This application and invention are related to and claim priority from provisional application serial number, filed Sep. 29, 2011, and entitled Automatic protocol (AP) for USB charger system, which provisional application is incorporated by reference herein.
The present invention relates to an automatic protocol (AP) for a USB charger system, that is designed to recognize the voltage needs of the device being charged, and controls the voltage level of the charger system to charge the device, based on the recognized voltage needs of the device. The present invention is particularly useful with portable devices.
Micro USB (Micro universal serial bus) connections are becoming increasingly common for portable devices. Some portable device manufacturers use voltage configuration on USB pin 2(D−) and pin 3(D+) to synchronize the signal between the USB Charger and portable device in order to provide a charging mode for the USB device. Each manufacturer device needs difference voltage on Pin2 (D−) and Pin3 (D+). Most USB chargers are specifically designed to fix the charging voltage to match with a specific portable device. The problem is that a USB charger may use a micro USB standard port, but may not be able to charge other devices due to difference voltage on D− and D+ configuration.
The USB standard is widespread in the industry, which has made it a standard also for small peripheral equipment charging. As part of the original standard, the device that is attached to a host would normally be provided with 100 mA of current. Thus the host would have a power budget. Incorporated into the standard was a digital protocol for a device to request more current from the host (a maximum of 500 mA). The host would normally evaluate if it had the available resources to answer this request. There arose a need to have independent chargers without the “smart” host abilities since having a full USB digital protocol requires a large microcontroller which is cost prohibitive on simple chargers. So a simple standard was adapted so that a simple charger could communicate to the host easily without having a complicated microcontroller on board. This standard involves shorting the D+ and D− together so a device being charged gets an echo from D− when it moves D+ and vice versa.
The D+ to D− short standard was adapted for the majority of devices. But it is not the only standard. Some manufacturers incorporated their own standards either because of the delay of the USB standard or because they desired other features. One feature that was desired was to communicate the amount of charging ability of the charger. Since by that time the maximum charging current moved from 500 mA to 1 Amp and even up to 2 Amps. One company decided to incorporate a divider protocol in which the dividers on the D+ and D− signals would indicate the charging ability. Another manufacturer just ties one signal D+ high and the other low while another does the opposite (D+ low). So, for a charger to be universal it would have to incorporate all these standards which became very difficult. So this places a burden on the consumer, who would have to buy a specific adapter that included a resistor network that would include the particular configuration protocol for their device. This is wasteful in the sense that the same connector would have to be bought several times for different devices just because the resistor network was different.
The present invention relates to a new and useful automatic protocol (AP) for a USB charger, which comprises a circuit that enables recognition of the voltage pin (D−) and pin (D+) needs of the device being charged, and controls the voltage level to charge the device, based on the recognized voltage needs.
Thus, one purpose of the present invention is to provide a changing resistor network that will adapt itself to a particular device it is charging. This device could again be incorporated in the charger and frees the consumer from figuring out which connector to buy (if any).
In a preferred embodiment, the circuit is configured to charge any of a plurality of different portable devices, each of which has different voltage needs. The circuit is configured to modify the voltage at the data lines of a USB port to meet needs of any of the plurality of portable devices.
Additional features of the present invention will be apparent from the following detailed description and the accompanying drawings
As described above, the present invention relates to a new and useful automatic protocol (AP) for a USB charger, which comprises a circuit that enables recognition of the voltage pin (D−) and pin (D+) needs of the device being charged, and controls the voltage level to charge the device, based on the recognized voltage needs. In a preferred embodiment, the circuit is configured to charge any of a plurality of different portable devices, each of which has different voltage needs. The circuit is configured to modify the voltage at the data lines of a USB port to meet needs of any of the plurality of portable devices. The present invention is described herein in connection with such a circuit, and from that description the manner in which the principles of the present invention can be applied to various USB charger circuits will be apparent to those in the art.
As also described above, Micro USB (Micro universal serial bus) connections are becoming increasingly common for portable devices. Some portable device manufacturers use voltage configuration on USB pin 2(D−) and pin 3(D+) to synchronize the signal between the USB Charger and portable device in order to provide a charging mode for the USB device. Each manufacturer device needs difference voltage on Pin2 (D−) and Pin3 (D+). Most USB chargers are specifically designed to fix the charging voltage to match with a specific portable device. The problem is that a USB charger may use a micro USB standard port, but may not be able to charge other devices due to difference voltage on D− and D+ configuration.
The USB standard is widespread in the industry, which has made it a standard also for small peripheral equipment charging. As part of the original standard, the device that is attached to a host would normally be provided with 100 mA of current. Thus the host would have a power budget. Incorporated into the standard was a digital protocol for a device to request more current from the host (a maximum of 500 mA). The host would normally evaluate if it had the available resources to answer this request. There arose a need to have independent chargers without the “smart” host abilities since having a full USB digital protocol requires a large microcontroller which is cost prohibitive on simple chargers. So a simple standard was adapted so that a simple charger could communicate to the host easily without having a complicated microcontroller on board. This standard involves shorting the D+ and D− together so a device being charged gets an echo from D− when it moves D+ and vice versa.
The D+ to D− short standard was adapted for the majority of devices. But it is not the only standard. Some manufacturers incorporated their own standards either because of the delay of the USB standard or because they desired other features. One feature that was desired was to communicate the amount of charging ability of the charger. Since by that time the maximum charring current moved from 500 mA to 1 Amp and even up to 2 Amps. One company decided to incorporate a divider protocol in which the dividers on the D+ and D− signals would indicate the charging ability. Another manufacturer just ties one signal D+ high and the other low while another does the opposite (D+ low). So, for a charger to be universal it would have to incorporate all these standards which became very difficult. So this places a burden on the consumer, who would have to buy a specific adapter that included a resistor network that would include the particular configuration protocol for their device. This is wasteful in the sense that the same connector would have to be bought several times for different devices just because the resistor network was different.
The present invention relates to a new and useful automatic protocol (AP) for a USB charger, which comprises a circuit that enables recognition of the voltage pin (D−) and pin (D+) needs of the device being charged, and controls the voltage level to charge the device, based on the recognized voltage needs.
Thus, one purpose of the present invention is to provide a changing resistor network that will adapt itself to a particular device it is charging. This device could again be incorporated in the charger and frees the consumer from figuring out which connector to buy (if any).
In a preferred embodiment, the circuit is configured to charge any of a plurality of different portable devices, each of which has different voltage needs. The circuit is configured to modify the voltage at the data lines of a USB port to meet needs of any of the plurality of portable devices.
The automatic protocol (AP) circuit for a USB charger system, according to the present invention, can be seen in the schematics of
As seen from the figures, the Automatic protocol (AP) is the data lines manager that enables any portable device to recognize and understand its connection to its USB charger. The AP of the present invention can modify the voltage at the data lines of the USB port to meet the voltage needs of most portable devices, by automatically changing voltage pin2(D−) and pin3(D+) when using this AP with the new portable devices. The AP comprises an analog switch, resistors network, current sensing, power on/off switch and microcontroller unit (MCU) with flash memory inside (
The objective of the invention is to provide an application that able automatic change voltage configuration on pin2 (D−) and pin3 (D+) for most portable devices in order to get charging mode. The way the invention is implemented, according to the figures, and according to the principles of the present invention, is by using the MCU (microcontroller unit) to control the analog switch to switch the resistor connection from USB output and ground. The resistors are designed to provide specified value matching that MCU can control to get the right voltage D− and D+ value for most portable devices currently on the market. The On/Off output switches are used for resetting the mobile (portable) device every time there is a change in the resistor network configuration. The MCU is programmed in order to control all analog switches to switch resistor network accordingly to MCU program.
The automatic protocol application comprises MCU (Micro controller unit), analog switch, resistor network, current sensing and output On/Off switch. These components are shown in the figures, and described further below.
MCU (microcontroller unit): The MCU is designed to check signal from the device (e.g. a portable device), via USB port data line D− and D+, and when appropriate provides different voltage level on pin 2(D−) and pin 3(D+) condition to the portable device (
The MCU is capable of being upgraded (e.g. in its firmware) when new portable devices are released to the marketplace.
Analog Switches (
The circuit components shown in
Resistor Network (
In the example of
Current Sense (
In the example of
Output On/Off Switch (
In the example of
In order to sequence which protocol standard the device to be charged has, the present invention provides a mechanism to start from scratch (reset the whole procedure). The power on/off switch serves this purpose. If a resistor network protocol is the incorrect one, the device to be charged might not “listen” to any other changes in the D+ and D− signals after the initial power on. So the charging device would have to disconnect power for a time and retry a different protocol. Each protocol is tried in sequence from the most popular to the least. Each time a new protocol is tried the USB 5V output is turned off to reset the startup sequence. For the charger to know when the right protocol is reached the current sensor monitors the amount of current the device to be charged is allowing to flow. When a significant increase over the 100 mA standard is reached then the assumption by the microcontroller is that the right protocol was found and locked in for this charging session and no more searching has to be done.
Voltage Reference (
In the example of
As will be clear to those in the art from the foregoing detailed description, the present invention relates to a new and useful automatic protocol (AP) for a USB charger, which comprises a circuit that enables recognition of the voltage pin2 (D−) and pin3 (D+) needs of the device being charged, and controls the voltage level to charge the device, based on the recognized voltage needs. In a preferred embodiment, described herein, the circuit is configured to charge any of a plurality of different portable devices, each of which has different voltage needs. The circuit is configured to modify the voltage at the data lines of a USB port to meet needs of any of the plurality of portable devices. Also, the circuit (
Thus, As described above, a new and useful automatic protocol (AP) for a USB charger is provided, which comprises a circuit that enables recognition of the voltage pin2 (D−) and pin3 (D+) needs of the device being charged, and controls the voltage level to charge the device, based on the recognized voltage needs. From that description the manner in which the principles of the present invention can be applied to various USB charger circuits will be apparent to those in the art.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB2012/002609 | 10/1/2012 | WO | 00 | 3/27/2014 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61540974 | Sep 2011 | US |