Energy Metering IC with On-Chip Fault Detection ADE7760 FEATURES GENERAL DESCRIPTION High accuracy active energy measurement IC, supports IEC 687/61036 Less than 0.1% error over a dynamic range of 500 to 1 Supplies active power on the frequency outputs F1 and F2 High frequency output CF is intended for calibration and supplies instantaneous active power Continuous monitoring of the phase and neutral current allows fault detection in 2-wire distribution systems Current channels input level best suited for current transformer sensors Uses the larger of the two currents (phase or neutral) to bill—even during a fault condition Two logic outputs (FAULT and REVP) can be used to indicate a potential miswiring or fault condition Direct drive for electromechanical counters and 2-phase stepper motors (F1 and F2) Proprietary ADCs and DSP provide high accuracy over large variations in environmental conditions and time Reference 2.5 V ± 8% (drift 30 ppm/°C typical) with external overdrive capability Single 5 V supply, low power The ADE7760 is a high accuracy, fault tolerant, electrical energy measurement IC intended for use with 2-wire distribution systems. The part specifications surpass the accuracy requirements as quoted in the IEC61036 standard. The only analog circuitry used on the ADE7760 is in the ADCs and reference circuit. All other signal processing (such as multiplication and filtering) is carried out in the digital domain. This approach provides superior stability and accuracy over extremes in environmental conditions and over time. The ADE7760 incorporates a fault detection scheme similar to the ADE7751 by continuously monitoring both the phase and neutral currents. A fault is indicated when these currents differ by more than 6.25%. The ADE7760 supplies average active power information on the low frequency outputs F1 and F2. The CF logic output gives instantaneous active power information. The ADE7760 includes a power supply monitoring circuit on the VDD supply pin. Internal phase-matching circuitry ensures that the voltage and current channels are matched. An internal no-load threshold ensures that the ADE7760 does not exhibit any creep when there is no load. FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM AGND FAULT VDD 8 15 1 POWER SUPPLY MONITOR V1A 2 ADC ADE7760 SIGNAL PROCESSING BLOCK HPF A>B V1N 4 ADC V1B 3 B>A A<>B LPF V2P 6 ADC V2N 5 INTERNAL OSCILLATOR DIGITAL-TO-FREQUENCY CONVERTER 9 14 17 10 11 12 18 19 20 REFIN/OUT RCLKIN DGND SCF S1 S0 REVP CF 16 F2 F1 04434-0-001 4kΩ 2.5V REFERENCE Figure 1. Rev. 0 Information furnished by Analog Devices is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by Analog Devices for its use, nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties that may result from its use. Specifications subject to change without notice. No license is granted by implication or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Analog Devices. Trademarks and registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners. One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106, U.S.A. Tel: 781.329.4700 www.analog.com Fax: 781.326.8703 © 2004 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. ADE7760 TABLE OF CONTENTS Specifications..................................................................................... 3 Active Power Calculation .......................................................... 13 Timing Characteristics..................................................................... 5 Digital-to-Frequency Conversion ............................................ 15 Absolute Maximum Ratings............................................................ 6 Transfer Function....................................................................... 16 ESD Caution.................................................................................. 6 Fault Detection ........................................................................... 17 Terminology ...................................................................................... 7 Applications..................................................................................... 19 Pin Configuration and Function Descriptions............................. 8 Interfacing to a Microcontroller for Energy Measurement .. 19 Typical Performance Characteristics ........................................... 10 Selecting a Frequency for an Energy Meter Application....... 19 Operation......................................................................................... 11 Negative Power Information..................................................... 20 Power Supply Monitor ............................................................... 11 Outline Dimensions ....................................................................... 21 Analog Inputs.............................................................................. 11 Ordering Guide .......................................................................... 21 Internal Oscillator ...................................................................... 12 Analog-to-Digital Conversion.................................................. 12 REVISION HISTORY Revision 0: Initial Version Rev. 0 | Page 2 of 24 ADE7760 SPECIFICATIONS VDD = 5 V ± 5%, AGND = DGND = 0 V, on-chip reference, on-chip oscillator, TMIN to TMAX = –40°C to +85°C. Table 1. Parameter ACCURACY1 Measurement Error2 Phase Error between Channels (PF = 0.8 Capacitive) (PF = 0.5 Inductive) AC Power Supply Rejection2 Output Frequency Variation DC Power Supply Rejection2 Output Frequency Variation FAULT DETECTION2, 3 Fault Detection Threshold Inactive Input <> Active Input Input Swap Threshold Inactive Input <> Active Input Accuracy Fault Mode Operation V1A Active, V1B = AGND V1B Active, V1A = AGND Fault Detection Delay Swap Delay ANALOG INPUTS Maximum Signal Levels Input Impedance (DC) Bandwidth (–3 dB) ADC Offset Error2 Gain Error REFERENCE INPUT REFIN/OUT Input Voltage Range Input Impedance Input Capacitance ON-CHIP REFERENCE Reference Error Temperature Coefficient Current Source ON-CHIP OSCILLATOR Oscillator Frequency Oscillator Frequency Tolerance Temperature Coefficient LOGIC INPUTS4 SCF, S1, and S0 Input High Voltage, VINH Input Low Voltage, VINL Input Current, IIN Input Capacitance, CIN Value Unit Test Conditions/Comments 0.1 % of reading, typ Over a dynamic range of 500 to 1 ±0.05 ±0.05 Degrees, max Degrees, max Phase lead 37° Phase lag 60° 0.01 %, typ V1A = V1B = V2P = ±100 mV rms 0.01 %, typ V1A = V1B = V2P = ±100 mV rms See the Fault Detection section 6.25 %, typ (V1A or V1B active) 6.25 % of larger, typ (V1A or V1B active) 0.1 0.1 3 3 % of reading, typ % of reading, typ Seconds, typ Seconds, typ Over a dynamic range of 500 to 1 Over a dynamic range of 500 to 1 ±660 400 7 10 ±4 mV peak, max kΩ, min kHz, typ mV, max %, typ 2.7 2.3 4 10 V, max V, min kΩ, min pF, max ±200 30 20 mV, max ppm/°C, typ µA, min 450 ±12 30 kHz % of reading, typ ppm/°C, typ 2.4 0.8 ±3 10 V, min V, max µA, max pF, max See footnotes on next page. Rev. 0 | Page 3 of 24 V1A – V1N, V1B – V1N, V2P – V2N Differential input Uncalibrated error, see the Terminology section for details External 2.5 V reference 2.5 V + 8% 2.5 V – 8% VDD = 5 V ± 5% VDD = 5 V ± 5% Typical 10 nA, VIN = 0 V to VDD ADE7760 Parameter LOGIC OUTPUTS4 CF, REVP, and FAULT Output High Voltage, VOH Output Low Voltage, VOH F1 and F2 Output High Voltage, VOH Output Low Voltage, VOH POWER SUPPLY VDD VDD Value Unit Test Conditions/Comments 4 1 V, min V, max VDD = 5 V ± 5% VDD = 5 V ± 5% 4 1 V, min V, max 4.75 5.25 4 V, min V, max mA, max VDD = 5 V ± 5%, Isource = 10 mA VDD = 5 V ± 5%, Isink = 10 mA For specified performance 5 V – 5% 5 V + 5% 1 See plots in the Typical Performance Characteristics section. See the Terminology section for explanation of specifications. 3 See the Fault Detection section for explanation of fault detection functionality. 4 Sample tested during initial release and after any redesign or process change that may affect this parameter. 2 Rev. 0 | Page 4 of 24 ADE7760 TIMING CHARACTERISTICS VDD = 5 V ± 5%, AGND = DGND = 0 V, on-chip reference, on-chip oscillator, TMIN to TMAX = –40°C to +85°C. Sample tested during initial release and after any redesign or process change that may affect this parameter. See Figure 2. Table 2. Parameter t11 t2 t3 t41 t5 t6 Unit ms s s ms s s Test Conditions/Comments F1 and F2 Pulse Width (Logic High). Output Pulse Period. See the Transfer Function section. Time between F1 Falling Edge and F2 Falling Edge. CF Pulse Width (Logic High). CF Pulse Period. See the Transfer Function section. Minimum Time between F1 and F2 Pulse. The pulse widths of F1, F2, and CF are not fixed for higher output frequencies. See the Transfer Function section. t1 F1 t6 t2 t3 F2 t4 t5 04434-0-002 1 Value 120 See Table 6 1/2 t2 90 See Table 7 CLKIN/4 CF Figure 2. Timing Diagram for Frequency Outputs Rev. 0 | Page 5 of 24 ADE7760 ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted. Table 3. Parameter VDD to AGND Analog Input Voltage to AGND V1AP, V1BP, V1N, V2N, V2P Reference Input Voltage to AGND Digital Input Voltage to DGND Digital Output Voltage to DGND Operating Temperature Range Industrial Storage Temperature Range Junction Temperature 20-Lead SSOP, Power Dissipation θJA Thermal Impedance Lead Temperature, Soldering Vapor Phase (60 s) Infrared (15 s) Rating –0.3 V to +7 V –6 V to +6 V –0.3 V to VDD + 0.3 V –0.3 V to VDD + 0.3 V –0.3 V to VDD + 0.3 V Stresses above those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings may cause permanent damage to the device. This is a stress rating only; functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions above those listed in the operational sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. –40°C to +85°C –65°C to +150°C 150°C 450 mW 112°C/W 215°C 220°C ESD CAUTION ESD (electrostatic discharge) sensitive device. Electrostatic charges as high as 4000 V readily accumulate on the human body and test equipment and can discharge without detection. Although this product features proprietary ESD protection circuitry, permanent damage may occur on devices subjected to high energy electrostatic discharges. Therefore, proper ESD precautions are recommended to avoid performance degradation or loss of functionality. Rev. 0 | Page 6 of 24 ADE7760 TERMINOLOGY Measurement Error The error associated with the energy measurement made by the ADE7760 is defined by the following formula: Percentage Error = ⎛ Energy registered by ADE7760 − True Energy ⎞ ⎜ × 100% ⎟ ⎜ ⎟ True Energy ⎝ ⎠ Phase Error between Channels The high-pass filter (HPF) in the current channel has a phase lead response. To offset this phase response and equalize the phase response between channels, a phase correction network is also placed in the current channel. The phase correction network ensures a phase match between the current channels and voltage channels to within ±0.1° over a range of 45 Hz to 65 Hz and ±0.2° over a range 40 Hz to 1 kHz. Power Supply Rejection This quantifies the ADE7760 measurement error as a percentage of reading when the power supplies are varied. For the ac PSR measurement, a reading at nominal supplies (5 V) is taken. A second reading is obtained with the same input signal levels when an ac (175 mV rms/100 Hz) signal is introduced onto the supplies. Any error introduced by this ac signal is expressed as a percentage of reading (see the Measurement Error definition above). For the dc PSR measurement, a reading at nominal supplies (5 V) is taken. A second reading is obtained with the same input signal levels when the power supplies are varied ±5%. Any error introduced is again expressed as a percentage of reading. ADC Offset Error This refers to the dc offset associated with the analog inputs to the ADCs. It means that with the analog inputs connected to AGND the ADCs still see a dc analog input signal. The magnitude of the offset depends on the input range selection (see the Typical Performance Characteristics section). However, when HPFs are switched on, the offset is removed from the current channels and the power calculation is not affected by this offset. Gain Error The gain error in the ADE7760 ADCs is defined as the difference between the measured output frequency (minus the offset) and the ideal output frequency. The difference is expressed as a percentage of the ideal frequency. The ideal frequency is obtained from the transfer function (see the Transfer Function section). Rev. 0 | Page 7 of 24 ADE7760 PIN CONFIGURATION AND FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS VDD 1 20 F1 V1A 2 19 F2 V1B 3 18 CF V1N 4 V2N 5 V2P 6 NC 7 14 RCLKIN AGND 8 13 INT REFIN/OUT 9 12 S0 SCF 10 11 S1 17 DGND TOP VIEW (Not to Scale) 16 REVP 15 FAULT 04434-0-003 ADE7760 NC = NO CONNECT Figure 3. Pin Configuration (SSOP) Table 4. Pin Function Descriptions Pin No. 1 Mnemonic VDD 2, 3 V1A, V1B 4 V1N 5 V2N 6 V2P 7 8 NC AGND 9 REFIN/OUT 10 SCF 11, 12 S1, S0 13 14 INT RCLKIN Description Power Supply. This pin provides the supply voltage for the digital circuitry in the ADE7760. The supply voltage should be maintained at 5 V ± 5% for specified operation. This pin should be decoupled with a 10 µF capacitor in parallel with a ceramic 100 nF capacitor. Analog Inputs for Channel 1 (Current Channel). These inputs are fully differential voltage inputs with maximum differential input signal levels of ±660 mV with respect to V1N for specified operation. The maximum signal level at these pins is ±1 V with respect to AGND. Both inputs have internal ESD protection circuitry, and an overvoltage of ±6 V can also be sustained on these inputs without risk of permanent damage. Negative Input Pin for Differential Voltage Inputs V1A and V1B. The maximum signal level at this pin is ±1 V with respect to AGND. The input has internal ESD protection circuitry, and an overvoltage of ±6 V can also be sustained on these inputs without risk of permanent damage. The input should be directly connected to the burden resistor and held at a fixed potential, that is, AGND. See the Analog Inputs section. Negative Input Pin for Differential Voltage Input V2P. The maximum signal level at this pin is ±1 V with respect to AGND. The input has internal ESD protection circuitry, and an overvoltage of ±6 V can also be sustained on these inputs without risk of permanent damage. The input should be held at a fixed potential, that is, AGND. See the Analog Inputs section. Analog Inputs for Channel 2 (Voltage Channel). This input is fully differential voltage input with maximum differential input signal levels of ±660 mV with respect to V2N for specified operation. The maximum signal level at these pins is ±1 V with respect to AGND. This input has internal ESD protection circuitry, and an overvoltage of ±6 V can also be sustained on these inputs without risk of permanent damage. Not Connected. Nothing should be connected to this pin. This pin provides the ground reference for the analog circuitry in the ADE7760, that is, ADCs and reference. This pin should be tied to the analog ground plane of the PCB. The analog ground plane is the ground reference for all analog circuitry such as antialiasing filters, and current and voltage transducers. For good noise suppression, the analog ground plane should be connected only to the digital ground plane at the DGND pin. This pin provides access to the on-chip voltage reference. The on-chip reference has a nominal value of 2.5 V ± 8% and a typical temperature coefficient of 30 ppm/°C. An external reference source can also be connected at this pin. In either case, this pin should be decoupled to AGND with a 1 μF ceramic capacitor and 100 nF ceramic capacitor. Select Calibration Frequency. This logic input is used to select the frequency on the calibration output CF. Table 6 shows how the calibration frequencies are selected. These logic inputs are used to select one of four possible frequencies for the digital-to-frequency conversion. This offers the designer greater flexibility when designing the energy meter. See the Selecting a Frequency for an Energy Meter Application section. This pin is internally used and should be connected to DGND. To enable the internal oscillator as a clock source on the chip, a precise low temperature drift resistor at nominal value of 6.2 kΩ must be connected from this pin to DGND. Rev. 0 | Page 8 of 24 ADE7760 Pin No. 15 Mnemonic FAULT 16 REVP 17 DGND 18 CF 19, 20 F2, F1 Description This logic output goes active high when a fault condition occurs. A fault is defined as a condition under which the signals on V1A and V1B differ by more than 6.25%. The logic output is reset to zero when a fault condition is no longer detected. See the Fault Detection section. This logic output goes logic high when negative power is detected, that is, when the phase angle between the voltage and current signals is greater than 90°. This output is not latched and is reset when positive power is once again detected. The output goes high or low at the same time as a pulse is issued on CF. This pin provides the ground reference for the digital circuitry in the ADE7760, that is, multiplier, filters, and digital-to-frequency converter. This pin should be tied to the digital ground plane of the PCB. The digital ground plane is the ground reference for all digital circuitry such as counters (mechanical and digital), MCUs, and indicator LEDs. For good noise suppression, the analog ground plane should be connected only to the digital ground plane at the DGND pin. Calibration Frequency Logic Output. The CF logic output, active high, gives instantaneous active power information. This output is intended to be used for operational and calibration purposes. See the Digitalto-Frequency Conversion section. Low Frequency Logic Outputs. F1 and F2 supply average active power information. The logic outputs can be used to directly drive electromechanical counters and 2-phase stepper motors. Rev. 0 | Page 9 of 24 ADE7760 TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS 1.0 0.8 1.0 PF = 1 ON-CHIP REFERENCE 0.8 –40°C PF = 1 ON-CHIP REFERENCE 5.25V 0.6 0.6 0.4 0.4 +25°C –0.2 +85°C 0 –0.4 –0.4 –0.6 –0.6 –0.8 –0.8 –1.0 0.1 1.0 10.0 CURRENT (% of Full Scale) 100.0 4.75V –1.0 0.1 Figure 4. Active Power Error as a Percentage of Reading with Internal Reference 1.5 5.00V –0.2 1.0 10.0 CURRENT (% of Full Scale) Figure 6. Active Power Error as a Percentage of Reading over Power Supply with Internal Reference PF = 0.5 ON-CHIP REFERENCE 1.0 –40°C; PF = 0.5 +25°C; PF = 1 0 +25°C; PF = 0.5 –0.5 –1.0 0.1 1.0 10.0 CURRENT (% of Full Scale) 100.0 04434-0-038 Figure 5. Active Power Error as a Percentage of Reading over Power Factor with Internal Reference VDD 10µF + 100nF 1 40A TO 80mA I 1kΩ RB CF 18 VDD 2kΩ PS2501-1 1 2 V1A 33nF TO FREQ. COUNTER 2 1kΩ RB 3 V1B FAULT 15 33nF RCLKIN 14 1kΩ RB = 18Ω 4 ADE7760 3 2kΩ 6.2kΩ 4 V1N 33nF 10kΩ 1kΩ 5 V2N S0 12 33nF S1 11 SCF 10 1MΩ 220V 1kΩ REFIN/OUT 9 6 V2P 33nF INT 13 AGND DGND 8 100nF 17 Figure 7. Test Circuit for Performances Curves Rev. 0 | Page 10 of 24 + 10µF 04434-0-036 % ERROR 0.5 +85°C; PF = 0.5 100.0 04434-0-039 % ERROR 0.2 0 04434-0-037 % ERROR 0.2 ADE7760 OPERATION POWER SUPPLY MONITOR Channel V2 (Voltage Channel) The ADE7760 contains an on-chip power supply monitor. The power supply (VDD) is continuously monitored by the ADE7760. If the supply is less than 4 V ± 5%, the ADE7760 goes into an inactive state, that is, no energy is accumulated and the CF, F1, and F2 outputs is disabled. This is useful to ensure correct device operation at power-up and during power-down. The power supply monitor has built-in hysteresis and filtering. This gives a high degree of immunity to false triggering due to noisy supplies. The output of the line voltage transducer is connected to the ADE7760 at this analog input. Channel V2 is a single-ended voltage input. The maximum peak differential signal on Channel 2 is ±660 mV with respect to V2N. Figure 10 shows the maximum signal levels that can be connected to Channel 2. DIFFERENTIAL INPUT ±660mV MAX PEAK V2 V2N VCM COMMON MODE ±100mV MAX –660mV + VCM VCM Figure 10. Maximum Signal Levels, Channel 2 VDD The differential voltage V2P–V2N must be referenced to a common mode (usually AGND). The analog inputs of the ADE7760 can be driven with common-mode voltages of up to 100 mV with respect to AGND. However, the best results are achieved using a common mode equal to AGND. 04434-0-010 TIME ADE7760 REVP - FAULT - CF - INACTIVE F1 - F2 OUTPUTS ACTIVE INACTIVE Figure 8. On-Chip Power Supply Monitoring ANALOG INPUTS Channel V1 (Current Channel) The voltage outputs from the current transducers are connected to the ADE7760 here. Channel V1 has two voltage inputs, V1A and V1B. These inputs are fully differential with respect to V1N. However, at any one time, only one is selected to perform the power calculation (see the Fault Detection section). The maximum peak differential signal on V1A–V1N and V1B–V1N is ±660 mV. Figure 9 shows the maximum signal levels on V1A, V1B, and V1N. The differential voltage signal on the inputs must be referenced to a common mode such as AGND. V1A, V1B DIFFERENTIAL INPUT A ±660mV MAX PEAK IN CF AGND V1N RB CF CT RF V1B Figure 11. Typical Connection for Channel 1 VCM V1 V1B Figure 9. Maximum Signal Levels, Channel 1 04434-0-011 VCM AGND RB IP V1A RF CT V1 V1N DIFFERENTIAL INPUT B ±660mV MAX PEAK Figure 11 shows a typical connection diagram for Channel V1. The analog inputs are being used to monitor both the phase and neutral currents. Because of the large potential difference between the phase and neutral, two current transformers (CTs) must be used to provide the isolation. Note that both CTs are referenced to AGND (analog ground); the common-mode voltage is, therefore, 0 V. The CT turns ratio and burden resistor (RB) are selected to give a peak differential voltage of ±660 mV. V1A +660mV + VCM COMMON MODE ±100mV MAX Typical Connection Diagrams 04434-0-014 0V NEUTRAL 4V PHASE 5V –660mV + VCM V2P 04434-0-012 The power supply and decoupling for the part should be such that the ripple at VDD does not exceed 5 V ± 5% as specified for normal operation. V2 +660mV + VCM Figure 12 shows two typical connections for Channel V2. The first option uses a potential transformer (PT) to provide complete isolation from the main voltage. In the second option, the ADE7760 is biased around the neutral wire, and a resistor divider is used to provide a voltage signal that is proportional to the line voltage. Adjusting the ratio of RA and RB + VR is a convenient way of carrying out a gain calibration on the meter. Rev. 0 | Page 11 of 24 ADE7760 V2P NEUTRAL RF CF MCLK ANALOG LOW-PASS FILTER V2N CF AGND RB* CF VREF DIGITAL LOW-PASS FILTER 1 ....10100101.... 1-BIT DAC V2P NEUTRAL LATCHED COMPARATOR 24 C RA* VR* Figure 14. First-Order Σ-∆ ADC V2N RF 04434-0-015 PHASE INTEGRATOR ∫ R 04434-0-019 PHASE RF ±660mV CT *RB + VR = RF Figure 12. Typical Connection for Channel 2 INTERNAL OSCILLATOR The nominal internal oscillator frequency is 450 kHz when used with the recommended ROSC resistor value of 6.2 kΩ between RCLKIN and DGND (see Figure 13). The internal oscillator frequency is inversely proportional to the value of this resistor. Although the internal oscillator operates when used with a ROSC resistor value between 5 kΩ and 12 kΩ, it is recommended to choose a value within the range of the nominal value. The output frequencies on CF, F1, and F2 are directly proportional to the internal oscillator frequency; thus, the resistor ROSC must have a low tolerance and low temperature drift. A low tolerance resistor limits the variation of the internal oscillator frequency. Small variation of the clock frequency and consequently of the output frequencies from meter to meter contributes to a smaller calibration range of the meter. A low temperature drift resistor directly limits the variation of the internal clock frequency over temperature. The stability of the meter to external variation is then better ensured by design. A Σ-Δ modulator converts the input signal into a continuous serial stream of 1s and 0s at a rate determined by the sampling clock. In the ADE7760, the sampling clock is equal to CLKIN. The 1-bit DAC in the feedback loop is driven by the serial data stream. The DAC output is subtracted from the input signal. If the loop gain is high enough, the average value of the DAC output (and, therefore, the bit stream) approaches that of the input signal level. For any given input value in a single sampling interval, the data from the 1-bit ADC is virtually meaningless. Only when a large number of samples are averaged is a meaningful result obtained. This averaging is carried out in the second part of the ADC, the digital low-pass filter. By averaging a large number of bits from the modulator, the low-pass filter can produce 24-bit data words that are proportional to the input signal level. The Σ-Δ converter uses two techniques to achieve high resolution from what is essentially a 1-bit conversion technique. The first is oversampling, which means that the signal is sampled at a rate (frequency) that is many times higher than the bandwidth of interest. For example, the sampling rate in the ADE7760 is CLKIN (450 kHz) and the band of interest is 40 Hz to 1 kHz. Oversampling has the effect of spreading the quantization noise (noise due to sampling) over a wider bandwidth. With the noise spread more thinly over a wider bandwidth, the quantization noise in the band of interest is lowered (see Figure 15). ADE7760 4kΩ 2.5V REFERENCE However, oversampling alone is not an efficient enough method to improve the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in the band of interest. For example, an oversampling ratio of 4 is required just to increase the SNR by only 6 dB (1 bit). To keep the oversampling ratio at a reasonable level, it is possible to shape the quantization noise so that the majority of the noise lies at the higher frequencies. This is what happens in the Σ-Δ modulator; the noise is shaped by the integrator, which has a high-pass type response for the quantization noise. The result is that most of the noise is at the higher frequencies where it can be removed by the digital low-pass filter. This noise shaping is also shown in Figure 15. INTERNAL OSCILLATOR 14 17 RCLKIN DGND ROSC 04434-0-017 9 REFIN/OUT Figure 13. ADE7760 Internal Oscillator Connection ANALOG-TO-DIGITAL CONVERSION The analog-to-digital conversion in the ADE7760 is carried out using second-order Σ-Δ ADCs. Figure 14 shows a first-order (for simplicity) Σ-Δ ADC. The converter is made up of two parts, the Σ-Δ modulator and the digital low-pass filter. Rev. 0 | Page 12 of 24 ADE7760 ANTIALIAS FILTER (RC) DIGITAL FILTER SIGNAL ACTIVE POWER CALCULATION SAMPLING FREQUENCY The ADCs digitize the voltage signals from the current and voltage transducers. A high-pass filter in the current channel removes any dc component from the current signal. This eliminates any inaccuracies in the active power calculation due to offsets in the voltage or current signals (see the HPF and Offset Effects section). SHAPED NOISE NOISE 0 1kHz 225kHz 450kHz FREQUENCY (Hz) HIGH RESOLUTION OUTPUT FROM DIGITAL LFP SIGNAL 0 1kHz 225kHz 04434-0-020 NOISE 450kHz FREQUENCY (Hz) Figure 15. Noise Reduction Due to Oversampling and Noise Shaping in the Analog Modulator Antialias Filter Figure 15 also shows an analog low-pass filter (RC) on input to the modulator. This filter is present to prevent aliasing. Aliasing is an artifact of all sampled systems, which means that frequency components in the input signal to the ADC that are higher than half the sampling rate of the ADC appear in the sampled signal frequency below half the sampling rate. Figure 16 illustrates the effect. In Figure 16, frequency components (arrows shown in black) above half the sampling frequency (also known as the Nyquist frequency), that is, 225 kHz get imaged or folded back down below 225 kHz (arrows shown in gray). This happens with all ADCs no matter what the architecture. In the example shown, it can be seen that only frequencies near the sampling frequency (450 kHz) move into the band of interest for metering (40 Hz to 1 kHz). This fact allows the use of a very simple low-pass filter to attenuate these frequencies (near 250 kHz) and thereby prevent distortion in the band of interest. A simple RC filter (single pole) with a corner frequency of 10 kHz produces an attenuation of approximately 33 dB at 450 kHz (see Figure 16). This is sufficient to eliminate the effects of aliasing. The active power calculation is derived from the instantaneous power signal. The instantaneous power signal is generated by a direct multiplication of the current and voltage signals. To extract the active power component (dc component), the instantaneous power signal is low-pass filtered. Figure 17 illustrates the instantaneous active power signal and shows how the active power information can be extracted by low-pass filtering the instantaneous power signal. This scheme correctly calculates active power for nonsinusoidal current and voltage waveforms at all power factors. All signal processing is carried out in the digital domain for superior stability over temperature and time. The low frequency output of the ADE7760 is generated by accumulating this active power information. This low frequency inherently means a long accumulation time between output pulses. The output frequency is, therefore, proportional to the average active power. This average active power information can in turn be accumulated (for example, by a counter) to generate active energy information. Because of its high output frequency and therefore shorter integration time, the CF output is proportional to the instantaneous active power. This is useful for system calibration purposes that would take place under steady load conditions. ADC CH1 DIGITAL-TOFREQUENCY F1 F2 HPF MULTIPLIER LPF ADC CH2 DIGITAL-TOFREQUENCY CF INSTANTANEOUS POWER SIGNAL –p(t) INSTANTANEOUS ACTIVE POWER SIGNAL V×I 1kHz 225kHz FREQUENCY (Hz) 450kHz TIME 04434-0-021 IMAGE FREQUENCIES 0 p(t) = i(t).v(t) WHERE: V×I v(t) = V × cos(ϖt) 2 i(t) = I × cos(ϖt) p(t) = V × I {1 + cos (2ϖt)} 2 SAMPLING FREQUENCY Figure 17. Signal Processing Block Diagram Figure 16. ADC and Signal Processing in Current Channel or Voltage Channel Rev. 0 | Page 13 of 24 04434-0-022 ANTIALIASING EFFECTS ADE7760 Power Factor Considerations where: The method used to extract the active power information from the instantaneous power signal (by low-pass filtering) is still valid even when the voltage and current signals are not in phase. Figure 18 displays the unity power factor condition and a displacement power factor (DPF = 0.5), that is, current signal lagging the voltage by 60°. If one assumes the voltage and current waveforms are sinusoidal, the active power component of the instantaneous power signal (dc term) is given by (V × I/2) × cos(60°). This is the correct active power calculation. INSTANTANEOUS POWER SIGNAL i(t) is the instantaneous current. IO is the dc component. Ih is the rms value of current harmonic h. βh is the phase angle of the current harmonic. Using Equations 1 and 2, the active power P can be expressed in terms of its fundamental active power (P1) and harmonic active power (PH): P = P1 + PH INSTANTANEOUS ACTIVE POWER SIGNAL where: P1 = V1 × I 1 cos(Φ 1 ) V×I 2 Φ 1 = α 1 − β1 0V and CURRENT VOLTAGE ∞ PH = ∑ Vh × I h × cos(Φ h ) INSTANTANEOUS POWER SIGNAL V×I 2 (3) h=2 INSTANTANEOUS ACTIVE POWER SIGNAL Φ h = α h − βh × cos(60°) 04434-0-023 0V VOLTAGE CURRENT 60° Figure 18. Active Power Calculation over PF Nonsinusoidal Voltage and Current The active power calculation method also holds true for nonsinusoidal current and voltage waveforms. All voltage and current waveforms in practical applications have some harmonic content. Using the Fourier transform, instantaneous voltage and current waveforms can be expressed in terms of their harmonic content: ∞ V (t ) = Vo + 2 × ∑ Vh × sin(hωt + α h ) h≠0 (1) As can be seen from Equation 4, a harmonic active power component is generated for every harmonic, provided that harmonic is present in both the voltage and current waveforms. The power factor calculation has previously been shown to be accurate in the case of a pure sinusoid; therefore, the harmonic active power must also correctly account for power factor, because it is made up of a series of pure sinusoids. Note that the input bandwidth of the analog inputs is 7 kHz with the internal oscillator frequency of 450 kHz. HPF and Offset Effects Equation 5 shows the effect of offset on the active power calculation. Figure 19 shows the effect of offsets on the active power calculation in the frequency domain. V (t ) × I (t ) = (V0 + V1 × cos(ωt )) × (I 0 + I 1 × cos(ωt )) = V0 × I 1 + where: v(t) is the instantaneous voltage. Vh is the rms value of voltage harmonic h. αh is the phase angle of the voltage harmonic. ∞ i(t ) = I o + 2 × ∑ I h × sin(hωt + β h ) h≠0 (4) (2) V1 × I 1 2 (5) + V0 × I 1 × cos(ωt ) + V1 × I 0 × cos(ωt ) As can be seen from Equation 5 and Figure 19, an offset on Channel 1 and Channel 2 contributes a dc component after multiplication. Because this dc component is extracted by the LPF and used to generate the active power information, the offsets contribute a constant error to the active power calculation. This problem is easily avoided in the ADE7760 with the HPF in Channel 1. By removing the offset from at least one channel, no error component can be generated at dc by the multiplication. Error terms at cos(ωt) are removed by the LPF and the digital-to-frequency conversion (see the Digital-toFrequency Conversion section). Rev. 0 | Page 14 of 24 ADE7760 The HPF in Channel 1 has an associated phase response that is compensated for on-chip. Figure 20 and Figure 21 show the phase error between channels with the compensation network activated. The ADE7760 is phase compensated up to 1 kHz as shown, which ensures correct active harmonic power calculation even at low power factors. DC COMPONENT (INCLUDING ERROR TERM) IS EXTRACTED BY THE LPF FOR ACTIVE POWER CALCULATION DIGITAL-TO-FREQUENCY CONVERSION As previously described, the digital output of the low-pass filter after multiplication contains the active power information. However, because this LPF is not an ideal “brick wall” filter implementation, the output signal also contains attenuated components at the line frequency and its harmonics, that is, cos(hωt), where h = 1, 2, 3, ..., and so on. The magnitude response of the filter is given by H( f ) = V1 × I1 2 04434-0-024 2v 0v FREQUENCY (RAD/S) Figure 22 shows the instantaneous active power signal output of the LPF, which still contains a significant amount of instantaneous power information, cos(2ωt). This signal is then passed to the digital-to-frequency converter, where it is integrated (accumulated) over time to produce an output frequency. This accumulation of the signal suppresses or averages out any nondc components in the instantaneous active power signal. The average value of a sinusoidal signal is zero. Therefore, the frequency generated by the ADE7760 is proportional to the average active power. Figure 19. Effect of Channel Offsets on the Active Power Calculation 0.30 0.25 0.20 0.15 0.10 0.05 0 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 FREQUENCY (Hz) 800 900 1000 Figure 20. Phase Error between Channels (0 Hz to 1 kHz) F1 0.30 DIGITAL-TOFREQUENCY F1 F2 0.25 V TIME 0.15 MULTIPLIER LPF I 0.10 LPF TO EXTRACT ACTIVE POWER (DC TERM) 0.05 0 DIGITAL-TOFREQUENCY CF FOUT TIME –0.10 40 45 50 55 60 FREQUENCY (Hz) 65 70 04434-0-026 –0.05 0 ϖ 2ϖ FREQUENCY (Rad/s) INSTANTANEOUS ACTIVE POWER SIGNAL (FREQUENCY DOMAIN) Figure 21. Phase Error between Channels (40 Hz to 70 Hz) Figure 22. Active Power to Frequency Conversion Rev. 0 | Page 15 of 24 04434-0-027 PHASE (Degrees) 0.20 FREQUENCY –0.10 04434-0-025 –0.05 Figure 22 also shows the digital-to-frequency conversion for steady load conditions: constant voltage and current. As can be seen in Figure 22, the frequency output CF varies over time, even under steady load conditions. This frequency variation is primarily due to the cos(2ωt) component in the instantaneous active power signal. FREQUENCY PHASE (Degrees) (6) 1 = ( f / 4.5 Hz) 2 For a line frequency of 50 Hz, this gives an attenuation of the 2ω (100 Hz) component of approximately –26.9 dB. The dominating harmonic is at twice the line frequency, that is, cos(2ωt), due to the instantaneous power signal. V1 × I 0 V0 × I 1 1 ADE7760 The output frequency on CF can be up to 2048 times higher than the frequency on F1 and F2. This higher output frequency is generated by accumulating the instantaneous active power signal over a much shorter time while converting it to a frequency. This shorter accumulation period means less averaging of the cos(2ωt) component. As a consequence, some of this instantaneous power signal passes through the digital-tofrequency conversion. This is not a problem in the application. Where CF is used for calibration purposes, the frequency should be averaged by the frequency counter, which removes any ripple. If CF is being used to measure energy, such as in a microprocessor-based application, the CF output should also be averaged to calculate power. Because the outputs F1 and F2 operate at a much lower frequency, a lot more averaging of the instantaneous active power signal is carried out. The result is a greatly attenuated sinusoidal content and a virtually ripple-free frequency output. TRANSFER FUNCTION Frequency Outputs F1 and F2 The ADE7760 calculates the product of two voltage signals (on Channel 1 and Channel 2) and then low-pass filters this product to extract active power information. This active power information is then converted to a frequency. The frequency information is output on F1 and F2 in the form of active high pulses. The pulse rate at these outputs is relatively low, for example, 0.34 Hz maximum for ac signals with S0 = S1 = 0 (see Table 7). This means that the frequency at these outputs is generated from active power information accumulated over a relatively long period of time. The result is an output frequency that is proportional to the average active power. The averaging of the active power signal is implicit to the digital-to-frequency conversion. The output frequency or pulse rate is related to the input voltage signals by the following equation: F1 − F2 Frequency = 5.70 × V1rms × V2 rms × F1− 4 V REF 2 (7) Table 5. F1–4 Frequency Solution S1 0 0 1 1 1 2 F1–4 (Hz)1 1.72 3.44 6.86 13.7 S0 0 1 0 1 OSC/CLKIN2 OSC/218 OSC/217 OSC/216 OSC/215 Values are generated using the nominal frequency of 450 kHz. F1–4 are a binary fraction of the master clock and, therefore, varies, if the internal oscillator frequency (OSC). Frequency Output CF The pulse output calibration frequency (CF) is intended for use during calibration. The output pulse rate on CF can be up to 2048 times the pulse rate on F1 and F2. The lower the F1–4 frequency selected, the higher the CF scaling. Table 6 shows how the two frequencies are related, depending on the states of the logic inputs S0, S1, and SCF. Because of its relatively high pulse rate, the frequency at this logic output is proportional to the instantaneous active power. As with F1 and F2, the frequency is derived from the output of the low-pass filter after multiplication. However, because the output frequency is high, this active power information is accumulated over a much shorter time. Therefore, less averaging is carried out in the digital-to-frequency conversion. With much less averaging of the active power signal, the CF output is much more responsive to power fluctuations (see Figure 17). Table 6. Relationship between CF and F1, F2 Frequency Outputs SCF 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 S1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 S0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 F1–4 (Hz) 1.72 1.72 3.44 3.44 6.86 6.86 13.7 13.7 CF Frequency output 128 × F1, F2 64 × F1, F2 64 × F1, F2 32 × F1, F2 32 × F1, F2 16 × F1, F2 16 × F1, F2 2048 × F1, F2 where: Example F1 − F2 Frequency is the output frequency on F1 and F2 (Hz). V1rms is the differential rms voltage signal on Channel 1 (V). V2rms is the differential rms voltage signal on Channel 2 (V). VREF is the reference voltage (2.5 V ± 8%) (V). F1–4 is one of four possible frequencies selected by using the logic inputs S0 and S1 (see Table 5). In this example, if ac voltages of ±660 mV peak are applied to V1 and V2, then the expected output frequency on CF, F1, and F2 is calculated as follows: F1–4 = 1.7 Hz, SCF = S1 = S0 = 0 V1rms = rms of 660 mV peak ac = 0.66/√2 V V2rms = rms of 660 mV peak ac = 0.66/√2 V VREF = 2.5 V (nominal reference value) Rev. 0 | Page 16 of 24 ADE7760 Fault with Active Input Greater than Inactive Input 5.70 × 0.66 × 0.66 × 1.72 Hz 2 × 2 × 2. 5 2 CF Frequency = F1 − F2 × 64 = 22.0 Hz = 0.34 Hz As can be seen from these two example calculations, the maximum output frequency for ac inputs is always half of that for dc input signals. Table 7 shows a complete listing of all maximum output frequencies for ac signals. Table 7. Maximum Output Frequency on CF, F1, and F2 for AC inputs SCF 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 S1 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 S0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 F1, F2 Maximum Frequency (Hz) 0.34 0.34 0.68 0.68 1.36 1.36 2.72 2.72 CF Maximum Frequency (Hz) 43.52 21.76 43.52 21.76 43.52 21.76 43.52 5570 CF to F1 Ratio 128 64 64 32 32 16 16 2048 V1A V1A V1B A V1A FAULT FILTER AND COMPARE TO MULTIPLIER 0V V1N AGND V1B V1B < 93.75% OF V1A B V1B FAULT <0 >0 ACTIVE POINT – INACTIVE INPUT 6.25% OF ACTIVE INPUT Figure 23. Fault Conditions for Active Input Greater than Inactive Input FAULT DETECTION Fault with Inactive Input Greater than Active Input The ADE7760 incorporates a novel fault detection scheme that warns of fault conditions and allows the ADE7760 to continue accurate billing during a fault event. The ADE7760 does this by continuously monitoring both the phase and neutral (return) currents. A fault is indicated when these currents differ by more than 6.25%. However, even during a fault, the output pulse rate on F1 and F2 is generated using the larger of the two currents. Because the ADE7760 looks for a difference between the voltage signals on V1A and V1B, it is important that both current transducers be closely matched. On power-up, the output pulse rate of the ADE7760 is proportional to the product of the voltage signals on V1A and Channel 2. If there is a difference of greater than 6.25% between V1A and V1B on power-up, the fault indicator (FAULT) becomes active after about 1 s. In addition, if V1B is greater than V1A, the ADE7760 selects V1B as the input. The fault detection is automatically disabled when the voltage signal on Channel 1 is less than 0.3% of the full-scale input range. This eliminates false detection of a fault due to noise at light loads. Figure 24 illustrates another fault condition. If the difference between V1B, the inactive input, and V1A, the active input (used for billing), becomes greater than 6.25% of V1B, the FAULT indicator goes active, and there is also a swap over to the V1B input. The analog input V1B becomes the active input. Again, there is a time constant of about 3 s associated with this swap. V1A does not swap back to being the active channel until V1A is greater than V1B and the difference between V1A and V1B—in this order—becomes greater than 6.25% of V1A. The FAULT indicator, however, becomes inactive as soon as V1A is within 6.25% of V1B. This threshold eliminates potential chatter between V1A and V1B. V1A V1A V1B A V1A FILTER FAULT AND COMPARE TO MULTIPLIER 0V V1N AGND V1A < 93.75% OF V1B V1B B V1B FAULT + SWAP <0 >0 ACTIVE POINT – INACTIVE INPUT 6.25% OF INACTIVE INPUT Figure 24. Fault Conditions for Inactive Input Greater than Active Input Rev. 0 | Page 17 of 24 04434-0-029 F1 − F2 Frequency = If V1A is the active current input (that is, is being used for billing), and the voltage signal on V1B (inactive input) falls below 93.75% of V1A, the fault indicator becomes active. Both analog inputs are filtered and averaged to prevent false triggering of this logic output. As a consequence of the filtering, there is a time delay of approximately 3 s on the logic output FAULT after the fault event. The FAULT logic output is independent of any activity on outputs F1 or F2. Figure 23 shows one condition under which FAULT becomes active. Because V1A is the active input and it is still greater than V1B, billing is maintained on V1A, that is, no swap to the V1B input occurs. V1A remains the active input. 04434-0-028 Note that if the on-chip reference is used, actual output frequencies may vary from device to device due to reference tolerance of ±8%. ADE7760 Calibration Concerns Typically, when a meter is being calibrated, the voltage and current circuits are separated as shown in Figure 25. This means that current passes through only the phase or neutral circuit. Figure 25 shows current being passed through the phase circuit. This is the preferred option, because the ADE7760 starts billing on the input V1A on power-up. The phase circuit CT is connected to V1A in the diagram. Because there is no current in the neutral circuit, the FAULT indicator comes on under these conditions. However, this does not affect the accuracy of the calibration and can be used as a means to test the functionality of the fault detection. IB V1A RF CT If the neutral circuit is chosen for the current circuit in the arrangement shown in Figure 25, this may have implications for the calibration accuracy. The ADE7760 powers up with the V1A input active as normal. However, because there is no current in the phase circuit, the signal on V1A is zero. This causes a fault to be flagged and the active input to be swapped to V1B (neutral). The meter can be calibrated in this mode, but the phase and neutral CTs might differ slightly. Because under no-fault conditions all billing is carried out using the phase CT, the meter should be calibrated using the phase circuit. Of course, both phase and neutral circuits can be calibrated. RB V1A CF RB 0V CF AGND CT RF RA* RB* V1B CF V2P VR* V2N RF V 04434-0-030 PHASE TEST CURRENT NEUTRAL V1N IB CT 240V RMS *RB + VR = RF Figure 25. Fault Conditions for Inactive Input Greater than Active Input Rev. 0 | Page 18 of 24 ADE7760 APPLICATIONS INTERFACING TO A MICROCONTROLLER FOR ENERGY MEASUREMENT The easiest way to interface the ADE7760 to a microcontroller is to use the CF high frequency output with the output frequency scaling set to 2048 × F1, F2. This is done by setting SCF = 0 and S0 = S1 = 1 (see Table 7). With full-scale ac signals on the analog inputs, the output frequency on CF is approximately 5.5 kHz. Figure 26 illustrates one scheme that could be used to digitize the output frequency and carry out the necessary averaging mentioned in the previous section. CF FREQUENCY RIPPLE AVERAGE FREQUENCY TIME MCU COUNTER CF FAULT** Table 8. F1 and F2 Frequency at 100 Impulses/kWh UP/DOWN LOGIC *REVP MUST BE USED IF THE METER IS BIDIRECTIONAL OR DIRECTION OF ENERGY FLOW IS NEEDED. **FAULT MUST BE USED TO RECORD ENERGY IN FAULT CONDITION. 04434-0-035 REVP* Figure 26. Interfacing the ADE7760 to an MCU As shown, the frequency output CF is connected to an MCU counter or port, which counts the number of pulses in a given integration time, determined by an MCU internal timer. The average power, proportional to the average frequency, is given by Average Frequency = Average Active Power = Counter Timer The energy consumed during an integration period is given by Energy = Average Power × Time = SELECTING A FREQUENCY FOR AN ENERGY METER APPLICATION As shown in Table 5, the user can select one of four frequencies. This frequency selection determines the maximum frequency on F1 and F2. These outputs are intended to be used to drive the energy register (electromechanical or other). Because only four different output frequencies can be selected, the available frequency selection has been optimized for a meter constant of 100 impulses/kWh with a maximum current of between 10 A and 120 A. Table 8 shows the output frequency for several maximum currents (IMAX) with a line voltage of 240 V. In all cases, the meter constant is 100 impulses/kWh. ±10% ADE7760 For the purpose of calibration, this integration time could be 10 s to 20 s in order to accumulate enough pulses to ensure correct averaging of the frequency. In normal operation, the integration time could be reduced to 1 s or 2 s depending, for example, on the required update rate of a display. With shorter integration times on the MCU, the amount of energy in each update might still have a small amount of ripple, even under steady load conditions. However, over a minute or more, the measured energy has no ripple. Counter × Time = Counter Time IMAX 12.5 A 25 A 40 A F1 and F2 (Hz) 0.083 0.166 0.266 60 A 80 A 0.4 0.533 120 A 0.8 The F1–4 frequencies allow complete coverage of this range of output frequencies on F1 and F2. When designing an energy meter the nominal design voltage on Channel 2 (voltage) should be set to half-scale to allow for calibration of the meter constant. The current channel should also be no more than halfscale when the meter sees maximum load. This accommodates overcurrent signals and signals with high crest factors. Table 9 shows the output frequency on F1 and F2 when both analog inputs are half-scale. The frequencies listed in Table 9 align well with those listed in Table 8 for maximum load. Rev. 0 | Page 19 of 24 ADE7760 No-Load Threshold Table 9. F1 and F2 Frequency with Half-Scale AC Inputs S0 0 0 1 1 S1 0 1 0 1 F1-4 1.72 3.44 6.86 13.5 Frequency on F1 and F2, CH1 and CH2, Half-Scale AC Inputs 0.085 Hz 0.17 Hz 0.34 Hz 0.68 Hz When selecting a suitable F1–4 frequency for a meter design, the frequency output at IMAX (maximum load) with a meter constant of 100 impulses /kWh should be compared with Column 4 of Table 9. The frequency that is closest in Table 9 determines the best choice of frequency (F1–4). For example, if a meter with a maximum current of 40 A is being designed, the output frequency on F1 and F2 with a meter constant of 100 impulses /kWh is 0.266 Hz at 40 A and 240 V (from Table 8). Looking at Table 9, the closest frequency to 0.266 Hz in Column 4 is 0.17 Hz. Therefore, F2 (3.4 Hz; see Table 5) is selected for this design. Frequency Outputs Figure 2 shows a timing diagram for the various frequency outputs. The high frequency CF output is intended to be used for communications and calibration purposes. CF produces a 90 ms wide, active high pulse (t4) at a frequency that is proportional to active power. The CF output frequencies are given in Table 7. As in the case of F1 and F2, if the period of CF (t5) falls below 180 ms, the CF pulse width is set to half the period. For example, if the CF frequency is 20 Hz, the CF pulse width is 25 ms. The ADE7760 also includes a no-load threshold and startup current feature that eliminates any creep effects in the meter. The ADE7760 is designed to issue a minimum output frequency. Any load generating a frequency lower than this minimum frequency does not cause a pulse to be issued on F1, F2, or CF. The minimum output frequency is given as 0.0045% of the full-scale output frequency. (See Table 7 for maximum output frequencies for ac signals.) For example, an energy meter with a meter constant of 100 impulses /kWh on F1, F2 using SCF = 1, S1 = 0, and S0 = 1, the maximum output frequency at F1 or F2 would be 0.68 Hz and 43.52 Hz on CF. The minimum output frequency at F1 or F2 would be 0.0045% of 0.68 Hz or 3.06 × 10–5 Hz. This would be 1.96 × 10–3 Hz at CF (64 × F1 Hz). In this example, the noload threshold would be equivalent to 1.1 W of load or a startup current of 4.6 mA at 240 V. Compare this value to the IEC61036 specification, which states that the meter must start up with a load equal to or less than 0.4% IB. For a 5 A (IB) meter, 0.4% of IB is equivalent to 20 mA. Note that the no-load threshold is not enabled when using the high CF frequency mode: SCF = 0, S1 = S0 = 1. NEGATIVE POWER INFORMATION The ADE7760 detects when the current and voltage channels have a phase shift greater than 90°. This mechanism can detect wrong connection of the meter or generation of negative power. The REVP pin output goes active high when negative power is detected and active low, when positive power is detected. The REVP pin output changes state as a pulse is issued on CF. Rev. 0 | Page 20 of 24 ADE7760 OUTLINE DIMENSIONS 7.50 7.20 6.90 20 11 1 10 2.00 MAX 0.65 BSC 0.05 MIN COPLANARITY 0.10 1.85 1.75 1.65 0.38 0.22 5.60 5.30 5.00 8.20 7.80 7.40 0.25 0.09 SEATING PLANE 8° 4° 0° 0.95 0.75 0.55 COMPLIANT TO JEDEC STANDARDS MO-150AE Figure 27. 20-Lead Shrink Small Outline Package [SSOP] (RS-20) Dimensions shown in millimeters ORDERING GUIDE Model ADE7760ARS ADE7760ARSRL Temperature Range –40°C to +85°C –40°C to +85°C Package Description 20-Lead Shrink Small Outline Package [SSOP] 20-Lead Shrink Small Outline Package [SSOP] Rev. 0 | Page 21 of 24 Package Option RS-20 RS-20 ADE7760 NOTES Rev. 0 | Page 22 of 24 ADE7760 NOTES Rev. 0 | Page 23 of 24 ADE7760 NOTES © 2004 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners. D04434–0–1/04(0) Rev. 0 | Page 24 of 24