SLVAES1A June 2020 – May 2022 DRV8300
Determining supply voltage, output current, and motor power in a system is one of the first steps in selecting what type of motor driver architecture is needed for an application.
Supply voltages come from two categories: battery powered and line powered. In both battery and line powered systems, the supply can vary in voltage, so a motor driver should support at least the maximum voltage of the battery with extra headroom in the case of voltage feedback or transients in the system. TI recommends using a motor driver rated up to 1.2 × the maximum voltage for well-regulated supplies and low-power motors, and 1.5 to 2 times for high-power motors and battery systems. Texas Instruments has a wide-ranging portfolio of motor drivers that support up to 56-V battery systems.
In general, integrated versus external FET architectures have different power requirements. High power (> 70W) systems use gate drivers and low-to-mid-power systems (< 70W) use integrated FET drivers. External FETs are able to drive higher power than integrated FETs because they are not constrained by the size of the single-chip integrated FET driver device. For integrated FET solutions, peak current, RMS current, and RDS(on) of the internal FETs are important considerations that directly relate to the motor power. For external FET solutions, the RDS(on) and current ratings of the external MOSFETs relate to the power the motor can drive.
Table 2-1 compares the specifications of gate driver and integrated FET driver architectures.
Gate Driver | Integrated FET Driver | |
---|---|---|
Power | High power (typically > 70W) | Low to mid power (typically < 70W) |
Voltage Range | Up to 100 V | Normally 60 V or less |
Gate Driver Current | Greater than 3.5-A/4.5-A of source/sink current | - |
Peak Current | - | Up to 13-A |
MOSFETs | External | Internal |
Thermal | Power is dissipated in external MOSFETs | Limited by the size of the integrated package |
Solution Size | Larger | Smaller |