SLUSD66D September 2019 – February 2021 TPS92520-Q1
PRODUCTION DATA
The TPS92520-Q1 is a dual synchronous buck LED driver with a 4.5-V to 65-V input voltage range. It can deliver up to 1.6 A of continuous current per channel and power two independent strings of one to 16 series-connected LEDs. The device implements an adaptive on-time current regulation control technique to achieve fast transient response. This architecture uses a comparator and a one-shot on-timer that varies inversely with input and output voltage to maintain a near-constant frequency. The integrated low offset rail-to-rail error amplifier enables closed-loop regulation of LED current and ensures better than 4% accuracy over a wide input, output, and temperature range.
The LED current reference is set by the 10-bit IADJ DAC and is programmed by the CHxIADJ register to achieve over a 16:1 linear analog dimming range. Pulse width modulation (PWM) dimming of the LED current is achieved by either programming the internal PWM generator or by modulating the duty cycle of external voltage signal at UDIMx input. When enabled, the internal PWM generator sets the LED current duty cycle based on the 10-bit CHxPWM command. The external UDIMx input acts as an enable and directly controls the LED current. This device optimizes the inductor current response and is capable of achieving over a 1000:1 PWM dimming ratio.
The device incorporates an enhanced programmable fault feature including the following:
In addition, thermal shutdown (TSD) protection is implemented to limit the junction temperature at 175°C (typical). For each fault, there is an associated fault read-bit in the status registers that can be easily accessed via SPI read commands.
The TPS92520-Q1 includes a communication watchdog timer that enables standalone and limp-home (LH) function. When enabled, the watchdog timer monitors the SPI communication during start-up and normal operation. Communication failure at start-up forces the device in stand-alone mode operation. In this mode, the operation of each channel is controlled by UDIMx and LHI inputs while the SPI communication is disabled. Limp-home (LH) mode is activated on detection of communication failure during normal operation. In LH mode, the device operation is controlled by the limp-home registers that are initialized and loaded during the device start-up sequence.