranteed outside the general limits (7 to 40 V). 3When EN = high, E ILAx = 100 x [( | ILAx | x RREF / 15 ) -1], with ILAx in mA and RREF in k. 4E IMLA = 100 x max ( | ILAx- ILA(AV) | ) / ILA(AV) , where ILA(AV) is the average current of all active outputs. Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. 115 Northeast Cutoff Worcester, Massachusetts 01615-0036 U.S.A. 1.508.853.5000; www.allegromicro.com 4 A6261 Protected LED Array Driver Functional Description The A6261 is a linear current regulator that is designed to provide drive current and protection for parallel strings of series-connected high brightness LEDs. It provides up to four matched programmable current outputs, at up to 100 mA, with low minimum dropout voltages below the main supply voltage. For 12 V power net applications optimum performance is achieved when driving 4 strings of 1 to 3 LEDs, at currents up to 100 mA per string. The A6261 is specifically designed for use in applications where the LED current is controlled by a single logic input or a highside switched supply. In addition the A6261 disables all LEDs on detecting a single open LED. Current regulation is maintained and the LEDs protected during a short-to-ground at any point in the LED string. A short-to-ground on any regulator output terminal will disable that output and set the fault flag. An open load on any output will set the fault flag and disable all outputs. Remaining outputs can be re-enabled by pulling the fault flag output low. Individual outputs can be disabled by connecting the output to VIN. FF Open drain fault flag, used with an external pull-up resistor, to indicate open, short, or overtemperature conditions. FF is inactive when a fault is present. During an open load condition, FF can be pulled low to force the remaining outputs on. LED Current Level The LED current is controlled by four matching linear current regulators between the VIN pin and each of the LAx outputs. The basic equation that determines the nominal output current at each LAx pin is: Given EN = high, ILAx = 15 (1) RREF where ILAx is in mA and RREF is in k. The output current may be reduced from the set level by the thermal monitor circuit. Conversely the reference resistors may be calculated from: Integrated thermal management reduces the regulated current level at high internal junction temperatures to limit power dissipation. RREF = 15 ILAx where ILAx is in mA and RREF is in k. Pin Functions VIN Supply to the control circuit and current regulators. A small value ceramic bypass capacitor, typically 100 nF, should be connected from close to this pin to the GND pin. For example, where the required current is 90 mA the resistor value will be : GND Ground reference connection. Should be connected directly to the negative supply. EN Logic input to enable LED current output. This provides a direct on/off action and can be used for direct PWM control. IREF 1.2 V reference to set current reference. Connect resistor, RREF, to GND to set reference current. THTH Sets the thermal monitor threshold, TJM , where the output current starts to reduce with increasing temperature. Connecting THTH directly to GND will disable the thermal monitor function. LA[1:4] Current source connected to the anode of the first LED in each string. Connect directly to VIN to disable the respective output. In this document "LAx" indicates any one of the four outputs. (2) RREF = 15 = 167 90 These equations completely define the output currents with respect to the setting resistors. However, for further reference, a more detailed description of the internal reference current calculations is included below. It is important to note that because the A6261 is a linear regulator, the maximum regulated current is limited by the power dissipation and the thermal management in the application. All current calculations assume adequate heatsinking for the dissipated power. Thermal management is at least as important as the electrical design in all applications. In high current high ambient temperature applications the thermal management is the most important aspect of the systems design. The application section below provides further detail on thermal management and the associated limitations. Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. 115 Northeast Cutoff Worcester, Massachusetts 01615-0036 U.S.A. 1.508.853.5000; www.allegromicro.com 5 A6261 Operation with Fewer LED Strings or Higher Currents The A6261 may be configured to use fewer than four LED strings, either by connecting outputs together for higher currents, or by connecting the output directly to VIN to disable the regulator for that output. When a regulator is disabled it will not indicate an open load and will not affect the fault flag or the operation of the remaining regulator outputs. Protected LED Array Driver VIN A6261 LA1 LA2 LA3 LA4 Sleep Mode When EN is held low the A6261 will be in shutdown mode and all sections will be in a low power sleep mode. The input current will be typically less than 10 A. This means that the complete circuit, including LEDs, may remain connected to the power supply under all conditions. GND Safety Features The circuit includes several features to ensure safe operation and to protect the LEDs and the A6261: A6261 * The current regulators between VIN and each LAx output provide a natural current limit due to the regulation. * Each LAx output includes a short-to-ground detector that will disable the output to limit the dissipation. * An open circuit on any output will disable all outputs. * The thermal monitor reduces the regulated current as the temperature rises. * Thermal shutdown completely disables the outputs under extreme overtemperature conditions. Short Circuit Detection A short-to-ground on any LED cathode (figure 1A) will not result in a short fault condition. The current through the remaining LEDs will remain in regulation and the LEDs will be protected. Due to the difference in the voltage drop across the LEDs, as a result of the short the current matching in the A6261 may exceed the specified limits. Any LAx output that is pulled below the short detect voltage (figure 1B) will disable the regulator on that output and allow the fault flag, FF, to go high. A small current will be sourced from the disabled output to monitor the short and detect when it is removed. When the voltage at LAx rises above the short detect voltage the fault flag will be removed and the regulator re-enabled. A shorted LED (figure 1C) will not result in a short fault condition. The current through the remaining LEDs will remain in regulation and the LEDs will be protected. Due to the difference in the voltage drop across the LEDs, as a result of the short, the current matching in the A6261 may exceed the specified limits. A short between LEDs in different strings (figure 1D) will not result in a short fault condition. The current through the remain- A. Any LED cathode short-to-ground. Current remains regulated in non-shorted LEDs. Matching may be affected. FF is low. VIN LA1 LA2 LA3 LA4 B. Any LAx output short-to-ground. Shorted output is disabled. Other outputs remain active. FF is high. GND VIN A6261 LA1 LA2 LA3 LA4 C. Shorted LEDs. Current remains regulated. Matching may be affected. Only the shorted LED is inactive. FF is low. GND VIN A6261 D. Short between LEDs in different strings. Current remains regulated. Current is summed and shared by affected strings. Intensity match dependent on voltage binning. FF is low. LA1 LA2 LA3 LA4 GND Figure 1. Short circuit conditions. Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. 115 Northeast Cutoff Worcester, Massachusetts 01615-0036 U.S.A. 1.508.853.5000; www.allegromicro.com 6 A6261 Open Load Detection An open load condition is detected when the voltage across the regulator, VIN - VLAx , is less than the open load detect voltage, VOCD , but greater than the output disable threshold voltage, VODIS . When this condition is present for more than the open load detect time, tOCD , then all regulators will be disabled and the fault flag allowed to go high. The regulators will remain disabled until either the power is cycled off and on, the EN input is taken low then high, or the fault flag, FF, is pulled low. If the power is cycled or EN is pulsed low, the regulators will start in the enabled state, unless disabled by tying the output to VIN, and the open load detection timer will be reset. If the open load is still present the regulators will again be disabled after the open load detect time. Pulling the fault flag low will override the open load fault action and all enabled regulators will be switched on. This state will be maintained while the fault flag is held low. If the fault flag is allowed to go high the A6261 will return to the open load fault condition and will disable all regulators. Each of the four regulators includes a limiter to ensure that the output voltage will not rise higher than the output disable threshold voltage below VIN when driven by the regulator. This means that the voltage across the regulator will not be less than the output disable voltage, unless it is forced by connecting the LAx pin to VIN. However if a load becomes disconnected, the regulator will pull the LAx pin up to the limit, which will ensure that the voltage across the regulator, VIN - VLAx , is less than the open load detect voltage, VOCD . Note that an open load may also be detected if the sum of the forward voltages of the LEDs in a string is close to or greater than the supply voltage on VIN. Temperature Monitor A temperature monitor function, included in the A6261, reduces the LED current as the silicon junction temperature of the A6261 increases (see figure 2). By mounting the A6261 on the same thermal substrate as the LEDs, this feature can also be used to limit the dissipation of the LEDs. As the junction temperature of the A6261 increases, the regulated current level is reduced, reducing the dissipated power in the A6261 and in the LEDs. The current is reduced from the 100% level at typically 4% per degree Celsius until the point at which the current drops to 25% of the full value, defined at TJL . Above this temperature the current will continue to reduce at a lower rate until the temperature reaches the overtemperature shutdown threshold temperature, TJF. The temperature at which the current reduction begins can be adjusted by changing the voltage on the THTH pin. When THTH is left open the temperature at which the current reduction begins is defined as the thermal monitor activation temperature, TJM, and is specified, in the characteristics table, at the 90% current level. TJM will increase as the voltage at the THTH pin, VTHTH , is reduced and is defined as approximately: TJM = 1.46 -VTHTH (C) (3) 0.0039 A resistor connected between THTH and GND will reduce VTHTII and increase TJM. A resistor connected between THTH and a reference supply greater than 1 V will increase VTHTH and reduce TJM. 100 Relative Sense Current (%) ing LEDs will remain in regulation and the LEDs will be protected. The current will be summed and shared by the affected strings. Current matching in the strings will then depend on the LED forward voltage differences. Protected LED Array Driver 90 80 60 TJM 40 25 20 TJF TJL 0 70 130 90 110 Junction Temperature, TJ (C) 150 170 Figure 2. Temperature monitor current reduction. Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. 115 Northeast Cutoff Worcester, Massachusetts 01615-0036 U.S.A. 1.508.853.5000; www.allegromicro.com 7 A6261 Protected LED Array Driver Figure 3 shows how the nominal value of the thermal monitor activation temperature varies with the voltage at THTH and with either a pull-down resistor, RTH, to GND or with a pull-up resistor, RTH , to 3 V and to 5 V. Note that it is possible for the A6261 to transition rapidly between thermal shutdown and normal operation. This can happen if the thermal mass attached to the exposed thermal pad is small and TJM is increased to close to the shutdown temperature. The period of oscillation will depend on TJM , the dissipated power, the thermal mass of any heatsink present, and the ambient temperature. 1.2 200 1.1 150 RTH pull-down to GND 100 50 0 70 1.0 VTHTH 0.9 RTH pull-up to 3 V 80 VTHTH (V) RTH pull-up to 5 V RTH (k) In extreme cases, if the chip temperature exceeds the overtemperature limit, TJF , all regulators will be disabled. The temperature will continue to be monitored and the regulators re-activated when the temperature drops below the threshold provided by the specified hysteresis. 1.3 250 90 100 110 120 130 140 Thermal Monitor Activation Temperature, TJM (C) 0.8 150 Figure 3. TJM versus a pull-up or pull-down resistor, RTH, and VTHTH. Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. 115 Northeast Cutoff Worcester, Massachusetts 01615-0036 U.S.A. 1.508.853.5000; www.allegromicro.com 8 A6261 Protected LED Array Driver Application Information Power Dissipation The most critical design considerations when using a linear regulator such as the A6261 are the power produced internally as heat and the rate at which that heat can be dissipated. There are three sources of power dissipation in the A6261: Note that the voltage drop across the regulator, VREG , is always greater than the specified minimum drop-out voltage, VDO . The output current is regulated by making this voltage large enough to provide the voltage drop from the supply voltage to the total forward voltage of all LEDs in series, VLED . The total power dissipated in the A6261 is the sum of the quiescent power, the reference power, and the power in each of the four regulators: * The quiescent power to run the control circuits * The power in the reference circuit * The power due to the regulator voltage drop The elements relating to these dissipation sources are illustrated in figure 4. Quiescent Power The quiescent power is the product of the quiescent current, IINQ , and the supply voltage, VIN , and is not related to the regulated current. The quiescent power, PQ, is therefore defined as: PQ = VIN x IINQ (4) Reference Power The reference circuit draws the reference current from the supply and passes it through the reference resistor to ground. The reference current is 8% of the output current on any one active output. The reference circuit power is the product of the reference current and the difference between the supply voltage and the reference voltage, typically 1.2 V. The reference power, PREF , is therefore defined as: PREF = (VIN - VREF) x VREF RREF PDIS = PQ + PREF + PREGA + PREGB + PREGC + PREGD The power that is dissipated in each string of LEDs is: PLEDx = VLEDx x ILEDx (8) where x is A, B, C, or D, and VLEDx is the voltage across all LEDs in the string. VIN A6261 VREG ILAx LAx (5) Regulator Power In most application circuits the largest dissipation will be produced by the output current regulators. The power dissipated in each current regulator is simply the product of the output current and the voltage drop across the regulator. The total current regulator dissipation is the sum of the dissipation in each output regulator. The regulator power for each output is defined as: (7) VIN IREF IINQ VLED IREF VREF RREF GND PREGx = (VIN - VLEDx ) x ILEDx where x is 1, 2, 3, or 4. (6) Figure 4. Internal power dissipation sources. Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. 115 Northeast Cutoff Worcester, Massachusetts 01615-0036 U.S.A. 1.508.853.5000; www.allegromicro.com 9 A6261 Protected LED Array Driver Dissipation Limits There are two features limiting the power that can be dissipated by the A6261: thermal shutdown and thermal foldback. Thermal Shutdown If the thermal foldback feature is disabled by connecting the THTH pin to GND, or if the thermal resistance from the A6261 to the ambient environment is high, then the silicon temperature will rise to the thermal shutdown threshold and the current will be disabled. After the current is disabled the power dissipated will drop and the temperature will fall. When the temperature falls by the hysteresis of the thermal shutdown circuit, then the current will be re-enabled and the temperature will start to rise again. This cycle will repeat continuously until the ambient temperature drops or the A6261 is switched off. The period of this thermal shutdown cycle will depend on several electrical, mechanical, and thermal parameters and could be from a few milliseconds to a few seconds. Thermal Foldback If there is a good thermal connection to the A6261, then the thermal foldback feature will have time to act. This will limit the silicon temperature by reducing the regulated current and therefore the dissipation. If the thermal foldback feature did not affect LED current, the current would increase the power dissipation and therefore the silicon temperature. The thermal foldback feature reduces power in the A6261 in order to limit the temperature increase, as shown in figure 7. The figure shows the operation of the A6261 under the same conditions as figure 6. That is, 4 strings of 3 red LEDs, each string running at 50 mA with each LED forward voltage at 54 52 48 46 44 With thermal monitor 4 Strings VLED = 6.9 V ILED = 50 mA TA = 50C 42 40 14.0 14.5 15.0 15.5 16.0 Supply Voltage, VIN (V) 16.5 17.0 Figure 6. LED current versus Supply Voltage. 3.0 130 2.5 125 2.0 120 1.5 Without thermal monitor 50 TJ (C) Power Dissipation, PD (W) The thermal monitor will reduce the LED current as the temperature of the A6261 increases above the thermal monitor activation temperature, TJM , as shown in figure 6. The figure shows the operation of the A6261 with 4 strings of 3 red LEDs, each string running at 50 mA. The forward voltage of each LED is 2.3 V and the graph shows the current as the supply voltage increases from 14 to 17 V. As the supply voltage increases, without the thermal foldback feature, the current would remain at 50 mA, as shown by the dashed line. The solid line shows the resulting current decrease as the thermal foldback feature acts. ILED (mA) From these equations (and as illustrated in figure 5) it can be seen that, if the power in the A6261 is not limited, then it will increase as the supply voltage increases but the power in the LEDs will remain constant. 4 Strings VLED = 6.9 V ILED = 50 mA TA = 50C 115 Without thermal monitor With thermal monitor LED Power 110 1.0 A6261 Power 105 0.5 0 8 9 10 12 13 11 Supply Voltage, VIN (V) Figure 5. Power Dissipation versus Supply Voltage. 14 15 16 100 14.0 14.5 15.0 15.5 16.0 Supply Voltage, VIN (V) 16.5 17.0 Figure 7. Junction Temperature versus Supply Voltage. Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. 115 Northeast Cutoff Worcester, Massachusetts 01615-0036 U.S.A. 1.508.853.5000; www.allegromicro.com 10 A6261 Protected LED Array Driver 2.3 V. The graph shows the temperature as the supply voltage increases from 14 to 17 V. Without the thermal foldback feature the temperature would continue to increase up to the thermal shutdown temperature as shown by the dashed line. The solid line shows the effect of the thermal foldback function in limiting the temperature rise. Figures 6 and 7 show the thermal effects where the thermal resistance from the silicon to the ambient temperature is 40C/W. Thermal performance can be enhanced further by using a significant amount of thermal vias as described below. Thermal Dissipation The amount of heat that can pass from the silicon of the A6261 to the surrounding ambient environment depends on the thermal resistance of the structures connected to the A6261. The thermal resistance, RJA , is a measure of the temperature rise created by the power dissipated and is usually measured in degrees Celsius per watt (C/W). The temperature rise, T, is calculated from the power dissipated, PD , and the thermal resistance, RJA , as: T = PD x RJA * For minimum supply voltage the limiting factor is the maximum drop-out voltage of the regulator, where the difference between the load voltage and the supply is insufficient for the regulator to maintain control over the output current. Minimum Supply Limit: Regulator Saturation Voltage The supply voltage, VIN , is always the sum of the voltage drop across the high-side regulator, VREG , and the forward voltage of the LEDs in the string, VLED, as shown in figure 4. VLED is constant for a given current and does not vary with supply voltage. Therefore VREG provides the variable difference between VLED and VIN . VREG has a minimum value below which the regulator can no longer be guaranteed to maintain the output current within the specified accuracy. This level is defined as the regulator drop-out voltage, VDO. The minimum supply voltage, below which the LED current does not meet the specified accuracy, is therefore determined by the sum of the minimum drop-out voltage, VDO , and the forward voltage of the LEDs in the string, VLED . The supply voltage must (9) A thermal resistance from silicon to ambient, RJA , of approximately 30C/W (LP package) or 34C/W (LY package) can be achieved by mounting the A6261 on a standard FR4 double-sided printed circuit board (PCB) with a copper area of a few square inches on each side of the board under the A6261. Multiple thermal vias, as shown in figure 8, help to conduct the heat from the exposed pad of the A6261 to the copper on each side of the board. The thermal resistance can be reduced by using a metal substrate or by adding a heatsink. Supply Voltage Limits In some applications the available supply voltage can vary over a two-to-one range; for example, emergency lighting systems using battery backup. In such systems is it necessary to design the application circuit such that the system meets the required performance targets over a specified voltage range. To determine this range when using the A6261 there are two limiting conditions: * For maximum supply voltage the limiting factor is the power that can be dissipated from the regulator without exceeding the temperature at which the thermal foldback starts to reduce the output current below an acceptable level. Figure 8. Board via layout for thermal dissipation: (top) LP package (bottom) LY package. Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. 115 Northeast Cutoff Worcester, Massachusetts 01615-0036 U.S.A. 1.508.853.5000; www.allegromicro.com 11 A6261 Protected LED Array Driver always be greater than this value and the minimum specified supply voltage, that is: VIN > VDO + VLED, and VIN > VIN (min) + 12 V PWM high-side drive A6261 As an example, consider the configuration used in figures 6 and 7 above, namely 4 strings of 3 red LEDs, each string running at 50 mA, with each LED forward voltage at 2.3 V. The minimum supply voltage will be approximately: VIN(min) = 0.55 + (3 x 2.3) = 7.45 V Maximum Supply Limit: Thermal Limitation As described above, when the thermal monitor reaches the activation temperature, TJM (due to increased power dissipation as the supply voltage rises), the thermal foldback feature causes the output current to decrease. The maximum supply voltage is therefore defined as the voltage above which the LED current drops below the acceptable minimum. This can be estimated by determining the maximum power that can be dissipated before the internal (junction) temperature of the A6261 reaches TJM. Note that, if the thermal monitor circuit is disabled (by connecting the THTH pin to GND), then the maximum supply limit will be determined by the specified maximum continuous operating temperature, 150C. The maximum power dissipation is therefore defined as: PD(max) = T RJA VIN (10) EN LA1 FF LA2 IREF LA3 THTH LA4 GND - A. High brightness (HB) LED incandescent lamp replacement + 24 V VIN PWM dimming input Fault output A6261 EN FF IREF THTH (11) where T is difference between the thermal monitor activation temperature, TJM , of the A6261 and the maximum ambient temperature, TA(max), and RJA is the thermal resistance from the internal junctions in the silicon to the ambient environment. If minimum LED current is not a critical factor, then the maximum voltage is simply the absolute maximum specified in the parameter tables above. Application Examples GND - B. Higher voltage operation + 12 V VIN PWM dimming input In some filament bulb replacement applications the supply may be provided by a PWM-driven, high-side switch. The A6261 can be used in this application by simply connecting EN to VIN. If neither fault action nor fault reporting is required, then FF should be tied to ground. When power is applied there will be a short startup delay, tON , before the current starts to rise. The current rise time will be limited by the internal current slew rate control. The application circuit options in figure 9 show operation with a higher voltage supply and with combinations of outputs tied together and disabled. LA1 LA2 LA3 LA4 A6261 EN LA1 FF LA2 IREF LA3 THTH LA4 GND - C. Mix of output combinations Figure 9. Typical applications with various supply and output options. Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. 115 Northeast Cutoff Worcester, Massachusetts 01615-0036 U.S.A. 1.508.853.5000; www.allegromicro.com 12 A6261 Protected LED Array Driver Package LP, 16-Pin TSSOP with Exposed Thermal Pad 0.45 5.000.10 16 0.65 16 8 0 0.20 0.09 1.70 B 30.05 4.400.10 3.00 6.400.20 6.10 0.60 0.15 A 1 1.00 REF 2 30.05 0.25 BSC Branded Face 16X SEATING PLANE 0.10 C 0.30 0.19 C 3.00 C PCB Layout Reference View For Reference Only; not for tooling use (reference MO-153 ABT) Dimensions in millimeters Dimensions exclusive of mold flash, gate burrs, and dambar protrusions Exact case and lead configuration at supplier discretion within limits shown 1.20 MAX 0.65 BSC 1 2 SEATING PLANE GAUGE PLANE 0.15 0.00 A Terminal #1 mark area B Exposed thermal pad (bottom surface); dimensions may vary with device C Reference land pattern layout (reference IPC7351 SOP65P640X110-17M); All pads a minimum of 0.20 mm from all adjacent pads; adjust as necessary to meet application process requirements and PCB layout tolerances; when mounting on a multilayer PCB, thermal vias at the exposed thermal pad land can improve thermal dissipation (reference EIA/JEDEC Standard JESD51-5) Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. 115 Northeast Cutoff Worcester, Massachusetts 01615-0036 U.S.A. 1.508.853.5000; www.allegromicro.com 13 A6261 Protected LED Array Driver Package LY, 10-Pin MSOP with Exposed Thermal Pad 3.00 0.10 0 to 6 10 0.15 0.05 3.00 0.10 4.88 0.20 A 0.53 0.10 1 2 0.25 1.98 1 Seating Plane Gauge Plane 2 B For Reference Only; not for tooling use (reference JEDEC MO-187) Dimensions in millimeters Dimensions exclusive of mold flash, gate burrs, and dambar protrusions Exact case and lead configuration at supplier discretion within limits shown 1.73 A Terminal #1 mark area B Exposed thermal pad (bottom surface) 10 0.86 0.05 SEATING PLANE 0.27 0.18 0.50 REF 0.05 0.15 Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. 115 Northeast Cutoff Worcester, Massachusetts 01615-0036 U.S.A. 1.508.853.5000; www.allegromicro.com 14 A6261 Protected LED Array Driver Revision History Revision Revision Date Rev. 6 January 13, 2012 Description of Revision Update RJA Copyright (c)2009-2012, Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. reserves the right to make, from time to time, such departures from the detail specifications as may be required to permit improvements in the performance, reliability, or manufacturability of its products. Before placing an order, the user is cautioned to verify that the information being relied upon is current. Allegro's products are not to be used in life support devices or systems, if a failure of an Allegro product can reasonably be expected to cause the failure of that life support device or system, or to affect the safety or effectiveness of that device or system. The information included herein is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. assumes no responsibility for its use; nor for any infringement of patents or other rights of third parties which may result from its use. For the latest version of this document, visit our website: www.allegromicro.com Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. 115 Northeast Cutoff Worcester, Massachusetts 01615-0036 U.S.A. 1.508.853.5000; www.allegromicro.com 15