TI BQ24707RGRT

bq24707
bq24707A
SLUSA78B – JULY 2010 – REVISED MARCH 2011
www.ti.com
1-4 Cell Li+ Battery SMBus Charge Controller With Independent Comparator and
Advanced Circuit Protection
Check for Samples: bq24707, bq24707A
FEATURES
DESCRIPTION
•
The bq24707 and bq24707A are high-efficiency,
synchronous battery charger, offering low component
count for space-constraint, multi-chemistry battery
charging applications.
•
•
•
•
•
Portable Notebook Computers, UMPC,
Ultra-Thin Notebook, and Netbook
Personal Digital Assistant
Handheld Terminal
Industrial and Medical Equipment
Portable Equipment
BTST
REGN
19
18
17
16
ACN 1
ACP
2
bq24707
bq24707A
CMPOUT 3
CMPIN 4
ACOK
15
LODRV
14
GND
13
SRP
12
SRN
11 IFAULT
5
6
7
8
9
10
ILIM
APPLICATIONS
20
SCL
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
The IC charges one, two, three, or four series Li+
cells, and is available in a 20-pin, 3.5×3.5 mm2 QFN
package.
HIDRV
•
The IC provides an IFAULT output to alarm if any
MOSFET fault or input over current occurs. This
alarm output allows users to turn off input power
selectors when the fault occurs. Meanwhile, an
independent comparator with internal reference is
available to monitor input current, output current, or
output voltage.
SDA
•
The IC uses the internal input current register or
external ILIM pin to throttle down PWM modulation to
reduce the charge current.
PHASE
•
IOUT
•
SMBus controlled input current, charge current, and
charge voltage DACs allow for very high regulation
accuracies that can be easily programmed by the
system power management micro-controller.
VCC
•
SMBus Host-Controlled NMOS-NMOS
Synchronous Buck Converter with
Programmable 615kHz, 750kHz, and 885kHz
Switching Frequency
Real Time System Control on ILIM Pin to Limit
Charge Current
Enhanced Safety Features for Over Voltage
Protection, Over Current Protection, Battery,
Inductor, and MOSFET Short Circuit Protection
Programmable Input Current, Charge Voltage,
Charge Current Limits
– ±0.5% Charge Voltage Accuracy up to 19.2V
– ±3% Charge Current Accuracy up to 8.128A
– ±3% Input Current Accuracy up to 8.064A
– ±2% 20x Adapter Current or Charge Current
Output Accuracy
Programmable Adapter Detection and
Indicator
Independent Comparator with Internal
Reference
Integrated Soft Start
Integrated Loop Compensation
AC Adapter Operating Range 5V-24V
15µA Off-State Battery Discharge Current
20-pin 3.5 x 3.5 mm2 QFN Package
bq24707: ACOK delay default 1.3s
bq24707A: ACOK delay default 1.2ms
ACDET
1
1
Please be aware that an important notice concerning availability, standard warranty, and use in critical applications of Texas
Instruments semiconductor products and disclaimers thereto appears at the end of this data sheet.
PRODUCTION DATA information is current as of publication date.
Products conform to specifications per the terms of the Texas
Instruments standard warranty. Production processing does not
necessarily include testing of all parameters.
© 2010–2011, Texas Instruments Incorporated
bq24707
bq24707A
SLUSA78B – JULY 2010 – REVISED MARCH 2011
www.ti.com
These devices have limited built-in ESD protection. The leads should be shorted together or the device placed in conductive foam
during storage or handling to prevent electrostatic damage to the MOS gates.
TYPICAL APPLICATION
Q1 (RBFET)
Si4435DDY
Adapter +
Ri
2?
Ci
2.2µF
Adapter -
Q2 (ACFET)
Si4435DDY
RAC 10m?
SYSTEM
C1
0.1µF
Controlled
By Host
C3
0.1µF
D2
RB751V40
+1.5V
If no adapter,
and Iout is
needed, this
rail is on
C5
1µF
ACN
C2
0.1µF
VCC
C6
1µF
ACDET
R2
66.5k
R8
100k
+3.3V
R3
10k
R4
10k
R5
10k
R6
10k
REGN
D1
BAT54
ILIM
R7
316k
BTST
R10
10k
HIDRV
SDA
SMBus
Q5 (BATFET)
Si4435DDY
Controlled
By Host
ACP
R1
430k
HOST
Total
Csys
220µF
R9
10Ω
SCL
U1
bq24707
bq24707A
C7
0.047µF
C8
10uF
Q3
Sis412DN
C9
10uF
RSR
10m?
Pack +
PHASE
L1
4.7µH
Q4
Sis412DN
LODRV
C10
10µF
C11
10µF
Pack -
ACOK
GND
Dig I/O
IFAULT
SRP
CMPOUT
R12
100k
R11
39.2k
R13
3.01M
ADC
R14
10Ω
*
R15
7.5Ω
*
C13
0.1µF
SRN
CMPIN
C14
0.1µF
IOUT
C4
100p
PowerPad
Fs = 750kHz, Iadpt = 4.096A, Ichrg = 2.944A, Ilim = 4A, Vchrg = 12.592V, 90W adapter and 3S2P battery pack
See the application information about negative output voltage protection for hard shorts on battery to ground or
battery reverse connection.
Figure 1. Typical System Schematic
ORDERING INFORMATION
PART NUMBER
IC MARKING
PACKAGE
bq24707
BQ707
20-PIN 3.5 x 3.5mm2 QFN
bq24707A
BQ07A
20-PIN 3.5 x 3.5mm2 QFN
ORDERING NUMBER
(Tape and Reel)
QUANTITY
bq24707RGRR
3000
bq24707RGRT
250
bq24707ARGRR
3000
bq24707ARGRT
250
COMPARISON TABLE
2
Condition
bq24707
bq24707A
ACOK default delay
1.3s
1.2ms
Suggest fully charged battery ChargeVoltage() setting
after termination
full scale charge voltage(12.592V for 3S battery)
0V
Suggest fully charged battery ChargeCurrent() setting
after termination
0A
0A
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© 2010–2011, Texas Instruments Incorporated
Product Folder Link(s): bq24707 bq24707A
bq24707
bq24707A
SLUSA78B – JULY 2010 – REVISED MARCH 2011
www.ti.com
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
over operating free-air temperature range (unless otherwise noted) (1)
(2)
VALUE
–0.3 to 30
SRN, SRP, ACN, ACP, VCC
Voltage range
Maximum difference voltage
UNIT
PHASE
–2 to 30
ACDET, SDA, SCL, LODRV, REGN, IOUT, ILIM, ACOK, IFAULT, CMPIN,
CMPOUT
–0.3 to 7
V
BTST, HIDRV
–0.3 to 36
SRP–SRN, ACP–ACN
–0.5 to 0.5
Junction temperature range, TJ
–40 to 155
°C
Storage temperature range, Tstg
–55 to 155
°C
(1)
(2)
Stresses beyond those listed under absolute maximum ratings may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings
only, and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond those indicated under recommended operating
conditions is not implied. Exposure to absolute-maximum-rated conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability.
All voltages are with respect to GND if not specified. Currents are positive into, negative out of the specified terminal. Consult Packaging
Section of the data book for thermal limitations and considerations of packages.
THERMAL INFORMATION
bq24707/bq24707A
THERMAL METRIC (1)
RGR
UNITS
20 PINS
θJA
Junction-to-ambient thermal resistance
ψJT
Junction-to-top characterization parameter
0.6
ψJB
Junction-to-board characterization parameter
15.3
(1)
46.8
°C/W
For more information about traditional and new thermal metrics, see the IC Package Thermal Metrics application report, SPRA953.
RECOMMENDED OPERATING CONDITIONS
over operating free-air temperature range (unless otherwise noted)
MIN NOM MAX
SRN, SRP, ACN, ACP, VCC
PHASE
Voltage range
ACDET, SDA, SCL, LODRV, REGN, IOUT, ILIM, ACOK, IFAULT, CMPIN,
CMPOUT
BTST, HIDRV
Maximum difference voltage
SRP–SRN, ACP–ACN
Junction temperature range, TJ
Storage temperature range, Tstg
0
24
–2
24
0
6.5
Product Folder Link(s): bq24707 bq24707A
V
0
30
–0.2
0.2
V
0
125
°C
–55
150
°C
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© 2010–2011, Texas Instruments Incorporated
UNIT
3
bq24707
bq24707A
SLUSA78B – JULY 2010 – REVISED MARCH 2011
www.ti.com
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
4.5 V ≤ V(VCC) ≤ 24 V, 0°C ≤ TJ ≤ 125°C, typical values are at TA = 25°C, with respect to GND (unless otherwise noted)
PARAMETER
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
OPERATING CONDITIONS
VVCC_OP
VCC Input voltage operating range
4.5
24
V
19.2
V
16.884
V
CHARGE VOLTAGE REGULATION
VBAT_REG_RNG
BAT voltage regulation range
1.024
16.716
ChargeVoltage() = 0x41A0H
–0.5%
12.529
ChargeVoltage() = 0x3130H
VBAT_REG_ACC
16.8
0.5%
12.592
–0.5%
12.655
V
0.5%
Charge voltage regulation accuracy
8.350
ChargeVoltage() = 0x20D0H
8.4
–0.6%
4.163
ChargeVoltage() = 0x1060H
8.450
V
0.6%
4.192
–0.7%
4.221
V
0.7%
CHARGE CURRENT REGULATION
VIREG_CHG_RNG
Charge current regulation differential voltage range
VIREG_CHG = VSRP - VSRN
0
3973
ChargeCurrent() = 0x1000H
–3%
1946
ChargeCurrent() = 0x0800H
ICHRG_REG_ACC
Charge current regulation accuracy 10mΩ current
sensing resistor
4096
410
2048
172
512
64
2150
mA
614
mA
20%
256
–33%
ChargeCurrent() = 0x0080H
mA
5%
–20%
ChargeCurrent() = 0x0100H
mV
4219
3%
–5%
ChargeCurrent() = 0x0200H
81.28
340
mA
33%
128
–50%
192
mA
50%
INPUT CURRENT REGULATION
VIREG_DPM_RNG
Input current regulation differential voltage range
VIREG_DPM = VACP – VACN
0
3973
InputCurrent() = 0x1000H
–3%
1946
InputCurrent() = 0x0800H
IDPM_REG_ACC
4096
870
InputCurrent() = 0x0400H
2048
384
mA
2150
mA
5%
1024
–15%
InputCurrent() = 0x0200H
mV
4219
3%
–5%
Input current regulation accuracy 10mΩ current
sensing resistor
80.64
1178
mA
15%
512
–25%
640
mA
25%
INPUT CURRENT OR CHARGE CURRENT SENSE AMPLIFIER
VACP/N_OP
Input common mode range
Voltage on ACP/ACN
4.5
24
V
VSRP/N_OP
Output common mode range
Voltage on SRP/SRN
0
19.2
V
VIOUT
IOUT output voltage range
0
1.6
IIOUT
IOUT output current
0
1
AIOUT
Current sense amplifier gain
V(ICOUT)/V(SRP-SRN) or V(ACP-ACN)
20
–2%
V(SRP-SRN) or V(ACP-ACN) = 40.96mV
VIOUT_ACC
Current sense output accuracy
CIOUT_MAX
V
mA
V/V
2%
V(SRP-SRN) or V(ACP-ACN) = 20.48mV
–4%
4%
V(SRP-SRN) or V(ACP-ACN) = 10.24mV
–15%
15%
V(SRP-SRN) or V(ACP-ACN) = 5.12mV
–20%
20%
V(SRP-SRN) or V(ACP-ACN) = 2.56mV
–33%
33%
V(SRP-SRN) or V(ACP-ACN) = 1.28mV
–50%
50%
Maximum output load capacitance
For stability with 0 to 1mA load
REGN regulator voltage
VVCC > 6.5V, VACDET > 0.6V (0-55mA load)
5.5
6
VREGN = 0V, VVCC > UVLO charge enabled and not in TSHUT
65
80
7
16
100
pF
6.5
V
REGN REGULATOR
VREGN_REG
IREGN_LIM
REGN current limit
VREGN = 0V, VVCC > UVLO charge disabled or in TSHUT
IREGN_LIM_TSHUT
CREGN
4
REGN output capacitor required for stability
ILOAD = 100µA to 65mA
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mA
1
µF
© 2010–2011, Texas Instruments Incorporated
Product Folder Link(s): bq24707 bq24707A
bq24707
bq24707A
SLUSA78B – JULY 2010 – REVISED MARCH 2011
www.ti.com
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
4.5 V ≤ V(VCC) ≤ 24 V, 0°C ≤ TJ ≤ 125°C, typical values are at TA = 25°C, with respect to GND (unless otherwise noted)
PARAMETER
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
3.5
3.75
4
UNIT
INPUT UNDERVOLTAGE LOCK-OUT COMPARATOR (UVLO)
VUVLO
Input under voltage rising threshold
VVCC rising
VUVLO_HYS
Input under voltage falling hysteresis
VVCC falling
340
V
mV
FAST DPM COMPARATOR (FAST_DPM)
VFAST_DPM
Fast DPM comparator stop charging rising threshold
with respect to input current limit, voltage across input
sense resistor rising edge (specified by design)
108%
QUIESCENT CURRENT
Total battery leakage current to ISRN + ISRP +IPHASE +
IVCC + IACP + IACN
VVCC < VBAT = 16.8V, TJ = 0 to 85°C
ISTANDBY
Standby quiescent current, IVCC + IACP + IACN
VVCC > VUVLO, VACDET > 0.6V, charge disabled,
TJ = 0 to 85°C
IAC_NOSW
Adapter bias current during charge,
IVCC + IACP + IACN
IAC_SW
Adapter bias current during charge,
IVCC + IACP + IACN
IBAT
15
µA
0.5
1
mA
VVCC > VUVLO, VACDET > 2.4V,
charge enabled, no switching, TJ = 0 to 85°C
1.5
3
mA
VVCC > VUVLO, VACDET > 2.4V,
charge enabled, switching, MOSFET Sis412DN
10
mA
ACOK COMPARATOR
VACOK_FALL
ACOK falling threshold
VVCC>VUVLO, VACDET rising
2.376
2.4
2.424
VACOK_RISE_HYS
ACOK rising hysteresis
VVCC>VUVLO, VACDET falling
35
55
75
mV
VVCC>VUVLO, VACDET rising above 2.4V,
ChargeOption() bit [15] = 0 (default), (bq24707 only)
0.9
1.3
1.7
s
VVCC>VUVLO, VACDET rising above 2.4V,
ChargeOption() bit [15] = 0 (default), (bq24707A only)
0.8
1.2
2
10
50
0.57
0.8
tACOK_FALL_DEG
ACOK falling deglitch (specified by design)
VVCC>VUVLO, VACDET rising above 2.4V,
ChargeOption() bit [15] = 1
VWAKEUP_RISE
WAKEUP detect rising threshold
VVCC>VUVLO, VACDET rising
VWAKEUP_FALL
WAKEUP detect falling threshold
VVCC>VUVLO, VACDET falling
0.3
0.51
V
ms
μs
V
V
VCC to SRN COMPARATOR (VCC_SRN)
VVCC-SRN_FALL
VCC-SRN falling threshold
VVCC falling towards VSRN
70
125
180
mV
VVCC-SRN _RHYS
VCC-SRN rising hysteresis
VVCC rising above VSRN
70
120
170
mV
ChargeOption() bit [8:7] = 00
200
300
450
ChargeOption() bit [8:7] = 01
330
500
700
ChargeOption() bit [8:7] = 10 (default)
450
700
1000
ChargeOption() bit [8:7] = 11
600
900
1250
40
110
160
ChargeOption() bit [2:1] = 01
120%
133%
145%
ChargeOption() bit [2:1] = 10 (default)
150%
166%
180%
ChargeOption() bit [2:1] = 11
200%
222%
240%
40
45
50
mV
HIGH SIDE IFAULT COMPARATOR (IFAULT_HI) (1)
VIFAULT_HI_RISE
ACP to PHASE rising threshold
mV
LOW SIDE IFAULT COMPARATOR (IFAULT_LOW)
VIFAULT_LOW_RISE
PHASE to GND rising threshold
mV
INPUT OVER-CURRENT COMPARATOR (ACOC) (1)
VACOC
Adapter over current rising threshold with respect to
input current limit, voltage across input sense resistor
rising edge
VACOC_min
Min ACOC threshold clamp voltage
ChargeOption() bit [2:1] = 01 (133%),
InputCurrent() = 0x0400H (10.24mV)
VACOC_max
Max ACOC threshold clamp voltage
ChargeOption() bit [2:1] = 11 (222%),
InputCurrent() = 0x1F80H (80.64mV)
140
150
160
mV
tACOC_DEG
ACOC deglitch time (specified by design)
Voltage across input sense resistor rising to disable charge
1.7
2.5
3.3
ms
103%
104%
106%
BAT OVER-VOLTAGE COMPARATOR (BAT_OVP)
VOVP_RISE
Over voltage rising threshold as percentage of
VBAT_REG
VSRN rising
VOVP_FALL
Over voltage falling threshold as percentage of
VBAT_REG
VSRN falling
102%
CHARGE OVERCURRENT COMPARATOR (CHG_OCP)
VOCP_RISE
(1)
Charge over current rising threshold, measure voltage
drop across current sensing resistor
ChargeCurrent() = 0x0xxxH
54
60
66
mV
ChargeCurrent() = 0x1000H – 0x17C0H
80
90
100
mV
ChargeCurrent() = 0x1800 H– 0x1FC0H
110
120
130
mV
User can adjust threshold via SMBus ChargeOption() REG0x12.
Submit Documentation Feedback
© 2010–2011, Texas Instruments Incorporated
Product Folder Link(s): bq24707 bq24707A
5
bq24707
bq24707A
SLUSA78B – JULY 2010 – REVISED MARCH 2011
www.ti.com
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
4.5 V ≤ V(VCC) ≤ 24 V, 0°C ≤ TJ ≤ 125°C, typical values are at TA = 25°C, with respect to GND (unless otherwise noted)
PARAMETER
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
1
5
9
UNIT
CHARGE UNDER-CURRENT COMPARATOR (CHG_UCP)
VUCP_FALL
Charge under current falling threshold
VSRP falling towards VSRN
mV
LIGHT LOAD COMPARATOR (LIGHT_LOAD)
VLL_FALL
Light load falling threshold
Measure voltage drop across current sensing resistor
1.25
mV
VLL_RISE_HYST
Light load rising hysteresis
Measure voltage drop across current sensing resistor
1.25
mV
BATTERY LOWV COMPARATOR (BAT_LOWV)
VBATLV_FALL
Battery LOWV falling threshold
VSRN falling
VBATLV_RHYST
Battery LOWV rising hysteresis
VSRN rising
2.4
200
2.5
2.6
mV
V
IBATLV
Battery LOWV charge current limit
10mΩ current sensing resistor
0.5
A
THERMAL SHUTDOWN COMPARATOR (TSHUT)
TSHUT
Thermal shutdown rising temperature
Temperature rising
155
°C
TSHUT_HYS
Thermal shutdown hysteresis, falling
Temperature falling
20
°C
VILIM_FALL
ILIM as CE falling threshold
VILIM falling
60
75
90
mV
VILIM_RISE
ILIM as CE rising threshold
VILIM rising
90
105
120
mV
0.8
V
1
μA
ILIM COMPARATOR
LOGIC INPUT (SDA, SCL)
VIN_ LO
Input low threshold
VIN_ HI
Input high threshold
IIN_ LEAK
Input bias current
2.1
V=7V
V
–1
LOGIC OUTPUT OPEN DRAIN (ACOK, SDA, IFAULT, CMPOUT)
VOUT_
IOUT_
LO
LEAK
Output saturation voltage
5 mA drain current
500
mV
Leakage current
V=7V
–1
1
μA
V=7V
–1
1
μA
7
μA
ANALOG INPUT (ACDET, ILIM)
IIN_ LEAK
Input bias current
ANALOG INPUT (CMPIN has 50kΩ series resistor and 2000kΩ pull down resistor)
IIN_LEAK
Input bias current
V=7V
1
3.5
FSW
PWM switching frequency
FSW+
PWM increase frequency
ChargeOption() bit [9] = 0 (default)
600
750
900
kHz
ChargeOption() bit [10:9] = 11
665
885
1100
FSW–
PWM decrease frequency
kHz
ChargeOption() bit [10:9] = 01
465
615
765
kHz
PWM OSCILLATOR
PWM HIGH SIDE DRIVER (HIDRV)
RDS_HI_ON
High side driver (HSD) turn-on resistance
VBTST – VPH = 5.5 V, I = 10mA
12
20
Ω
RDS_HI_OFF
High side driver turn-off resistance
VBTST – VPH = 5.5 V, I = 10mA
0.65
1.3
Ω
VBTST_REFRESH
Bootstrap refresh comparator threshold voltage
VBTST – VPH when low side refresh pulse is requested
4.3
4.7
V
3.85
PWM LOW SIDE DRIVER (LODRV)
RDS_LO_ON
Low side driver (LSD) turn-on resistance
VREGN = 6 V, I = 10 mA
15
25
Ω
RDS_LO_OFF
Low side driver turn-off resistance
VREGN = 6 V, I = 10 mA
0.9
1.4
Ω
PWM DRIVER TIMING
tLOW_HIGH
Driver dead time from low side to high side
20
ns
tHIGH_LOW
Driver dead time from high side to low side
20
ns
INTERNAL SOFT START
ISTEP
Soft start step size
In CCM mode, 10mΩ current sense resistor
64
mA
tSTEP
Soft start step time
In CCM mode, 10mΩ current sense resistor
240
μs
INDEPENDENT COMPARATOR
(2)
VIC_REF1
Comparator reference
ChargeOption() bit [4] = 0, rising edge (default)
0.585
0.6
0.615
VIC_REF2
Comparator reference
ChargeOption() bit [4] = 1, rising edge
2.375
2.4
2.425
RS
Series resistor
RDOWN
Pull down resistor
(2)
6
V
V
50
kΩ
2000
kΩ
User can adjust threshold via SMBus ChargeOption() REG0x12.
Submit Documentation Feedback
© 2010–2011, Texas Instruments Incorporated
Product Folder Link(s): bq24707 bq24707A
bq24707
bq24707A
SLUSA78B – JULY 2010 – REVISED MARCH 2011
www.ti.com
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
4.5 V ≤ V(VCC) ≤ 24 V, 0°C ≤ TJ ≤ 125°C, typical values are at TA = 25°C, with respect to GND (unless otherwise noted)
PARAMETER
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNIT
SMBus TIMING CHARACTERISTICS
1
μs
tR
SCLK/SDATA rise time
tF
SCLK/SDATA fall time
tW(H)
SCLK pulse width high
tW(L)
SCLK pulse width low
4.7
μs
tSU(STA)
Setup time for START condition
4.7
μs
tH(STA)
START condition hold time after which first clock
pulse is generated
4
μs
tSU(DAT)
Data setup time
250
ns
tH(DAT)
Data hold time
300
ns
tSU(STOP)
Setup time for STOP condition
4
µs
t(BUF)
Bus free time between START and STOP condition
4.7
FS(CL)
Clock frequency
10
100
kHz
35
ms
4
300
ns
50
μs
μs
HOST COMMUNICATION FAILURE
ttimeout
SMBus bus release timeout (3)
25
tBOOT
Deglitch for watchdog reset signal
10
tWDI
Watchdog timeout period, ChargeOption()
bit [14:13] = 01 (4)
35
44
53
s
tWDI
Watchdog timeout period, ChargeOption()
bit [14:13] = 10 (4)
70
88
105
s
tWDI
Watchdog timeout period, ChargeOption()
bit [14:13] = 11 (4) (default)
140
175
210
s
(3)
(4)
ms
Devices participating in a transfer timeout when any clock low exceeds the 25ms minimum timeout period. Devices that have detected a
timeout condition must reset the communication no later than the 35ms maximum timeout period. Both a master and a slave must
adhere to the maximum value specified as it incorporates the cumulative stretch limit for both a master (10ms) and a slave (25ms).
User can adjust threshold via SMBus ChargeOption() REG0x12.
Figure 2. SMBus Communication Timing Waveforms
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TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Table 1. Table of Graphs
FIGURE NO.
VCC, ACDET, REGN and ACOK Power up (bq24707)
Figure 3
Charge Enable by ILIM
Figure 4
Current Soft-start
Figure 5
Charge Disable by ILIM
Figure 6
Continuous Conduction Mode Switching Waveforms
Figure 7
Cycle-by-Cycle Synchronous to Non-synchronous
Figure 8
100% Duty and Refresh Pulse
Figure 9
System Load Transient (Input DPM)
Figure 10
Battery Insertion
Figure 11
Battery to Ground Short Protection
Figure 12
Battery to Ground Short Transition
Figure 13
Efficiency vs Output Current
Figure 14
CH1: VCC, 10V/div, CH2: ACDET, 2V/div, CH3: ACOK, 5V/div,
CH4: REGN, 5V/div, 200ms/div
Figure 3. VCC, ACDET, REGN and ACOK Power Up
(bq24707)
CH2: ILIM, 1V/div, CH4: inductor current, 1A/div, 10ms/div
CH1: PHASE, 10V/div, CH2: Vin, 10V/div, CH3: LODRV, 5V/div,
CH4: inductor current, 2A/div, 2ms/div
Figure 5. Current Soft-Start
CH2: ILIM, 1V/div, CH4: inductor current, 1A/div, 4us/div
8
Figure 4. Charge Enable by ILIM
Figure 6. Charge Disable by ILIM
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CH1: HIDRV, 10V/div, CH2: LODRV, 5V/div, CH3: PHASE, 10V/div,
CH4: inductor current, 2A/div, 400ns/div
Figure 7. Continuous Conduction Mode Switching
Waveforms
CH1: HIDRV, 10V/div, CH2: LODRV, 5V/div, CH3: PHASE, 10V/div,
CH4: inductor current, 1A/div, 400ns/div
Figure 8. Cycle-by-Cycle Synchronous to
Non-synchronous
CH1: PHASE, 10V/div, CH2: LODRV, 5V/div, CH4: inductor current,
2A/div, 4us/div
Figure 9. 100% Duty and Refresh Pulse
CH2: battery current, 2A/div, CH3: adapter current, 2A/div, CH4:
system load current, 2A/div, 100us/div
CH1: PHASE, 20V/div, CH2: battery voltage, 5V/div, CH3: LODRV,
10V/div, CH4: inductor current, 2A/div, 400us/div
CH1: PHASE, 20V/div, CH2: LODRV, 10V/div, CH3: battery voltage,
5V/div, CH4: inductor current, 2A/div, 2ms/div
Figure 12. Battery to Ground Short Protection
Figure 11. Battery Insertion
Figure 10. System Load Transient (Input DPM)
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98
4-cell 16.8 V
97
96
Efficiency - %
95
3-cell 12.6 V
94
93
2-cell 8.4 V
92
91
VI = 20 V,
f = 750 kHz,
L = 4.7 mH
90
89
88
CH1: PHASE, 20V/div, CH2: LODRV, 10V/div, CH3: battery voltage,
5V/div, CH4: inductor current, 2A/div, 4us/div
Figure 13. Battery to Ground Short Transition
0
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
Charge Current
3
3.5
4
4.5
Figure 14. Efficiency vs Output Current
PIN FUNCTIONS – 20-PIN QFN
PIN
NO.
1
ACN
Input current sense resistor negative input. Place an optional 0.1µF ceramic capacitor from ACN to GND for
common-mode filtering. Place a 0.1µF ceramic capacitor from ACN to ACP to provide differential mode filtering.
2
ACP
Input current sense resistor positive input. Place a 0.1µF ceramic capacitor from ACP to GND for common-mode
filtering. Place a 0.1µF ceramic capacitor from ACN to ACP to provide differential-mode filtering.
3
CMPOUT
Open-drain output of independent comparator. Place a 10kΩ pull-up resistor from CMPOUT to pull-up supply rail.
Internal reference is 0.6V or 2.4V, selectable by SMBus command ChargeOption(). When CMPIN is above the internal
reference, CMPOUT goes HIGH. Place a resistor between CMPIN and CMPOUT to program hysteresis.
CMPIN
Input of independent comparator. It has one 50kΏ series resistor and one 2000kΏ pull-down resistor. Program CMPIN
voltage by connecting a resistor divider from the IOUT pin to the CMPIN pin to the GND pin for adapter or charge
current comparison or from the SRN pin to the CMPIN pin to the GND pin for battery voltage comparison. The internal
reference is 0.6V or 2.4V, selectable by SMBus command ChargeOption(). When CMPIN is above the internal
reference, CMPOUT goes HIGH. Place a resistor between CMPIN and CMPOUT to program hysteresis.
5
ACOK
AC adapter detect open drain output. It is pulled LOW to GND by an internal MOSFET when the voltage on the
ACDET pin is above 2.4V, voltage on the VCC pin is above UVLO and voltage on the VCC pin is 245mV above the
voltage on the SRN pin, indicating a valid adapter is present to start charge. If any one of the above conditions cannot
meet, it is pulled HIGH to the external pull-up supply rail by an external pull-up resistor. Connect a 10kΩ pull-up
resistor from the ACOK pin to the pull-up supply rail.
6
ACDET
Adapter detection input. Program the adapter valid input threshold by connecting a resistor divider from the adapter
input to the ACDET pin to the GND pin. When the ACDET pin is above 0.6V and VCC is above UVLO, REGN LDO is
present, ACOK comparator and IOUT are both active.
7
IOUT
Buffered adapter or charge current output, selectable with SMBus command ChargeOption(). IOUT voltage is 20 times
the differential voltage across the sense resistor. Place a 100pF or less ceramic decoupling capacitor from the IOUT
pin to GND.
8
SDA
SMBus open-drain data I/O. Connect to the SMBus data line from the host controller or smart battery. Connect a 10kΩ
pull-up resistor according to SMBus specifications.
9
SCL
SMBus open-drain clock input. Connect to the SMBus clock line from the host controller or smart battery. Connect a
10kΩ pull-up resistor according to SMBus specifications.
10
ILIM
Charge current limit input. Program ILIM voltage by connecting a resistor divider from the system reference 3.3V rail to
the ILIM pin to the GND pin. The lower of the ILIM voltage or DAC limit voltage sets the charge current regulation limit.
To disable control on ILIM, set ILIM above 1.6V. Once the voltage on the ILIM pin falls below 75mV, charge is
disabled. Charge is enabled when the ILIM pin rises above 105mV.
11
IFAULT
Open-drain output. It is pulled LOW by an internal MOSFET when ACOC or a short circuit is detected. It is pulled
HIGH to the external pull-up supply rail by an external pull-up resistor in normal condition.
SRN
Charge current sense resistor negative input. The SRN pin is for battery voltage sensing as well. Connect SRN pin to
a 7.5 Ω resistor first then from resistor another terminal connect a 0.1µF ceramic capacitor to GND for common-mode
filtering and connect to current sensing resistor. Connect a 0.1µF ceramic capacitor between current sensing resistor
to provide differential mode filtering. See application information about negative output voltage protection for hard
shorts on battery to ground or battery reverse connection by adding small resistor.
4
12
10
DESCRIPTION
NAME
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PIN FUNCTIONS – 20-PIN QFN (continued)
PIN
NO.
DESCRIPTION
NAME
13
SRP
Charge current sense resistor positive input. Connect SRP pin to a 10 Ω resistor first then from resistor another
terminal connect to current sensing resistor. Connect a 0.1µF ceramic capacitor between current sensing resistor to
provide differential mode filtering. See application information about negative output voltage protection for hard shorts
on battery to ground or battery reverse connection by adding small resistor.
14
GND
IC ground. On PCB layout, connect to the analog ground plane, and only connect to power ground plane through the
PowerPAD underneath the IC.
15
LODRV
Low side power MOSFET driver output. Connect to low side n-channel MOSFET gate.
16
REGN
Linear regulator output. REGN is the output of the 6V linear regulator supplied from VCC. The LDO is active when the
voltage on the ACDET pin is above 0.6V and voltage on VCC is above UVLO. Connect a 1uF ceramic capacitor from
REGN to GND.
17
BTST
High side power MOSFET driver power supply. Connect a 0.047µF capacitor from BTST to PHASE, and a bootstrap
Schottky diode from REGN to BTST.
18
HIDRV
High side power MOSFET driver output. Connect to the high side n-channel MOSFET gate.
19
PHASE
High side power MOSFET driver source. Connect to the source of the high side n-channel MOSFET.
20
VCC
Input supply, diode OR from adapter or battery voltage. Use 10Ω resistor and 1µF capacitor to ground as low pass
filter to limit inrush current.
PowerPAD
Exposed pad beneath the IC. Analog ground and power ground star-connected only at the PowerPAD plane. Always
solder PowerPAD to the board, and have vias on the PowerPAD plane connecting to analog ground and power
ground planes. It also serves as a thermal pad to dissipate the heat.
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FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
3.75V
bq24707 and bq24707A Block Diagram
UVLO
** Threshold or deglitch time is adjustable by ChargeOption()
VCC 20
EN_REGN
WAKEUP
ACDET 6
0.6V
ACGOOD
WATCHDOG
TIMER
175s **
VCC_SRN
2.4V
ACOK 5
ACOK_DRV
EN_CHRG
WATCHDOG
TIMEOUT
1.3s rising deglitch** (bq24707)
1.2ms rising deglitch** (bq24707A)
11 IFAULT
VREF_IAC
IFAULT
ACP 2
20X
ACN 1
IOUT 7
1X
Type III
Compensation
MUX
FBO
EAI
ACOK_DRV
CHARGE_INHIBIT
17 BTST
IOUT_SEL
DAC_VALID
ILIM 10
HSON
18 HIDRV
EAO
PWM
SRP 13
20X
SRN 12
19 PHASE
VREF_ICHG
RAMP
Frequency **
200mV
VFB
EN_REGN
REGN
LDO
16 REGN
ILIM
LSON
CE
15 LODRV
105mV
VREF_VREG
10uA
4mA in
BATOVP
Tj
14 GND
TSHUT
WAKEUP
155?C
Driver Logic
SRP-SRN
DAC_VALID
SMBus Interface
SDA 8
SCL 9
ChargeOption()
ChargeCurrent()
ChargeVoltage()
InputCurrent()
ManufactureID()
DeviceID()
CHG_OCP
60mV/90mV/120mV
CHARGE_INHIBIT
VREF_VREG
VREF_ICHG
5mV
CHG_UCP
SRP-SRN
VREF_IAC
1.25mV
LIGHT_LOAD
IOUT_SEL
SRP-SRN
ACP-PH
CMPOUT 3
IFAULT_HI
700mV **
CMPOUT_DRV
PH-GND
IFAULT_LO
110mV
0.6V **
50kΩ
ACP-ACN
CMPIN 4
ACOC
1.66xVREF_IAC **
2000kΩ
ACP-ACN
FAST_DPM
1.08xVREF_IAC
4.3V
REFRESH
BTST-PH
VFB
BATOVP
104%VREF_VREG
2.5V
BAT_LOWV
SRN
VCC
VCC-SRN
SRN+245mV
Figure 15. Functional Block Diagram for bq24707 and bq24707A
12
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
SMBus Interface
The IC operates as a slave, receiving control inputs from the embedded controller host through the SMBus
interface. The IC uses a simplified subset of the commands documented in System Management Bus
Specification V1.1, which can be downloaded from www.smbus.org. The IC uses the SMBus Read-Word and
Write-Word protocols (see Figure 16) to communicate with the smart battery. The IC performs only as a SMBus
slave device with address 0b00010010 (0x12H) and does not initiate communication on the bus. In addition, the
IC has two identification registers a 16-bit device ID register (0xFFH) and a 16-bit manufacturer ID register
(0xFEH).
SMBus communication is enabled with the following conditions:
• VVCC is above UVLO;
• VACDET is above 0.6V;
The data (SDA) and clock (SCL) pins have Schmitt-trigger inputs that can accommodate slow edges. Choose
pull-up resistors (10kΩ) for SDA and SCL to achieve rise times according to the SMBus specifications.
Communication starts when the master signals a START condition, which is a high-to-low transition on SDA,
while SCL is high. When the master has finished communicating, the master issues a STOP condition, which is a
low-to-high transition on SDA, while SCL is high. The bus is then free for another transmission. Figure 17 and
Figure 18 show the timing diagrams for signals on the SMBus interface. The address byte, command byte, and
data bytes are transmitted between the START and STOP conditions. The SDA state changes only while SCL is
low, except for the START and STOP conditions. Data is transmitted in 8-bit bytes and is sampled on the rising
edge of SCL. Nine clock cycles are required to transfer each byte in or out of the IC because either the master or
the slave acknowledges the receipt of the correct byte during the ninth clock cycle. The IC supports the charger
commands as described in Table 2.
a) Write-Word Format
S
COMMAND
BYTE
ACK
1b
8 BITS
0
MSB LSB
SLAVE
ADDRESS
W
ACK
7 BITS
1b
MSB LSB
0
Preset to 0b0001001
HIGH DATA
BYTE
ACK
1b
8 BITS
1b
0
MSB LSB
0
LOW DATA
BYTE
ACK
1b
8 BITS
0
MSB LSB
ChargeCurrent() = 0x14H D7
ChargeVoltage() = 0x15H
InputCurrent() = 0x3FH
ChargeOption() = 0x12H
D0
D15
P
D8
b) Read-Word Format
S
SLAVE
ADDRESS
W
ACK
7 BITS
1b
1b
8 BITS
1b
MSB LSB
0
0
MSB LSB
0
COMMAND
BYTE
ACK
S
SLAVE
ADDRESS
R
ACK
7 BITS
1b
1b
1
0
MSB
LSB
LOW DATA
BYTE
8 BITS
MSB
LSB
ACK
1b
0
HIGH DATA
BYTE
NACK
8 BITS
1b
MSB
LSB
P
1
Preset to 0b0001001
DeviceID() = 0xFFH
Preset to
D7 D0
D15 D8
ManufactureID() = 0xFEH
0b0001001
ChargeCurrent() = 0x14H
ChargeVoltage() = 0x15H
InputCurrent() = 0x3FH
ChargeOption() = 0x12H
LEGEND:
S = START CONDITION OR REPEATED START CONDITION
P = STOP CONDITION
ACK = ACKNOWLEDGE (LOGIC-LOW)
NACK = NOT ACKNOWLEDGE (LOGIC-HIGH)
W = WRITE BIT (LOGIC-LOW)
R = READ BIT (LOGIC-HIGH)
MASTER TO SLAVE
SLAVE TO MASTER
Figure 16. SMBus Write-Word and Read-Word Protocols
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Figure 17. SMBus Write Timing
A
B
tLOW
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
t HIGH
A = START CONDITION
E = SLAVE PULLS SMBDATA LINE LOW
B = MSB OF ADDRESS CLOCKED INTO SLAVE
F = ACKNOWLEDGE BIT CLOCKED INTO MASTER
I = ACKNOWLEDGE CLOCK PULSE
J = STOP CONDITION
C = LSB OF ADDRESS CLOCKED INTO SLA VE
G = MSB OF DATA CLOCKED INTO MASTER
K = NEW START CONDITION
D = R/W BIT CLOCKED INTO SLAVE
H = LSB OF DATA CLOCKED INTO MASTER
Figure 18. SMBus Read Timing
Battery-Charger Commands
The IC supports six battery-charger commands that use either Write-Word or Read-Word protocols, as
summarized in Table 2. ManufacturerID() and DeviceID() can be used to identify the IC. The ManufacturerID()
command always returns 0x0040H and the DeviceID() command always returns 0x000AH.
Table 2. Battery Charger Command Summary
14
REGISTER ADDRESS
REGISTER NAME
READ/WRITE
DESCRIPTION
POR STATE
0x12H
ChargeOption()
Read or Write
Charger Options Control
0x7904H
0x14H
ChargeCurrent()
Read or Write
7-Bit Charge Current Setting
0x0000H
0x15H
ChargeVoltage()
Read or Write
11-Bit Charge Voltage Setting
0x0000H
0x3FH
InputCurrent()
Read or Write
6-Bit Input Current Setting
0x1000H
0XFEH
ManufacturerID()
Read Only
Manufacturer ID
0x0040H
0xFFH
DeviceID()
Read Only
Device ID
0x000AH
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Setting Charger Options
By writing ChargeOption() command (0x12H or 0b00010010), the IC allows users to change several charger
options after POR (Power On Reset) as shown in Table 3.
Table 3. Charge Options Register (0x12H)
BIT
[15]
BIT NAME
DESCRIPTION
ACOK Deglitch Time Adjust ACOK deglitch time.
Adjust
0: ACOK deglitch time 1.3s for bq24707, 1.2ms for bq24707A <default at POR>
1: ACOK deglitch time set to minimum (<50µs).
To change this option, VCC pin voltage must be above UVLO and ACDET pin voltage must be above
0.6V to enable IC SMBus communication and set this bit to 1 to disable the ACOK deglitch timer. After
POR the bit default value is 0 and ACOK deglitch time is 1.3s for bq24707 and 1.2ms for bq24707A.
[14:13]
WATCHDOG Timer
Adjust
Set maximum delay between consecutive SMBus Write charge voltage or charge current command. The
charge is suspended if the IC does not receive write charge voltage or write charge current command
within the watchdog time period and watchdog timer is enabled.
The charge is resumed after receive write charge voltage or write charge current command when
watchdog timer expires and charge suspends.
00: Disable Watchdog Timer
01: Enabled, 44 sec
10: Enabled, 88 sec
11: Enable Watchdog Timer (175s) <default at POR>
[12:11]
Not In Use
11 at POR
[10]
EMI Switching
Frequency Adjust
0: Reduce PWM switching frequency by 18% <default at POR>
1: Increase PWM switching frequency by 18%
[9]
EMI Switching
Frequency Enable
0: Disable adjust PWM switching frequency <default at POR>
1: Enable adjust PWM switching frequency
IFAULT_HI
Comparator
Threshold Adjust
Short circuit protection high side MOSFET voltage drop comparator threshold.
00: 300mV
01: 500mV
10: 700mV <default at POR>
11: 900mV
[6]
Not In Use
0 at POR
[5]
IOUT Selection
0: IOUT is the 20x adapter current amplifier output <default at POR>
1: IOUT is the 20x charge current amplifier output
[4]
Comparator
Threshold Adjust
0: 0.6V <default at POR>
1: 2.4V
[3]
Not In Use
0 at POR
ACOC Threshold
Adjust
00: Disable ACOC
01: 1.33X of input current regulation limit
10: 1.66X of input current regulation limit <default at POR>
11: 2.22X of input current regulation limit
Charge Inhibit
0: Enable Charge <default at POR>
1: Inhibit Charge
[8:7]
[2:1]
[0]
Setting the Charge Current
To set the charge current, write a 16-bit ChargeCurrent() command (0x14H or 0b00010100) using the data
format listed in Table 4. With a 10mΩ sense resistor, the IC provides a charge current range of 128mA to
8.128A, with 64mA step resolution. Sending ChargeCurrent() below 128mA or above 8.128A clears the register
and terminates charging. Upon POR, charge current is 0A. A 0.1µF capacitor between SRP and SRN for
differential mode filtering, 0.1µF capacitor between SRN and ground for common mode filtering, and an optional
0.1µF capacitor between SRP and ground for common mode filtering is recommended. Meanwhile, the
capacitance on SRP should not be higher than 0.1µF in order to properly sense the voltage across SRP and
SRN for cycle-by-cycle under-current and over-current detection.
The SRP and SRN pins are used to sense RSR with a default value of 10mΩ. However, resistors of other values
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can also be used. With a larger sense resistor comes a larger sense voltage, and higher regulation accuracy;
but, at the expense of higher conduction loss. If the current sensing resistor value is too high, it may trig over
current protection threshold due to the current ripple voltage being too high. In such a case either a higher
inductance value or a lower current sensing resistor value should be used to limit the current ripple voltage level.
A current sensing resistor value of no more than 20mΩ is suggested.
To provide secondary protection, the IC has an ILIM pin with which the user can program the maximum allowed
charge current. Internal charge current limit is the lower one between the voltage set by ChargeCurrent(), and
voltage on the ILIM pin. To disable this function, the user can pull ILIM above 1.6V, which is the maximum
charge current regulation limit. The following equation shows the voltage should add on the ILIM pin with respect
to the preferred charge current limit:
VILIM = 20 × (VSRP - VSRN ) = 20 ´ ICHG ´ RSR
(1)
Table 4. Charge Current Register (0x14H), Using 10mΩ Sense Resistor
BIT
BIT NAME
DESCRIPTION
0
–
Not used.
1
–
Not used.
2
–
Not used.
3
–
Not used.
4
–
Not used.
5
–
Not used.
6
Charge Current, DACICHG 0
0 = Adds 0mA of charger current.
1 = Adds 64mA of charger current.
7
Charge Current, DACICHG 1
0 = Adds 0mA of charger current.
1 = Adds 128mA of charger current.
8
Charge Current, DACICHG 2
0 = Adds 0mA of charger current.
1 = Adds 256mA of charger current.
9
Charge Current, DACICHG 3
0 = Adds 0mA of charger current.
1 = Adds 512mA of charger current.
10
Charge Current, DACICHG 4
0 = Adds 0mA of charger current.
1 = Adds 1024mA of charger current.
11
Charge Current, DACICHG 5
0 = Adds 0mA of charger current.
1 = Adds 2048mA of charger current.
12
Charge Current, DACICHG 6
0 = Adds 0mA of charger current.
1 = Adds 4096mA of charger current.
13
–
Not used.
14
–
Not used.
15
–
Not used.
Setting the Charge Voltage
To set the output charge regulation voltage, write a 16bit ChargeVoltage() command (0x15H or 0b00010101)
using the data format listed inTable 5. The IC provides a charge voltage range from 1.024V to 19.200V, with
16mV step resolution. Sending ChargeVoltage() below 1.024V or above 19.2V clears the register and terminates
charging. Upon POR, the charge voltage limit is 0V.
The SRN pin is used to sense the battery voltage for voltage regulation and should be connected as close to the
battery as possible, and directly place a decoupling capacitor (0.1µF recommended) as close to the IC as
possible to decouple high frequency noise.
Table 5. Charge Voltage Register (0x15H)
16
BIT
BIT NAME
DESCRIPTION
0
-
Not used.
1
-
Not used.
2
-
Not used.
3
-
Not used.
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Table 5. Charge Voltage Register (0x15H) (continued)
BIT
BIT NAME
4
Charge Voltage, DACV 0
0 = Adds 0mV of charger voltage.
1 = Adds 16mV of charger voltage.
DESCRIPTION
5
Charge Voltage, DACV 1
0 = Adds 0mV of charger voltage.
1 = Adds 32mV of charger voltage.
6
Charge Voltage, DACV 2
0 = Adds 0mV of charger voltage.
1 = Adds 64mV of charger voltage.
7
Charge Voltage, DACV 3
0 = Adds 0mV of charger voltage.
1 = Adds 128mV of charger voltage.
8
Charge Voltage, DACV 4
0 = Adds 0mV of charger voltage.
1 = Adds 256mV of charger voltage.
9
Charge Voltage, DACV 5
0 = Adds 0mV of charger voltage.
1 = Adds 512mV of charger voltage.
10
Charge Voltage, DACV 6
0 = Adds 0mV of charger voltage.
1 = Adds 1024mV of charger voltage.
11
Charge Voltage, DACV 7
0 = Adds 0mV of charger voltage.
1 = Adds 2048mV of charger voltage.
12
Charge Voltage, DACV 8
0 = Adds 0mV of charger voltage.
1 = Adds 4096mV of charger voltage.
13
Charge Voltage, DACV 9
0 = Adds 0mV of charger voltage.
1 = Adds 8192mV of charger voltage.
14
Charge Voltage, DACV 10
0 = Adds 0mV of charger voltage.
1 = Adds 16384mV of charger voltage.
15
-
Not used.
Setting Input Current
System current normally fluctuates as portions of the system are powered up or put to sleep. With the input
current limit, the output-current requirement of the AC wall adapter can be lowered, reducing system cost.
The total input current, from a wall cube or other DC source, is the sum of the system supply current and the
current required by the charger. When the input current exceeds the set input current limit, the IC decreases the
charge current to provide priority to system load current. As the system current rises, the available charge current
drops linearly to zero. Thereafter, all input current goes to system load and input current increases.
During DPM regulation, the total input current is the sum of the device supply current IBIAS, the charger input
current, and the system load current ILOAD, and can be estimated as follows:
éI
´ VBATTERY ù
IINPUT = ILOAD + ê BATTERY
ú + IBIAS
VIN ´ η
ë
û
(2)
where η is the efficiency of the charger buck converter (typically 85% to 95%).
To set the input current limit, write a 16-bit InputCurrent() command (0x3FH or 0b00111111) using the data
format listed in Table 6. When using a 10mΩ sense resistor, the IC provides an input-current limit range of
128mA to 8.064A, with 128mA resolution. An input current limit set to no less than 512mA is suggested. Sending
InputCurrent() below 128mA or above 8.064A clears the register and terminates charging. Upon POR, the default
input current limit is 4096mA.
The ACP and ACN pins are used to sense RAC with a default value of 10mΩ. However, resistors of other values
can also be used. With a larger sense resistor, comes a larger sense voltage, and a higher regulation accuracy;
but, at the expense of higher conduction loss.
Instead of using the internal DPM loop, the user can build up an external input current regulation loop and have
the feedback signal on ILIM. To disable the internal DPM loop, set the input current limit register value to a
maximum 8.064A or a value much higher than the external DPM set point.
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If input current rises above 108% of the input current limit set point, the charger shuts down immediately to let
the input current fall fast. After stopping charge, the charger soft restarts to charge the battery if the adapter still
has power left to charge the battery. This prevents overloading the adapter to crash when system has a high and
fast loading transient. The wait time between shut down and restart charging is a natural response time of the
input current limit loop.
Table 6. Input Current Register (0x3FH), Using 10mΩ Sense Resistor
BIT
BIT NAME
0
–
Not used.
DESCRIPTION
1
–
Not used.
2
–
Not used.
3
–
Not used.
4
–
Not used.
5
–
Not used.
6
–
Not used.
7
Input Current, DACIIN 0
0 = Adds 0mA of input current.
1 = Adds 128mA of input current.
8
Input Current, DACIIN 1
0 = Adds 0mA of input current.
1 = Adds 256mA of input current.
9
Input Current, DACIIN 2
0 = Adds 0mA of input current.
1 = Adds 512mA of input current.
10
Input Current, DACIIN 3
0 = Adds 0mA of input current.
1 = Adds 1024mA of input current.
11
Input Current, DACIIN 4
0 = Adds 0mA of input current.
1 = Adds 2048mA of input current.
12
Input Current, DACIIN 5
0 = Adds 0mA of input current.
1 = Adds 4096mA of input current.
13
–
Not used.
14
–
Not used.
15
–
Not used.
Adapter Detect and ACOK Output
The IC uses an ACOK comparator to determine the source of power on the VCC pin, either from the battery or
adapter. An external resistor voltage divider attenuates the adapter voltage before it goes to ACDET. The
adapter detect threshold should typically be programmed to a value greater than the maximum battery voltage
but lower than the maximum allowed adapter voltage.
The open drain ACOK output requires an external pull-up resistor to the system digital rail for a high level. It can
be pulled to ground under the following conditions:
• VVCC > UVLO;
• 2.4V < VACDET (not in low input voltage condition);
• VVCC–VSRN > 245mV (not in sleep mode);
The default delay is 1.3s for bq24707 and 1.2ms for bq24707A after ACDET has valid voltage to make ACOK
pull low. It can be reduced by a SMBus command (ChargeOption() bit[15] = 0 ACOK delay 1.3s for bq24707 and
1.2ms for bq24707A, bit[15] = 1 ACOK no delay). To change this option, the VCC pin voltage must be above
UVLO and the ACDET pin voltage must be above 0.6V to enable IC SMBus communication and set
ChargeOption() bit[15] to 1 to disable the ACOK deglitch timer.
Enable and Disable Charging
In
•
•
•
18
Charge mode, the following conditions have to be valid to start charge:
Charge is enabled via SMBus (ChargeOption() bit [0] = 0, default is 0, charge enabled);
ILIM pin voltage higher than 105mV;
All three regulation limit DACs have a valid value programmed;
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•
•
•
•
ACOK is valid (See the Adapter Detect and ACOK Output section for details);
VSRN does not exceed BATOVP threshold;
IC temperature does not exceed TSHUT threshold;
Not in ACOC condition (see the Input Over Current Protection (ACOC) section for details);
One of the following conditions stops on-going charging:
• Charge is inhibited via SMBus (ChargeOption() bit[0] = 1);
• ILIM pin voltage lower than 75mV;
• One of three regulation limit DACs is set to 0 or out of range;
• ACOK is pulled high (see the Adapter Detect and ACOK Output section for details);
• VSRN exceeds BATOVP threshold;
• TSHUT IC temperature threshold is reached;
• ACOC is detected (see the Input Over Current Protection (ACOC) section for details);
• Short circuit is detected (see the Inductor Short, MOSFET Short Protection section for details);
• Watchdog timer expires if watchdog timer is enabled (see the Charger Timeout section for details);
Automatic Internal Soft-Start Charger Current
Every time charge is enabled, the charger automatically applies soft-start on charge current to avoid any
overshoot or stress on the output capacitors or the power converter. The charge current starts at 128mA, and the
step size is 64mA in CCM mode for a 10mΩ current sensing resistor. Each step lasts around 240µs in CCM
mode, until it reaches the programmed charge current limit. No external components are needed for this function.
During DCM mode, the soft-start current step size is larger and each step lasts for a longer time period due to
the intrinsic slow response of DCM mode.
High Accuracy Current Sense Amplifier
As an industry standard, a high accuracy current sense amplifier (CSA) is used to monitor the input current or the
charge current, selectable via SMBus (ChargeOption() bit[5] = 0 selects the input current, bit[5] = 1 selects the
charge current) by the host. The CSA senses voltage across the sense resistor by a factor of 20 through the
IOUT pin. Once VCC is above UVLO and ACDET is above 0.6V, CSA turns on and the IOUT output becomes
valid. To lower the voltage on current monitoring, a resistor divider from IOUT to GND can be used and accuracy
over temperature can still be achieved.
A 100pF capacitor connected on the output is recommended for decoupling high-frequency noise. An additional
RC filter is optional, if additional filtering is desired. Note that adding filtering also adds additional response delay.
Charge Timeout
The IC includes a watchdog timer to terminate charging if the charger does not receive a write ChargeVoltage()
or write ChargeCurrent() command within 175s (adjustable via ChargeOption() command). If a watchdog timeout
occurs all register values stay unchanged but charge is suspended. Write ChargeVoltage() or write
ChargeCurrent() commands must be re-sent to reset the watchdog timer and resume charging. The watchdog
timer can be disabled, or set to 44s, 88s, or 175s via a SMBus command (ChargeOption() bit[14:13]). After
watchdog timeout write ChargeOption() bit[14:13] to disable the watchdog timer also resume charging.
Converter Operation
The synchronous buck PWM converter uses a fixed frequency voltage mode control scheme and internal type III
compensation network. The LC output filter generates the following characteristic resonant frequency:
1
¦o =
2p Lo Co
(3)
The resonant frequency fo is used to determine the compensation to ensure there is sufficient phase margin and
gain margin for the target bandwidth. The LC output filter should be selected to generate a resonant frequency of
10–20 kHz nominal for the best performance. The suggested component values per charge current with a
750kHz default switching frequency is shown in Table 7.
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Ceramic capacitors show a dc-bias effect. This effect reduces the effective capacitance when a dc-bias voltage is
applied across a ceramic capacitor, as on the output capacitor of a charger. The effect may lead to a significant
capacitance drop, especially for high output voltages and small capacitor packages. See the manufacturer's data
sheet about the performance with a dc bias voltage applied. It may be necessary to choose a higher voltage
rating or nominal capacitance value in order to get the required value at the operating point.
Table 7. Suggested Component Values per Charge Current with a Default
750kHz Switching Frequency
Charge Current
2A
3A
4A
6A
8A
Output inductor Lo (µH)
6.8 or 8.2
5.6 or 6.8
3.3 or 4.7
3.3
2.2
Output capacitor Co (µF)
20
20
20
30
40
Sense resistor (mΩ)
10
10
10
10
10
The IC has three loops of regulation: input current, charge current, and charge voltage. The three loops are
brought together internally at the error amplifier. The maximum voltage of the three loops appears at the output
of the error amplifier EAO (see Figure 15). An internal saw-tooth ramp is compared to the internal error control
signal EAO to vary the duty-cycle of the converter. The ramp has an offset of 200mV in order to allow 0%
duty-cycle.
When the battery charge voltage approaches the input voltage, the EAO signal is allowed to exceed the
saw-tooth ramp peak in order to get a 100% duty-cycle. If voltage across the BTST and PHASE pins falls below
4.3V, a refresh cycle starts and the low-side n-channel power MOSFET is turned on to recharge the BTST
capacitor. It can achieve a duty-cycle of up to 99.5%.
Continuous Conduction Mode (CCM)
With sufficient charge current the IC inductor current never crosses zero, which is defined as continuous
conduction mode. The controller starts a new cycle with ramp coming up from 200mV. As long as EAO voltage is
above the ramp voltage, the high-side MOSFET (HSFET) stays on. When the ramp voltage exceeds EAO
voltage, the HSFET turns off and the low-side MOSFET (LSFET) turns on. At the end of the cycle, the ramp gets
reset and the LSFET turns off, ready for the next cycle. There is always break-before-make logic during the
transition to prevent cross-conduction and shoot-through. During the dead time when both MOSFETs are off, the
body-diode of the low-side power MOSFET conducts the inductor current.
During CCM mode, the inductor current is always flowing and creates a fixed two-pole system. Having the
LSFET turn-on keeps the power dissipation low and allows safely charging at high currents.
Discontinuous Conduction Mode (DCM)
During the HSFET off time when LSFET is on, the inductor current decreases. If the current goes to zero, the
converter enters Discontinuous Conduction Mode. Every cycle, when the voltage across SRP and SRN falls
below 5mV (0.5A on 10mΩ), the under-current-protection comparator (UCP) turns off LSFET to avoid negative
inductor current, which may boost the system via the body diode of HSFET.
During the DCM mode the loop response automatically changes. It changes to a single pole system and the pole
is proportional to the load current.
Both CCM and DCM are synchronous operation with LSFET turn-on every clock cycle. If the average charge
current goes below 125mA on 10mΩ current sensing resistor or the battery voltage falls below 2.5V, the LSFET
keeps turn-off. The battery charger operates in non-synchronous mode and the current flows through the LSFET
body diode. During non-synchronous operation, the LSFET turns on only for refreshing pulse to charge BTST
capacitor. If the average charge current goes above 250mA on 10mΩ current sensing resistor, the LSFET exits
non-synchronous mode and enters synchronous mode to reduce LSFET power loss.
Input Over Current Protection (ACOC)
The IC cannot maintain the input current level if the charge current has been already reduced to zero. After the
system current continues increasing to the 1.66X of input current DAC set point (with 2.5ms blank out time),
IFAULT is pulled to low and the charge is disabled for 1.3s and will soft start again for charge if ACOC condition
goes away. If such failure is detected seven times in 90 seconds, charge will be latched off and an adapter
removal and system shut down (make ACDET < 0.6V to reset IC) is required to start charge again. After 90
seconds, the failure counter will be reset to zero to prevent latch off.
20
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The ACOC function can be disabled or the threshold can be set to 1.33X, 1.66X or 2.22X of input DPM current
via SMBus command (ChargeOption() bit [2:1]).
Charge Over Current Protection (CHGOCP)
The IC has a cycle-by-cycle peak over-current protection. It monitors the voltage across SRP and SRN, and
prevents the current from exceeding of the threshold based on the DAC charge current set point. The high-side
gate drive turns off for the rest of the cycle when the over-current is detected, and resumes when the next cycle
starts.
The charge OCP threshold is automatically set to 6A, 9A, and 12A on a 10mΩ current sensing resistor based on
charge current register value. This prevents the threshold to be too high which is not safe or too low which can
be triggered in normal operation. Proper inductance should be selected to prevent OCP triggered in normal
operation due to high inductor current ripple.
Battery Over Voltage Protection (BATOVP)
The IC will not allow the high-side and low-side FET to turn-on when the battery voltage at SRN exceeds 104%
of the regulation voltage set-point. If BATOVP last over 30ms, charger is completely disabled. This allows quick
response to an over-voltage condition – such as occurs when the load is removed or the battery is disconnected.
A 4mA current sink from SRN to GND is on only during BATOVP and allows discharging the stored output
inductor energy that is transferred to the output capacitors.
Some battery pack gas gauges will set the ChargeVoltage() and ChargeCurrent() registers to 0V and 0A after the
battery pack is fully charged. If the ChargeVoltage() register is set to 0V, the bq24707 triggers BATOVP, and the
4mA current discharges the battery pack. The recommendation for bq24707 is to set the ChargeVoltage()
register to full scale charge voltage (12.592V for 3S battery for example) after the battery is fully charged. The
bq24707A will not trigger BATOVP, and there is no 4mA current to discharge the battery pack if the
ChargeVoltage() register is set 0V. The recommendation for bq24707A is to set the ChargeVoltage() register to
0V after the battery is fullycharged.
Battery Shorted to Ground (BATLOWV)
The IC will disable charge for 1ms if the battery voltage on SRN falls below 2.5V. After 1ms reset, the charge is
resumed with soft-start if all the enable conditions in the Enable and Disable Charging sections are satisfied. This
prevents any overshoot current in inductor which can saturate inductor and may damage the MOSFET. The
charge current is limited to 0.5A on 10mΩ current sensing resistor when BATLOWV condition persists and
LSFET keeps off. The LSFET turns on only for refreshing pulse to charge BTST capacitor.
Thermal Shutdown Protection (TSHUT)
The QFN package has low thermal impedance, which provides good thermal conduction from the silicon to the
ambient, to keep junctions temperatures low. As added level of protection, the charger converter turns off for
self-protection whenever the junction temperature exceeds the 155°C. The charger stays off until the junction
temperature falls below 135°C. During thermal shut down, the REGN LDO current limit is reduced to 16mA.
Once the temperature falls below 135°C, charge can be resumed with soft start.
EMI Switching Frequency Adjust
The charger switching frequency can be adjusted ±18% to solve EMI issue via SMBus command.
ChargeOption() bit [9]=0 disable the frequency adjust function. To enable frequency adjust function, set
ChargeOption() bit[9]=1. Set ChargeOption() bit [10]=0 to reduce switching frequency, set bit[10]=1 to increase
switching frequency.
If frequency is reduced, for a fixed inductor the current ripple is increased. Inductor value must be carefully
selected so that it will not trig cycle-by-cycle peak over current protection even for the worst condition such as
higher input voltage, 50% duty cycle, lower inductance and lower switching frequency.
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Inductor Short, MOSFET Short Protection
The IC has a unique short circuit protection feature. Its cycle-by-cycle current monitoring feature is achieved
through monitoring the voltage drop across RDS(on) of the MOSFETs after a certain amount of blanking time. In
case of MOSFET short or inductor short circuit, the over current condition is sensed by two comparators and two
counters will be triggered. After seven times of short circuit events, the charger will be latched off. To reset the
charger from latch-off status, the IC VCC pin must be pulled down below UVLO or ACDET pin must be pulled
down below 0.6V. This can be achieved by removing the adapter and shut down the operation system. The low
side MOSFET short circuit voltage drop threshold is fixed to typical 110mV. The high side MOSFET short circuit
voltage drop threshold can be adjusted via SMBus command. ChargeOption() bit[8:7] = 00, 01, 10, 11 set the
threshold 300mV, 500mV, 700mV and 900mV respectively.
Due to the certain amount of blanking time to prevent noise when MOSFET just turns on, the cycle-by-cycle
charge over-current protection may detect high current and turn off MOSFET first before the short circuit
protection circuit can detect short condition because the blanking time has not finished. In such a case the
charge may not be able to detect shorts circuit and counter may not be able to count to seven then latch off.
Instead the charge may continuously keep switching with very narrow duty cycle to limit the cycle-by-cycle
current peak value. However, the charger should still be safe and will not cause failure because the duty cycle is
limited to a very short of time and MOSFET should be still inside the safety operation area. During a soft start
period, it may takes long time instead of just seven switching cycles to detect short circuit based on the same
blanking time reason.
Independent Comparator
The IC has an independent comparator can be used to compare input current, charge current or battery voltage
with internal reference . Program CMPIN voltage by connecting a resistor divider from IOUT pin to CMPIN pin to
GND pin for adapter or charge current comparison or from SRN pin to CMPIN pin to GND pin for battery voltage
comparison. When CMPIN is above internal reference, CMPOUT is pulled to external pull up rail by external pull
up resistor. When CMPIN is below internal reference, CMPOUT is pulled to GND by internal MOSFET. Place a
resistor between CMPIN and CMPOUT to program hysteresis. The internal reference can be set to 0.6V or 2.4V
via SMBus command (ChargeOption() bit[4]=0 set internal reference 0.6V, bit[4]=1 set 2.4V).
There is one 50kΩ series resistor RS and one 2000kΩ pull down resistor RDOWN for CMPIN pin as shown in
Figure 19. To get the accurate comparison set point, these two resistors must be included in the calculation. A
spreadsheet calculation tool has been developed to simplify the design work. User can down load from the TI
Web site at www.ti.com under the IC product folder.
Figure 19 also shows one application circuit using this comparator for battery voltage comparison. After using the
superposition principle and fill the components value into the spreadsheet the battery voltage threshold is 9.45V
for rising edge and 8.99V for falling edge.
3.3V
RS
50kΩ
RHYS
3010kΩ
VBAT
CMPIN
CMPOUT
RDOWN
2000kΩ
RTOP
422kΩ
RBOT
30.1kΩ
0.6V/2.4V
RUP
10kΩ
CMPIN
RS
50kΩ
CMPOUT
RDOWN
2000kΩ
0.6V
(a) Internal Circuit showing the series resistor and
pull down resistor
(b) Application Circuit, 9.45V rising edge and 8.99V falling edge
for 3cell battery
Figure 19. IC Comparator Internal Circuit and Application Circuit
22
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Table 8. Component List for Typical System Circuit of Figure 1
PART DESIGNATOR
QTY
DESCRIPTION
C1, C2, C3, C13, C14
5
Capacitor, Ceramic, 0.1µF, 25V, 10%, X7R, 0603
C4
1
Capacitor, Ceramic, 100pF, 25V, 10%, X7R, 0603
C5, C6
2
Capacitor, Ceramic, 1µF, 25V, 10%, X7R, 0603
C7
1
Capacitor, Ceramic, 0.047µF, 25V, 10%, X7R, 0603
C8, C9, C10, C11
4
Capacitor, Ceramic, 10µF, 25V, 10%, X7R, 1206
Ci
1
Capacitor, Ceramic, 2.2µF, 25V, 10%, X7R, 1210
Csys
1
Capacitor, Electrolytic, 220µF, 25V
D1
1
Diode, Schottky, 30V, 200mA, SOT-23, Fairchild, BAT54
D2
1
Diode, Schottky, 40V, 120mA, SOD-323, NXP, RB751V40
Q1, Q2, Q5
3
P-channel MOSFET, –30V, –9.4A, SO-8, Vishay Siliconix, Si4435DDY
Q3, Q4
2
N-channel MOSFET, 30V, 12A, PowerPAK 1212-8, Vishay Siliconix, SiS412DN
L1
1
Inductor, SMT, 4.7µH, 5.5A, Vishay Dale, IHLP2525CZER4R7M01
R1
1
Resistor, Chip, 430kΩ, 1/10W, 1%, 0603
R2
1
Resistor, Chip, 66.5kΩ, 1/10W, 1%, 0603
R3, R4, R5, R6, R10
5
Resistor, Chip, 10kΩ, 1/10W, 1%, 0603
R7
1
Resistor, Chip, 316kΩ, 1/10W, 1%, 0603
R8, R12
2
Resistor, Chip, 100kΩ, 1/10W, 1%, 0603
R9
1
Resistor, Chip, 10Ω, 1/4W, 1%, 1206
R11
1
Resistor, Chip, 39.2kΩ, 1/10W, 1%, 0603
R13
1
Resistor, Chip, 3.01MΩ, 1/10W, 1%, 0603
R14
1
Resistor, Chip, 10 Ω, 1/10W, 5%, 0603
R15
1
Resistor, Chip, 7.5 Ω, 1/10W, 5%, 0603
RAC, RSR
2
Resistor, Chip, 0.01Ω, 1/2W, 1%, 1206
Ri
1
Resistor, Chip, 2Ω, 1/2W, 1%, 1210
U1
1
Charger controller, 20 pin VQFN, TI, bq24707RGR or bq24707ARGR
APPLICATION INFORMATION
Negative Output Voltage Protection
Reversely insert the battery pack into the charger output during production or hard shorts on battery to ground
will generate negative output voltage on SRP and SRN pin. IC internal electrostatic-discharge (ESD) diodes from
GND pin to SRP or SRN pins and two anti-parallel (AP) diodes between SRP and SRN pins can be forward
biased and negative current can pass through the ESD diodes and AP diodes when output has negative voltage.
Insert two small resistors for SRP and SRN pins to limit the negative current level when output has negative
voltage. Suggest resistor value is 10Ω for SRP pin and 7-8Ω for SRN pin. After adding small resistors, the
suggested pre-charge current is at least 192mA for a 10mΩ current sensing resistor.
Inductor Selection
The IC has three selectable fixed switching frequencies. Higher switching frequency allows the use of smaller
inductor and capacitor values. Inductor saturation current should be higher than the charging current (ICHG) plus
half the ripple current (IRIPPLE):
ISAT ³ ICHG + (1/2) IRIPPLE
(4)
The inductor ripple current depends on input voltage (VIN), duty cycle (D = VOUT/VIN), switching frequency (fS) and
inductance (L):
V ´ D ´ (1 - D)
IRIPPLE = IN
fS ´ L
(5)
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The maximum inductor ripple current happens with D = 0.5 or close to 0.5. For example, the battery charging
voltage range is from 9V to 12.6V for 3-cell battery pack. For 20V adapter voltage, 10V battery voltage gives the
maximum inductor ripple current. Another example is 4-cell battery, the battery voltage range is from 12V to
16.8V, and 12V battery voltage gives the maximum inductor ripple current.
Usually inductor ripple is designed in the range of (20-40%) maximum charging current as a trade-off between
inductor size and efficiency for a practical design.
The IC has charge under current protection (UCP) by monitoring charging current sensing resistor cycle-by-cycle.
The typical cycle-by-cycle UCP threshold is 5mV falling edge corresponding to 0.5A falling edge for a 10mΩ
charging current sensing resistor. When the average charging current is less than 125mA for a 10mΩ charging
current sensing resistor, the low side MOSFET is off until BTST capacitor voltage needs to refresh charge. As a
result, the converter relies on low side MOSFET body diode for the inductor freewheeling current.
Input Capacitor
Input capacitor should have enough ripple current rating to absorb input switching ripple current. The worst case
RMS ripple current is half of the charging current when duty cycle is 0.5. If the converter does not operate at
50% duty cycle, then the worst case capacitor RMS current occurs where the duty cycle is closest to 50% and
can be estimated by Equation 6:
ICIN = ICHG ´
D × (1 - D)
(6)
Low ESR ceramic capacitor such as X7R or X5R is preferred for input decoupling capacitor and should be
placed to the drain of the high side MOSFET and source of the low side MOSFET as close as possible. Voltage
rating of the capacitor must be higher than normal input voltage level. 25V rating or higher capacitor is preferred
for 19-20V input voltage. 10-20μF capacitance is suggested for typical of 3-4A charging current.
Ceramic capacitors show a dc-bias effect. This effect reduces the effective capacitance when a dc-bias voltage is
applied across a ceramic capacitor, as on the input capacitor of a charger. The effect may lead to a significant
capacitance drop, especially for high input voltages and small capacitor packages. See the manufacturer's data
sheet about the performance with a dc bias voltage applied. It may be necessary to choose a higher voltage
rating or nominal capacitance value in order to get the required value at the operating point.
Output Capacitor
Output capacitor also should have enough ripple current rating to absorb output switching ripple current. The
output capacitor RMS current is given:
I
ICOUT = RIPPLE » 0.29 ´ IRIPPLE
2 ´ 3
(7)
The IC has internal loop compensator. To get good loop stability, the resonant frequency of the output inductor
and output capacitor should be designed between 10 kHz and 20 kHz. The preferred ceramic capacitor is 25V
X7R or X5R for output capacitor. 10-20μF capacitance is suggested for typical of 3-4A charging current. Place
capacitors after charging current sensing resistor to get the best charge current regulation accuracy.
Ceramic capacitors show a dc-bias effect. This effect reduces the effective capacitance when a dc-bias voltage is
applied across a ceramic capacitor, as on the output capacitor of a charger. The effect may lead to a significant
capacitance drop, especially for high output voltages and small capacitor packages. See the manufacturer's data
sheet about the performance with a dc bias voltage applied. It may be necessary to choose a higher voltage
rating or nominal capacitance value in order to get the required value at the operating point.
Power MOSFETs Selection
Two external N-channel MOSFETs are used for a synchronous switching battery charger. The gate drivers are
internally integrated into the IC with 6V of gate drive voltage. 30V or higher voltage rating MOSFETs are
preferred for 19-20V input voltage.
Figure-of-merit (FOM) is usually used for selecting proper MOSFET based on a tradeoff between the conduction
loss and switching loss. For top side MOSFET, FOM is defined as the product of a MOSFET's on-resistance,
RDS(ON), and the gate-to-drain charge, QGD. For bottom side MOSFET, FOM is defined as the product of the
MOSFET's on-resistance, RDS(ON), and the total gate charge, QG.
FOMtop = RDS(on) x QGD; FOMbottom = RDS(on) x QG
24
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The lower the FOM value, the lower the total power loss. Usually lower RDS(ON) has higher cost with the same
package size.
The top-side MOSFET loss includes conduction loss and switching loss. It is a function of duty cycle
(D=VOUT/VIN), charging current (ICHG), MOSFET's on-resistance ®DS(ON)), input voltage (VIN), switching frequency
(fS), turn on time (ton) and turn off time (toff):
1
Ptop = D ´ ICHG2 ´ RDS(on) +
´ VIN ´ ICHG ´ (t on + t off ) ´ f s
2
(9)
The first item represents the conduction loss. Usually MOSFET RDS(ON) increases by 50% with 100°C junction
temperature rise. The second term represents the switching loss. The MOSFET turn-on and turn-off times are
given by:
Q
Q
t on = SW , t off = SW
Ion
Ioff
(10)
where Qsw is the switching charge, Ion is the turn-on gate driving current and Ioff is the turn-off gate driving
current. If the switching charge is not given in MOSFET datasheet, it can be estimated by gate-to-drain charge
(QGD) and gate-to-source charge (QGS):
1
QSW = QGD +
´ QGS
2
(11)
Gate driving current can be estimated by REGN voltage (VREGN), MOSFET plateau voltage (Vplt), total turn-on
gate resistance (Ron) and turn-off gate resistance (Roff) of the gate driver:
VREGN - Vplt
Vplt
Ion =
, Ioff =
Ron
Roff
(12)
The conduction loss of the bottom-side MOSFET is calculated with the following equation when it operates in
synchronous continuous conduction mode:
Pbottom = (1 - D) ´ ICHG2 ´ RDS(on)
(13)
When charger operates in non-synchronous mode, the bottom-side MOSFET is off. As a result all the
freewheeling current goes through the body-diode of the bottom-side MOSFET. The body diode power loss
depends on its forward voltage drop (VF), non-synchronous mode charging current (INONSYNC), and duty cycle (D).
PD = VF x INONSYNC x (1 - D)
(14)
The maximum charging current in non-synchronous mode can be up to 0.25A for a 10mΩ charging current
sensing resistor or 0.5A if battery voltage is below 2.5V. The minimum duty cycle happens at lowest battery
voltage. Choose the bottom-side MOSFET with either an internal Schottky or body diode capable of carrying the
maximum non-synchronous mode charging current.
Input Filter Design
During adapter hot plug-in, the parasitic inductance and input capacitor from the adapter cable form a second
order system. The voltage spike at VCC pin maybe beyond IC maximum voltage rating and damage IC. The
input filter must be carefully designed and tested to prevent over voltage event on VCC pin.
There are several methods to damping or limit the over voltage spike during adapter hot plug-in. An electrolytic
capacitor with high ESR as an input capacitor can damp the over voltage spike well below the IC maximum pin
voltage rating. A high current capability TVS Zener diode can also limit the over voltage level to an IC safe level.
However these two solutions may not have low cost or small size.
A cost effective and small size solution is shown in Figure 20. The R1 and C1 are composed of a damping RC
network to damp the hot plug-in oscillation. As a result the over voltage spike is limited to a safe level. D1 is used
for reverse voltage protection for VCC pin. C2 is VCC pin decoupling capacitor and it should be place to VCC pin
as close as possible. C2 value should be less than C1 value so R1 can dominant the equivalent ESR value to
get enough damping effect. R2 is used to limit inrush current of D1 to prevent D1 getting damage when adapter
hot plug-in. R2 and C2 should have 10us time constant to limit the dv/dt on VCC pin to reduce inrush current
when adapter hot plug in. R1 has high inrush current. R1 package must be sized enough to handle inrush current
power loss according to resistor manufacturer’s datasheet. The filter components value always need to be
verified with real application and minor adjustments may need to fit in the real application circuit.
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25
bq24707
bq24707A
SLUSA78B – JULY 2010 – REVISED MARCH 2011
www.ti.com
D1
Adapter
connector
R2(1206)
10-20 Ω
R1(2010)
2Ω
VCC pin
C1
2.2μF
C2
0.47-1μF
Figure 20. Input Filter
IC Design Guideline
The IC has a unique short circuit protection feature. Its cycle-by-cycle current monitoring feature is achieved
through monitoring the voltage drop across Rdson of the MOSFETs after a certain amount of blanking time. In
case of MOSFET short or inductor short circuit, the over current condition is sensed by two comparators and two
counters will be triggered. After seven times of short circuit events, the charger will be latched off. The way to
reset the charger from latch-off status is reconnect adapter. Figure 21 shows the IC short circuit protection block
diagram.
Adapter
ACP
RAC
ACN R
PCB
BTST
SCP1
High-Side
MOSFET
PHASE
L
REGN
COMP1
Adapter
Plug in
COMP2
Count to 7
CLR
SCP2
RDC
Low-Side
MOSFET
Battery
C
Latch off
Charger
Figure 21. Block Diagram of IC Short Circuit Protection
In normal operation, low side MOSFET current is from source to drain which generates negative voltage drop
when it turns on, as a result the over current comparator can not be triggered. When high side switch short circuit
or inductor short circuit happens, the large current of low side MOSFET is from drain to source and can trig low
side switch over current comparator. IC senses low side switch voltage drop by PHASE pin and GND pin.
The high-side FET short is detected by monitoring the voltage drop between ACP and PHASE. As a result, it not
only monitors the high side switch voltage drop, but also the adapter sensing resistor voltage drop and PCB trace
voltage drop from ACN terminal of RAC to charger high side switch drain. Usually, there is a long trance between
input sensing resistor and charger converting input, a careful layout will minimize the trace effect.
26
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bq24707
bq24707A
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www.ti.com
To prevent unintentional charger shut down in normal operation, MOSFET RDS(on) selection and PCB layout is
very important. Figure 22 shows a need improve PCB layout example and its equivalent circuit. In this layout,
system current path and charger input current path is not separated, as a result, the system current causes
voltage drop in the PCB copper and is sensed by IC. The worst layout is when a system current pull point is after
charger input; as a result all system current voltage drops are counted into over current protection comparator.
The worst case for IC is the total system current and charger input current sum equals DPM current. When
system pull more current, the charger IC try to regulate RAC current as a constant current by reducing charging
current.
I DPM
R AC
System Path PCB Trace
System current
R AC
R PCB
I SYS
I CHRGIN
Charger input current
ACP
Charger Input PCB Trace
ACN
Charger
I BAT
To ACN
To ACP
(a) PCB Layout
(b) Equivalent Circuit
Figure 22. Need Improve PCB Layout Example
Figure 23 shows the optimized PCB layout example. The system current path and charge input current path is
separated, as a result the IC only senses charger input current caused PCB voltage drop and minimized the
possibility of unintentional charger shut down in normal operation. This also makes PCB layout easier for high
system current application.
R AC
System Path PCB Trace
I DPM
System current
Single point connection at RAC
I SYS
R AC
R PCB
Charger input current
ACP
To ACP
To ACN
ACN
I CHRGIN
Charger
I BAT
Charger Input PCB Trace
(a) PCB Layout
(b) Equivalent Circuit
Figure 23. Optimized PCB Layout Example
The total voltage drop sensed by IC can be express as the following equation.
Vtop = RAC x IDPM + RPCB x (ICHRGIN + (IDPM - ICHRGIN) x k) + RDS(on) x IPEAK
(15)
where the RAC is the AC adapter current sensing resistance, IDPM is the DPM current set point, RPCB is the PCB
trace equivalent resistance, ICHRGIN is the charger input current, k is the PCB factor, RDS(on) is the high side
MOSFET turn on resistance and IPEAK is the peak current of inductor. Here the PCB factor k equals 0 means the
best layout shown in Figure 23 where the PCB trace only goes through charger input current while k equals 1
means the worst layout shown in Figure 22 where the PCB trace goes through all the DPM current. The total
voltage drop must below the high side short circuit protection threshold to prevent unintentional charger shut
down in normal operation.
The low side MOSFET short circuit voltage drop threshold is fixed to typical 110mV. The high side MOSFET
short circuit voltage drop threshold can be adjusted via SMBus command. ChargeOption() bit[8:7] = 00, 01, 10,
11 set the threshold 300mV, 500mV, 700mV and 900mV respectively. For a fixed PCB layout, host should set
proper short circuit protection threshold level to prevent unintentional charger shut down in normal operation.
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27
bq24707
bq24707A
SLUSA78B – JULY 2010 – REVISED MARCH 2011
www.ti.com
PCB Layout
The switching node rise and fall times should be minimized for minimum switching loss. Proper layout of the
components to minimize high frequency current path loop (see Figure 24) is important to prevent electrical and
magnetic field radiation and high frequency resonant problems. Here is a PCB layout priority list for proper
layout. Layout PCB according to this specific order is essential.
1. Place input capacitor as close as possible to switching MOSFET’s supply and ground connections and use
shortest copper trace connection. These parts should be placed on the same layer of PCB instead of on
different layers and using vias to make this connection.
2. The IC should be placed close to the switching MOSFET’s gate terminals and keep the gate drive signal
traces short for a clean MOSFET drive. The IC can be placed on the other side of the PCB of switching
MOSFETs.
3. Place inductor input terminal to switching MOSFET’s output terminal as close as possible. Minimize the
copper area of this trace to lower electrical and magnetic field radiation but make the trace wide enough to
carry the charging current. Do not use multiple layers in parallel for this connection. Minimize parasitic
capacitance from this area to any other trace or plane.
4. The charging current sensing resistor should be placed right next to the inductor output. Route the sense
leads connected across the sensing resistor back to the IC in same layer, close to each other (minimize loop
area) and do not route the sense leads through a high-current path (see Figure 25 for Kelvin connection for
best current accuracy). Place decoupling capacitor on these traces next to the IC
5. Place output capacitor next to the sensing resistor output and ground
6. Output capacitor ground connections need to be tied to the same copper that connects to the input capacitor
ground before connecting to system ground.
7. Use single ground connection to tie charger power ground to charger analog ground. Just beneath the IC
use analog ground copper pour but avoid power pins to reduce inductive and capacitive noise coupling
8. Route analog ground separately from power ground. Connect analog ground and connect power ground
separately. Connect analog ground and power ground together using power pad as the single ground
connection point. Or using a 0Ω resistor to tie analog ground to power ground (power pad should tie to
analog ground in this case if possible).
9. Decoupling capacitors should be placed next to the IC pins and make trace connection as short as possible
10. It is critical that the exposed power pad on the backside of the IC package be soldered to the PCB ground.
Ensure that there are sufficient thermal vias directly under the IC, connecting to the ground plane on the
other layers.
11. The via size and number should be enough for a given current path.
See the EVM design for the recommended component placement with trace and via locations. For the QFN
information, See SCBA017 and SLUA271.
PHASE
VIN
C1
High
Frequency
Current
Path
L1
R1
VBAT
BAT
GND
C2
Figure 24. High Frequency Current Path
28
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bq24707
bq24707A
SLUSA78B – JULY 2010 – REVISED MARCH 2011
www.ti.com
Charge Current Direction
R SNS
To Inductor
To Capacitor and battery
Current Sensing Direction
To SRP and SRN pin
Figure 25. Sensing Resistor PCB Layout
REVISION HISTORY
Changes from Original (July 2010) to Revision A
Page
•
Changed the Functional Block Diagram, Figure 1 ................................................................................................................ 2
•
Updated the description for the SRN and SRP pins ........................................................................................................... 10
•
Deleted C12, added R14 and R15 in Table 8 .................................................................................................................... 23
•
Added Added section: Negative Output Voltage Protection ............................................................................................... 23
Changes from Revision A (November 2010) to Revision B
Page
•
Added Features for the bq24707 and bq24707A ................................................................................................................. 1
•
Added device bq24707A to this data sheet .......................................................................................................................... 1
•
Added bq24707A to the ORDERING INFORMATION table ................................................................................................ 2
•
Added the COMPARISON TABLE ....................................................................................................................................... 2
•
Added bq24707 only to the test condition of tACOK_FALL_DEG first row .................................................................................... 5
•
Added bq24707A only to the test condition of tACOK_FALL_DEG second row ............................................................................ 5
•
Added (bq24707) to the title of Figure 3 ............................................................................................................................... 8
•
Changed the Description of the ACOK Deglitch Time Adjust bit in Table 3 ....................................................................... 15
•
Changed the Adapter Detect and ACOK Output section. included 1.3s for bq24707 and 1.2ms for bq24707A ............... 18
•
Added a new paragraph in the Battery Over Voltage Protection (BATOVP) section ......................................................... 21
•
Changed the Description of item U1 in Table 8 .................................................................................................................. 23
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29
PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM
www.ti.com
16-Apr-2011
PACKAGING INFORMATION
Orderable Device
Status
(1)
Package Type Package
Drawing
Pins
Package Qty
Eco Plan
(2)
Lead/
Ball Finish
MSL Peak Temp
(3)
BQ24707ARGRR
ACTIVE
VQFN
RGR
20
3000
Green (RoHS
& no Sb/Br)
CU NIPDAU Level-2-260C-1 YEAR
BQ24707ARGRT
ACTIVE
VQFN
RGR
20
250
Green (RoHS
& no Sb/Br)
CU NIPDAU Level-2-260C-1 YEAR
BQ24707RGRR
ACTIVE
VQFN
RGR
20
3000
Green (RoHS
& no Sb/Br)
CU NIPDAU Level-2-260C-1 YEAR
BQ24707RGRT
ACTIVE
VQFN
RGR
20
250
Green (RoHS
& no Sb/Br)
CU NIPDAU Level-2-260C-1 YEAR
Samples
(Requires Login)
(1)
The marketing status values are defined as follows:
ACTIVE: Product device recommended for new designs.
LIFEBUY: TI has announced that the device will be discontinued, and a lifetime-buy period is in effect.
NRND: Not recommended for new designs. Device is in production to support existing customers, but TI does not recommend using this part in a new design.
PREVIEW: Device has been announced but is not in production. Samples may or may not be available.
OBSOLETE: TI has discontinued the production of the device.
(2)
Eco Plan - The planned eco-friendly classification: Pb-Free (RoHS), Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt), or Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) - please check http://www.ti.com/productcontent for the latest availability
information and additional product content details.
TBD: The Pb-Free/Green conversion plan has not been defined.
Pb-Free (RoHS): TI's terms "Lead-Free" or "Pb-Free" mean semiconductor products that are compatible with the current RoHS requirements for all 6 substances, including the requirement that
lead not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous materials. Where designed to be soldered at high temperatures, TI Pb-Free products are suitable for use in specified lead-free processes.
Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt): This component has a RoHS exemption for either 1) lead-based flip-chip solder bumps used between the die and package, or 2) lead-based die adhesive used between
the die and leadframe. The component is otherwise considered Pb-Free (RoHS compatible) as defined above.
Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br): TI defines "Green" to mean Pb-Free (RoHS compatible), and free of Bromine (Br) and Antimony (Sb) based flame retardants (Br or Sb do not exceed 0.1% by weight
in homogeneous material)
(3)
MSL, Peak Temp. -- The Moisture Sensitivity Level rating according to the JEDEC industry standard classifications, and peak solder temperature.
Important Information and Disclaimer:The information provided on this page represents TI's knowledge and belief as of the date that it is provided. TI bases its knowledge and belief on information
provided by third parties, and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of such information. Efforts are underway to better integrate information from third parties. TI has taken and
continues to take reasonable steps to provide representative and accurate information but may not have conducted destructive testing or chemical analysis on incoming materials and chemicals.
TI and TI suppliers consider certain information to be proprietary, and thus CAS numbers and other limited information may not be available for release.
In no event shall TI's liability arising out of such information exceed the total purchase price of the TI part(s) at issue in this document sold by TI to Customer on an annual basis.
Addendum-Page 1
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com
14-Jul-2012
TAPE AND REEL INFORMATION
*All dimensions are nominal
Device
Package Package Pins
Type Drawing
SPQ
Reel
Reel
A0
Diameter Width (mm)
(mm) W1 (mm)
B0
(mm)
K0
(mm)
P1
(mm)
W
Pin1
(mm) Quadrant
BQ24707ARGRR
VQFN
RGR
20
3000
330.0
12.4
3.75
3.75
1.15
8.0
12.0
Q1
BQ24707ARGRR
VQFN
RGR
20
3000
330.0
12.4
3.75
3.75
1.15
8.0
12.0
Q1
BQ24707ARGRT
VQFN
RGR
20
250
180.0
12.4
3.75
3.75
1.15
8.0
12.0
Q1
BQ24707ARGRT
VQFN
RGR
20
250
180.0
12.4
3.75
3.75
1.15
8.0
12.0
Q1
BQ24707RGRR
VQFN
RGR
20
3000
330.0
12.4
3.75
3.75
1.15
8.0
12.0
Q1
BQ24707RGRR
VQFN
RGR
20
3000
330.0
12.4
3.75
3.75
1.15
8.0
12.0
Q1
BQ24707RGRT
VQFN
RGR
20
250
180.0
12.4
3.75
3.75
1.15
8.0
12.0
Q1
BQ24707RGRT
VQFN
RGR
20
250
180.0
12.4
3.75
3.75
1.15
8.0
12.0
Q1
Pack Materials-Page 1
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com
14-Jul-2012
*All dimensions are nominal
Device
Package Type
Package Drawing
Pins
SPQ
Length (mm)
Width (mm)
Height (mm)
BQ24707ARGRR
VQFN
RGR
20
3000
552.0
367.0
36.0
BQ24707ARGRR
VQFN
RGR
20
3000
367.0
367.0
35.0
BQ24707ARGRT
VQFN
RGR
20
250
552.0
185.0
36.0
BQ24707ARGRT
VQFN
RGR
20
250
210.0
185.0
35.0
BQ24707RGRR
VQFN
RGR
20
3000
552.0
367.0
36.0
BQ24707RGRR
VQFN
RGR
20
3000
367.0
367.0
35.0
BQ24707RGRT
VQFN
RGR
20
250
552.0
185.0
36.0
BQ24707RGRT
VQFN
RGR
20
250
210.0
185.0
35.0
Pack Materials-Page 2
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