SBASAJ9B June 2022 – December 2024 AMC22C12-Q1
PRODUCTION DATA
The voltage on the REF pin determines the trip threshold of the window comparator. The internal precision current source forces a 100μA current through an external resistor connected from the REF pin to GND1. The resulting voltage across the resistor (VREF) equals the magnitude of the positive and negative trip thresholds, see Figure 6-1. Place a 100nF capacitor parallel to the resistor to filter the reference voltage. This capacitor must be charged by the 100μA current source during power-up and the charging time can exceed the high-side blanking time (tHS,BLK). In this case, as shown in Figure 6-2, the comparator can output an incorrect state after the high-side blanking time has expired until VREF reaches the final value. See the Power-Up and Power-Down Behavior section for more details on power-up behavior.
The voltage on the REF pin also determines the functionality of the negative comparator (Cmp1) and the hysteresis of the positive comparator (Cmp0) shown in the Functional Block Diagram. If VREF exceeds the VMSEL threshold defined in the Electrical Characteristics table, Cmp1 is disabled and the hysteresis of Cmp0 is increased from 4mV (typical) to 25mV. Positive-comparator mode is intended for voltage-monitoring applications that require higher input voltages and higher noise immunity.
The reference pin can be driven by an external voltage source to change the comparator thresholds during operation. However, do not drive VREF dynamically across the VMSEL threshold during normal operation because doing so changes the hysteresis of the Cmp0 comparator and can lead to unintentional switching of the output.
Figure 6-3 shows a mode selection timing diagram.