Voltage Regulators Rev Up PWM-Based Fan Control
Nov 1, 2006 12:00 PM
By Tarlton Fleming, Editor, Steve Caldwell and Nancy Xiong, Customer Applications Engineers, Maxim I
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The simplest of fan-control schemes — an on-off switch — is simple but inefficient, because it provides more cooling than necessary most of the time. When on, the fully powered switch-controlled fan also generates a maximum amount of noise. More recently, the use of pulse-width modulation (PWM) has improved the efficiency and regulation of fan controllers, but PWM is not a perfect solution, either. However, there are two alternatives to the direct use of PWM signals for controlling the speed of 3-wire fans. One is an inexpensive “bulletproof” technique based on a linear regulator, while the other is a more efficient approach that employs a switching regulator.
Typical fan-controller ICs provide a PWM output for regulating fan speed. Normally, this low-frequency signal (~30 Hz to 100 Hz) adjusts the fan rotations per minute by cycling the fan motor on and off via an adjustable duty cycle. Unfortunately, chopping power to a 3-wire fan (power supply, ground and tachometer output) inhibits the tachometer signal that provides feedback to the fan controller, because cutting off the signal during low portions of the duty cycle affects the control loop. Some fan controllers attempt to compensate for this effect, but with limited success. The on/off cycling also can produce an objectionable clicking noise.
One solution to these problems is to smooth the PWM signal with a low-pass filter and use that voltage to control a linear driver. For a 12-V fan, the resulting control voltage is typically 5 V to 12 V, and you can use an inexpensive linear voltage regulator to drive the fan. Otherwise, such circuits introduce an RC filter for smoothing the PWM output, which is then buffered by an op amp and current-amplified by an external pass transistor. That approach is functional, but without additional protection circuitry it is subject to damage. A shorted fan can blow out the circuit.
The popular linear voltage regulator is well suited to drive a fan. It combines the op amp, pass transistor, current limiter, short-circuit protection and over-temperature protection all in one package at a reasonable price. More importantly, a typical linear-regulator IC can supply 0.5 A to 1.5 A, which covers most of today's fan-control applications.
In a typical application, the controller applies a 100-Hz PWM signal to the base of a pass transistor, which controls fan speed according to the PWM duty cycle, by toggling the fan-motor current off and on. The circuit of Fig. 1 also controls the fan with a 100-Hz PWM signal, generated by the open-drain output of U1 (the MAX6639, a 2-channel temperature monitor with dual automatic PWM fan-speed controller).
Instead of the on/off control of a pass transistor, however, the PWM signal in Fig. 1 controls the output-voltage level of a linear voltage regulator (U2). U1's PWM output is smoothed by an RC network consisting of the Thevenin equivalent of R1, R2A and R2B, multiplied by the value of C2.
U2 regulates its output to maintain 1.25 V between the V
The sum of R2B and R2A sets the maximum value of V

