Datasheet

V
SW
(10 V/ div)
V
OUT
(1 V/ div)
I
OUT
(10 A/ div)
T − Time − 10 µs / div
T − Time − 10 µs / div
V
OUT
(100 mV/ div)
I
OUT
(10 A/ div)
T − Time − 20 ms / div
TPS40190
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SLUS658C JULY 2005REVISED JULY 2012
Output Short Circuit Protection
The short circuit detection in the TPS40190 is done by sensing the voltage drop across the high side FET when
it is on. If the voltage drop across this FET exceeds the selected threshold in any given switching cycle, a
counter counts up one count and the FET is turned off early. If the voltage drop across that FET does not exceed
this threshold, the counter is decremented for that cycle and the FET is allowed to remain on for the normal
pulse width commanded by the internal pulse width modulator. If the counter fills up (a count of 7) a fault
condition is declared and the drivers turn both FETs off. After a timeout of approximately 95 ms, the controller
attempts to restart. If a short circuit is still present at the output, the current ramps quickly up to the short-circuit
threshold and another fault condition is declared. The device then waits 95 ms to attempt to restart again.
Typical waveforms during a short circuit event are shown in Figure 1 and Figure 2.
Figure 1. Output Short Circuit Detected (Nominal Figure 2. Output Fault Hiccup Restart Timing
Threshold 25 A)
The TPS40190 provides three selectable short circuit protection thresholds: 160 mV, 320 mV and 460 mV. The
particular threshold is selected by connecting a resistor from COMP to GND. Table 1 gives the short circuit
thresholds for corresponding resistors from COMP to GND. Note that since the TPS40190 measures the
resistance from COMP to GND during a 2-ms window, the compensation network from COMP to FB should have
a time constant significantly less than 1 ms or there can be issues detecting the resistance and setting the
correct short circuit threshold. This network should have no DC path from COMP to FB.
The short circuit detection threshold in the TPS40190 has some temperature compensation built in to help offset
the high-side FET rise in resistance as its temperature rises. A typical FET has a resistance temperature
coefficient of about 4500 ppm/°C. The temperature coefficient of the short circuit threshold is approximately
4200 ppm/°C. Figure 3 shows how the short circuit threshold increases with temperature to help compensate for
the FET resistance increase. The relative FET resistance change is based on an estimate of a linear
4500 ppm/°C temperature coefficient. The effectiveness of this compensation depends on how tight the thermal
coupling between the TPS40190 and the high-side FET is. Better thermal coupling between the TPS40190 and
the high-side FET gives better compensation effectiveness.
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