SLVSAR1E January 2011 – July 2015 DRV8833
PRODUCTION DATA.
Refer to the PDF data sheet for device specific package drawings
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.
The DRV8833 is used in brushed DC or stepper motor control. The following design procedure can be used to configure the DRV8833 in a brushed DC motor application. The inputs and outputs are connected in parallel to achieve higher current.
The two H-bridges in the DRV8833 can be connected in parallel for double the current of a single H-bridge. The internal dead time in the DRV8833 prevents any risk of cross-conduction (shoot-through) between the two bridges due to timing differences between the two bridges. Figure 7 shows the connections.
DESIGN PARAMETER | REFERENCE | EXAMPLE VALUE |
---|---|---|
Motor voltage | VM | 10 V |
Motor RMS current | IRMS | 0.8 A |
Motor start-up current | ISTART | 2 A |
Motor current trip point | ITRIP | 2.5 A |
The motor voltage to use will depend on the ratings of the motor selected and the desired RPM. A higher voltage spins a brushed DC motor faster with the same PWM duty cycle applied to the power FETs. A higher voltage also increases the rate of current change through the inductive motor windings.
When the voltage on pin xISEN exceeds VTRIP (0.2 V), current regulation is activated. The RISENSE resistor should be sized to set the desired ICHOP level.
To set ICHOP to 1 A, RSENSE = 0.2 V / 1 A = 0.2 Ω.
For optimal performance, it is important for the sense resistor to be:
The power dissipated by the sense resistor equals IRMS2 × R. For example, if peak motor current is 3 A, RMS motor current is 2 A, and a 0.05-Ω sense resistor is used, the resistor will dissipate 2 A2× 0.05 Ω = 0.2 W. The power quickly increases with higher current levels.
Resistors typically have a rated power within some ambient temperature range, along with a derated power curve for high ambient temperatures. When a PCB is shared with other components generating heat, margin should be added. For best practice, measure the actual sense resistor temperature in a final system, along with the power MOSFETs, as those are often the hottest components.
Because power resistors are larger and more expensive than standard resistors, the common practice is to use multiple standard resistors in parallel, between the sense node and ground. This distributes the current and heat dissipation.