The UVLO circuit makes sure that the device stays
disabled before the input supply reaches the
minimum operational voltage range. This circuit
also makes sure that the device shuts down when
the input supply collapses. Figure 7-2 shows the UVLO circuit response to various
input voltage events. The diagram is separated
into the following parts:
- Region A: The device does not start until the input reaches the UVLO rising threshold.
- Region B: Normal operation, regulating device.
- Region C: Brownout event above the UVLO falling
threshold (UVLO rising threshold – UVLO
hysteresis). The output potentially falls out of
regulation but the device remains enabled.
- Region D: Normal operation, regulating device.
- Region E: Brownout event below the UVLO falling
threshold. The device is disabled in most cases and the output falls because
of the load and active discharge circuit. The device is re-enabled when the
UVLO rising threshold is reached by the input voltage and a normal start-up
follows.
- Region F: Normal operation followed by the input falling to the UVLO falling threshold.
- Region G: The device is disabled when the input
voltage falls below the UVLO falling threshold to
0V. The output falls because of the load and
active discharge circuit.