Some computers, such as notebook computers, have an external power adapter that converts alternating current (AC) voltage to direct current (DC) voltage for consumption by the computer. The DC voltage provided to the computer can be used to operate the logic circuits in the computer as well as to charge a battery. Different voltages may be required for battery charging as opposed to operating the computer's logic circuits. Additionally, a computer may be able to draw more current than the power adapter is rated to provide.
For a detailed description of exemplary embodiments of the invention, reference will now be made to the accompanying drawings in which:
Certain terms are used throughout the following description and claims to refer to particular system components. As one skilled in the art will appreciate, computer companies may refer to a component by different names. This document does not intend to distinguish between components that differ in name but not function. In the following discussion and in the claims, the terms “including” and “comprising” are used in an open-ended fashion, and thus should be interpreted to mean “including, but not limited to . . . .” Also, the term “couple” or “couples” is intended to mean either an indirect, direct, optical or wireless electrical connection. Thus, if a first device couples to a second device, that connection may be through a direct electrical connection, through an indirect electrical connection via other devices and connections, through an optical electrical connection, or through a wireless electrical connection. The term “system” refers to a combination of two or more components. A system may comprise, for example, the combination of a server and a client communicatively coupled thereto, or a server alone, a client alone, or a subsystem within a computer. The term “battery” refers to a single battery cell or multiple cells packaged as a battery pack.
In accordance with at least some embodiments, the power adapter 10 and load 20 comprise circuitry that enables each such device to control the other. The power adapter 10 causes the load 20 to change (e.g., reduce) its power draw as the power draw from the power adapter 10 nears and/or exceeds the power rating, or other threshold, of the power adapter. That is, if the load 20 begins to draw more power than the power adapter 10 can safely provide, the power adapter provides a control signal to the load to reduce its power consumption. The load 20 responds to the signal initiated by the power adapter 10 by reducing its power consumption. This reduction can be in accordance with any of a variety of power-reducing techniques. Examples comprise dimming a display of the load, throttling back a processor of the load, spinning down a rotatable storage medium (e.g., hard disk drive), ceasing battery charging, etc. The power adapter 10 also permits the load 20 to increase its power draw if the load's power draw is not at or in excess of the power adapter's threshold.
The load 20 is also able to control the power adapter 10. In at least some embodiments, the load 20 comprises host logic (e.g., processor, memory, etc.) as well as a rechargeable battery. The voltage used to recharge the load's battery may be a different voltage level than the voltage used to power the load's host logic. While some loads may comprise battery charging circuitry to generate the appropriate battery charging voltage, the load 20 of various embodiments does not necessarily comprise battery charging circuitry. In such embodiments, the power adapter 10 provides the voltage necessary to charge the load's rechargeable battery. Moreover, the power adapter 10 selectively provides at least two different voltages to the load 20. One voltage level is suitable for operating the host logic in the load 20 and another voltage level is suitable for charging the load's battery. The load 20 causes a control signal to be generated between the power adapter 10 and load 20 which, in turn, causes the output voltage provided by the power adapter 10 to the load 20 to change, for example, to increase if the load 20 requires a higher voltage or to decrease if the load 20 is operable with a lower voltage.
The cable 15 connecting the power adapter 10 to the load 20 comprises at least three conductors in various embodiments. In the embodiment of
The control principle is illustrated in
The circuitry of the power adapter 10 comprises an adapter voltage adjust circuit 40 coupled to an adapter control circuit 50. The adapter voltage adjust circuit comprises operational amplifier 41, capacitor 42, resistors 43 and 45-47, and zener diode 44. Adapter control circuit 50 comprises operational amplifier 51, resistors 53-54, and 56-59, capacitor 52, zener diode 55, and transistor 56. A diode 48 is provided coupling the adapter voltage adjust circuit 40 to the adapter control circuit 50.
The notebook computer circuitry shown in
The component values listed in
As described above, the power adapter 10 causes the notebook computer 20 to change (e.g., reduce) its power draw as the power draw from the power adapter 10 nears and/or exceeds the power rating, or other threshold, of the power adapter. The circuitry that performs this functionality comprises circuitry in both the power adapter 10 and the notebook computer 20, namely the adapter control circuit 50 working in concert with the computer power draw adjust circuit 70.
Current from the power adapter 10 (Iout) flows through conductor 16 and to the notebook computer 20, and returns via ground conductor 17. Resistor 54 comprises a sense resistor, that is, a resistor with a low resistance value (e.g., 0.01 ohms). The resistance is low enough so as not to disturb the operation of the circuit. The voltage across the resistor is proportional to the output current of the power adapter 10. The zener diode 55 comprises, for example, a 50 millivolt (mV) voltage reference. The voltage generated across sense resistor 54 is provided, in part via the zener diode 55 to the non-inverting (+) and inverting (−) terminals of operational amplifier 51. The zener diode voltage is applied to the non-inverting terminal. If the voltage across sense resistor 54 is less than 50 mV, the output of operational amplifier 51 goes high. When the current Iout is high enough so as to generate a voltage across sense resistor 54 in excess of 50 mV, the voltage applied to the inverting terminal of operational amplifier 51 will be greater than the 50 mV voltage applied to the non-inverting terminal via zener diode 55. When the inverting terminal voltage becomes greater than the non-inverting terminal, the output of operational amplifier 51 goes low.
The values of the zener diode 55 (e.g., 50 mV) and the sense resistor (0.01 ohms) is chosen so that the output voltage of operational amplifier decreases when the power adapter's output current Iout begins to near or exceed a rating associated with the power adapter. Thus, a low voltage at the output of the operational amplifier 51 indicates that the power adapter 10 is being driven, or about to be driven, past its maximum current rating.
In the embodiment of
However, if the current through the sense resistor 54 is high (relative to the zener diode's voltage), the output voltage of the operational amplifier 51 decreases which drives the PNP transistor 56 to turn on. While on, current 80 flows through resistor 57, transistor 56, across conductor 18, and through zener diode 72 and resistor 71 in the computer power draw adjust circuit 70. The magnitude of the current 80 is proportional to the difference between the power adapter's output current Iout and the rating threshold.
In some embodiments, a sawtooth waveform is generated (via circuitry not shown in
The pulse train output of comparator 74 comprise a pulse-width modulated (PWM) signal controlled indirectly by the power adapter's output current lout. The PWM signal from comparator 74 is used by the computer power draw adjust circuit 70 to cause the notebook computer 20 to adjust its power draw (e.g., throttling the clock speed of a processor, dimming a display, etc.). The smaller the pulse width, the lower the power draw. This results in a controlled reduction in power draw; it is a regulation process.
The zener diode 72 in the computer power draw adjust circuit 70 comprises a current blocking device that prevents the computer power draw adjust circuit from generating the PWM signal unless the voltage on conductor 18 through which current 80 flows has a voltage greater than a threshold voltage associated with the zener diode 72 (e.g., 6.8V).
As the notebook computer 20 reduces its power draw, the output current Iout provided by the power adapter will reduce to the point at which the voltage across sense resistor 54 is less than the threshold voltage of zener diode 55. At that point, the PNP transistor 56 starts to turn off, decreasing current 80 through the resistor 71 of the computer power draw adjust 70. When PNP transistor 56 turns off completely, the output voltage of comparator 74 becomes a constant high voltage which signals to the notebook computer that it no longer need actively reduce its power draw.
The combination of capacitor 52 and resistor 53 in the adapter control circuit 50 acts as an integrator that slows down the changes in current 80 to thereby slow down the notebook computer's attempts to alter its power consumption, and thereby stabilizes the control loop that controls power draw.
As described above, the notebook computer 20 causes a control signal to be generated between the power adapter 10 and load 20 which, in turn, causes the output voltage provided by the power adapter 10 to the notebook computer 20 to change, for example, to increase if the notebook computer 20 requires a higher voltage or to decrease if the notebook computer 20 is operable with a lower voltage. The circuitry that performs this functionality comprises circuitry in both the power adapter 10 and the notebook computer 20, namely the computer control circuit 60 working in concert with the adapter voltage adjust circuit 40.
The operational amplifier 41 in the adapter voltage adjust circuit 40 is configured as an error amplifier in the embodiment of
In some situations (e.g., for battery charging), the notebook computer 20 may require a different output voltage Vout from the power adapter 10. Logic in the computer control circuit 60 is used by the notebook computer 20 to cause the adapter voltage adjust circuit in the power adapter 10 to adjusts the output voltage of the adapter accordingly. Such logic may, for example, comprise the notebook computer's processor or analog circuitry. Such logic in the notebook computer 20 adjusts the potentiometer 62, which may comprise a digital potentiometer in some embodiments. The output voltage of the operational amplifier 61 equals or is proportional to the voltage provided on the operational amplifier's non-inverting terminal from the potentiometer 62.
As the logic in the notebook computer 20 adjusts potentiometer 62, transistor 63 (which comprises an NPN transistor) is turned on and a control signal current 85 flows through resistor 45 in the adapter voltage adjust circuit 40, through diode 48, through transistor 63 and resistor 64. Current 85, in addition to the current already flowing through resistors 45-47, increases the voltage drop across resistor 45. As a result, the voltage across resistor 47 decreases and the operational amplifier 41 generates a positive output voltage proportional to the difference between the voltage reference (zener diode 44) and the voltage across resistor 47. The adapter voltage adjust circuit 40 thereby causes the power adapter 10 to re-adjust (increase) its output voltage until the voltage across resistor 47 equals the zener diode's reference voltage. Current 85 causes the adapter voltage adjust circuit 40 to cause the adapter 10 to re-adjust the output voltage Vout. As the control current 85 decreases, the output voltage from operational amplifier 41 also decreases. Thus, logic in the notebook computer 20 can control the potentiometer 62 to thereby cause the power adapter 10 to increase or decrease its output voltage to the notebook computer 20.
The diode 48 in the power adapter 10 comprises signal blocking device disposed between the adapter control circuit 50 and the adapter voltage adjust circuit 40 to block the adapter control signal (current 80) from being received by the adapter voltage control adjust circuit 40. That is, the diode 48 precludes the current 80 from flowing to the adapter voltage adjust circuit 40, which otherwise would result in an unintended change to the power adapter's output voltage Vout when the adapter control circuit 50 was attempting to cause the notebook computer 10 to change its power draw.
In the event the adapter is requesting a decrease in load, while the notebook is requesting an increase in adapter voltage Vout, the current 80 sourced by adapter control circuit 50 is shared with current 85 that is drawn by computer control circuit 60. This tends to cancel out the effect of each request. As a result, the currents 80 and 85 are increased by their respective control circuits, until one reaches its maximum level, and is overdriven by the other. By design, the adapter control circuit 50 can drive current 80 to a higher level than the maximum of current 85 from computer control circuit 60. This way, overload of power adapter 10 is prevented. In this manner, the control circuits are able to operate simultaneously, and transition seamlessly between operating modes, without switching in new control logic or signals.
The above discussion is meant to be illustrative of the principles and various embodiments of the present invention. Numerous variations and modifications will become apparent to those skilled in the art once the above disclosure is fully appreciated. It is intended that the following claims be interpreted to embrace all such variations and modifications.
The present application claims the benefit of, and incorporates by reference, provisional application Ser. No. 60/915,117, filed May 1, 2007, and entitled “Bi-Directional Control of Power Adapter and Load.”
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US08/62232 | 5/1/2008 | WO | 00 | 10/30/2009 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60915117 | May 2007 | US |