JAJSGZ6E January 2009 – February 2019 UC1842A-SP , UC1844A-SP
PRODUCTION DATA.
The UC184xA-SP current sense input is configured as shown in Figure 18. Current-to-voltage conversion is done externally with ground-referenced resistor RS. Under normal operation, the peak voltage across RS is controlled by the E/A according to the following relation:
where
RS can be connected to the power circuit directly or through a current transformer, as Figure 18 shows. While a direct connection is simpler, a transformer can reduce power dissipation in RS, reduce errors caused by the base current, and provide level shifting to eliminate the restraint of ground-referenced sensing. The relation between VC and peak current in the power stage is given by:
where
For purposes of small-signal analysis, the control-to-sensed-current gain is:
When sensing current in series with the power transistor, as shown in Figure 18, the current waveform often has a large spike at its leading edge. This spike is due to rectifier recovery and/or inter-winding capacitance in the power transformer. If unattenuated, this transient can prematurely terminate the output pulse. As shown, a simple RC filter is usually adequate to suppress this spike. The RC time constant should be approximately equal to the current spike duration (usually a few hundred nanoseconds).
The inverting input to the UC184xA-SP current-sense comparator is internally clamped to 1 V (Figure 18). Current limiting occurs if the voltage at pin 3 reaches this threshold value, that is, the current limit is defined by: