Timothy Hegarty
Smart sensor transmitters are widely used in factory automation, process instrumentation and control equipment to measure temperature, pressure, flow, level and many other process variables. Figure 1 is a block diagram of a field transmitter that measures temperature as the primary variable using a resistance temperature detector (RTD), thermistor or thermocouple.
The signal chain includes the sensor analog front end, microcontroller (MCU), and high-precision analog-to digital and digital-to-analog converters.
While a basic sensor transmitter circuit’s MCU and data converters are usually optimized for low operating current, the added functionality in high-performance smart sensor applications leads to increased current demand. For example, current consumption is greater when the circuit includes features such as isolation, calibration and diagnostics, a liquid crystal display (LCD) interface, or wireless connectivity options such as Bluetooth® low energy or wireless HART®.
Such intelligent sensor systems may not be able to meet typical underscale current thresholds or the 4mA zero-scale level of the 4-20mA current loop. For example, the default loop currents that demarcate low- and high-error currents for TI’s DAC161S997 are 3.375mA and 21.75mA, respectively. The NAMUR NE43 specification has similar current thresholds. Fortunately, a high-efficiency synchronous buck converter provides higher output current than a low-dropout regulator (LDO) to power sensor electronics, while harvesting less than 3.375mA from the loop.
For powering sensors, the LM5165 synchronous buck solution from TI has high-efficiency and ultralow quiescent current (IQ = 10.5uA). Operating from a 20:1 wide input-voltage (VIN) range and capable of sustaining repetitive 65V surges, its output voltage is immune to large and noisy voltage swings at the input. Such transient immunity performance is critical in sensor applications that require high reliability.
Figure 2 shows the converter schematic configured for an output of 5V at 25mA. Adding an input filter with reverse polarity and transient/surge voltage protection helps achieve electromagnetic compatibility (EMC).
Various features incorporated in the LM5165 for smart sensor applications include a simple control architecture for optimal solution size, 100% duty cycle capability for low dropout, an open-drain power-good circuit for power-rail sequencing and fault reporting, internally fixed or externally adjustable soft start (SS), and precision enable with customizable hysteresis for programmable-line undervoltage lockout (UVLO). Also, an adjustable cycle-by-cycle current limit optimizes inductor selection and sizing. Figure 3 shows the converter efficiency and power dissipation for a load current from 0.1mA to 30mA.
The benefit of a wide VIN buck converter such as the LM5165 lies in its cohesive feature set, which addresses a specific set of power solution needs:
To exploit the full potential of modern loop-powered sensor transmitters and retain the simple two-wire architecture, the LM5165 low IQ synchronous buck converter delivers adequate load current while meeting current loop, solution size, reliability and EMC requirements.
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