SBVS066S December 2005 – November 2024 TPS74401
PRODUCTION DATA
Thermal protection disables the output when the junction temperature rises to approximately 155°C for the legacy chip and 165°C for the new chip, allowing the device to cool. When the junction temperature cools to approximately 140°C, the output circuitry is enabled. Depending on power dissipation, thermal resistance, and ambient temperature the thermal protection circuit can cycle on and off. This cycling limits the dissipation of the regulator, protecting the regulator from damage as a result of overheating.
Activation of the thermal protection circuit indicates excessive power dissipation or inadequate heatsinking. For reliable operation, limit junction temperature to 125°C maximum. To estimate the margin of safety in a complete design (including heatsink), increase the ambient temperature until thermal protection is triggered; use worst-case loads and signal conditions. For good reliability, trigger thermal protection at least 30°C above the maximum expected ambient condition of the application. This condition produces a worst-case junction temperature of 125°C at the highest expected ambient temperature and worst-case load.
The internal protection circuitry of the TPS74401 is designed to protect against overload conditions. This circuitry is not intended to replace proper heatsinking. Continuously running the TPS74401 into thermal shutdown degrades device reliability.