Latched Overcurrent Fault Detector Has Fast Response Time
Oct 1, 2005 12:00 PM
By Andy Fewster, Regional Business Manager, SPM Products, and Kevin Frick, Applications Engineer, Ma
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The circuit introduced here is a simple and fast-responding overcurrent detector for protection of low-voltage applications. Unlike dedicated hot-swap controllers that impose a long startup delay initiated by undervoltage, this circuit provides protection only 150 µs after the input supply rises above 2.7 V. It also possesses a measure of inrush current limiting during power up, by virtue of the limited gate voltage on an external p-channel switch.
Fig. 1 shows the complete circuit of the latched overcurrent fault detector. After power is applied, the comparator output (C
When the load current produces a voltage at C
The MAX4373 is the controller selected for a fast-responding, current-latching, current-limit detector circuit able to operate from 3.3-V supplies. The MAX4373 integrates all the elements required to produce such a circuit: a high common-mode differential voltage detector, a reference and a latching comparator with active low reset. Startup delay is typically 500 µs from application of V
When selecting the sense resistor value to ensure optimum gain accuracy (typically 1% to 1.5%), the voltage drop at the rated current should be in the range 75 mV to 100 mV for gain values of 20 and 50 (provided by the T and F versions of the MAX4373, respectively). R
The dynamic range of the output is also an important consideration. You should center the nominal output voltage (corresponding to the operating/detecting current) at one-half the supply voltage. Note that V
For a sense current of 15 A in this application, R
Having set the current-detection amplifier, you should set up the comparator to provide a switching output voltage suitable for disabling the series power switch. A resistor divider connects the current-amplifier output to the comparator-positive input. For switching, the internally set threshold of 600 mV nominal (580 mV to 618 mV) must be exceeded by the positive input of the comparator.
The current through R1 and R2 should be greater than 150 nA, and less than 500 µA at the nominal output voltage of the current-sense amplifier. The comparator output sinks 1 mA with a saturation voltage of 600 mV maximum. R3, the gate pull-up resistor, is calculated from the following equation:
The external p-channel MOSFET is chosen with peak current, on-resistance and gate voltage as the key selection specifications, closely followed by packaging. On-resistance should be chosen so that the voltage drop at the rated current is approximately the same as the current-sense voltage. That value produces similar levels of dissipation in the sense resistor and the MOSFET.
The Si7485DP MOSFET from Siliconix has a 9-mΩ maximum on-resistance at V
At a 15-A load current and a 9-mΩ on-resistance, the Si7485DP operates 40°C to 50°C above ambient, so additional heatsinking is required according to the final application. In this example, the power switch has a gate-charge specification of about 60 nC. If a fast response is required, that value is beyond the drive capability of R3 and the low-power comparator output. A gate-drive buffer is therefore mandatory. As outlined above, Q2 and Q3 form a complementary emitter-follower driver that provides significant bipolar current gain into the gate of Q1. The transistors are chosen with good dc beta at medium collector currents of 500 mA to 1 A. Suitable choices are the Zetex FZT688B (npn) and FZT788B (pnp), packaged in SOT-223 outlines. Gate time = G
The value of the current actually sensed depends on tolerance buildup due to the following:
| Sense resistor | ±1% (TL3A) |
| Sense voltage limits | ±0.1% |
| Gain tolerance | ±5.5% max (includes gain and offset errors) |
| Comparator resistor tolerance | ±1% (R1 & R2) |
| Comparator threshold tolerance | ±3.3% |
Ignoring the sense-voltage tolerance, overall current-sense tolerance is close to ±10.8%. Detailed limits can be calculated using the following equation:
Using ±0.1% tolerance resistors for R1 and R2 reduces the error limits somewhat (approx ±1%), but the additional cost may not be supported by the end application.
Fast response to a fault and the subsequent current interruption is a key requirement. However, energy remaining in the power leads' distributed inductance can produce damaging voltage spikes. Some of that energy is absorbed by distributed capacitance in the load supply, but a fast-responding overvoltage clamp may be required to protect the MAX4373 from transients of 28 V or higher.
As a test of circuit operation, a current probe monitors load current at the input terminal (V
Acknowledgment
The author would like to thank Kevin Frick for his layout, construction and testing of the circuit shown in Fig. 1.

