Protect Mobile Devices from Hot Plug Transients (to 85V) and from Users Who Use the Wrong Power Adapter

design features
Protect Mobile Devices from Hot Plug Transients (to 85V)
and from Users Who Use the Wrong Power Adapter
Kevin Wong
Battery powered mobile gadgets like smart phones,
tablets and digital cameras have become integral parts
of the modern lifestyle. More and more functionality
is squeezed into increasingly small form factors in the
endless quest for more mobility. The proliferation of mobile
devices has spawned a corresponding number of power
adapters to charge batteries and power the devices: from
AC wall outlets, car battery adapters, USB ports and
even mobile solar panels. Although many adapters use
similar plugs, their electrical specifications can be very
different. Product designers are thus forced to employ
protection circuitry to protect the low voltage rated
electronics from transient and steady state overvoltages.
Failures or faults in the power adapters
can cause an overvoltage event. So can
hot-plugging an adapter into the power
input of the mobile device (see Linear
Technology Application Note 88). With the
prevalence of universal connectors, a user
can also unknowingly plug in the wrong
adapter, damaging the device with a high
or even negative power supply voltage.
The LTC4360, LTC4361 and LTC4362 can
protect against the above mentioned fault
situations with minimal components. See
Table 1 for a comparison of these devices.
Table 1. Comparison of overvoltage
protection parts
VIN
5V
The LTC4360 and LTC4361 protect low
voltage electronics from overvoltage
conditions by controlling a low cost
external N-channel MOSFET configured as
a pass transistor. The LTC4362 achieves
an even smaller PCB footprint by incorporating an internal 28V, 71mΩ RDS(ON)
MOSFET and a 31mΩ sense resistor.
The LTC4360 and LTC4361 can withstand
up to 85V at IN, SENSE and GATEP. For all
three parts, there is no requirement for
a high voltage bypass capacitor at IN,
eliminating a potential point of failure.
The low voltage capacitor required at
M2
Si3590DV
RSENSE
0.05Ω
VOUT
5V
0.5A
M1
COUT
10µF
GATE
SENSE
OUT
LTC4361
VIO
5V
IN
R1
1k
GATEP
ON
PWRGD
GND
Figure 1. A 5V system protected from ±24V power
supplies and overcurrent
OUT is also the bypass capacitor to the
downstream circuits. It helps to slow
down the dV/dt at OUT during a fast
overvoltage, allowing time for the protection part to shut off the MOSFET before
VOUT overshoots to a dangerous voltage.
These features make the parts versatile
building blocks for some very robust yet
simple overvoltage protection circuits.
OPERATION
When power is first applied or the part
is activated by pulling ON low, a 130ms
delay cycle starts. Any undervoltage or
overvoltage event at IN (VIN < 2.1V or VIN >
PART
FEATURES
PACKAGE
LTC4360
85V Rated Input, 5.8V Overvoltage Threshold
SC70
LTC4361
85V Rated Input, 5.8V Overvoltage Threshold,
50mV Electronic Circuit Breaker Threshold
SOT23, DFN
(2mm x 2mm)
LTC4362
28V Rated Input, Internal 40mΩ N-Channel MOSFET and
31mΩ R SENSE , 5.8V Overvoltage Threshold, 1.5A Overcurrent
Threshold
DFN
(2mm x 3mm)
April 2011 : LT Journal of Analog Innovation | 7
With the prevalence of universal connectors for mobile
devices, users can easily plug in the wrong adapter,
damaging the device with a high or even negative power
supply voltage. The LTC4360, LTC4361 and LTC4362,
along with a few components, protect valuable downstream
devices against this and other fault situations.
WALL ADAPTER
AC/DC
RIN
LIN
IN
RSENSE
M1
Si1470DH
OUT
MOBILE
DEVICE
ICABLE
+
COUT
GATE
CABLE
SENSE OUT
LOAD
LTC4361
IN
GND
Figure 2. Typical circuit of voltage adapter charging a mobile device
5.7V) restarts the delay cycle. This allows
the MOSFET to isolate the output from
any input transients that occur at startup. When the delay cycle completes, the
MOSFET is turned on by a controlled 3V/ms
gate ramp. The voltage ramp of the output
capacitor follows the slope of the gate
ramp and sets the supply inrush current at:
IINRUSH = COUT • 3 [mA/µF]
As GATE ramps higher, it trips an internal
gate high threshold (7.2V for VIN = 5V)
to start a 65ms delay cycle. After the
delay, PWRGD asserts low to signal that
the MOSFET has fully enhanced. An
internal circuit clamps GATE at 6V above
OUT to protect the MOSFET gate.
When VIN rises above the 2% accurate
overvoltage threshold of 5.8V, a 30m A fast
pull-down on the GATE pin is activated
within 1µs and the PWRGD pull-down
is released. After an overvoltage condition, the MOSFET is held off until VIN once
again remains below 5.7V for 130ms.
In addition to overvoltage protection, the
LTC4361 and LTC4362 have overcurrent
protection to protect the pass MOSFET from
8 | April 2011 : LT Journal of Analog Innovation
excessive current. The LTC4361 implements a 10% accurate 50mV electronic
circuit breaker threshold with a 10µs
glitch filter. A 50mΩ RSENSE connected
between IN and SENSE implements a
1A overcurrent threshold as shown
in Figure 1. The LTC4362 implements
internal current sensing and has a 20%
accurate 1.5A overcurrent threshold with
a 10µs glitch filter. As in an overvoltage, an overcurrent activates a 30m A fast
pull-down on GATE and releases the
PWRGD pull-down. After an overcurrent
fault, the LTC4361-1 and LTC4362-1 latch
off while the LTC4361-2 and LTC4362-2
automatically restart after a 130ms delay.
An optional P-channel MOSFET driven
by the GATEP pin as shown in Figure 1
provides low loss negative input voltage protection down to the BVDSS of the
MOSFET. An internal IN to GATEP Zener
protects the MOSFET gate by clamping
its VGS to 5.8V when VIN goes high.
Another feature is the CMOS-compatible,
active low enable input ON. With
VIN
10V/DIV
VIN
10V/DIV
VOUT
1V/DIV
ICABLE
20A/DIV
ICABLE
20A/DIV
5µs/DIV
RIN = 150mΩ,
LIN = 0.7µH, RSENSE = 25mΩ
LOAD = 10Ω, COUT = 10µF
WITH LTC4361 PROTECTION CIRCUIT
5µs/DIV
RIN = 150mΩ,
LIN = 0.7µH
LOAD = 10Ω, COUT = 10µF
WITHOUT LTC4361 PROTECTION CIRCUIT
Figure 3. Hot-plug waveform with and without the protection of the LTC4361
design features
The LTC4360 and LTC4361 overvoltage protection controllers use small footprint
and low cost external N-channel MOSFETs while the LTC4362 incorporates the
MOSFET into a 2mm × 3mm DFN package. Although these overvoltage protection
circuits occupy very little PCB space, they are rich in features like an 85V rating at
the input side and fast response in the event of overvoltage or overcurrent.
RIN
20V
WALL
ADAPTER
+
–
LIN
ICABLE
IN
D1
B160
5V
USB
+
–
M1
Si1470DH
IN
R1
100k
GATE
OUT
VIN
20V/DIV
OUT
VOUT
5V/DIV
COUT
VGATE
10V/DIV
LOAD
LTC4360
ICABLE
10A/DIV
GND
1µs/DIV
Figure 4. Overvoltage protection waveforms when 20V adapter is plugged into 5V system
ON actively pulled to ground or left
open to pull low with its internal
5µ A pull-down, the device operates
normally. If ON is driven high while
the MOSFET is turned on, GATE is pulled
low with a weak pull-down current
(40µ A) to turn off the MOSFET gradually, minimizing input voltage transients.
The part then goes into a low current
sleep mode and draws only 1.5µ A at IN.
INPUT TRANSIENTS
Figure 2 shows the circuit of a LTC4361
protecting the power input of a mobile
device. LIN and RIN model the accumulated parasitic inductance and resistance
in the wall adapter, adapter cable and
the connector. A 20V wall adapter’s
output is hot-plugged into the device to
simulate an accidental plug-in with the
wrong adapter. To do a before and after
comparison, the LTC4361, RSENSE and
MOSFET are removed and the same hotplug is repeated with IN shorted to OUT.
Figure 3 compares the two hot-plug
waveforms. Due to the low capacitance
at the IN pin, there is little overshoot
and inrush current for the case with the
LTC4361 circuit. A higher voltage rated
MOSFET can be used to protect the system
against even higher transient or DC voltages up to the BVDSS of the MOSFET. For
example, a MOSFET with a 60V BVDSS used
with the LTC4361 is able to withstand
transient and DC voltages up to 60V at IN.
The circuit in Figure 4 illustrates a worst
case overvoltage situation that can occur
at a mobile device power input. In a
device with dual power inputs, a 20V wall
adapter is mistakenly hot-plugged into
the 5V adapter input with the 5V USB input
already live. The LTC4360 detects the
overvoltage at IN quickly and cuts off the
MOSFET. But the large current built up in
LIN causes an inductive spike at IN. The
body diode of the avalanche breakdown
rated MOSFET breaks down to discharge
this energy into COUT, clamping IN at about
40V, well below the 85V that IN can withstand. If the avalanche capability of the
MOSFET is exceeded or the voltage rise at
VOUT due to the discharge of the energy in
LIN into COUT is not acceptable, an additional external clamp like the SMAJ24A can
be placed between IN and GND.
RIN = 150mΩ, LIN = 2µH
LOAD = 10Ω, COUT = 10µF (16V, SIZE 1210)
CONCLUSION
The LTC4360 and LTC4361 overvoltage
protection controllers use small footprint
and low cost external N-channel MOSFETs
while the LTC4362 incorporates this
MOSFET into a 2mm × 3mm DFN package.
Although these overvoltage protection
circuits occupy very little PCB space, they
are rich in features like an 85V rating at
the input side and fast response in the
event of overvoltage or overcurrent. In
addition, there is a PWRGD status flag for
the downstream circuits and a low power
mode enabled by a CMOS compatible
input to save battery power when necessary. The LTC4360, LTC4361 and LTC4362
form a simple yet effective and rugged
barrier between the sensitive electronics inside a mobile device and real life
accidents like faulty, substandard power
adapters or a user’s absent-mindedness
in plugging in the wrong adapter. n
April 2011 : LT Journal of Analog Innovation | 9