SLAT163 July 2024 AFE43902-Q1 , AFE439A2 , AFE53902-Q1 , AFE539A4 , AFE539F1-Q1 , AFE639D2 , DAC43204 , DAC43401 , DAC43401-Q1 , DAC43701 , DAC43701-Q1 , DAC43901-Q1 , DAC43902-Q1 , DAC53001 , DAC53002 , DAC53004 , DAC53004W , DAC53202 , DAC53204 , DAC53204-Q1 , DAC53204W , DAC53401 , DAC53401-Q1 , DAC53701-Q1 , DAC539E4W , DAC539G2-Q1 , DAC63001 , DAC63002 , DAC63004 , DAC63004W , DAC63202 , DAC63202W , DAC63204 , DAC63204-Q1 , DAC63204W
To gather and communicate simple faults from system to system often times require software implementation. Take rear lighting of a car as an example: there are a few LED drivers which output digital fault signals which needs to be somehow communicate to the main processor located in the front of the car. To do so, another micro-controller is normally utilized.
DAC539G2-Q1 provides software-free way to solve this kind of problem. The device takes 3 GPIs as an input. The input is mapped in the internal LUT to the corresponding PWM duty cycle signal. For example: if input is 0 0 0, the output PWM is 100% duty cycle, if input is 0 0 1, the output PWM is 87.5% duty cycle, and so on. Hence, up to 8 different fault condition can be monitored and communicated. As the output is PWM duty cycle is modulated, such communication only requires a single wire and can be transmitted across 3-5 meters. GPI-to-duty cycle relationship is fully customizable within device LUT and can be stored in the device non-volatile memory for software-free operation.
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End Equipment | Design help |