SLVAE57B February 2021 – October 2021 LM5050-1 , LM5050-2 , LM5051 , LM66100 , LM74202-Q1 , LM74500-Q1 , LM74610-Q1 , LM74700-Q1 , LM74720-Q1 , LM74721-Q1 , LM74722-Q1 , LM7480-Q1 , LM7481-Q1 , LM76202-Q1 , SM74611 , TPS2410 , TPS2411 , TPS2412 , TPS2413 , TPS2419
Ideal Diode controllers such as LM7480-Q1 and LM7472x-Q1 can drive and control external back to back N-Channel MOSFETs to emulate an ideal diode rectifier with power path ON/OFF control, inrush current limiting and over voltage protection. Load disconnection during an overvoltage fault such as load-dump allows use of low voltage downstream components, enabling dense ECU designs such as ADAS camera, USB Hubs, LIDAR, and TCU. LM7480x-Q1 and LM7472x-Q1 have separate GATE controls for ideal diode control and ON/OFF control.
Automotive ECU designs powered from a vehicle battery need to be load dump tolerant. For the 12-V car battery based designs, the suppressed load dump peak specification is 35-V. For the system designs without the centralized load dump suppression, the surge voltage due to unsuppressed load dump can peak up to 101 V in 12-V systems and 202 V in 24-V battery based systems as per the ISO-16750-2 standard. Conventional solutions use several high-power TVS stacks (SMD sized) to clamp to a safe level (below the downstream absolute maximum voltages) during the unsuppressed load dump resulting in an increase in overall solution size and BoM cost of the front-end protection circuit.
The LM7480-Q1 controller with the external MOSFETs configured in common source topology as shown in Figure 6-7 below provides unsuppressed load dump protection.