SLUSBX7C September   2014  – March 2017

PRODUCTION DATA.  

  1. Features
  2. Applications
  3. Description
  4. Revision History
  5. Device Comparison Table
  6. Pin Configuration and Functions
  7. Specifications
    1. 7.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings
    2. 7.2 ESD Ratings
    3. 7.3 Recommended Operating Conditions
    4. 7.4 Thermal Information
    5. 7.5 Electrical Characteristics
    6. 7.6 Typical Characteristics
  8. Detailed Description
    1. 8.1 Overview
    2. 8.2 Functional Block Diagram
    3. 8.3 Feature Description
      1. 8.3.1  Dynamic Rectifier Control
      2. 8.3.2  Dynamic Power Scaling
      3. 8.3.3  VO_REG Calculations
      4. 8.3.4  RILIM Calculations
      5. 8.3.5  Adapter Enable Functionality
      6. 8.3.6  Turning Off the Transmitter
        1. 8.3.6.1 WPC v1.2 EPT
      7. 8.3.7  Communication Current Limit
      8. 8.3.8  PD_DET and TMEM
      9. 8.3.9  TS/CTRL
      10. 8.3.10 PMODE Pin
      11. 8.3.11 I2C Communication
      12. 8.3.12 Input Overvoltage
      13. 8.3.13 Alignment Aid Using Frequency Information
    4. 8.4 Device Functional Modes
    5. 8.5 Register Maps
      1. 8.5.1  Wireless Power Supply Current Register 1
      2. 8.5.2  Wireless Power Supply Current Register 2
      3. 8.5.3  Wireless Power Supply Current Register 3
      4. 8.5.4  I2C Mailbox Register
      5. 8.5.5  I2C Mailbox Register 2
      6. 8.5.6  I2C Mailbox Register 3
      7. 8.5.7  Wireless Power Supply FOD RAM
      8. 8.5.8  Wireless Power User Header RAM
      9. 8.5.9  Wireless Power USER VRECT Status RAM
      10. 8.5.10 Wireless Power VOUT Status RAM
      11. 8.5.11 Wireless Power Proprietary Mode REC PWR MSByte Status RAM
      12. 8.5.12 Wireless Power REC PWR LSByte Status RAM
      13. 8.5.13 Wireless Power Prop Packet Payload RAM Byte 0
      14. 8.5.14 Wireless Power Prop Packet Payload RAM Byte 1
      15. 8.5.15 Wireless Power Prop Packet Payload RAM Byte 2
      16. 8.5.16 Wireless Power Prop Packet Payload RAM Byte 3
  9. Application and Implementation
    1. 9.1 Application Information
    2. 9.2 Typical Applications
      1. 9.2.1 WPC v1.2 Power Supply 7-V Output With 1.4-A Maximum Current With I2C
        1. 9.2.1.1 Design Requirements
        2. 9.2.1.2 Detailed Design Procedure
          1. 9.2.1.2.1 Output Voltage Set Point
          2. 9.2.1.2.2 Output and Rectifier Capacitors
          3. 9.2.1.2.3 TMEM
          4. 9.2.1.2.4 Maximum Output Current Set Point
          5. 9.2.1.2.5 I2C
          6. 9.2.1.2.6 Communication Current Limit
          7. 9.2.1.2.7 Receiver Coil
          8. 9.2.1.2.8 Series and Parallel Resonant Capacitors
          9. 9.2.1.2.9 Communication, Boot, and Clamp Capacitors
        3. 9.2.1.3 Application Curves
      2. 9.2.2 Standalone 10-V WPC v1.2 Power Supply With 1-A Maximum Output Current in System Board
      3. 9.2.3 Standalone 10-V Power Supply With 1-A Maximum Output Current for 2S Charging System
        1. 9.2.3.1 Design Requirements
        2. 9.2.3.2 Detailed Design Procedure
          1. 9.2.3.2.1  Output Voltage Set Point
          2. 9.2.3.2.2  Output and Rectifier Capacitors
          3. 9.2.3.2.3  TMEM
          4. 9.2.3.2.4  Maximum Output Current Set Point
          5. 9.2.3.2.5  I2C
          6. 9.2.3.2.6  Communication Current Limit
          7. 9.2.3.2.7  Receiver Coil
          8. 9.2.3.2.8  Series Resonant Capacitors
            1. 9.2.3.2.8.1 Tuning Procedure
          9. 9.2.3.2.9  Communication, Boot, and Clamp Capacitors
          10. 9.2.3.2.10 VRECT Clamp
        3. 9.2.3.3 Application Curves
  10. 10Power Supply Recommendations
  11. 11Layout
    1. 11.1 Layout Guidelines
    2. 11.2 Layout Example
  12. 12Device and Documentation Support
    1. 12.1 Receiving Notification of Documentation Updates
    2. 12.2 Community Resources
    3. 12.3 Trademarks
    4. 12.4 Electrostatic Discharge Caution
    5. 12.5 Glossary
  13. 13Mechanical, Packaging, and Orderable Information

Package Options

Mechanical Data (Package|Pins)
Thermal pad, mechanical data (Package|Pins)
Orderable Information

Application and Implementation

NOTE

Information in the following applications sections is not part of the TI component specification, and TI does not warrant its accuracy or completeness. TI’s customers are responsible for determining suitability of components for their purposes. Customers should validate and test their design implementation to confirm system functionality.

Application Information

The bq51025 device complies with WPC v1.2 standard. There are several tools available for the design of the system. Obtain these tools by checking the product page at www.ti.com. The following sections detail how to design a WPC v1.2 mode RX system.

Typical Applications

WPC v1.2 Power Supply 7-V Output With 1.4-A Maximum Current With I2C

bq51025 bq51025_I2C_app.gif Figure 14. Schematic Using bq51025

Design Requirements

Table 20 shows the design parameters.

Table 20. Design Parameters

DESIGN PARAMETER EXAMPLE VALUE
VOUT 7 V
IOUT MAXIMUM 1.4 A

Detailed Design Procedure

To start the design procedure, determine the following:

  • Output voltage
  • Maximum output current

Output Voltage Set Point

The output voltage of the bq51025 device can be set by adjusting a feedback resistor divider network. The resistor divider network is used to set the voltage gain at the VO_REG pin. The device is intended to operate where the voltage at the VO_REG pin is set to 0.5 V. This value is the default setting and can be changed through I2C. In Figure 15, R6 and R7 are the feedback network for the output voltage sense.

bq51025 sch_votage_setpt_SLUSBS9.gif Figure 15. Voltage Gain for Feedback
Equation 12. bq51025 eq_Kvo_SLUSBS9.gif
Equation 13. bq51025 eq_R6_voltage_SLUSBS9.gif

Choose R7 to be a standard value. In this case, take care to choose R6 and R7 to be fairly large values so as to not dissipate an excessive amount of power in the resistors and thereby lower efficiency.

KVO is set to be 0.5 / 7 = 1/14, choose R7 to be 130 kΩ, and thus R6 to be 10 kΩ.

After R6 and R7 are chosen, the same values should be used on the VI_REG resistor divider (R9 and R8). This allows the device to regulate the rectifier voltage properly and accurately track the output voltage.

Output and Rectifier Capacitors

Set C4 between 1 and 4.7 µF. This example uses 3.3 µF.

Set C3 between 22 and 44 µF. This example uses 44 µF to minimize output ripple.

TMEM

Set C5 to 2.2 µF. To determine the bleedoff resistor, the WPC transmitters (for which the PD_DET is being set for) needs to be determined. After the ping timing (time between two consecutive digital pings after EPT charge complete is sent) is determined, the bleedoff resistor RMEM can be determined. This example uses TI transmitter EVMs as the use case. In this case, the time between pings is 5 s. To set the time constant using Equation 9, RMEM is set to 560 kΩ.

Maximum Output Current Set Point

bq51025 sch_max_output_current_SLUSBS9.gif Figure 16. Current Limit Setting for bq51025

The bq51025 device includes a means of providing hardware overcurrent protection by means of an analog current regulation loop. The hardware current limit provides a level of safety by clamping the maximum allowable output current (for example, a current compliance). The RILIM resistor size also sets the thresholds for the dynamic rectifier levels, and thus providing efficiency tuning per each application’s maximum system current. The calculation for the total RILIM resistance is as follows:

Equation 14. bq51025 eq_R_ilim_1_LUSBX7.gif
Equation 15. bq51025 eq_R1_1_LUSBX7.gif

The RILIM allows for the ILIM pin to reach 1.2 V at an output current equal to IILIM in 10-W mode and reach 0.6 V in 5-W mode. When choosing IILIM, consider two possible operating conditions:

  • If the application requires an output current equal to or greater than external ILIM that the circuit is designed for (input current limit on the charger where the RX is delivering power to is higher than the external ILIM), ensure that the downstream charger is capable of regulating the voltage of the input into which the RX device output is tied to by lowering the amount of current being drawn. This ensures that the RX output does not collapse. Such behavior is referred to as VIN DPM in TI chargers. Unless such behavior is enabled on the charger, the charger pulls the output of the RX device to ground when the RX device enters current regulation.
  • If the applications are designed to extract less than the IMAX, typical designs should leave a design margin of at least 20% so that the voltage at ILIM pin reaches 1.2 V when 20% more than maximum current of the system (IMAX) is drawn from the output of the RX. Such a design would have input current limit on the charger lower than the external current limit of the RX device.

In both cases, however, the charger must be capable of regulating the current drawn from the device to allow the output voltage to stay at a reasonable value. This same behavior is also necessary during the WPC v1.2 Communication. See Communication Current Limit for more details. The following calculations show how such a design is achieved:

Equation 16. bq51025 eq_Rilim_2_SLUSBS9.gif
Equation 17. bq51025 eq_R1_1_LUSBX7.gif

When referring to the application diagram shown in Figure 16, RILIM is the sum of the R1 and RFOD resistance (that is, the total resistance from the ILIM pin to GND). RFOD is chosen according to the FOD application note that can be obtained by contacting your TI representative. This is used to allow the RX implementation to comply with WPC v1.2 requirements related to received power accuracy.

Also note that in many applications, the resistor ROS is necessary to comply with WPC v1.2 requirements. In such a case, the offset on the FOD pin from the voltage on RFOD can cause a shift in the calculation that can reduce the expected current limit. Therefore, it is always a good idea to check the output current limit after FOD calibration is performed according to the FOD section. Unfortunately, because the RECT voltage is not deterministic, and depends on transmitter operation to a certain degree, it is not possible to determine R1 with ROS present in a deterministic manner.

In this example, set maximum current for the example to be 1.4 A at 10 W and 700 mA at 5-W mode. Set IILIM = 1.7 A to allow for the 20% margin.

Equation 18. bq51025 eq_Rilim_1p7A.gif

I2C

The I2C lines are used to communicate with the device. To enable the I2C, they can be pulled up to an internal host bus. The device address is 0x6C.

Communication Current Limit

Communication current limit allows the device to communicate with the transmitter in an error-free manner by decoupling the coil from load transients on the OUT pin during WPC communication. In some cases, this communication current limit feature is not desirable. In this design, the user enables the communication current limit by tying the CM_ILIM pin to GND. If this is not needed, the CM_ILIM pin can be tied to the OUT pin to disable the communication current limit. In this case, take care that the voltage on the CM_ILIM pin does not exceed the maximum rating of the pin.

Receiver Coil

The receiver coil design is the most open part of the system design. The choice of the receiver inductance, shape, and materials all intimately influence the parameters themselves in an intertwined manner. This design can be complicated and involves optimizing many different aspects; refer to the EVM user's guide (SLUUB55).

The typical choice of the inductance of the receiver coil for a 10-W, 7-V solution is between 15 and 16 µH.

Series and Parallel Resonant Capacitors

Resonant capacitors, C1 and C2, are set according to WPC specification.

The equations for calculating the values of the resonant capacitors are shown:

Equation 19. bq51025 eq4_C1_C2_lusay6.gif

Because the bq51025 can provide up to 10 W of output power, TI highly recommends that the resonant capacitors have very-low ESR and dissipate as little power as possible for better thermal performance. TI highly recommends NP0/C0G ceramic material capacitors.

Communication, Boot, and Clamp Capacitors

Set CCOMMx to a value ranging from C1 / 8 to C1 / 3. The higher the value of the communication capacitors, the easier it is to comply with the WPC specification. However, higher capacitors do lower the overall efficiency of the system. Make sure these are X7R ceramic material and have a minimum voltage rating of 25 V.

Set CBOOTx as 15 nF. Make sure these are X7R ceramic material and have a minimum voltage rating of 25 V.

Set CCLAMPx as 470 nF. Make sure these are X7R ceramic material and have a minimum voltage rating of 25 V.

Application Curves

bq51025 Startup_7V_9Ohms_standard.png
CM_ILIM = High CH1 = VRECT CH2 = VOUT
CH3 = PMODE CH4 = ILOAD
Figure 17. 7-V RX Start-Up With 9-Ω Load on a 5-W WPC TX
bq51025 bq51025_7V_145A_transient.png
CM_ILIM = High CH1 = VRECT CH2 = VOUT
CH4 = ILOAD
Figure 19. 0- to 1450-mA Step with 7-V RX on bq500215 TX
bq51025 D007_SLUSBX7.gif
Figure 21. ILIM Voltage as a Function of Load Current
bq51025 D011_SLUSBX7.gif
CM_ILIM = High
Figure 23. Efficiency on Various 5-W WPC TX, 7-V RX
bq51025 D010_SLUSBX7.gif
Figure 25. Frequency Range of 7-V, 5-W Mode on a WPC TX
bq51025 D013_SLUSBX7.gif
Figure 27. VRECT Foldback in Current Limit on a WPC TX
bq51025 USB_removal_10V_1A.png
CH1 = VRECT CH2 = VOUT
CH3 = AD_EN CH4 = AD
Figure 29. AD_EN Functionality upon 5-V USB Removal, 10-V RX, 1-A Load
bq51025 bq51025_TS_bias.png
CH2 = VTS
Figure 31. TS Voltage Bias Without TS Resistor
bq51025 Startup_7V_5Ohms_bq500215.png
CM_ILIM = High CH1 = VRECT CH2 = VOUT
CH3 = PMODE CH4 = ILOAD
Figure 18. 7-V RX Start-Up With 5-Ω Load on a bq500215 TX
bq51025 bq51025_7V_145A_load_dump.png
CM_ILIM = High CH1 = VRECT CH2 = VOUT
CH4 = ILOAD
Figure 20. 1450- to 0-mA Load Dump with 7-V RX on bq500215 TX
bq51025 D008_SLUSBX7.gif
Figure 22. Rectifier Regulation as a Function of RILIM on bq500215 TX, 7-V RX
bq51025 D012_SLUSBX7.gif
CM_ILIM = High
Figure 24. Efficiency on 10-W bq500215 TX
bq51025 D009_SLUSBX7.gif
Figure 26. Output Regulation on bq500215 TX
bq51025 USB_insertion_10V_no load.png
CH1 = VRECT CH2 = VOUT
CH3 = AD_EN CH4 = AD
Figure 28. AD_EN Functionality upon 5-V USB Connection, 10-V RX, No Load
bq51025 D015_SLUSBX7.gif
Figure 30. Received Power Variation (mW) vs IOUT (mA) on a WPC TX

Standalone 10-V WPC v1.2 Power Supply With 1-A Maximum Output Current in System Board

When the bq5102x device is implemented as an embedded device on the system board, the same design procedure as for an I2C system should be used, but the I2C pins are to be connected to ground.The VO_REG and VIREG resistor dividers are chosen to achieve 10-V output and RILIM is chosen to allow a maximum current of 1 A (IILIM = 1.2 A for 20% margin). Refer to WPC v1.2 Power Supply 7-V Output With 1.4-A Maximum Current With I2C for details on how these resistor values are calculated.

A typical coil inductance for 10-V is between 15 and 17 µH. It is important to note that even if the same receiver coil and tuning as for a 7-V RX solution are used (see Receiver Coil and Series and Parallel Resonant Capacitors), the RFOD and ROS values need to be updated to accurately determine the received power.

bq51025 bq51025_standalone.gif Figure 32. bq51025 Embedded in a System Board

Standalone 10-V Power Supply With 1-A Maximum Output Current for 2S Charging System

For the bq51025 to work properly as a supply to a 2S charger, the bq51025 output voltage must not drop below the minimum input charging voltage of the charger, which may be around 9 V depending on the charger IC. In a WPC tuned Rx/TX system, the power delivered to the load may change during Rx/Tx communication due to the capacitive modulation when CCOMM1 and CCOMM2 are connected form AC1 and AC2 pins to ground. If the power delivered to the load decreases, the VRECT voltage will drop and so may VOUT. if the charger IC does not have input DPM. If the power delivered to the load does not change or increases for a given current, the VRECT voltage will increase and the bq51025 will regulate the voltage.

NOTE

The following design example is for a 2S charging system where the charger IC does not have input DPM feature.

bq51025 bq51025_2S.gif Figure 33. bq51025 Embedded in a 2S Battery System Board

Design Requirements

Table 21 shows the design parameters.

Table 21. Design Parameters

DESIGN PARAMETER EXAMPLE VALUE
VOUT 10 V
IOUT MAXIMUM 1 A

Detailed Design Procedure

To start the design procedure, determine the following:

  • Output voltage
  • Maximum output current

Output Voltage Set Point

The output voltage of the bq51025 device can be set by adjusting a feedback resistor divider network as described in Output Voltage Set Point. The ratio of VO_REG and VIREG resistor dividers are chosen to achieve 10-V based on the 0.5-V feedback voltage. Following Equation 12 and Equation 13, R6 and R7 are selected to be 11.3KΩ- and 215-kΩ, respectively. The same values are used on R9 and R8 in the VIREG divider.

Output and Rectifier Capacitors

Set C4 to at least 3.3 µF.

Set C3 to at least 44 µF to minimize output ripple. Use capacitors rated for 25 V or higher.

TMEM

Follow procedure described in TMEM.

Maximum Output Current Set Point

Follow the procedure described in Maximum Output Current Set Point.

I2C

Connect I2C lines to ground.

Communication Current Limit

Communication current limit must be disabled. Connect CM_ILIM pin to voltage supply making sure it does not exceed maximum absolute rating for the pin. If only the battery voltage is available, use a 5-V Zener diode (D1) to clamp the voltage.

Receiver Coil

The receiver coil design is the most open part of the system design. The choice of the receiver inductance, shape, and materials all intimately influence the parameters themselves in an intertwined manner. This design can be complicated and involves optimizing many different aspects. The typical choice of the inductance of the receiver coil for a 10-W, 10-V solution is between 15 and 16 µH.

Series Resonant Capacitors

In order for the bq51025 to work properly as a supply to a 2S charger, the bq51025 output voltage must not drop below the minimum input charging voltage of the charger, which may be around 9 V depending on the charger IC. In a WPC tuned Rx/Tx system, the power delivered to the load may change during Rx/Tx communication due to the capacitive modulation when CCOMM1 and CCOMM2 are connected from AC1 and AC2 pins to ground. If the power delivered to the load decreases, the VRECT voltage will drop and so may VOUT if the charger IC does not have VIN-DPM function. If the power delivered to the load does not change or increases for a given current, the VRECT voltage will increase and the bq51025 will regulate the voltage to a fixed value. The following section discusses the tuning procedure to ensure that the output voltage level is maintained during communication when operating with a bq51025 based transmitter.

Tuning Procedure

NOTE

The following tuning procedure results in a system that is not compliant with WPC specification and is only designed to operate with a given bq500215 based transmitter.

  1. Measure the effective self-inductance of the bq500215 based transmitter (primary) coil, LP' , and receiver (secondary) coil, LS'. The measurements must be done on the final charging system setup (that is, battery and any other friendly metal of the device is included as well as any cover material that determines the distance between the coil and charging surface). Make the measurement at the optimal alignment position.
  2. Measure the mutual inductance, LM and calculate the coupling factor given by:
  3. Equation 20. bq51025 eq_coupliing.gif
  4. A first-order approximation of the series capacitance is given by:
  5. Equation 21. bq51025 eq_2S_tune.gif

    Where f is the operating frequency of the transmitter, which is 130 kHz and CP is the transmitter resonant capacitance which is 247 nF.

  6. Make sure C1 as well as CCOMM1 and CCOMM2 are populated and place the receiver with best possible alignment on the transmitter and start power transfer. Using an oscilloscope, monitor the VRECT voltage during communication at maximum load. If VRECT decreases during communication, increase C1 until the voltage remains flat. Note that the larger the VRECT voltage increase is during communication at maximum load, the larger the losses on the device. The voltage increase in VRECT is larger with lower load and lower coupling, so it is important to keep the VRECT voltage as low as possible during communication at maximum load and coupling to maximize efficiency across charging area and load range. Figure 35 and Figure 36 show how the VRECT voltage behavior after tuning

Communication, Boot, and Clamp Capacitors

Set CCOMMx to a value ranging from C1 / 8 to C1 / 3. Make sure these are X7R ceramic material and have a minimum voltage rating of 25 V. For this example 56-nF capacitors are chosen.

Set CBOOTx as 15 nF. Make sure these are X7R ceramic material and have a minimum voltage rating of 25 V.

CCLAMPx is not populated since a external clamping diode is used.

VRECT Clamp

Connect a 12-V Zener diode (DCLAMP) from VRECT to ground. This diode prevents the rectifier voltage from overshoot above VRECT-OVP level, preventing unwanted resets during large load transients during communication.

Application Curves

bq51025 bq51025_2S_startupImax.png
CH1 = VRECT CH2 = VOUT
CH4 = ILOAD
Figure 34. 10-V Tuned RX Start-Up With 1-A Load
bq51025 bq51025_2S_tunednoload.png
CH1 = VRECT CH2 = VOUT
CH4 = ILOAD
Figure 36. 10-V Tuned RX VOUT at Center Position With No load
bq51025 bq51025_2S_tuned_100mto1A.png
CH1 = VRECT CH2 = VOUT
CH4 = ILOAD
Figure 38. 100-mA to 1-A Load Transient With 10-V Tuned RX
bq51025 bq51025_2S_tuned_Imax.png
CH1 = VRECT CH2 = VOUT
CH4 = ILOAD
Figure 35. 10-V Tuned RX VOUT at Center Position
With 1-A Load
bq51025 bq51025_2S_tuned_loaddump.png
CH1 = VRECT CH2 = VOUT
CH4 = ILOAD
Figure 37. 1-A to 0-mA Load Dump
With 10-V Tuned RX
bq51025 D016_SLUSBX7.gif
Figure 39. Efficiency With 10-V Tuned RX