PA343 PA343 PA343 High Voltage Power Operational Amplifier DESCRIPTION FEATURES The PA343 is a dual high voltage monolithic MOSFET operational amplifier achieving performance features previously found only in hybrid designs while increasing reliability. This approach provides a cost-effective solution to applications where multiple amplifiers are required. Inputs are protected from excessive common mode and differential mode voltages. The safe operating area (SOA) has no secondary breakdown limitations and can be observed with all type loads by choosing an appropriate current limiting resistor. External compensation provides the user flexibility in choosing optimum gain and bandwidth for the application. RoHS COMPLIANT SURFACE MOUNT PACKAGE MONOLITHIC MOS TECHNOLOGY LOW COST HIGH VOLTAGE OPERATION - 350V LOW QUIESCENT CURRENT TYP. - 2.2mA NO SECOND BREAKDOWN HIGH OUTPUT CURRENT - 120 mA PEAK APPLICATIONS TELEPHONE RING GENERATOR PIEZO ELECTRIC POSITIONING ELECTROSTATIC TRANSDUCER & DEFLECTION DEFORMABLE MIRROR FOCUSING The PA343DF is packaged in a 24 pin PSOP (JEDEC MO-166) package. The heatslug of the PA343DF package is isolated in excess of full supply voltage. FIGURE 1: Equivalent Schematic (one of 2 Channels) +VS Q1 Q2 Q3 C C1 Q4 CC2 +IN -IN Q5 Q7 Q8 Q9 D4 D1 D2 ILIM Q6 Q11 Q10 OUT Q13 D3 Q12 Q14 Q15 D5 -VS www.apexanalog.com PA343U Copyright (c) Apex Microtechnology, Inc. 2012 (All Rights Reserved) OCT 2012 1 PA343U REVB PA343 FIGURE 2. External Connections. * 1 +Vsa NC -Vsa 24 NC La COMPa RCL +INa + A COMPa CC * NC -INa - OUTa NC OUTb NC -INb COMPb - B +INb RCL COMPb + ILb CC NC * +Vsb -Vsb * For CC values, see graph on page 4. Note: CC must be rated for full supply voltage. * Supply bypassing required. See general Operating Considerations. 24-pin PSOP PACKAGE STYLE DF TYPICAL APPLICATION A single PA343 amplifier operates as a bridge driver for a piezo transducer providing a low cost 660 volt total drive capability. The RN CN network serves to raise the apparent gain of A2 at high frequencies. If RN is set equal to R the amplifiers can be compensated identically and will have matching bandwidths. See application note 20 for more details. R VIN 20R 20R 20R +175 +175 10pF A PA343 R CL 47 -175 10pF R CL B PA343 PIEZO TRANSDUCER 47 RN CN -175 FIGURE 3. Low Cost 660v p-p Piezo Drive 2 PA343U PA343 1. CHARACTERISTICS AND SPECIFICATIONS ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS Parameter Symbol Min Max Units 350 V OUTPUT CURRENT, continuous within SOA 60 mA OUTPUT CURRENT, peak 120 mA POWER DISSIPATION, continuous @ TC = 25C 12 W SUPPLY VOLTAGE, +VS to -VS INPUT VOLTAGE, differential -16 +16 V INPUT VOLTAGE, common mode -VS +VS V 220 C TEMPERATURE, pin solder - 10 sec TEMPERATURE, junction (Note 2) 150 C TEMPERATURE, storage -65 150 C TEMPERATURE RANGE, powered (case) -40 125 C SPECIFICATIONS (PER AMPLIFIER) Parameter Test Conditions (Note 1) Min Typ Max Units OFFSET VOLTAGE, initial 12 40 mV OFFSET VOLTAGE, vs. temperature 25C to 85C (Note 3) 17 250 V/C OFFSET VOLTAGE, vs. temperature -25C to 25C (Note 3) 18 500 V/C OFFSET VOLTAGE, vs. supply 4.5 OFFSET VOLTAGE, vs. time 80 BIAS CURRENT, initial 50 BIAS CURRENT, vs. supply 2 INPUT OFFSET CURRENT, initial 50 INPUT IMPEDANCE, DC INPUT CAPACITANCE V/V V/kh 200 pA pA/V 200 pA 1011 3 pF COMMON MODE, voltage range +VS - 12 V COMMON MODE, voltage range -VS + 12 V COMMON MODE REJECTION, DC VCM = 90VDC NOISE, broad band 10kHz BW, RS = 1K 84 115 dB 337 V RMS GAIN OPEN LOOP at 15Hz RL = 5K 103 dB GAIN BANDWIDTH PRODUCT @1MHz 10 MHz POWER BANDWIDTH 280V p-p 35 kHz PA343U 90 3 PA343 Parameter Test Conditions (Note 1) Min Typ VS - 12 VS - 10 Max Units OUTPUT VOLTAGE SWING IO = 40mA V CURRENT, peak (Note 3) 120 mA CURRENT, continuous 60 mA SETTLING TIME to 0.1% 10V step, A V = -10 2 s SLEW RATE CC = 4.7pF 32 V/S RESISTANCE, 10mA (Note 4) RCL = 0 91 RESISTANCE, 40mA (Note 4) RCL = 0 65 POWER SUPPLY VOLTAGE 10 CURRENT, quiescent 150 175 V 2.2 2.5 mA THERMAL RESISTANCE, junction to case AC, single amplifier F > 60Hz 6 7 C/W DC, single amplifier F < 60Hz 9 11 C/W AC, both amplifier (Note 5) 3.3 4.0 C/W DC, both amplifier (Note 5) 5.0 6.0 C/W RESISTANCE, junction to air Full temperature range (Note 6) 25 TEMPERATURE RANGE, case NOTES: -25 +85 C 1. Unless otherwise noted TC = 25C, CC = 6.8pF. DC input specifications are value given. Power supply voltage is typical rating. 2. Long term operation at the maximum junction temperature will result in reduced product life. Derate internal power dissipation to achieve high MTTF. For guidance, refer to heatsink data sheet. 3. Guaranteed but not tested. 4. The selected value of RCL must be added to the values given for total output resistance. 5. Rating applies when power dissipation is equal in the two amplifiers. 6. Rating applies with solder connection of heatslug to a minimum 1in2 foil area of the printed circuit board. CAUTION 4 Meets full range specifications C/W The PA340 is constructed from MOSFET transistors. ESD handling procedures must be observed. PA343U PA343 Both Amplifiers Single Amplifier 20 0.80 0.75 15 VBE+ 0.70 T = TC 0.65 5 0 T = TA 0.60 T = TA 0.55 0 20 40 60 80 TEMPERATURE, T (C) 0.50 -40 -20 100 PHASE, () 60 2.2pF 6.8pF 40 2.2pF 6.8pF -140 -150 68pF 15pF -160 0 -170 -20 10 10 -110 -130 15pF 20 0.75pF -120 100 1K 10K 100K 1M 10M FREQUENCY, F (Hz) -180 10K 100K 1M FREQUENCY, F (Hz) HARMONIC DISTORTION 10M SLEW RATE A V = 20 C C = 15pF R L = 2K 1K 10K FREQUENCY, F (Hz) 80 60 40 20 0 10 PA343U 100 1K 10K FREQUENCY, F (Hz) 100K RISE 5 15 25 35 45 55 65 75 85 COMPENSATION CAPACITANCE, CC (pF) POWER SUPPLY REJECTION COMMON MODE REJECTION 100 10 0 100K 120 FALL 20 100 80 70 25C 55C 1 NEGATIVE 60 POWER RESPONSE 15pF 100 33pF 68pF 10 10K 100K FREQUENCY, F (Hz) 1M QUIESCENT CURRENT 102 ) 5C 12 100 I Q( C) 5 I Q(2 C) 40 98 I Q(- 96 20 60 100 140 180 220 260 300 340 TOTAL SUPPLY VOLTAGE, (V) OUTPUT VOLTAGE SWING VDROP+@85C 20 VDROP-@85C 15 VDROP-@27C 10 5 40 10 0 100K 10 2.2pF 6.8pF 50 100 1K 10K FREQUENCY, F (Hz) 1 GAIN 25 POSITIVE 90 10 30 VDROP FROM VS, (V) 0.01 SLEW RATE, (V/us) 0.1 180V P-P 0.001 100 COMMON MODE REJECTION, CMR (dB) 30VP-P 60VP-P POWER SUPPLY REJECTION, PSR (dB) DISTORTION, (%) 30 1 125C 85C 1000 68pF -100 0.75pF GAIN AND COMPENSATION 0.1 0.1 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 TEMPERATURE (C) PHASE RESPONSE -80 -90 100 80 VBE- OUTPUT VOLTAGE, (VOUT) (P-P) 10 SMALL SIGNAL RESPONSE OPEN LOOP GAIN, A (dB) 100 COMPENSATION, pF T = TC VBE for ILIMIT 0.85 NORMALIZED QUIESCENT CURRENT (%) POWER DERATING 25 VBE (V) INTERNAL POWER DISSIPATION, P(W) 2. TYPICAL PERFORMANCE GRAPHS VDROP+@27C 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 OUTPUT CURRENT, IO (mA) 5 PA343 3. APPLICATION INFORMATION 3.1 PHASE COMPENSATION 3.2 OTHER STABILITY CONCERNS Please read Application Note 1 "General Operating Considerations" which covers stability, power supplies, heat sinking, mounting, current limit, SOA interpretation, and specification interpretation. Visit www.apexanalog.com for design tools that help automate tasks such as calculations for stability, internal power dissipation, current limit, heat sink selection, Apex Microtechnology's complete Application Notes library, Technical Seminar Workbook and Evaluation Kits. Open loop gain and phase shift both increase with increasing temperature. The PHASE COMPENSATION typical graph shows closed loop gain and phase compensation capacitor value relationships for four case temperatures. The curves are based on achieving a phase margin of 50. Calculate the highest case temperature for the application (maximum ambient temperature and highest internal power dissipation) before choosing the compensation. Keep in mind that when working with small values of compensation, parasitics may play a large role in performance of the finished circuit. The compensation capacitor must be rated for at least the total voltage applied to the amplifier and should be a temperature stable type such as NPO or COG. There are two important concepts about closed loop gain when choosing compensation. They stem from the fact that while "gain" is the most commonly used term, (the feedback factor) is really what counts when designing for stability. 1. Gain must be calculated as a non-inverting circuit (equal input and feedback resistors can provide a signal gain of -1, but for calculating offset errors, noise, and stability, this is a gain of 2). 2. Including a feedback capacitor changes the feedback factor or gain of the circuit. Consider Rin=4.7k, Rf=47k for a gain of 11. Compensation of 4.7 to 6.8pF would be reasonable. Adding 33pF parallel to the 47k rolls off the circuit at 103kHz, and at 2MHz has reduced gain from 11 to roughly 1.5 and the circuit is likely to oscillate. As a general rule the DC summing junction impedance (parallel combination of the feedback resistor and all input resistors) should be limited to 5k ohms or less. The amplifier input capacitance of about 6pF, plus capacitance of connecting traces or wires and (if used) a socket will cause undesirable circuit performance and even oscillation if these resistances are too high. In circuits requiring high resistances, measure or estimate the total sum point capacitance, multiply by Rin/Rf, and parallel Rf with this value. Capacitors included for this purpose are usually in the single digit pF range. This technique results in equal feedback factor calculations for AC and DC cases. It does not produce a roll off, but merely keeps constant over a wide frequency range. Paragraph 6 of Application Note 19 details suitable stability tests for the finished circuit. 3.3 CURRENT LIMIT For proper operation, the current limiting resistor, RCL, must be connected as shown in Figure 3, "External Connections". The current limit can be predicted as follows: ILIMIT = VBE RCL The "VBE for ILIMIT" performance graph is used to find VBE. On this graph, the VBE+ and VBE- curves show the voltages across the current limiting resistor at which current limiting is turned on. The VBE+ curve shows these turn-on voltages when the amplifier is sourcing current, and the VBE- curve shows these voltages when the amplifier is sinking current. The current limit can be thought of as a ceiling or limit for safe operation. For continuous operation it is any value between the desired load current and 60 mA (as long as the curves on the SOA graph are not exceeded, please 6 PA343U PA343 refer to section 3.4 for information on the SOA graph). As an example, suppose the desired load current for the application is 20 mA. In this case we may set a current limit of 30 mA. Starting with the smaller VBE- of 0.6 we have: RCL = 0.6 = 20 1.03 For the larger VBE+ this RCL resistor will allow for a maximum current of: ILIMIT = 0.7 = 35mA 20 This value is still acceptable because it is less than 60 mA. For the case of continuous load currents, check that the current limit does not exceed 60 mA. The VBE values used above are approximate and can vary with process. To allow for this possibility the user can reduce the VBE = 0.6 value by 20%. This results in a RCL value of 16 . Using this same RCL value and allowing for a 20% increase in the other VBE , the current limit maximum is 52 mA. The absolute minimum value of the current limiting resistor is bounded by the largest current and the largest VBE in the application. The largest VBE is determined by the coldest temperature in the application. In general the largest VBE is VBE+ = 0.78, which occurs at T = - 40C. The largest allowed current occurs in pulsed applications where, from the SOA graph, we can see current pulses of 120 mA. This gives us an absolute minimum RCL value of 0.78/0.12 = 6.5. 3.4 SAFE OPERATING AREA 1. Voltage withstand capability of the transistors. 2. Current handling capability of the die metalization. 3. Temperature of the output MOSFETS. These limitations can be seen in the SOA (see Safe Operating Area graphs). Note that each pulse capability line shows a constant power level (unlike second breakdown limitations where power varies with voltage stress). These lines are shown for a case temperature of 25C and correspond to thermal resistances of 5.2C/W for the PA343DF. Pulse stress levels for other case temperatures can be calculated in the same manner as DC power levels at different temperatures. The output stage is protected against transient flyback by the parasitic diodes of the output stage MOSFET structure. However, for protection against sustained high energy flyback external fast-recovery diodes must be used. 3.5 OUTPUT CURRENT FROM +VS or -VS, (mA) The MOSFET output stage of the PA343 is not limited by second FIGURE 4. Safe Operating Area breakdown considerations as in bipolar output stages. However PA343 SOA there are still three distinct limitations: 200 120 100 50 40 30 20 10 5 4 3 20 30 0m S 0m S DC ,T C DC DC ,T C = = 85 C 12 5 C PULSE CURVES @ 10% DUTY CYCLE MAX. 2 10 20 30 50 100 200 300 500 SUPPLY TO OUTPUT DIFFERENTIAL, V S- V O (V) HEATSINKING The PA343DF package has a large exposed integrated copper heatslug to which the monolithic amplifier is directly attached. The solder connection of the heatslug to a minimum of 1 square inch foil area on the printed circuit board will result in thermal performance of 25C/W junction to air rating of the PA343DF. Solder connection to an area of 1 to 2 square inches is recommended. This may be adequate heatsinking but the large number of variables involved suggest temperature measurements be made on the top of the package. Do not allow the temperature to exceed 85C. PA343U 7 PA343 3.6 OVERVOLTAGE PROTECTION Although the PA241 can withstand differential input voltages up to 16V, FIGURE 5. Overvoltage Protection in some applications additional external protection may be needed. Dif+Vs Z1 ferential inputs exceeding 16V will be clipped by the protection circuitry. However, if more than a few milliamps of current is available from the overload source, the protection circuitry could be destroyed. For differen+Vs -IN tial sources above 16V, adding series resistance limiting input current to 1mA will prevent damage. Alternatively, 1N4148 signal diodes connected OUT Q1 anti-parallel across the input pins is usually sufficient. In more demanding Q2 applications where bias current is important, diode connected JFETs such as 2N4416 will be required. See Q1 and Q2 in Figure 5. In either case the +IN -Vs differential input voltage will be clamped to 0.7V. This is sufficient overdrive to produce the maximum power bandwidth. In the case of inverting circuits where the +IN pin is grounded, the diodes Z2 -Vs mentioned above will also afford protection from excessive common mode voltage. In the case of non-inverting circuits, clamp diodes from each input to each supply will provide protection. Note that these diodes will have substantial reverse bias voltage under normal operation and diode leakage will produce errors. Some applications will also need over-voltage protection devices connected to the power supply rails. Unidirectional zener diode transient suppressors are recommended. The zeners clamp transients to voltages within the power supply rating and also clamp power supply reversals to ground. Whether the zeners are used or not the system power supply should be evaluated for transient performance including power-on overshoot and power-off polarity reversals as well as line regulation. See Z1 and Z2 in Figure 5. NEED TECHNICAL HELP? CONTACT APEX SUPPORT! For all Apex Microtechnology product questions and inquiries, call toll free 800-546-2739 in North America. For inquiries via email, please contact apex.support@apexanalog.com. International customers can also request support by contacting their local Apex Microtechnology Sales Representative. To find the one nearest to you, go to www.apexanalog.com IMPORTANT NOTICE Apex Microtechnology, Inc. has made every effort to insure the accuracy of the content contained in this document. However, the information is subject to change without notice and is provided "AS IS" without warranty of any kind (expressed or implied). Apex Microtechnology reserves the right to make changes without further notice to any specifications or products mentioned herein to improve reliability. This document is the property of Apex Microtechnology and by furnishing this information, Apex Microtechnology grants no license, expressed or implied under any patents, mask work rights, copyrights, trademarks, trade secrets or other intellectual property rights. Apex Microtechnology owns the copyrights associated with the information contained herein and gives consent for copies to be made of the information only for use within your organization with respect to Apex Microtechnology integrated circuits or other products of Apex Microtechnology. 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