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Not Applicable
The present invention relates generally to semiconductor integrated circuit (IC) technology. In particular, the invention relates to a unique semiconductor circuit used for wide-range low-dropout current regulation.
In known electronics designs, power control includes voltage or current regulation. One popular example that requires constant current control is the light-emitted-diode (LED) controller application. As a lighting source, an LED unit is required to work with a wide range of brightness, which is proportional with the forward current going through the LED unit. For this reason an LED unit 10 is often driven by a constant current regulator 12 as indicated in
Many applications require multiple LED units 14, 16, 18 (
In some LED lighting source applications the overall light color is generated by a combination of different LED color units, often Red, Green, and Blue (RGB). This allows control of the chromatic hue or while balance of the resulting light. Different color LED units often have different current requirements and working forward voltages, thus making tight current control of each of the LED colors important and the use of multiple current regulated outputs mandatory. The current in each channel can be independently controlled by adjusting the effective value of the current sense resistor and/or changing the amount of gain or attenuation applied to the non-inverting input of the Error Amplifier.
When there is sufficient supply voltage, there will be enough voltage to maintain the correct forward voltage for the LED unit (or units) and a large enough voltage headroom across the current regulating circuit for it to function correctly. (In this case, headroom can be defined as the drain to source voltage of the output MOSFET.) However, as the supply voltage decreases the voltage headroom across the current regulator output can eventually be reduced to a value that prevents the current level from being maintained. Then the current will start to decrease as the supply voltage is further decreased. The point at which regulation is lost will be dependent on the forward voltage of each LED unit, and since this is not well-controlled, the matching of the currents for the different LED units will be lost under low headroom conditions. As regulation is lost, the brightness of the various LED units will differ and unevenness will appear across the display and/or a change in color will also appear if RGB LED units are used. Both effects are undesirable and in current practice the LED units need to be switched off in time to prevent such effects occurring.
What is needed is a better way to sense and control output of an array of LED units.
According to the invention, a digital control mechanism is provided to maintain current matching of a plurality of LED devices where the conventional supply voltage may be insufficient to achieve the threshold working current.
The invention will be better understood by reference to the following detailed description in connection with the accompanying drawings.
In general each channel need not have the same output current and each current can be set independently by either adjusting the effective value of the current sense resistor, or by adjusting the percentage of the reference value utilized by each channel error amplifier, or by a combination of both methods.
When the supply voltage is lowered, the headroom voltage across the output MOSFET is reduced and the error amplifier will increase the output MOSFET gate voltage to try and maintain the correct current value. At some point the gate drive for the output MOSFET will reach a maximum, usually the supply voltage of the error amplifier output stage, and at that point the output stage is said to be saturated and regulation will be lost.
In the preferred embodiments according to the invention, the current invention adds a saturation detection system to the error amplifier that provides a logic output signal that goes active just before the error amplifier loses regulation. An example of such a saturation detection circuit is indicated in
Each channel will produce a saturation detection logic signal that is logically ORed and used to provide a composite error signal for the rest of the control logic block. If the error logic signal is active, then one or more of the outputs is close to, or in, saturation. The digital controller then acts to vary the value of the current sense resistor (
The digital controller needs to monitor and control the output currents on a regular or continuous basis to ensure that the LED units are running at the maximum brightness possible up to a maximum preset value. This monitoring is only necessary once the digital controller has taken control of the effective reference voltage (or current) to each channel. Once all channels are working at the intended full current value, and the Error Amplifier error signals remain not active, the digital controller no longer regulates the brightness of the display.
The operation of the digital control loop is indicated by the waveforms in
The digital control loop is stabilized by storing and comparing two different error signal results at different current levels at a regular rate. The order in which the sampling occurs is not important for the operation of the digital loop and the negative excursion is not required but is the preferred solution to minimize current level disturbance in the LED units. As indicated in this implementation the voltage reference is initially increased slightly, then decreased slightly, and then returned to the initial value. The least disturbance is caused when the amount and duration that the reference value is decreased matches the amount and duration that it was increased by so that the time averaged value is equal to the nominal value. If the tests are performed quickly enough the resulting small display brightness flicker caused by the intended current variations will not be seen. The negative excursion is not a requirement and could be omitted if the resulting average value disturbance caused by the reference increase pulse is not significant. The combined error signal is sampled towards the end of the high reference value and stored as sample S2. The combined error signal is also sampled just before (as indicated), or some time after, the intended disturbance and stored as the nominal sample S1.
The two samples are then compared as indicated in the table of
The tests could be performed continuously but in general this is unnecessary as the supply voltage generally does not vary very quickly. Therefore the tests could be repeated at a lower rate indicated by the Test Repetition Rate in
The sampling as shown in
Another potential enhancement of the circuit is to add a digital dip detector to the existing circuit by allowing an instant reduction in the output current should one of the current outputs saturate but require multiple clear signals (i.e., all samples result in no active error logic signal) before returning to a higher current setting. This function can be readily implemented by adding a resettable counter, or some such similar circuit, placed after the sampled data signal. The count of the resettable counter is increased at each active sampled error signal and reset at every non-active sampled error signal. Only if the counter receives a preset number of sequential active error signals does the counter output go active and cause the current setting register to increment the output current setting. The current setting register then continues to increment until an active error signal is sampled or the maximum setting is obtained.
The resulting asymmetric nature of the digital control loop will enable the outputs to regulate better in the presence of noise or frequent supply voltage dips such as when the circuit is attached to a battery used with a GSM RF transmitter module.
Referring to
The present invention may be embodied in many different forms, designs or configurations, for the purpose of promoting an understanding of the principles of the invention, reference has been made to the embodiments illustrated in the drawings and specific language used to describe the same. It will nevertheless be understood that no limitation of the scope of the invention is thereby intended. Any alterations and further implementations of the principles of the invention as described herein are contemplated as would normally occur to one skilled in the art to which the invention relates. The skilled artisan will appreciate that modifications and adoptions to those embodiments may be made without departing from the scope and spirit of the present invention, which is only to be limited as indicated by the appended claims.
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61165671 | Apr 2009 | US |