The thermal protection behavior can be
split up into three categories of events that can happen. Figure 8-16 shows each of these categories.
Relative thermal shutdown: the device is enabled into an overcurrent
event. The DIAG_EN pin is high so that diagnostics can be monitored on SNS and
FLT (however, DIAG_EN being high is not necessary for all protection features to
function). The output current rises up to the IILIM level and the FLT
goes low while the SNS goes to VSNSFH. With this large amount of
current going through the junction temperature of the FET increases rapidly with
respect to the controller temperature. When the power FET temperature rises
TREL amount above the controller junction temperature ΔT =
TFET – TCON > TREL, the device shuts
down. The faults are continually shown on SNS and FLT and the part waits for the
tRETRY timer to expire. When tRETRY timer expires,
because the LATCH pin is low and EN is still high, the device comes back on into
this IILIM condition.
Absolute thermal shutdown:
the device is still enabled in an overcurrent event with DIAG_EN high and LATCH
still low. However, in this case the junction temperature rises up and hits an
absolute reference temperature, TABS, and then shuts down. The device
does not recover until both TJ < TABS – Thys
and the tRETRY timer has expired.
Latch-off mode: the device
is enabled into an overcurrent event. The DIAG_EN pin is high so that
diagnostics can be monitored on SNS and FLT. The output current rises up to the
IILIM level and the FLT goes low while the SNS goes to
VSNSFH. If the part shuts down due to a thermal fault, either
relative thermal shutdown or absolute thermal shutdown, the device does not
enable the channel until either the LATCH pin or the EN pin is toggled.