SNVA966 July   2020  – MONTH  LP8864-Q1 , LP8864S-Q1 , LP8866-Q1 , LP8866S-Q1

 

  1.   Trademarks
  2. 1Fault Handling Routine
  3. 2Different Fault and Diagnostic Handling Method Recommendation
    1. 2.1 Different Fault Handling Method
      1. 2.1.1 System Brightness Derating
      2. 2.1.2 System-Level Unrecoverable Critical Fault
      3. 2.1.3 System-Level Sustainable Fault
    2. 2.2 Different Diagnostic Wrong Information Handling Method
      1. 2.2.1 System-Level Critical Wrong Diagnostic Information
      2. 2.2.2 System Level Sustainable Wrong Diagnostic Information
  4. 3Summary
  5.   A Fault-Related Functions
    1.     A.1 Protection and Fault Detections
      1.      A.1.1 Supply Faults
        1.       A.1.1.1 VIN Undervoltage Faults (VINUVLO)
        2.       16
        3.       A.1.1.2 VIN Overvoltage Faults (VINOVP)
        4.       A.1.1.3 VDD Undervoltage Faults (VDDUVLO)
        5.       A.1.1.4 VIN OCP Faults (VINOCP)
        6.       A.1.1.5 Charge Pump Faults (CPCAP, CP)
        7.       A.1.1.6 Boost Sync Clock Invalid Faults (BSTSYNC)
        8.       A.1.1.7 CRC Error Faults (CRCERR)
      2.      A.1.2 Boost Faults
        1.       A.1.2.1 Boost Overvoltage Faults (BSTOVPL, BSTOVPH)
        2.       A.1.2.2 Boost Overcurrent Faults (BSTOCP)
        3.       A.1.2.3 LEDSET Resistor Missing Faults (LEDSET)
        4.       A.1.2.4 MODE Resistor Missing Faults (MODESEL)
        5.       A.1.2.5 FSET Resistor Missing Faults (FSET)
        6.       A.1.2.6 ISET Resistor Out of Range Faults (ISET)
        7.       A.1.2.7 Thermal Shutdown Faults (TSD)
      3.      A.1.3 LED Faults
        1.       A.1.3.1 Open LED Faults (OPEN_LED)
        2.       A.1.3.2 Short LED Faults (SHORT_LED)
        3.       A.1.3.3 LED Short to GND Faults (GND_LED)
        4.       A.1.3.4 Invalid LED String Faults (INVSTRING)
        5.       A.1.3.5 I2C Timeout Faults
      4.      A.1.4 Overview of the Fault and Protection Schemes
    2.     A.2 Programming Examples
      1.      A.2.1 Clearing Fault Interrupts
      2.      A.2.2 Disabling Fault Interrupts
      3.      A.2.3 Diagnostic Registers

Boost Overcurrent Faults (BSTOCP)

Boost overcurrent is detected if the FB pin voltage drops below the VUVP threshold for 110 ms. If the boost overcurrent timer expires before the output voltage recovers, the BSTOCP_STATUS bit is set in the BOOST_FAULT_STATUS register. The fault recovery state is entered, and a fault interrupt is generated. The device will enter STANDBY mode and then attempt to restart after 100 ms. If the BSTOCP_STATUS bit is permanently set, it may indicate an issue in the application. Boost overcurrent is monitored from the boost start, and fault may trigger during boost start-up.