ELE Times December 2016 Electronics News in India | Online Electronics Mag | Page 32

Cover Story Analog dimming via adjustable voltage on the CTRL pin has always been easier to implement than the more accurate PWM dimming. Until now, PWM dimming required an external clock or micro signal whose duty cycle controlled the brightness via the PWM input pin. However, the LT3922 features an internally generated PWM dimming signal that only requires an external voltage on the PWM pin to set the duty cycle for 128:1 PWM dimming. The PWM period, such as 122Hz, is set by a single resistor on the RP pin. LED current accuracy is a necessity for vehicles with redundant light clusters. The brightness of both sides must match for obvious reasons. Identically manufactured LEDs can produce different brightnesses at the same drive current. The internal dimming feature of the LT3922 can be used for brightness trimming near or just below 100% duty cycle and then set to accurate 10:1 or 100:1 ratios. This can save the light cluster manufacturer from paying extra for specially binned LEDs. When higher dimming ratios are needed, the LT3922 can be externally dimmed in the usual manner. The high bandwidth 400kHz buck mode LED driver in Figure 2 yields a 1000:1 PWM dimming ratio at 100Hz. The 2MHz boost LED driver in Figure 1 can achieve 2000:1 dimming ratio at 120Hz as shown in Figure 7a. The same circuit can be set up for internally generated PWM dimming by placing a 122Hz frequency resistor on the RP pin and setting the PWM pin voltage between 1.0V and 2.0V for up to 128:1 dimming as shown in Figure 7b. The LT3922 can be set up to run with up to 5000:1 external PWM dimming in some applications and PWM dimming can be combined with LT3922’s analog dimming for over 50,000:1 brightness control. Machine Vision Figure 8. Assembly line system overview with machine vision application performing “maintenance switching” during the PWM off-time while the LEDs are disconnected by the high side PMOS. During standard PWM dimming at frequencies above 100Hz, the longest off-time is 10ms or less, and not much leakage current can be pulled off the output at that time. Machine vision and strobe applications can have long off-times between 100ms and 5s (or longer), allowing for tens to hundreds times more leakage. Figure 9. Camera flash waveform looks the same regardle ss of idle or down time. Waveforms show pulse after 10ms and after one hour. The flash looks the same after sitting idle for one hour as it does after 10ms. These results are for the circuit shown in Figure 1. Maintenance switching ensures that the output capacitor maintains the voltage recorded during the LT3922’s previous sample cycle. The digital sample of the state of the converter is stored indefinitely, assuming uninterrupted input power is provided to the IC. This allows the LT3922 to have a consistent output current waveform for any given off-time, as demonstrated in Figure 9. Conclusion The LT3922 36V LED driver with internal, synchronous, 2A switches is a compact and versatile LED driver. It can be easily used in boost, buck and boost-buck topologies. Regardless of topology, all of its features are available, including high PWM dimming capability and internally generated PWM dimming. Low EMI is easily achievable with its Silent Switcher layout and SSFM. Its compact and synchronous switches maintain high efficiency, even at frequencies up to 2MHz. With robust fault protection, this IC easily meets the requirements of automotive other demanding applications. In industrial assembly line applications, machine vision (Figure 8) provides rapid visual feedback of devices using high speed digital photography in conjunction with digital image processing. This helps rapidly identify and isolate defective products with little or no human inspection. The lighting used for machine vision systems must be synchronized with the speed of the assembly line processes while maintaining the ability to produce a consistent pulse of light for an indefinite period of off-time. Conventional LED drivers are unable to maintain their output voltage after the PWM input signal is held low for any sustained amount of time. This is due to the gradual discharge of the output capacitor, making generic LED drivers unsuitable for these types of applications. However, the LT3922 digitally samples the output state of the converter during the falling edge of the PWM signal. It then maintains its output voltage during prolonged off-times by ELE Times | 32 | December, 2016