NSC LM9040M

LM9040
Dual Lambda Sensor Interface Amplifier
General Description
Features
The LM9040 is a dual sensor interface circuit consisting of
two independent sampled input differential amplifiers designed for use with conventional Lambda Oxygen Sensors.
The Lambda Sensor is used for monitoring the oxygen concentration in the exhaust of gasoline engines using catalytic
after treatment and will deliver a voltage signal which is dependent on the air-fuel mixture. The gain of the amplifiers
are internally set and can directly convert the Lambda sensor output voltage to a level suitable for A/D conversion in a
system using a 5V reference.
The input common mode voltage range of each amplifier is
g 2V with respect to the IC ground pin. This will allow the IC
to connect to sensors which are remotely grounded at the
engine exhaust manifold or exhaust pipe.
Each amplifier is capable of independent default operation
should either, or both, of the leads to a sensor become
open circuited.
Noise filtering is provided by an internal switched capacitor
low pass filter as part of each amplifier, and by external
components.
The LM9040 is fully specified over the automotive temperature range of b40§ C to a 125§ C and is provided in a 14-pin
Small Outline surface mount package.
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Single 5V supply operation
Common mode input voltage range of g 2V
Differential input voltage range of 50 mV to 950 mV
Sampled differential input
Switched capacitor low pass filter
Internal oscillator and VBB generator
Open input default operation
Cold sensor default operation
Low power consumption (42 mW max)
Gain set by design and guaranteed over the operating
temperature range
Applications
Y
Y
Closed loop emissions control
Catalytic converter monitoring
Connection Diagram
TL/H/12372 – 1
Top View
Ordering Information
LM9040M
See NS Package Number M14B
C1995 National Semiconductor Corporation
TL/H/12372
RRD-B30M115/Printed in U. S. A.
LM9040 Dual Lambda Sensor Interface Amplifier
August 1995
Absolute Maximum Ratings
Operating Ratings
If Military/Aerospace specified devices are required,
please contact the National Semiconductor Sales
Office/Distributors for availability and specifications.
Supply Voltage
Supply Voltage
4.75V to 5.25V
Differential Input Voltage
0V to a 1V
Common Mode Voltage
Power Dissipation
b 0.3V to a 6.0V
g 14V
Input Voltage Continuous (Note 1)
g 60V
Input Voltage Transient t s 1 ms (Note 1)
g 2000V
ESD Susceptibility (Note 2)
Maximum Junction Temperature
150§ C
b 65§ C to a 150§ C
Storage Temperature Range
Lead Soldering Information
Vapor Phase (60 Seconds)
215§ C
Infrared (15 Seconds)
220§ C
g 2V
42 mW
DC Electrical Characteristics
The following specifications apply for VCC e 5.0V, VDIFF e 500 mV, VCM e 0V, ROSC e 178 kX, b40§ C s TA s a 125§ C, DC
Test Circuit Figure 1 , unless otherwise specified.
Symbol
Parameter
Conditions
Min
Max
8.0
mA
1.60
Meg X
ICC
Supply Current
4.75V s VCC s 5.25V
ZDIFF
Differential Input Impedance
4.75V s VCC s 5.25V
1.05
ZIO
Inverting Input to Ground Impedance
Non-Inverting Inputs Open
10.00
VOL
Output Low Voltage
VDIFF e 0V, ILOAD e 2.0 mA
VOC
VOUT Center
One, or Both, Input(s) Open
4.75V s VCC s 5.25V
VOUT(ERROR)
(VOUT)– (VDIFF # 4.53)
50 mV s VDIFF s 950 mV, VCM e 0V
VOH
Output High Voltage
VDIFF e 5V, ILOAD e b2 mA
ROUT
Output Resistance
CMRR(DC)
DC Common Mode Error
b 2V s VCM s a 2V
TRISE
Output Rise Time
COUT e 0.01 mF
TFALL
Output Fall Time
COUT e 0.01 mF
FC
Low Pass Filter b3 dB
COUT e 0.01 mF
VCC # 0.380
Units
Meg X
100
mV
VCC # 0.425
V
g 65
mV
3500
X
g 4.5
mV/V
1.2
ms
1.2
ms
700
Hz
VCC b 0.1V
1500
400
V
Note 1: The input voltage must be applied through external 4 kX input resistors. See Figure 2 , AC Test Circuit. Amplifier operation will be disrupted, but will not be
destructive.
Note 2: ESD rating is with Human Body Model: 100 pF discharged through a 1500X resistor.
TL/H/12372 – 3
TL/H/12372–2
FIGURE 2. AC Test Circuit
FIGURE 1. DC Test Circuit
2
Typical Performance Characteristics
Supply Current vs Temperature
FCLOCK (Normalized) vs ROSC
TL/H/12372–4
Output R vs Temperature
TL/H/12372 – 5
ZDIFF vs Temperature
TL/H/12372–7
Voltage Gain vs Frequency
TL/H/12372 – 8
PSRR vs Frequency
TL/H/12372–10
TL/H/12372 – 11
3
FCLOCK (Normalized) vs VCC
TL/H/12372 – 6
FC vs Temperature
TL/H/12372 – 9
CMRR vs Frequency
TL/H/12372 – 12
The oscillator resistor should be located as close to the
OSCÐRES pin as possible. Any variation of the oscillator
resistor value, any stray capacitance on the OSCÐRES pin,
or any changes in the supply voltage, will result in a change
in the oscillator frequency. This will directly affect the device
Differential Input Impedance, and Low Pass filter response.
Additional circuitry takes the oscillator signal and generates
two non-overlapping clock signals, and a CLKÐOUT signal.
The clock signals operate at one half the oscillator frequency, or typically 100 kHz. This results in a Nyquist frequency
of typically 50 kHz.
Circuit Description
The LM9040 is fabricated in CMOS technology and is designed to operate from a single, well regulated, 5V supply.
The IC consists of two independent differential amplifiers
which are designed using two-phased switched capacitor
networks (SCN). The differential inputs have a common
mode operating range of 2V above and below ground. The
SCN includes the input sampling, the lowpass filter, cold
sensor bias voltage, and the gain circuitry. Each amplifier
has an independent voltage comparator to detect an open
inverting input pin. Additional support circuitry includes the
oscillator, clock generator, and VBB bias generator.
Clock Out/Clock In
For the input stage to work with common mode voltages
below Ground potential, a negative bias voltage (VBB) is
needed. The CLKÐOUT pin is used to provide the AC signal needed to drive the internal VBB bias generator through
an external coupling capacitor. A minimum coupling capacitor value of 100 pF to a maximum value of 0.1 mF is recommended. The CLKÐIN pin is the input to the VBB bias generator circuitry.
Differential Input Circuit
The input stage can be best described as a switched Sample and Difference circuit (see Figure 4 ). When the input
capacitor CIN is switched to the non-inverting input, the input voltage plus the common mode voltage is stored on CIN.
When CIN is switched to the inverting input, CIN will be discharged by an amount equal to the common mode voltage.
The remaining charge across CIN will be equal to the differential input voltage, and a proportional charge will be transferred through the virtual ground via the gain stage.
TL/H/12372 – 14
FIGURE 4. Simplified Switched Capacitor Input Circuit
TL/H/12372–13
FIGURE 3. Simplified Circuit
Oscillator
The device contains an internal oscillator which is used to
drive the internal two-phase clock generator. The oscillator
requires an external resistor value of 178 kX from the
‘‘OSCÐRES’’ pin to device VCC. This resistor value determines the charge rate of the internal capacitor, and thus
sets the oscillator frequency. The internal oscillator capacitor is matched to the switched capacitor networks, so that
the absolute capacitance values are not as important as is
the absolute ratios of the capacitors. The oscillator frequency is approximately 200 kHz.
4
Differential Input Circuit (Continued)
Differential Input Filtering
The differential input impedance is a function of the value of
the input capacitor array and the sampling frequency. The
capacitor CBIAS is used to generate a bias voltage across
the Differential Input impedance (ZDIFF). This bias voltage is
similar to the Lambda Sensor output voltage at the stoichiometric air-fuel mixture (l e 1). The bias voltage is set by the
ratio of CIN and CBIAS, and the value of VCC.
The resulting bias voltage across the Differential Input is
defined as:
Since each input is sampled independently, an anti-aliasing
filter is required at the amplifier inputs to ensure that the
input signal does not exceed the Nyquist frequency.
This external low-pass filter is implemented by adding a capacitor (CDIFF) across the differential input. See Figure 6 .
This forms an RC network across the differential inputs in
conjunction with the required external 4 kX resistors and
the differential input impedance (ZDIFF). The capacitor selected should be small enough to have minimal effect on
gain accuracy in the application, yet large enough to filter
out unwanted noise. Given that the FC of the LM9040 is
typically 500 Hz, the use of a 0.01 mF capacitor will generally provide adequate filtering, with less than b0.4 dB of input
attenuation at 500 Hz and approximately b28 dB at 50 kHz.
A larger value capacitor can be used if needed, but a value
larger than typically 0.02 mF will begin to dominate the cutoff frequency of the application. This capacitor must be a
low leakage and low ESR type so that circuit performance is
not degraded.
VCC # CBIAS
(CIN a CBIAS)
With CBIAS e 0.7286 pF, CIN e 7.421 pF, FCLOCK e
100 kHz, and VCC e 5V:
5 # 7.286E-13
VBIAS e
(7.4213E-12 a 7.286E-13)
VBIAS e 447 mV
In effect, the result is the same as forcing a bias current
through the Differential Input impedance.
The bias current is defined as:
VBIAS e
IBIAS e VCC # CBIAS # FCLOCK
IBIAS e 364.3 nA
The Differential Input impedance is defined as:
1
ZDIFF e
(CIN a CBIAS) # FCLOCK
ZDIFF e 1.227 MX
This bias voltage will be developed across the Differential
Input impedance (ZDIFF) if there is no other path available
from the non-inverting input pin for IBIAS, and the inverting
input has a current path to ground. See Figure 5 . During
normal operating conditions IBIAS will have a negligible effect on accuracy
TL/H/12372 – 16
FIGURE 6. Differential and Common Mode Filtering
Common Mode Filtering
The differential input sampling of the LM9040 actually reduces the effects of common mode input noise at low frequencies. The time interval between the sampling of the
inverting input and the non-inverting input is one half of a
clock period. A change in the common mode voltage during
this short time interval can cause an error in the charge
stored on CIN. This will result in an error seen on the output
voltage. For a sine-wave common mode voltage the minimum common mode rejection is:
CMRR e 2 # q # FCMR # (0.5/FCLOCK) # 4.53
Where FCMR is the frequency of the common mode signal,
and FCLOCK is the clock frequency.
TL/H/12372 – 15
FIGURE 5. Equivalent Input Bias Circuit
5
Common Mode Filtering (Continued)
For a common mode sine wave signal having a frequency
100 Hz, and with a FCLOCK of 100 kHz, the minimum common mode rejection would be:
CMRR e 2 # 3.14159 # 100 # 5E-6 # 4.53
CMRR e 0.014 e b37 dB
If the common mode sine wave has a peak to peak value of
2V, the maximum voltage error at the output would be:
VOUT(CM) e 2V # 0.014 e 28 mV
As this formula shows, the value of VOUT(CM) is proportional
to the frequency of the CMR signal. If the frequency is doubled, the value of VOUT(CM) is also doubled. The addition of
a small bypass capacitor (CCM) from the non-inverting input
to ground will help counter this problem. See Figure 6 . However, the use of this bypass capacitor creates a new problem in that the differential input is no longer balanced. While
the Lambda sensor is cold (i.e. RSENSOR l 10 MegX) there
is little difference in CMR performance. As the Lambda sensor heats to the operating temperature and the sensor resistance decreases, the common mode signal is no longer
applied to both inputs equally. This imbalance causes
VOUT(CM) to increase as RSENSOR decreases, as the noninverting input will see the full common mode signal, while
the non-inverting input will see an attenuated common
mode signal.
The selection of the value of the CMR bypass capacitor
needs to be balanced with the need for reasonable reduction, or elimination, of common mode signals with both cold
and hot sensors. Since normal operation will need to include consideration of the entire impedance range of the
sensor, a trade off in overall application performance may
be needed.
Generally, the value of the CMR bypass capacitor should be
kept as low as possible, and should not be larger than the
differential input filter capacitor. Values in the range of
0.001 mF to 0.01 mF will usually provide reasonable CMR
results, but optimum results will need to be determined empirically, as the source of common mode signals will be
unique to each application.
TL/H/12372 – 17
FIGURE 7. Simplified Gain and Filter Circuit
The internal gain is set by the ratio of CIN and CFB:
CIN
GAINDC e
CFB
7.4213 pF
e 4.53 V/V
GAINDC e
1.6383 pF
The corner frequency (b3 dB) is set by the ratio of CFB and
CINT, and by FCLOCK:
FCLOCK # CFB
FC e
2 # q # CINT
1E5 # 1.6383E-12
e
e 500 Hz
FC
2 # 3.14159 # 52.1E-12
Gain and Filter Stage
The signal gain and filter stage is designed to have a DC
gain of 4.53 V/V, with a cut-off frequency of typically
500 Hz. The external 4 kX resistors on each input pin are in
series with the differential input impedance. Together they
form a voltage divider circuit across the input such that the
net DC gain of the application circuit is 4.50 V/V.
TL/H/12372 – 18
FIGURE 8. Equivalent Gain and Filter Circuit
6
Cold Sensor
Open Input Pins Defaults
Typically, a Lambda sensor will have an impedance of less
than 10 kX when operating at temperatures between 300§ C,
and 500§ C. When a Lambda sensor is not at operating temperature, its impedance can be more than 10 MegX. Any
voltage signal that may be developed is seriously attenuated. During this high impedance condition the LM9040 will
provide a default output voltage.
In any remote sensor application it is desirable to be able to
deal with the possibility of open connections between the
sensor and the control module. The LM9040 is capable of
providing an output voltage scaled to VCC should either, or
both, of the wires to the Lambda sensor open. The two
inputs handle the open circuit condition differently. The
LM9040 will provide a default VOUT that is typically 2.025V
when VCC is at 5V.
For the case of an open connection of the non-inverting
input, the device would react the same as for the Cold Sensor condition. The internal bias voltage across ZIN would
cause the output voltage to be at a value defined by VCC
and the LM9040 DC gain. The inverting input would still be
connected to the Lambda sensor ground, so any common
mode signals would still need to be allowed for in this condition. See Figure 9 .
For the case of an open connection of the inverting input,
the device output stage switches from the amplifier output
to a resistive voltage divider. In this case, the default VOUT
is not dependent on the gain stage, and any signal on the
non-inverting input will have no effect on the output. Each
amplifier has a comparator to monitor the voltage on the
inverting input pin. When the voltage on an inverting pin
goes above typically 2.5V, the comparator will switch the
output from the amplifier output to the voltage divider stage.
To fully implement this function requires external pull-up resistors for each of the inverting inputs. To minimize signal
errors due to DC currents through the 4 kX resistors, the
pull-up resistors need to be added in the application circuit
between the 4 kX input resistor and the connection to the
Lambda sensor ground point. A typical pull-up value of
51 kX to VCC is recommended. During this condition, the
effective resistance of the output stage will be 3.5 kX typically. See Figure 10 .
TL/H/12372 – 19
FIGURE 9. VOUT with Cold Lambda Sensor
Each amplifier input has a bias charge applied across the
Differential Input impedance (ZDIFF) by means of charge
redistribution through the switched capacitor network. This
bias charge is a ratio of VCC, and is typically 447 mV for a
VCC value of 5.00V. This will provide an output voltage of
typically 2.025V.
While the Lambda sensor is high impedance, the 447 mV
across ZDIFF will be the dominant input signal. As the Lambda sensor is heated, and the sensor impedance begins to
drop, the voltage signal from the sensor will become the
dominate signal.
Output Resistance
With normal operation, each output has typically 2.5 kX of
resistance. This resistance, along with an external capacitor, form a RC low pass filter to remove any clock noise
from the output signal. An external output filter capacitor
value of 0.01 mF is recommended. Additionally, the output
resistance will provide current limiting for the output stage
should it become shorted to Ground or VCC.
Any DC loading of the output will cause an error in the measured output voltage. This error will be equal to the I # R drop
across the output resistance:
VERROR e ILOAD # 2.5 kX
TL/H/12372 – 20
FIGURE 10. VOUT with Open Inverting Input
7
Open Input Pins Defaults (Continued)
Supply Bypassing
In the cases where both the inverting and non-inverting pins
are open, the non-inverting condition (i.e.: voltage divider
across the output) will be the dominant condition.
For best performance the LM9040 requires a VCC supply
which is stable and noise free. The same 5V VREF supply
used for the A/D converter is the recommended VCC supply. During operation the device will generate current spikes
coincident with the clock edges. Inadequate bypassing will
cause excessive clock noise on the outputs, as well as
noise on the VCC line. The LM9040 VCC pin should be bypassed with a minimum 0.1 mF capacitor to the Signal
Ground pin, and should be located as close to the device as
possible. Some applications may require an additional
4.7 mF tantalum capacitor, especially if there are several
other switched capacitor devices running off the same 5V
supply line. The Signal and Digital Ground pins should be
tied together as close to the device as possible.
Any common mode signal seen by inverting input pin should
not be allowed to exceed the Common Mode voltage range.
Exceeding the positive Common Mode voltage limit could
cause the inverting input pin voltage comparator to act as if
the inverting input pin is open. Since the comparator circuit
is not part of the switched capacitor network there is no
frequency limitation on the signal to the comparator. Any
transient on the inverting input pin which goes above the
comparator threshold will immediately cause the output to
switch to the open sensor mode. The output will return to
normal operation when the voltage on the inverting input
falls below the comparator threshold.
TL/H/12372 – 21
FIGURE 11. Typical Application
8
9
LM9040 Dual Lambda Sensor Interface Amplifier
Physical Dimensions inches (millimeters)
14-Lead (0.300× Wide) Molded Small Outline Package, JEDEC
Order Number LM9040M
NS Package Number M14B
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