LTC4061 Standalone Linear Li-Ion Battery Charger with Thermistor Input U FEATURES ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ DESCRIPTIO Charge Current Programmable up to 1A Charges Single Cell Li-Ion Batteries Directly from USB Port Preset Charge Voltage with ±0.35% Accuracy Thermistor Input for Temperature Qualified Charging Input Supply Present Logic Output Thermal Regulation Maximizes Charge Rate Without Risk of Overheating* Programmable Charge Current Detection/ Termination Programmable Charge Termination Timer Smart Pulsing Error Feature SmartStartTM Prolongs Battery Life 20µA Charger Quiescent Current in Shutdown Available in a Low Profile (0.75mm) 10-Lead (3mm × 3mm) DFN Package U APPLICATIO S ■ ■ ■ Handheld Computers Portable MP3 Players Digital Cameras The LTC®4061 is a full-featured, flexible, standalone linear charger for single-cell Lithium-Ion batteries. It is capable of operating within USB power specifications. Both programmable time and programmable current based termination schemes are available. Furthermore, the ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G open-drain status pin can be programmed to indicate the battery charge state according to the needs of the application. Additional safety features designed to maximize battery lifetime and reliability include NTC battery temperature sensing and the SmartStartTM charging algorithm. No external sense resistor or external blocking diode is required for charging due to the internal MOSFET architecture. Internal thermal feedback regulates the charge current to maintain a constant die temperature during high power operation or high ambient temperature conditions. The charge current is programmed with an external resistor. With power applied, the LTC4061 can be put into shutdown mode to reduce the supply current to 20µA and the battery drain current to less than 2µA. Other features include smart recharge, USB ⎯C⎯/⎯5 current programming input, undervoltage lockout and AC Present logic. , LTC and LT are registered trademarks of Linear Technology Corporation. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. SmartStart is a trademark of Linear Technology Corporation. *Protected by U.S. Patents including 6522118. U Complete Charge Cycle (1100mAh Battery) TYPICAL APPLICATIO VCC 1µF BAT EN LTC4061 CHRG C/5 TIMER PROG IDET 619Ω ACPR + NTC GND 4.2V SINGLE CELL Li-Ion BATTERY 900 4.3 800 4.2 700 4.1 600 4.0 3.9 500 BATTERY VOLTAGE 400 BATTERY CURRENT 3.8 3.7 300 3.6 200 VCC = 5V TA = 25°C 100 3.5 0 4061 TA01a BATTERY VOLTAGE (V) 800mA VIN 4.3V TO 8V CHARGE CURRENT (mA) 800mA Single Cell Li-Ion Battery Charger (C/10 Termination) 0 0.5 1.5 1.0 2.0 TIME (HOURS) 2.5 3.4 3.0 4061 TA01b 4061fa 1 LTC4061 U W W W ABSOLUTE AXI U RATI GS U W U PACKAGE/ORDER I FOR ATIO (Note 1) Input Supply Voltage (VCC) ........................ –0.3V to 10V ⎯E⎯N, ⎯A⎯C⎯P⎯R, ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G, NTC, PROG, ⎯C⎯/⎯5, BAT ..................................................... –0.3V to 10V TIMER, IDET .................................... –0.3V to VCC + 0.3V BAT Short-Circuit Duration............................Continuous VCC Pin Current ...........................................................1A BAT Pin Current ..........................................................1A Maximum Junction Temperature (Note 5) ............ 125°C Operating Temperature Range (Note 2) ...–40°C to 85°C Storage Temperature Range...................–65°C to 125°C ORDER PART NUMBER TOP VIEW 10 VCC 9 PROG BAT 1 NTC 2 TIMER 3 ACPR 4 7 EN CHRG 5 6 C/5 11 LTC4061EDD 8 IDET DD PART MARKING TJMAX = 125°C, θJA = 40°C/W (NOTE 3) EXPOSED PAD IS GROUND (PIN 11) MUST BE SOLDERED TO PCB LBJS Consult LTC Marketing for parts specified with wider operating temperature ranges. ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS The ● denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. VCC = 5V, unless otherwise noted. SYMBOL PARAMETER CONDITIONS MIN VCC Input Supply Voltage ● ICC Input Supply Current Charge Mode (Note 4), RPROG = 10k ● Standby Mode, Charge Terminated ● Shutdown (⎯E⎯N = 5V, VCC < VBAT or VCC < VUV) ● VFLOAT VBAT Regulated Output Voltage 0 ≤ TA ≤ 85°C ● ● ● ● TYP MAX 8 V 240 130 20 500 300 50 µA µA µA 4.185 4.175 4.2 4.2 4.215 4.225 V V 93 760 100 800 ±1 ±1 107 840 ±2 ±2 mA mA µA µA 0.97 0.97 1 1 1.03 1.03 V V 0.1 0.25 V 4.3 UNITS IBAT BAT Pin Current RPROG = 10k, Constant Current Mode RPROG = 1.25k, Constant Current Mode Standby Mode, Charge Terminated Shutdown Mode VPROG PROG Pin Voltage RPROG = 10k, Constant Current Mode RPROG = 1.25k, Constant Current Mode V⎯A⎯C⎯P⎯R ⎯A⎯C⎯P⎯R Output Low Voltage I⎯A⎯C⎯P⎯R = 5mA V⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G Output Low Voltage I⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G = 5mA 0.1 0.25 V ITRIKL Trickle Charge Current VBAT < VTRIKL, RPROG = 10k VBAT < VTRIKL, RPROG = 1.25k 6 60 10 80 14 100 mA mA VTRIKL Trickle Charge Threshold Voltage VBAT Rising Hysteresis 2.8 2.9 100 3 V mV VUV VCC Undervoltage Lockout Voltage From Low to High Hysteresis 3.7 3.8 200 3.9 V mV VASD VCC – VBAT Lockout Threshold Voltage VCC from Low to High, VBAT = 4.3V VCC from High to Low, VBAT = 4.3V 145 10 190 45 230 75 mV mV R⎯E⎯N ⎯E⎯N Pin Pull-Down Resistor 2 3.4 5 MΩ V⎯E⎯N ⎯E⎯N Input Threshold Voltage E⎯ ⎯N Rising, 4.3V < VCC < 8V Hysteresis 0.4 0.7 70 1 V mV VCT Charge Termination Mode Threshold Voltage VTIMER from High to Low Hysteresis 0.4 0.7 50 1 V mV ● 4061fa 2 LTC4061 ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS The ● denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. VCC = 5V, unless otherwise noted. SYMBOL PARAMETER CONDITIONS MIN TYP VUT User Termination Mode Threshold Voltage VTIMER from Low to High Hysteresis 3.9 4.2 50 IDETECT Charge Current Detection Threshold ΔVRECHRG tSS tTERM tRECHRG tTIMER R⎯C⎯/⎯5 V⎯C⎯/⎯5 Recharge Threshold Voltage Soft-Start Time Termination Comparator Filter Time Recharge Comparator Filter Time Charge Cycle Time ⎯C⎯/5 Pin Pull-Down Resistor ⎯ /⎯ 5 Input Threshold Voltage C RDET = 1k, 0 ≤ TA ≤ 85°C RDET = 2k, 0 ≤ TA ≤ 85°C RDET = 10k, 0 ≤ TA ≤ 85°C RDET = 20k, 0 ≤ TA ≤ 85°C VFLOAT – VRECHRG, 0 ≤ TA ≤ 85°C IBAT from 0 to ICHRG Current Termination Mode 90 45 8 3.8 65 100 50 10 5 100 100 1.5 7 3 3.4 VNTC-HOT NTC Pin Hot Threshold Voltage VNTC Falling VNTC Rising VNTC-COLD NTC Pin Cold Threshold Voltage VNTC Rising VNTC Falling VNTC-DIS NTC Pin Disable Threshold Voltage VNTC Falling Hysteresis f⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G NTC Fault Pulsing Frequency Current/User Termination Mode Time Termination Mode CTIMER = 0.1µF TLIM Junction Temperature in Constant Temperature Mode RON Power FET “ON” Resistance (Between VCC and BAT) CTIMER = 0.1µF ● ⎯C⎯/⎯5 Rising, 4.3V < VCC < 8V Hysteresis 0.4 70 VBAT = 3.85V, ICC = 175mA, RPROG = 2k Note 1: Absolute Maximum Ratings are those values beyond which the life of the device may be impaired. Note 2: The LTC4061 is guaranteed to meet performance specifications from 0°C to 70°C. Specifications over the –40°C to 85°C operating temperature range are assured by design, characterization and correlation with statistical process controls. Note 3: Failure to correctly solder the exposed pad of the package to the PC board will result in a thermal resistance much higher than 40°C/W. 0.8 3 2.55 2 1 0.7 70 0.35 • VCC 0.36 • VCC 0.76 • VCC 0.75 • VCC 85 50 1.5 1.5 105 375 MAX UNITS V mV 110 55 12 6.2 135 2.5 14 3.45 5 1 100 2 mA mA mA mA mV µs ms ms hr MΩ V mV V V V V mV mV Hz Hz °C mΩ Note 4: Supply current includes PROG pin current and IDET pin current (approximately 100µA each) but does not include any current delivered to the battery through the BAT pin (approximately 100mA). Note 5: This IC includes overtemperature protection that is intended to protect the device during momentary overload conditions. Overtemperature protection will become active at a junction temperature greater than the maximum operating temperature. Continuous operation above the specified maximum operating junction temperature may impair device reliability. 4061fa 3 LTC4061 U W TYPICAL PERFOR A CE CHARACTERISTICS Battery Regulated Output (Float) Voltage vs Charge Current 4.26 Battery Regulated Output (Float) Voltage vs Temperature 4.215 VCC = 5V RPROG = 1k 4.24 Battery Regulated Output (Float) Voltage vs Supply Voltage 4.26 VCC = 5V RPROG = 10k 4.22 4.20 4.18 4.16 VFLOAT (V) 4.205 VFLOAT (V) VBAT (V) 4.22 4.200 4.18 4.16 4.14 4.190 4.12 4.10 200 800 600 CHARGE CURRENT (mA) 0 400 4.12 4.185 –50 1000 –25 0 25 50 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 1.006 800 1.006 RPROG = 10k C/5 = VCC 1.002 VPROG (V) VPROG (V) VCC = 8V 1.000 VCC = 4.3V 1.000 400 0.998 0.998 200 0.996 0.996 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 0.994 –50 –25 VPROG (V) 0 25 50 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 84 100 0.994 4.0 4.5 5.0 5.5 6.0 6.5 7.0 Trickle Charge Threshold Voltage vs Temperature VCC = 5V VBAT = 2.5V RPROG = 1.25k 8.0 4061 G06 4061 G05 2.96 7.5 VCC (V) 4061 G04 Trickle Charge Current vs Temperature 8.0 VCC = 5V VBAT = 4V RPROG = 10k C/5 = 5V 1.004 1.002 0 7.0 7.5 PROG Pin Voltage vs VCC (Constant-Current Mode) 1.004 600 6.0 6.5 4061 G03 PROG Pin Voltage vs Temperature (Constant-Current Mode) VCC = 5V RPROG = 1k C/5 = 5V VTIMER = 5V 1000 5.0 5.5 4061 G02 Charge Current vs PROG Pin Voltage 1200 4.10 4.0 4.5 100 VCC (V) 4061 G01 IBAT (mA) 4.20 4.195 4.14 0 RPROG = 1k TA = 25°C IBAT = 10mA 4.24 4.210 Charge Current vs Battery Voltage 550 VCC = 5V RPROG = 1.25k C/5 = 5V 2.94 450 80 2.92 IBAT (mA) VTRICKLE (V) ITRICKLE (mA) 82 2.90 350 250 2.88 78 76 –50 –25 0 25 50 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 100 4061 G07 2.84 –50 VCC = 5V RPROG = 2k 150 2.86 –25 0 25 50 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 100 4061 G08 C/5 = 0V 50 3.2 3.0 3.6 3.4 VBAT (V) 3.8 4.0 4061 G09 4061fa 4 LTC4061 U W TYPICAL PERFOR A CE CHARACTERISTICS NTC Fault Pulsing Frequency vs VCC Internal Charge Timer vs Temperature 195 NTC Fault Pulsing Frequency vs Temperature 1.7 1.60 CTIMER = 0.1µF CTIMER = 0.1µF 1.55 VCC = 4.3V 185 1.6 180 1.45 175 1.40 170 1.35 165 –50 fCHRG (Hz) 1.50 VCC = 8V fCHRG (Hz) tTIMER (MINUTES) 190 0 25 50 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 1.30 4.0 100 4.5 5.5 5.0 6.0 6.5 7.0 1.2 –50 8.0 7.5 –25 VCC (V) 4061 G10 0 25 50 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 Recharge Threshold Voltage vs Temperature Charge Current vs Supply Voltage 1000 104 RPROG = 1.25k 4.16 VCC = 5V VBAT = 4V C/5 = 5V RPROG = 10k ONSET OF THERMAL REGULATION 102 100 4061 G12 4061 G11 Charge Current vs Ambient Temperature with Thermal Regulation 800 VCC = 4.3V 1.4 1.3 CTIMER = 0.1µF –25 VCC = 8V 1.5 4.14 400 VRECHARGE (V) IBAT (mA) RPROG = 2k VCC = 8V 4.10 100 VCC = 4.3V 4.08 98 200 4.06 0 –50 –25 50 25 0 75 TEMPERATURE (°C) 100 96 125 4.0 4.5 5.0 5.5 6.0 6.5 7.0 7.5 4.04 –50 8.0 VCC (V) 4061 G13 Power FET “ON” Resistance vs Temperature Undervoltage Lockout Voltage vs Temperature 500 VCC = 4V IBAT = 200mA –25 0 25 50 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 100 4061 G15 4061 G14 Charge Current vs Battery Voltage 3.900 900 3.875 800 450 700 3.850 600 350 3.800 3.775 300 250 –50 IBAT (mA) 3.825 400 VUV (V) IBAT (mA) 4.12 600 –25 0 25 50 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 100 4061 G16 500 400 300 3.750 200 3.725 100 3.700 –50 0 –25 50 25 0 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 100 4061 G17 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 VBAT (V) 4061 G18 4061fa 5 LTC4061 U W TYPICAL PERFOR A CE CHARACTERISTICS ⎯E⎯N Pin Pulldown Resistance vs Temperature ⎯C⎯/⎯5 Pin Pulldown Resistance vs Temperature ⎯E⎯N Pin Threshold Voltage (On-to-Off) vs Temperature 4.0 4.0 900 VCC = 5V 3.5 3.5 3.0 3.0 2.5 2.5 850 VEN (mV) 800 750 700 2.0 2.0 1.5 –50 –25 50 25 0 TEMPERATURE (°C) 1.5 –50 100 75 650 –25 50 25 0 TEMPERATURE (°C) 4061 G19 0 25 50 TEMPERATURE (°C) –25 ⎯A⎯C⎯P⎯R Pin I-V Curve 70 VCC = 5V 160 VCC = 5V VBAT = 4V EN = VCC 850 60 800 50 140 TA = – 40°C 700 30 650 20 IACPR (mA) ICC (µA) VC/5 (mV) 120 40 100 4061 G21 Shutdown Supply Current vs Temperature and VCC 750 75 4061 G20 ⎯C⎯/⎯5 Pin Threshold Voltage (High-to-Low) vs Temperature 900 600 –50 100 75 VCC = 8V TA = 25°C TA = 90°C 100 80 60 40 VCC = 5V 20 VCC = 4.3V 600 – 50 –25 50 25 0 TEMPERATURE (°C) 10 –50 100 75 –25 0 25 50 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 0 1 2 4061 G23 ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G Pin Output Low Voltage vs Temperature 0.6 0.6 VCC = 5V ICHRG = 5mA 0.5 ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G Pin I-V Curve 160 VCC = 5V IACPR = 5mA VCC = 5V VBAT = 4V 140 TA = – 40°C 120 ICHRG (mA) 0.4 VACPR (V) VCHRG (V) 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.1 4 4061 G24 ⎯A⎯C⎯P⎯R Pin Output Low Voltage vs Temperature 0.3 3 VACPR (V) 4061 G22 0.5 0 100 TA = 25°C TA = 90°C 100 80 60 40 0 –50 –25 50 25 0 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 100 4061 G25 0 –50 20 –25 50 25 0 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 100 4061 G26 0 0 1 2 VCHRG (V) 3 4 4061 G27 4061fa 6 LTC4061 U U U PI FU CTIO S BAT (Pin 1): Charge Current Output. This pin provides charge current to the battery and regulates the final float voltage to 4.2V. NTC (Pin 2): Input to the NTC (Negative Temperature Coefficient) Thermistor Temperature Monitoring Circuit. Under normal operation, connect a thermistor from the NTC pin to ground and a resistor of equal value from the NTC pin to VCC. When the voltage at this pin drops below 0.35 • VCC at hot temperatures or rises above 0.76 • VCC at cold, charging is suspended, the internal timer is frozen and the ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G pin output will start to pulse at 1.5Hz. Pulling this pin below 0.016 • VCC disables the NTC feature. There is approximately 2°C of temperature hysteresis associated with each of the input comparators thresholds. TIMER (Pin 3): Timer Program and Termination Select Pin. This pin selects which method is used to terminate the charge cycle. Connecting a capacitor, CTIMER, to ground selects charge time termination. The charge time is set by the following formula: C TIMER or 0.1µF TIME (HOURS) C TIMER = 0.1µF • 3 (HOURS) TIME (HOURS) = 3 HOURS • Connecting the TIMER pin to ground selects charge current termination, while connecting the pin to VCC selects user termination. See Applications Information for more information on current and user termination. ACPR (Pin 4): Open-Drain Power Supply Present Status Output. The power supply status indicator pin has two states: pull-down and high impedance. This output can be used as a logic interface or as a LED driver. In the pull-down state, an NMOS transistor capable of sinking 10mA pulls down on the ⎯A⎯C⎯P⎯R pin. The state of this pin is dependent on the value of VCC and BAT: it requires that VCC is 190mV greater than VBAT and greater than VUVLO. See Applications Information. ⎯ ⎯H⎯R⎯G (Pin 5): Open-Drain Charge Status Output. The C charge status indicator pin has three states: pull-down, pulse at 1.5Hz or 6Hz and high impedance. This output can be used as a logic interface or as a LED driver. In the pull-down state, an NMOS transistor capable of sinking 10mA pulls down on the ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G pin. The state of this pin depends on the value of IDETECT as well as the termination method being used and the state of the NTC pin. See Applications Information. ⎯C⎯/⎯5 (Pin 6): ⎯C⎯/⎯5 Enable Input. Used to control the amount of current drawn from the USB port. A logic high on the ⎯C⎯/⎯5 pin sets the current limit to 100% of the current programmed by the PROG pin. A logic low on the ⎯C⎯/⎯5 pin sets the current limit to 20% of the current programmed by the PROG pin. An internal 3MΩ pull-down resistor defaults the ⎯C⎯/⎯5 pin to its low current state. ⎯ (Pin 7): Charger Enable Input. A logic high on the E⎯ N ⎯ pin E⎯ N places the charger into shutdown mode, where the input quiescent current is less than 50µA. A logic low on this pin enables charging. An internal 3MΩ pull-down resistor to ground defaults the charger to its enabled state. IDET (Pin 8): Current Detection Threshold Program Pin. The current detection threshold, IDETECT, is set by connecting a resistor, RDETECT, to ground. IDETECT is set by the following formula: RPROG 100V • ICHG = or 10RDET RDET 100V IDETECT = RDET = IDETECT The ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G pin becomes high impedance when the charge current drops below IDETECT. IDETECT can be set to 1/10th the programmed charge current by connecting IDET directly to PROG. If the IDET pin is not connected, the ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G output remains in its pull-down state until the charge time elapses and terminates the charge cycle. See Applications Information. This pin is clamped to approximately 2.4V. Driving this pin to voltages beyond the clamp voltage should be avoided. PROG (Pin 9): Charge Current Program and Charge Current Monitor. The charge current is set by connecting a 4061fa 7 LTC4061 U U U PI FU CTIO S VCC (Pin 10): Positive Input Supply Voltage. Provides power to the battery charger. This pin should be bypassed with a 1µF capacitor. resistor, RPROG, to ground. When charging in constant current mode, this pin servos to 1V. The voltage on this pin can be used to measure the charge current using the following formula: IBAT = GND (Exposed Pad) (Pin 11): Ground. This pin is the back of the exposed pad package and must be soldered to the PCB copper for minimal thermal resistance. VPROG •1000 RPROG W BLOCK DIAGRA 10 VCC + 4.1V – TO BAT C1 1× 1× 1000× – NTC 2 BAT + 1 MA 4 ACPR HOT COLD DIS ACPR CA – 5 VA + + – CHRG 1V 1.2V STOP 0.2V RECHRG 6 0.1V C/5 C/5 LOGIC 3M LOGIC 7 EN EN IDETECT C/5 3M SEL C2 + C3 + – TO BAT 2.9V – COUNTER 0.1V OSCILLATOR + TDIE – 105°C TA SHDN IDET TIMER 3 8 PROG 9 GND 11 4061 BD CTIMER RDET RPROG 4061fa 8 LTC4061 U OPERATIO The LTC4061 is designed to charge single cell lithium-ion batteries. Using the constant current/constant voltage algorithm, the charger can deliver up to 1A of charge current with a final float voltage accuracy of ±0.35%. The LTC4061 includes an internal P-channel power MOSFET and thermal regulation circuitry. No blocking diode or external sense resistor is required; thus, the basic charger circuit requires only two external components. RPROG = 1000V 1000V , ICHG = ICHG RPROG The charge current out of the BAT pin can be determined at any time by monitoring the PROG pin voltage and applying the following equation: IBAT = VPROG •1000 RPROG Normal Operation The charge cycle begins when the voltage at the VCC pin rises above the UVLO level and a discharged battery is connected to BAT. If the BAT pin voltage is below 2.9V, the charger enters trickle charge mode. In this mode, the LTC4061 supplies 1/10th of the programmed charge current in order to bring the battery voltage up to a safe level for full current charging. Once the BAT pin voltage rises above 2.9V, the charger enters constant current mode, where the programmed charge current is supplied to the battery. When the BAT pin approaches the final float voltage (4.2V), the LTC4061 enters constant voltage mode and the charge current decreases as the battery becomes fully charged. The LTC4061 offers several methods with which to terminate a charge cycle. Connecting an external capacitor to the TIMER pin activates an internal timer that stops the charge cycle after the programmed time period has elapsed. Grounding the TIMER pin and connecting a resistor to the IDET pin causes the charge cycle to terminate once the charge current falls below a set threshold when the charger is in constant voltage mode. Connecting the TIMER pin to VCC disables internal termination, allowing external charge user termination through the ⎯E⎯N input. See Applications Information for more information on charge termination methods. Programming Charge Current The charge current is programmed using a single resistor from the PROG pin to ground. When the charger is in the constant current mode, the voltage on the PROG pin is 1V. The battery charge current is 1000 times the current out of the PROG pin. The program resistor and the charge current are calculated by the following equations: SmartStart When the LTC4061 is initially powered on or brought out of shutdown mode, the charger checks the battery voltage. If the BAT pin is below the recharge threshold of 4.1V (which corresponds to approximately 80-90% battery capacity), the LTC4061 enters charge mode and begins a full charge cycle. If the BAT pin is above 4.1V, the LTC4061 enters standby mode and does not begin charging. This feature reduces the number of unnecessary charge cycles, prolonging battery life. Automatic Recharge When the charger is in standby mode, the LTC4061 continuously monitors the voltage on the BAT pin. When the BAT pin voltage drops below 4.1V, the charge cycle is automatically restarted and the internal timer is reset to 50% of the programmed charge time (if time termination is being used). This feature eliminates the need for periodic charge cycle initiations and ensures that the battery is always fully charged. Automatic recharge is disabled in user termination mode. Thermal Regulation An internal thermal feedback loop reduces the programmed charge current if the die temperature attempts to rise above a preset value of approximately 105°C. This feature protects the LTC4061 from excessive temperature and allows the user to push the limits of the power handling capability of a given circuit board without risk of damaging the LTC4061. The charge current can be set according to typical (not worst-case) ambient temperatures with the assurance that the charger will automatically reduce the current in worst-case conditions. 4061fa 9 LTC4061 U OPERATIO Undervoltage Lockout (UVLO) An internal undervoltage lockout circuit monitors the input voltage and keeps the charger in shutdown mode until VCC rises above the undervoltage lockout threshold (3.8V). The UVLO circuit has a built-in hysteresis of 200mV. Furthermore, to protect against reverse current in the power MOSFET, the UVLO circuit keeps the charger in shutdown mode if VCC falls to less than 45mV above the battery voltage. Hysteresis of 145mV prevents the charger from cycling in and out of shutdown. Manual Shutdown At any point in the charge cycle, the charger can be put into shutdown mode by pulling the ⎯E⎯N pin high. This reduces the supply current to less than 50µA and the battery drain current of the charger to less than 2µA. A new charge cycle can be initiated by floating the ⎯E⎯N pin or pulling it low. If shutdown is not required, leaving the pin disconnected continuously enables the circuit. Trickle-Charge and Defective Battery Detection When the BAT pin voltage is below the 2.9V trickle charge threshold (VTRIKL), the charger reduces the charge current to 10% of the programmed value. If the battery remains in trickle charge for more than 25% of the total programmed charge time, the charger stops charging and enters a FAULT state, indicating that the battery is defective1. The LTC4061 indicates the FAULT state by driving the ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G open-drain output with a square wave. The duty cycle of this oscillation is 50% and the frequency is set by CTIMER: f CHRG = 0.1µF • 6Hz C TIMER ⎯ H ⎯ R ⎯ G ⎯ output exhibits a pulsing A LED driven by the C pattern, indicating to the user that the battery needs replacing. To exit the FAULT state, the charger must be restarted either by toggling the ⎯E⎯N input or removing and reapplying power to VCC. Charge Status Output (⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G) The charge status indicator pin has three states: pull-down, pulse at 1.5Hz or 6Hz and high impedance. In the pull-down state, an NMOS transistor pulls down on the ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G pin capable of sinking up to 10mA. A pull-down state indicates that the LTC4061 is charging a battery and the charge current is greater than IDETECT (which is set by the external component RDET). A high impedance state indicates that the charge current has dropped below IDETECT. In the case where the IDET pin is left unconnected (RDET = ∞, IDETECT = 0), a high impedance state on ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G indicates that the LTC4061 is not charging. Smart Pulsing Error Feature LTC4061 has two different pulsing states at ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G pulldown pin: 1) 6Hz (50% duty cycle) due to defective battery detection (see Trickle-Charge and Defective Battery Detection section); 2) 1.5Hz (25% duty cycle if in time termination, 50% duty cycle if in charge current or user termination) due to NTC out-of-temperature condition. NTC Thermistor (NTC) The temperature of the battery is measured by placing a negative temperature coefficient (NTC) thermistor close to the battery pack. The NTC circuitry is shown in Figure 1. To use this feature, connect the NTC thermistor, RNTC, between the NTC pin and ground and a resistor, RNOM, from the NTC pin to VCC. RNOM should be a 1% resistor with a value equal to the value of the chosen NTC thermistor at 25°C (this value is 100kΩ for a Vishay NTHS0603N01N1003J thermistor). The LTC4061 goes into hold mode when the resistance, RHOT, of the NTC thermistor drops to 0.53 times the value of RNOM or approximately 53kΩ, which corresponds to approximately 40°C. Hold mode freezes the timer and stops the charge cycle until the thermistor indicates a return to a valid temperature. As the temperature drops, the resistance of the NTC thermistor rises. The LTC4061 is designed to go into hold mode when the value of the NTC thermistor increases to 3.26 times the value of RNOM. This resistance is RCOLD. For a Vishay NTHS0603N01N1003J thermistor, this value is 326kΩ, which corresponds to approximately 0°C. The hot and cold comparators each have approximately 2°C of hysteresis to prevent oscillation about the trip point. Grounding the NTC pin disables the NTC function. For more details refer to the Application Information section. 1 The Defective Battery Detection feature is only available when time termination is being used. 4061fa 10 LTC4061 U OPERATIO 0.76 • VCC VCC – TOO COLD + RNOM NTC 2 0.35 • VCC + TOO HOT – RNTC + ENABLE 0.016 • VCC – LTC4061 4061 F01 Figure 1. NTC Circuit Information U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO Programming Charge Termination Charge Time Termination The LTC4061 can terminate a charge cycle using one of several methods, allowing the designer considerable flexibility in choosing an ideal charge termination algorithm. Table 1 shows a brief description of the different termination methods and their behaviors. Connecting a capacitor (CTIMER) to the TIMER pin enables the timer and selects charge time termination. The total charge time is set by: TIME (HOURS) = 0.1µF • 3 HOURS C TIMER Table 1. METHOD Charge Time Termination Mode Charge Current Termination User Selectable Charge Termination TIMER 0.1µF to GND IDET RDET to GND CHARGER DESCRIPTION Charges for 3 Hours. After 3 Hours, the Charger Stops Charging and Enters Standby Mode. Recharge Cycles Last for 1.5 Hours. CHRG OUTPUT DESCRIPTION Pull-Down State While IBAT > IDET. High Impedance State While IBAT < IDETECT or When Charging Is Stopped. Pulsing State Available When NTC Is Used and Is Still Charging. 0.1µF to GND NC Charges for 3 Hours. After 3 Hours, the Charger Stops Charging and Enters Standby Mode. Recharge Cycles Last for 1.5 Hours. Pull-Down State When Charging. High Impedance State When Charging Is Stopped. Pulsing State Available When NTC Is Used and Is Still Charging. GND RDET to GND Charges Until Charge Current Drops Below IDET, Then Enters Standby Mode. GND NC VCC RDET to GND Charges Indefinitely. SmartStart Is Disabled. Pull-Down State When Charging. High Impedance State When Charging Is Stopped. Pulsing State Available When NTC Is Used and Is Still Charging. Pull-Down State When Charging. High Impedance State When Charging Is Stopped. Pulsing State Available When NTC Is Used and Is Still Charging. Pull-Down State While IBAT > IDETECT. High Impedance State While IBAT < IDETECT or When Charging Is Stopped. Pulsing State Available When NTC Is Used and Is Still Charging. VCC NC Charges Indefinitely. SmartStart Is Disabled. Charges Indefinitely. Pull-Down State When Charging. High Impedance State When Charging Is Stopped. Pulsing State Available When NTC Is Used and Is Still Charging. 4061fa 11 LTC4061 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO When the programmed time has elapsed, the charge cycle terminates and the charger enters standby mode. Subsequent recharge cycles terminate when 50% of the programmed time has elapsed. The IDET pin determines the behavior of the ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G output. Connecting a resistor (RDET) from the IDET pin to ground sets the charge current detection threshold, IDETECT: RPROG 100V • ICHG = or 10RDET RDET 100V IDETECT = RDET = IDETECT When the charge current (I BAT ) is greater than IDETECT, the ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G output is in its pull-down state. When the charger enters constant voltage mode operation and the charge current falls below IDETECT, the ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G output becomes high impedance, indicating that the battery is almost fully charged. The ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G output will also become high impedance once the charge time elapses. If the IDET pin is not connected, the ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G output remains in its pulldown state until the charge time elapses and terminates the charge cycle. Figure 2 shows a charger circuit using charge time termination that is programmed to charge at 500mA. Once the charge current drops below 100mA in constant voltage mode (as set by RDET), the ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G output turns off the LED. This indicates to the user that the battery is almost fully charged and ready to use. The LTC4061 continues to charge the battery until the internal timer reaches 3 hours (as set by CTIMER). During recharge cycles, the LTC4061 charges the battery until the internal timer reaches 500mA VIN VCC BAT C/5 LTC4061 CHRG PROG RPROG 2k IDET RDET 1k + TIMER GND CTIMER 0.1µF 4061 F02 Figure 2. Time Termination Mode. The Charge Cycle Ends After 3 Hours. 1.5 hours. Figure 3 describes the operation of the LTC4061 charger when charge time termination is used. Charge Current Termination Connecting the TIMER pin to ground selects charge current termination. With this method, the timer is disabled and a resistor (RDET) must be connected from the IDET pin to ground. IDETECT is programmed using the same equation stated in the previous section. The charge cycle terminates when the charge current falls below IDETECT. This condition is detected using an internal filtered comparator to monitor the IDET pin. When the IDET pin falls below 100mV for longer than tTERM (typically 1ms), charging is terminated. When charging, transient loads on the BAT pin can cause the IDET pin to fall below 100mV for short periods of time before the DC current has dropped below the IDETECT threshold. The 1.5ms filter time (tTERM) on the internal comparator ensures that transient loads of this nature do not result in premature charge cycle termination. Once the average charge current drops below IDETECT, the charger terminates the charge cycle. The ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G output is in a pull-down state while charging and in a high impedance state once charging has stopped. Figure 4 describes the operation of the LTC4061 charger when charge current termination is used. User-Selectable Charge Termination Connecting the TIMER pin to VCC selects user-selectable charge termination, in which all of the internal termination features are disabled. The charge cycle continues indefinitely until the charger is shut down through the ⎯E⎯N pin. The IDET pin programs the behavior of the ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G output in the same manner as when using charge time termination. If the IDET pin is not connected, the ⎯C⎯H⎯R⎯G output remains in its pull-down state until the charger is shut down. With user-selectable charge termination, the SmartStart feature is disabled; when the charger is powered on or enabled, the LTC4061 automatically begins charging, regardless of the battery voltage. Figure 5 describes charger operation when user-selectable charge termination is used. 4061fa 12 LTC4061 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO POWER ON DEFECTIVE BATTERY FAULT MODE NO CHARGE CURRENT CHRG STATE: PULSING 1/4 CHARGE TIME ELAPSES EN = 0V OR UVLO CONDITION STOPS TRICKLE CHARGE MODE 1/10TH FULL CURRENT CHRG STATE: PULL-DOWN BAT < 2.9V BAT > 2.9V CHARGE MODE SHUTDOWN MODE FULL CURRENT ICC DROPS TO 20µA CHRG STATE: 2.9V < BAT < 4.1V PULL-DOWN IF IBAT > IDETECT Hi-Z IF IBAT < IDETECT CHRG STATE: Hi-Z CHARGE TIME ELAPSES STANDBY MODE BAT > 4.1V NO CHARGE CURRENT EN = 5V OR UVLO CONDITION CHRG STATE: Hi-Z BAT < 4.1V RECHARGE MODE FULL CURRENT 1/2 CHARGE TIME ELAPSES CHRG STATE: PULL-DOWN IF IBAT > IDETECT Hi-Z IF IBAT < IDETECT 4061 F03 Figure 3. State Diagram of a Charge Cycle Using Charge Time Termination 4061fa 13 LTC4061 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO POWER ON TRICKLE CHARGE MODE 1/10TH FULL CURRENT EN = 0V OR UVLO CONDITION STOPS CHRG STATE: PULL-DOWN BAT < 2.9V BAT > 2.9V 2.9V < BAT < 4.1V CHARGE MODE SHUTDOWN MODE FULL CURRENT ICC DROPS TO 20µA CHRG STATE: Hi-Z CHRG STATE: PULL-DOWN BAT < 4.1V IBAT < IDETECT IN VOLTAGE MODE STANDBY MODE NO CHARGE CURRENT BAT > 4.1V EN = 5V OR UVLO CONDITION CHRG STATE: Hi-Z 4061 F04 Figure 4. State Diagram of a Charge Cycle Using Charge Current Termination POWER ON EN = 0V OR UVLO CONDITION STOPS TRICKLE CHARGE MODE 1/10TH FULL CURRENT SHUTDOWN MODE CHRG STATE: PULL-DOWN ICC DROPS TO 20µA BAT < 2.9V BAT > 2.9V CHRG STATE: Hi-Z CHARGE MODE FULL CURRENT CHRG STATE: 2.9V < BAT PULL-DOWN IF IBAT > IDETECT Hi-Z IF IBAT < IDETECT 4061 F05 EN = 5V OR UVLO CONDITION Figure 5. State Diagram of a Charge Cycle Using User-Selectable Termination 4061fa 14 LTC4061 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO Programming C/10 Current Detection/Termination Power Dissipation In most cases, an external resistor, RDET, is needed to set the charge current detection threshold, IDETECT. However, when setting IDETECT to be 1/10th of ICHG, the IDET pin can be connected directly to the PROG pin. This reduces the component count, as shown in Figure 6. When designing the battery charger circuit, it is not necessary to design for worst-case power dissipation scenarios because the LTC4061 automatically reduces the charge current during high power conditions. The conditions that cause the LTC4061 to reduce charge current through thermal feedback can be approximated by considering the power dissipated in the IC. Most of the power dissipation is generated from the internal charger MOSFET. Thus, the power dissipation is calculated to be approximately: 500mA VIN VCC BAT C/5 LTC4061 PROG RPROG 2k IDET RDET 2k + TIMER GND PD = (VCC – VBAT) • IBAT 500mA VIN VCC BAT C/5 LTC4061 PROG RPROG 1k IDET + PD is the power dissipated, VCC is the input supply voltage, VBAT is the battery voltage and IBAT is the charge current. The approximate ambient temperature at which the thermal feedback begins to protect the IC is: TA = 105°C – PD • θJA TIMER GND 4061 F06 Figure 6. Two Circuits That Charge at 500mA Full-Scale Current and Terminate at 50mA When PROG and IDET are connected in this way, the fullscale charge current, ICHG, is programmed with a different equation: 500V 500V RPROG = , ICHG = ICHG RPROG TA = 105°C – (VCC – VBAT) • IBAT • θJA Example: An LTC4061 operating from a 5V wall adapter is programmed to supply 800mA full-scale current to a discharged Li-Ion battery with a voltage of 3.3V. Assuming θJA is 40°C/W (see Thermal Considerations), the ambient temperature at which the LTC4061 will begin to reduce the charge current is approximately: TA = 105°C – (5V – 3.3V) • (800mA) • 40°C/W TA = 105°C – 1.36W • 40°C/W = 105°C – 54.4°C TA = 50.6°C Stability Considerations The battery charger constant voltage mode feedback loop is stable without any compensation provided a battery is connected. However, a 1µF capacitor with a 1Ω series resistor to GND is recommended at the BAT pin to reduce noise when no battery is present. When the charger is in constant current mode, the PROG pin is in the feedback loop, not the battery. The constant current stability is affected by the impedance at the PROG pin. With no additional capacitance on the PROG pin, the charger is stable with program resistor values as high as 10kΩ; however, additional capacitance on this node reduces the maximum allowed program resistor value. The LTC4061 can be used above 50.6°C ambient, but the charge current will be reduced from 800mA. The approximate current at a given ambient temperature can be approximated by: IBAT = 105°C – TA (VCC – VBAT )• θ JA Using the previous example with an ambient temperature of 60°C, the charge current will be reduced to approximately: 105°C – 60°C 45°C = (5V – 3.3V)• 40°C /W 68°C /A = 662mA IBAT = IBAT 4061fa 15 LTC4061 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO It is important to remember that LTC4061 applications do not need to be designed for worst-case thermal conditions, since the IC will automatically reduce power dissipation if the junction temperature reaches approximately 105°C. Thermistors The LTC4061 NTC comparator trip points were designed to work with thermistors whose resistance-temperature characteristics follow Vishay Dale’s “R-T Curve 1.” The Vishay NTHS0603N01N1003J is an example of such a thermistor. However, Vishay Dale has many thermistor products that follow the “R-T Curve 1” characteristic in a variety of sizes. Furthermore, any thermistor whose ratio of RCOLD to RHOT is about 6 also works (Vishay Dale R-T Curve 1 shows a ratio of RCOLD to RHOT of 3.266/0.5325 = 6.13). Power conscious designers may want to use thermistors whose room temperature value is greater than 10kΩ. Vishay Dale has a number of values of thermistor from 10kΩ to 100kΩ that follow the “R-T Curve 1.” Using different R-T curves, such as Vishay Dale “R-T Curve 2,” is also possible. This curve, combined with LTC4061 internal thresholds, gives temperature trip points of approximately 0°C (falling) and 40°C (rising), a delta of 40°C. This delta in temperature can be moved in either direction by changing the value of RNOM with respect to RNTC. Increasing RNOM moves both trip points to lower temperatures. Likewise a decrease in RNOM with respect to RNTC moves the trip points to higher temperatures. To calculate RNOM for a shift to lower temperatures, use the following equation: RNOM = RCOLD • RNTC at 25°C 3.266 where RCOLD is the resistance ratio of RNTC at the desired cold temperature trip point. If you want to shift the trip points to higher temperatures, use the following equations: RNOM = RHOT • RNTC at 25°C 0.5325 where RHOT is the resistance ratio of RNTC at the desired hot temperature trip point. Here is an example using 10kΩ R-T Curve 2 thermistor from Vishay Dale. The difference between the trip points is 40°C, from before, and we want the cold trip point to be 0°C, which would put the hot trip point at 40°C. The RNOM needed is calculated as follows: RCOLD • RNTC at 25°C 3.266 2.816 = • 10kΩ = 8.62kΩ 3.266 RNOM = The nearest 1% value for RNOM is 8.66kΩ. This is the value used to bias the NTC thermistor to get cold and hot trip points of approximately 0°C and 40°C respectively. To extend the delta between the cold and hot trip points, a resistor, R1, can be added in series with RNTC. The values of the resistors are calculated as follows: RCOLD – RHOT 3.266 – 0.5325 0.5325 ⎛ ⎞ R1 = ⎜ ⎟ • (RCOLD – RHOT ) – RHOT ⎝ 3.266 − 0.5325⎠ RNOM = where RNOM is the value of the bias resistor, RHOT and RCOLD are the values of RNTC at the desired temperature trip points. Continuing the example from before with a desired hot trip point of 50°C: RCOLD – RHOT 10k • (2.816 – 0.4086) = 3.266 – 0.5325 3.266 – 0.5325 = 8.8kΩ, 8.87k is the nearest 1% value. RNOM = 0.5325 ⎛ ⎞ R1 = 10k • ⎜ ⎟ ⎝ 3.266 – 0.5325⎠ • (2.816 – 0.4086) – 0.4086 = 604Ω, 604 is the nearest 1% value. The final solution is RNOM = 8.87kΩ, R1 = 604Ω and RNTC = 10kΩ at 25°C. NTC Trip Point Error When a 1% resistor is used for RHOT, the major error in the 40°C trip point is determined by the tolerance of the NTC thermistor. A typical 100kΩ NTC thermistor has ±10% tolerance. By looking up the temperature coefficient of the thermistor at 40°C, the tolerance error can 4061fa 16 LTC4061 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO be calculated in degrees centigrade. Consider the Vishay NTHS0603N01N1003J thermistor, which has a temperature coefficient of –4%/°C at 40°C. Dividing the tolerance by the temperature coefficient, ±5%/(4%/°C) = ±1.25°C, gives the temperature error of the hot trip point. The cold trip point error depends on the tolerance of the NTC thermistor and the degree to which the ratio of its value at 0°C and its value at 40°C varies from 6.14 to 1. Therefore, the cold trip point error can be calculated using the tolerance, TOL, the temperature coefficient of the thermistor at 0°C, TC (in %/°C), the value of the thermistor at 0°C, RCOLD, and the value of the thermistor at 40°C, RHOT. The formula is: ⎛ 1 + TOL RCOLD ⎞ • – 1⎟ • 100 ⎜ ⎝ 6.14 RHOT ⎠ Temperature Error (°C ) = TC For example, the Vishay NTHS0603N01N1003J thermistor with a tolerance of ±5%, TC of -5%/°C and RCOLD/ RHOT of 6.13, has a cold trip point error of: ⎛ 1 + 0.05 ⎞ • 6.13 – 1⎟ • 100 ⎜ ⎝ 6.14 ⎠ Temperature Error (°C ) = –5 = – 0.95°C, 1.05°C Thermal Considerations In order to deliver maximum charge current under all conditions, it is critical that the exposed metal pad on the backside of the LTC4061 package is properly soldered to the PC board ground. Correctly soldered to a 2500mm2 double sided 1oz copper board, the LTC4061 has a thermal resistance of approximately 40°C/W. Failure to make thermal contact between the exposed pad on the backside of the package and the copper board will result in thermal resistances far greater than 40°C/W. As an example, a correctly soldered LTC4061 can deliver over 800mA to a battery from a 5V supply at room temperature. Without a good backside thermal connection, this number could drop to less than 500mA. VCC Bypass Capacitor Many types of capacitors can be used for input bypassing; however, caution must be exercised when using multi-layer ceramic capacitors. Because of the self-resonant and high Q characteristics of some types of ceramic capacitors, high voltage transients can be generated under some start-up conditions such as connecting the charger input to a live power source. Adding a 1.5Ω resistor in series with an X5R ceramic capacitor will minimize start-up voltage transients. For more information, see Application Note 88. Charge Current Soft-Start and Soft-Stop The LTC4061 includes a soft-start circuit to minimize the inrush current at the start of a charge cycle. When a charge cycle is initiated, the charge current ramps from zero to the full-scale current over a period of approximately 100µs. Likewise, internal circuitry slowly ramps the charge current from full-scale to zero when the charger is shut off or self terminates. This has the effect of minimizing the transient current load on the power supply during start-up and charge termination. Reverse Polarity Input Voltage Protection In some applications, protection from reverse polarity voltage on VCC is desired. If the supply voltage is high enough, a series blocking diode can be used. In other cases, where the diode voltage drop must be kept low, a P-channel MOSFET can be used (as shown in Figure 7). DRAIN-BULK DIODE OF FET LTC4061 VIN VCC 4061 F07 Figure 7. Low Loss Input Reverse Polarity Protection USB and Wall Adapter Power The LTC4061 allows charging from both a wall adapter and a USB port. Figure 8 shows an example of how to combine wall adapter and USB power inputs. A P-channel 4061fa 17 LTC4061 U W U U APPLICATIO S I FOR ATIO MOSFET, MP1, is used to prevent back conducting into the USB port when a wall adapter is present and a Schottky diode, D1, is used to prevent USB power loss through the 1kΩ pull-down resistor. Typically a wall adapter can supply more current than the 500mA limited USB port. Therefore, an N-channel MOSFET, MN1, and an extra 3.3kΩ program resistor are used to increase the charge current to 800mA when the wall adapter is present. 5V WALL ADAPTER ICHG = 800mA USB POWER ICHG = 500mA D1 VCC MP1 SYSTEM LOAD BAT LTC4061 IDET C/5 + PROG Li-Ion BATTERY 3.3k 1k MN1 2k 1.25k 4061 F08 Figure 8. Combining Wall Adapter and USB Power 4061fa 18 LTC4061 U PACKAGE DESCRIPTIO DD Package 10-Lead Plastic DFN (3mm × 3mm) (Reference LTC DWG # 05-08-1699) R = 0.115 TYP 6 0.38 ± 0.10 10 0.675 ±0.05 3.50 ±0.05 1.65 ±0.05 2.15 ±0.05 (2 SIDES) 3.00 ±0.10 (4 SIDES) PACKAGE OUTLINE 1.65 ± 0.10 (2 SIDES) PIN 1 TOP MARK (SEE NOTE 6) (DD10) DFN 1103 5 0.25 ± 0.05 0.200 REF 0.50 BSC 2.38 ±0.05 (2 SIDES) RECOMMENDED SOLDER PAD PITCH AND DIMENSIONS 1 0.75 ±0.05 0.00 – 0.05 0.25 ± 0.05 0.50 BSC 2.38 ±0.10 (2 SIDES) BOTTOM VIEW—EXPOSED PAD NOTE: 1. DRAWING TO BE MADE A JEDEC PACKAGE OUTLINE M0-229 VARIATION OF (WEED-2). CHECK THE LTC WEBSITE DATA SHEET FOR CURRENT STATUS OF VARIATION ASSIGNMENT 2. DRAWING NOT TO SCALE 3. ALL DIMENSIONS ARE IN MILLIMETERS 4. DIMENSIONS OF EXPOSED PAD ON BOTTOM OF PACKAGE DO NOT INCLUDE MOLD FLASH. MOLD FLASH, IF PRESENT, SHALL NOT EXCEED 0.15mm ON ANY SIDE 5. EXPOSED PAD SHALL BE SOLDER PLATED 6. SHADED AREA IS ONLY A REFERENCE FOR PIN 1 LOCATION ON THE TOP AND BOTTOM OF PACKAGE 4061fa Information furnished by Linear Technology Corporation is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed for its use. Linear Technology Corporation makes no representation that the interconnection of its circuits as described herein will not infringe on existing patent rights. 19 LTC4061 U TYPICAL APPLICATIO S Full-Featured Li-Ion Charger (Using Time Termination) USB/Wall Adapter Power Li-Ion Charger (Using Charge Current Termination) VIN 5V 1µF 5V WALL ADAPTER 1k 1k 5 0.1µF VCC CHRG BAT 800mA 1 6 C/5 3 TIMER 9 4 ACPR PROG LTC4061 1.25k 2 8 NTC IDET GND 619Ω 11 10 USB POWER 10 BAT VCC 1 + Li-Ion CELL LTC4061 1µF 6 9 µC C/5 PROG VIN + 100k 3 SINGLE CELL Li-Ion BATTERY 1k IDET TIMER GND 11 100k NTC 8 2k 2.5k 4061 TA03 4061 TA02 RELATED PARTS PART NUMBER DESCRIPTION COMMENTS Battery Chargers LTC1734 LTC1734L LTC4002 LTC4050 Lithium-Ion Linear Battery Charger in ThinSOTTM Lithium-Ion Linear Battery Charger in ThinSOT Switch Mode Lithium-Ion Battery Charger Lithium-Ion Linear Battery Charger Controller Simple ThinSOT Charger, No Blocking Diode, No Sense Resistor Needed Low Current Version of LTC1734, 50mA ≤ ICHRG ≤ 180mA Standalone, 4.7V ≤ VIN ≤ 24V, 500kHz Frequency, 3 Hour Charge Termination Features Preset Voltages, C/10 Charger Detection and Programmable Timer, Input Power Good Indication, Thermistor Interface No Blocking Diode or External Power FET Required, ≤1.5A Charge Current Standalone Charger with Programmable Timer, Up to 1.25A Charge Current Thermal Regulation Prevents Overheating, C/10 Termination, C/10 Indicator, Up to 800mA Charge Current Up to 800mA Charge Current, Thermal Regulation, ThinSOT Package C/10 Charge Termination, Battery Kelvin Sensing, ±7% Charge Accuracy 2mm x 2mm DFN Package, Thermal Regulation, Charge Current Monitor Output Up to 1A Charge Current, 100mA, 125mV LDO, 3mm × 3mm DFN LTC4052 LTC4053 LTC4054 LTC4057 LTC4058 LTC4059 Monolithic Lithium-Ion Battery Pulse Charger USB Compatible Monolithic Li-Ion Battery Charger Standalone Linear Li-Ion Battery Charger with Integrated Pass Transistor in ThinSOT Lithium-Ion Linear Battery Charger Standalone 950mA Lithium-Ion Charger in DFN 900mA Linear Lithium-Ion Battery Charger LTC4063 LTC4411/LTC4412 Li-Ion Charger with Linear Regulator Low Loss PowerPathTM Controller in ThinSOT Power Management LTC3405/LTC3405A 300mA (IOUT), 1.5MHz, Synchronous Step-Down DC/DC Converter LTC3406/LTC3406A 600mA (IOUT), 1.5MHz, Synchronous Step-Down DC/DC Converter LTC3411 1.25A (IOUT), 4MHz, Synchronous Step-Down DC/DC Converter LTC3440 600mA (IOUT), 2MHz, Synchronous Buck-Boost DC/DC Converter LTC4413 Dual Ideal Diode in DFN Automatic Switching Between DC Sources, Load Sharing, Replaces ORing Diodes 95% Efficiency, VIN: 2.7V to 6V, VOUT = 0.8V, IQ = 20µA, ISD < 1µA, ThinSOT Package 95% Efficiency, VIN: 2.5V to 5.5V, VOUT = 0.6V, IQ = 20µA, ISD < 1µA, ThinSOT Package 95% Efficiency, VIN: 2.5V to 5.5V, VOUT = 0.8V, IQ = 60µA, ISD < 1µA, MS Package 95% Efficiency, VIN: 2.5V to 5.5V, VOUT = 2.5V, IQ = 25µA, ISD < 1µA, MS Package 2-Channel Ideal Diode ORing, Low Forward ON Resistance, Low Regulated Forward Voltage, 2.5V ≤ VIN ≤ 5.5V ThinSOT and PowerPath are trademarks of Linear Technology Corporation. 4061fa 20 Linear Technology Corporation LT/TP 0305 1K REV A • PRINTED IN USA FAX: (408) 434-0507 www.linear.com © LINEAR TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION 2004 1630 McCarthy Blvd., Milpitas, CA 95035-7417 (408) 432-1900 ● ●