Datasheet

remote-diode sensor designed for a nominal ideality
factor n
NOMINAL
is used to measure the temperature of
a diode with a different ideality factor n1. The measured
temperature T
M
can be corrected using:
where temperature is measured in Kelvin and
n
NOMIMAL
for the MAX6697 is 1.008. As an example,
assume you want to use the MAX6697 with a CPU that
has an ideality factor of 1.002. If the diode has no
series resistance, the measured data is related to the
real temperature as follows:
For a real temperature of +85°C (358.15K), the mea-
sured temperature is +82.87°C (356.02K), an error of
-2.13°C.
Series Resistance Cancellation
Some thermal diodes on high-power ICs can have
excessive series resistance, which can cause tempera-
ture measurement errors with conventional remote tem-
perature sensors. Channel 1 of the MAX6697 has a
series resistance cancellation feature (enabled by bit 3
of the configuration 1 register) that eliminates the effect
of diode series resistance. Set bit 3 to 1 if the series
resistance is large enough to affect the accuracy of
channel 1. The series resistance cancellation function
increases the conversion time for channel 1 by 125ms.
This feature cancels the bulk resistance of the sensor
and any other resistance in series (wire, contact resis-
tance, etc.). The cancellation range is from 0 to 100Ω.
Discrete Remote Diodes
When the remote-sensing diode is a discrete transistor,
its collector and base must be connected together.
Table 10 lists examples of discrete transistors that are
appropriate for use with the MAX6697. The transistor
must be a small-signal type with a relatively high for-
ward voltage; otherwise, the A/D input voltage range
can be violated. The forward voltage at the highest
expected temperature must be greater than 0.25V at
10µA, and at the lowest expected temperature, the for-
ward voltage must be less than 0.95V at 100µA. Large
power transistors must not be used. Also, ensure that
the base resistance is less than 100Ω. Tight specifica-
tions for forward current gain (50 < ß <150, for exam-
ple) indicate that the manufacturer has good process
controls and that the devices have consistent V
BE
char-
acteristics. Manufacturers of discrete transistors do not
normally specify or guarantee ideality factor. This is
normally not a problem since good-quality discrete
transistors tend to have ideality factors that fall within a
relatively narrow range. We have observed variations in
remote temperature readings of less than ±2°C with a
variety of discrete transistors. Still, it is good design
practice to verify good consistency of temperature
readings with several discrete transistors from any
manufacturer under consideration.
TT
n
n
TT
ACTUAL M
NOMINAL
MM
=
1
1 008
1 002
1 00599
.
.
(. )
TT
n
n
M ACTUAL
NOMINAL
=
1
MAX6697
7-Channel Precision Temperature Monitor
______________________________________________________________________________________ 13
Table 6. Configuration 3 Register
BIT NAME
POR
STATE
FUNCTION
7(MSB) Reserved 0
6 Reserved 0
5 Mask OVERT 6 0
Channel 6 Remote-Diode OVERT Mask Bit. Set to logic 1 to mask channel 6
OVERT.
4 Mask OVERT 5 0
Channel 5 Remote-Diode OVERT Mask Bit. Set to logic 1 to mask channel 5
OVERT.
3 Mask OVERT 4 0
Channel 4 Remote-Diode OVERT Mask Bit. Set to logic 1 to mask channel 4
OVERT.
2 Reserved 0
1 Reserved 0
0 Mask OVERT 1 0
Channel 1 Remote-Diode OVERT Mask Bit. Set to logic 1 to mask channel 1
OVERT.