DN1004 - An Efficient and Low Cost Alternative to LEDs for Backlighting Handheld Computer Displays

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An Efficient and Low Cost Alternative to LEDs for Backlighting
Handheld Computer Displays – Design Note 1004
David Canny
Introduction
The backlight for a handheld computer’s liquid crystal
display should be efficient, compact and inexpensive. The
two primary competing backlight solutions, white LEDs
and Cold Cathode Floresent Lamps (CCFLs), satisfy some
of these requirements but neither excel in all. Of these two,
white LEDs have recently gained popularity because of
their smaller size and easier-to-design controller circuits—important during the technology boom when timeto-market often took precedence over cost and product
performance. CCFL solutions, however, continue to have
advantages, including better efficiency (resulting in longer
battery run times) and lower overall production costs.
Furthermore, recent advancements in CCFL drivers and
changes in the market have given CCFLs the advantage in
many applications. One of the most significant changes is
the rise in the importance of cost cutting where inexpensive CCFL solutions have always held the upper hand over
comparable LED circuits. This, plus easier-to-design and
more compact CCFL solutions, have made CCFL solutions
more desirable.
A Compact CCFL Circuit
The circuit shown in Figure 1 is specifically designed to
control a single 1W CCFL. T1, Q1, Q2 and associated
components form a current fed resonant Royer converter
that produces a high voltage at transformer T1’s secondary winding. The CCFL current is the feedback signal to the
LTC®1697. The LTC1697 delivers switch mode power to
the L1-internal synchronous diode node closing a control
loop around the Royer converter. R3 sets the lamp current
operating point. The loop stabilizes the lamp current
against variations in time, supply, temperature and lamp
characteristics.
The Royer topology is well suited for driving CCFLs. The
lamp drive should ideally contain no DC component,
which would degrade the life of the lamp. The converter
should deliver the lamp drive in the form of a sine wave.
A sinusoidal CCFL drive maximizes current-to-light conversion and minimizes EMI and RF emissions which can
interfere with other devices and further degrade overall
operating efficiency.
, LTC and LT are registered trademarks of Linear Technology Corporation.
6
5
T1
1
VIN
2.7V TO 5.5V
10
2
R1
330Ω
1/4W
3
4
C2
Q1 0.15µF Q2
R2
200k
R4
1M
C3
27pF
1.5kV
CCFL
LAMP
L1
33µH
VIN 0VSEN SW
DIMMING INPUT
1V(0%) – 2V(100%)
SHDN
LTC1697
VDIM LAMP
CDIM
C3
10µF
6.3V
C5
0.022µF
RPROG
GND
R3
10k
VC
C4
0.1µF
C1: AVX 1808SA270JAT
C2: PANASONIC ECH-U1H154JC9
L1: SUMIDA CDR-H6D28-330NC
Q1, Q2: ZETEX FMMT617
T1: SUMIDA CLQ122-S-227-5316
DN1004 F01
Figure 1. 1W CCFL Controller for Backlighting a Handheld Device’s LCD
02/04/1004
The LTC1697 includes a synchronous current mode PWM
controller with two internal 1A MOSFET switches. It
contains a 300kHz oscillator, 0.8V reference and internal
current sensing. It operates from a 2.7V to 5.5V input
voltage and has a thermal limit and a shutdown mode
which reduces its supply current to 1µA. An on-chip PWM
dimming circuit enables and disables the current mode
regulator for each dimming cycle. The frequency of the
oscillator for the dimming PWM is determined by the
external capacitor C5. The dimming PWM duty cycle is set
by the voltage on the VDIM pin where DC = 0% at VDIM =
1V and DC = 100% at VDIM = 2V. This permits lamp
intensity control from zero to full brightness with no
hysteresis or “pop-on.”
LTC1697 Includes Important Safety Features
Figure 2 shows the overvoltage protection feature reacting to the loss of lamp current feedback. When the lamp
is removed (the trigger point, T, in Figure 2), the lamp
feedback current drops to zero (see the top trace of
Figure 2). The LTC1697 responds to this open-loop condition by driving the Royer converter toward full output
power, but as the transformer primary voltage increases
so too does the current through R2 (Figure 1). The
LTC1697 monitors and limits this current by limiting the
duty cycle, thus protecting the transformer from excessive output voltages.
The circuit in Figure 1 limits the output voltage to approximately 700VRMS with R2 = 200k. This can be seen in the
bottom trace of Figure 2. The typical operating voltage
across the transformer output winding is ~425VRMS (bottom trace, left of the trigger point T). When the lamp is
removed and the CCFL current drops to zero, the output
voltage is limited to 700VRMS (bottom trace, right of the
trigger point T).
The LTC1697 also has a current limit feature. A current
limit amplifier shuts the internal MOSFET switch off once
the current exceeds the current limit threshold. These
combined safety features provide a safe, simple and
reliable CCFL driver for handheld devices.
Conclusion
The rush to white LEDs for the backlighting of handheld
device displays may have been overdone. CCFLs have
always offered attractive features such as longer battery
run-times and lower costs, but these were often ignored
in the rush to bring products to market with easy-todesign LED solutions. The new LTC1697 overcomes
some of the traditional disadvantages of CCFL solutions
by simplifying circuit design and shrinking the solution
size. Now, it is practically as easy to design a CCFL
solution as it is an LED solution and the total CCFL solution
can fit easily into PDAs.
1.27cm
CCFL
CURRENT
5A/DIV
5.72cm
DN1004 F03
Figure 3. Actual Size of the Circuit Shown in Figure 1. A
Production Circuit Would Actually be Smaller Since the
Turrets Added Here for Testing Purposes are not
Necessary in a Production Board
TRANSFORMER
OUTPUT
VOLTAGE
1kV/DIV
10ms/DIV
DN1004 F02
Figure 2. The Transformer Output Voltage is Limited to a
Safe Value When the Lamp is Removed. Note That These
Traces are ~100kHz Waveforms—the 10ms/DIV Horizontal
Scale is Wide Enough to Capture the Voltage Change, but
too Wide to Resolve the Sine Wave
Data Sheet Download
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Linear Technology Corporation
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call (408) 432-1900, Ext. 2593
dn1004f LT 0204 • PRINTED IN THE USA
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© LINEAR TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION 2004