The TPIC46L01, TPIC46L02, and TPIC46L03 are low-side predrivers that provide serial input interface and
parallel input interface to control six external field-effect transistor(FET) power switches such as offered in the
Texas Instruments TPIC family of power arrays. These devices are designed primarily for low-frequency
switching, inductive load applications such as solenoids and relays. Fault status for each channel is available
in a serial-data format. Each driver channel has independent off-state open-load detection and on-state
shorted-load/short-to-battery detection. Battery overvoltage and undervoltage detection and shutdown are
provided. Battery and output load faults provide real-time fault reporting to the controller. Each channel also
provides inductive-voltage-transient protection for the external FET.
These devices provide control of output channels through a serial input interface or a parallel input interface.
A command to enable the output from either interface enables the respective channel GATE output to the
external FET. The serial input interface is recommended when the number of signals between the control device
and the predriver must be minimized, and the speed of operation is not critical. In applications where the
predriver must respond very quickly or asynchronously, the parallel input interface is recommended.
For serial operation, the control device must transition CS\ from high to low to activate the serial input interface.
When this occurs, SDO is enabled, fault data is latched into the serial input interface, and the FLT\ flag is
refreshed.
Data is clocked into the serial registers on low-to-high transitions of SCLK through SDI. Each string of data must
consist of 8 bits of data. In applications where multiple devices are cascaded together, the string of data must
consist of 8 bits for each device. A high data bit turns the respective output channel on and a low data bit turns
it off. Fault data for the device is clocked out of SDO as serial input data is clocked into the device. Fault data
consists of fault flags for the over-battery voltage (bit 8), under-battery voltage (bit 7) (not on TPIC46L03), and
shorted/open-load flags (bits 1-6) for each of the six output channels. A logic-high bit in the fault data indicates
a fault and a logic-low bit indicates that no fault is present on that channel. Fault register bits are set or cleared
asynchronously to reflect the current state of the hardware. The fault must be present when CS\ is transitioned
from high to low to be captured and reported in the serial fault data. New faults cannot be captured in the serial
register when CS\ is low. CS\ must be transitioned high after all of the serial data has been clocked into the device.
A low-to-high transition of CS\ transfers the last 6 bits of serial data to the output buffer, puts SDO in a
high-impedance state, and clears and reenables the fault register. The TPIC46L01/L02/L03 was designed to
allow the serial input interfaces of multiple devices to be cascaded together to simplify the serial interface to the
controller. Serial input data flows through the device and is transferred out SDO following the fault data in
cascaded configurations.
For parallel operation, data is asynchronously transferred directly from the parallel input interface (IN0-IN5) to
the respective GATE output. SCLK or CS\ are not required for parallel control. A 1 on the parallel input turns the
respective channel on, where a 0 turns it off. Note that either the serial interface or the parallel interface can
enable a channel. Under parallel operation, fault data must still be collected through the serial data interface.
The predrivers monitor the drain voltage for each channel to detect shorted-load or open-load fault conditions
in the on and off states respectively. These devices offer the option of using an internally generated
fault-reference voltage or an externally supplied VCOMP for fault detection. The internal fault reference is
selected by connecting VCOMPEN to GND and the external reference is selected by connecting VCOMPEN
to VCC. The drain voltage is compared to the fault-reference voltage when the channel is turned on to detect
shorted-load conditions and when the channel is off to detect open-load conditions. When a shorted-load fault
occurs using the TPIC46L01 or TPIC46L03, the channel is turned off and a fault signal is sent to FLT\ as well
as to the serial fault-register bit. When a shorted-load fault occurs while using the TPIC46L02, the channel
transitions into a low-duty cycle, pulse-width-modulated (PWM) signal as long as the fault is present.
Shorted-load conditions must be present for at least the shorted-load deglitch time, t(STBDG), in order to be
flagged as a fault. A fault signal is sent to FLT\ as well as the serial fault register bit. More detail on fault detection
operation is presented in the device operation section of this data sheet.
The TPIC46L01 and TPIC46L02 provide protection from over-battery voltage and under-battery voltage
conditions irrespective of the state of the output channels. The TPIC46L03 provides protection from over-battery
voltage conditions irrespective of the state of the output channels When the battery voltage is greater than the
overvoltage threshold or less than the undervoltage threshold (except for the TPIC46L03, which has no
undervoltage threshold), all channels are disabled and a fault signal is sent to FLT\ as well as to the respective
fault register bits. The outputs return to normal operation once the battery voltage fault has been corrected.
When an over-battery/under-battery voltage condition occurs, the device reports the battery fault, but disables
fault reporting for open and shorted-load conditions. Fault reporting for open and shorted-load conditions are
reenabled after the battery fault condition has been corrected.
These devices provide inductive transient protection on all channels. The drain voltage is clamped to protect
the FET. This clamp voltage is defined by the sum of VCC and turn-on voltage of the external FET. The predriver
also provides a gate-to-source voltage (VGS) clamp to protect the GATE-source terminals of the power FET from
exceeding their rated voltages.
These devices provide pulldown resistors on all inputs except CS\. A pullup resistor is used on CS\.
The TPIC46L01, TPIC46L02, and TPIC46L03 are low-side predrivers that provide serial input interface and
parallel input interface to control six external field-effect transistor(FET) power switches such as offered in the
Texas Instruments TPIC family of power arrays. These devices are designed primarily for low-frequency
switching, inductive load applications such as solenoids and relays. Fault status for each channel is available
in a serial-data format. Each driver channel has independent off-state open-load detection and on-state
shorted-load/short-to-battery detection. Battery overvoltage and undervoltage detection and shutdown are
provided. Battery and output load faults provide real-time fault reporting to the controller. Each channel also
provides inductive-voltage-transient protection for the external FET.
These devices provide control of output channels through a serial input interface or a parallel input interface.
A command to enable the output from either interface enables the respective channel GATE output to the
external FET. The serial input interface is recommended when the number of signals between the control device
and the predriver must be minimized, and the speed of operation is not critical. In applications where the
predriver must respond very quickly or asynchronously, the parallel input interface is recommended.
For serial operation, the control device must transition CS\ from high to low to activate the serial input interface.
When this occurs, SDO is enabled, fault data is latched into the serial input interface, and the FLT\ flag is
refreshed.
Data is clocked into the serial registers on low-to-high transitions of SCLK through SDI. Each string of data must
consist of 8 bits of data. In applications where multiple devices are cascaded together, the string of data must
consist of 8 bits for each device. A high data bit turns the respective output channel on and a low data bit turns
it off. Fault data for the device is clocked out of SDO as serial input data is clocked into the device. Fault data
consists of fault flags for the over-battery voltage (bit 8), under-battery voltage (bit 7) (not on TPIC46L03), and
shorted/open-load flags (bits 1-6) for each of the six output channels. A logic-high bit in the fault data indicates
a fault and a logic-low bit indicates that no fault is present on that channel. Fault register bits are set or cleared
asynchronously to reflect the current state of the hardware. The fault must be present when CS\ is transitioned
from high to low to be captured and reported in the serial fault data. New faults cannot be captured in the serial
register when CS\ is low. CS\ must be transitioned high after all of the serial data has been clocked into the device.
A low-to-high transition of CS\ transfers the last 6 bits of serial data to the output buffer, puts SDO in a
high-impedance state, and clears and reenables the fault register. The TPIC46L01/L02/L03 was designed to
allow the serial input interfaces of multiple devices to be cascaded together to simplify the serial interface to the
controller. Serial input data flows through the device and is transferred out SDO following the fault data in
cascaded configurations.
For parallel operation, data is asynchronously transferred directly from the parallel input interface (IN0-IN5) to
the respective GATE output. SCLK or CS\ are not required for parallel control. A 1 on the parallel input turns the
respective channel on, where a 0 turns it off. Note that either the serial interface or the parallel interface can
enable a channel. Under parallel operation, fault data must still be collected through the serial data interface.
The predrivers monitor the drain voltage for each channel to detect shorted-load or open-load fault conditions
in the on and off states respectively. These devices offer the option of using an internally generated
fault-reference voltage or an externally supplied VCOMP for fault detection. The internal fault reference is
selected by connecting VCOMPEN to GND and the external reference is selected by connecting VCOMPEN
to VCC. The drain voltage is compared to the fault-reference voltage when the channel is turned on to detect
shorted-load conditions and when the channel is off to detect open-load conditions. When a shorted-load fault
occurs using the TPIC46L01 or TPIC46L03, the channel is turned off and a fault signal is sent to FLT\ as well
as to the serial fault-register bit. When a shorted-load fault occurs while using the TPIC46L02, the channel
transitions into a low-duty cycle, pulse-width-modulated (PWM) signal as long as the fault is present.
Shorted-load conditions must be present for at least the shorted-load deglitch time, t(STBDG), in order to be
flagged as a fault. A fault signal is sent to FLT\ as well as the serial fault register bit. More detail on fault detection
operation is presented in the device operation section of this data sheet.
The TPIC46L01 and TPIC46L02 provide protection from over-battery voltage and under-battery voltage
conditions irrespective of the state of the output channels. The TPIC46L03 provides protection from over-battery
voltage conditions irrespective of the state of the output channels When the battery voltage is greater than the
overvoltage threshold or less than the undervoltage threshold (except for the TPIC46L03, which has no
undervoltage threshold), all channels are disabled and a fault signal is sent to FLT\ as well as to the respective
fault register bits. The outputs return to normal operation once the battery voltage fault has been corrected.
When an over-battery/under-battery voltage condition occurs, the device reports the battery fault, but disables
fault reporting for open and shorted-load conditions. Fault reporting for open and shorted-load conditions are
reenabled after the battery fault condition has been corrected.
These devices provide inductive transient protection on all channels. The drain voltage is clamped to protect
the FET. This clamp voltage is defined by the sum of VCC and turn-on voltage of the external FET. The predriver
also provides a gate-to-source voltage (VGS) clamp to protect the GATE-source terminals of the power FET from
exceeding their rated voltages.
These devices provide pulldown resistors on all inputs except CS\. A pullup resistor is used on CS\.