HIP4081 80V Fast Bridge Driver
HIP4081 80V Fast Bridge Driver
HIP4081 80V Fast Bridge Driver
Introduction
The HIP4081A is a member of the HIP408x family of High Frequency H-Bridge Driver ICs. A simplified application diagram of the HIP4081A IC is shown in Figure 1. The HIP408x family of H-Bridge driver ICs provide the ability to operate from 10VDC to 80VDC busses for driving H-Bridges, whose switch elements are comprised of power N-Channel MOSFETs. The HIP408x family, packaged in both 20 pin DIP and 20 pin SOIC DIPs, provide peak gate current drive of 2.5A. The HIP4081A includes undervoltage protection, which sends a continuous gate turn-off pulse to all gate outputs when the VDD voltage falls below a nominal 8.25V. The startup sequence of the HIP4081A is initiated when the VDD voltage returns above a nominal 8.75V. Of course, the DIS pin must be in the low state for the IC to be enabled. The startup sequence turns on both low side outputs, ALO and BLO, so that the bootstrap capacitors for both sides of the H-bridge can be fully charged. During this time the AHO and BHO gate outputs are held low continuously to insure that no shoot-through can occur during the nominal 400ns boot-strap refresh period. At the end of the boot strap refresh period the outputs respond normally to the state of the input control signals. A combination of bootstrap and charge-pumping techniques is used to power the circuitry which drives the upper halves of the H-Bridge. The bootstrap technique supplies the high instantaneous current needed for turning on the power devices, while the charge pump provides enough current to maintain bias voltage on the upper driver sections and MOSFETs. Since voltages on the upper bias supply pin float along with the source terminals of the upper power switches, the design of this family provides voltage capability for the upper bias supply terminals to 95VDC. The HIP4081A can drive lamp loads for automotive and industrial applications as shown in Figure 2. When inductive loads are switched, flyback diodes must be placed around the loads to protect the MOSFET switches. Many applications utilize the full bridge topology. These are voice coil motor drives, stepper and DC brush motors, audio amplifiers and even power supply inverters used in uninterruptable power supplies, just to name a few. The HIP408x family of devices is fabricated using a proprietary Intersil IC process which allows this family to switch at frequencies over 250kHz. Therefore the HIP408x family is ideal for use in various high frequency converter applications, such as motor drives, switching power amplifiers, and high-performance DC/DC converters. A typical application is shown in Figure 5.
80V
12V
HIP4081A
GND
GND
HIP4081A
GND
To provide accurate dead-time control for shoot-through avoidance and duty-cycle maximization, two resistors tied to pins HDEL and LDEL provide precise delay matching of upper and lower propagation delays, which are typically only 55ns. The HIP4081A H-Bridge driver has enough voltage margin to meet all SELV (UL classification for operation at 42.0V) applications and most Automotive applications where load dump capability over 65V is required. This capability makes the HIP408x family a more cost-effective solution for driving N-Channel power MOSFETs than either discrete solutions or other solutions relying on transformeror opto-coupling gate-drive techniques.
CAUTION: These devices are sensitive to electrostatic discharge; follow proper IC Handling Procedures. 1-888-INTERSIL or 1-888-468-3774 | Intersil (and design) is a registered trademark of Intersil Americas Inc. Copyright Intersil Americas Inc. 2007. All Rights Reserved All other trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners.
Input Logic
The HIP4081A has 4 inputs, ALI, BLI, AHI and BHI, which control the gate outputs of the H-Bridge. The DIS, Disable, pin disables gate drive to all H-Bridge MOSFETs regardless of the command states of the input pins above. The state of the bias voltage, VDD, also can disable all gate drive as discussed in the introduction. With external pull-ups on the high input terminals, AHI and BHI, the bridge can be totally controlled using only the lower input control pins, ALI and BLI, which can greatly simplify the external control circuitry needed to control the HIP4081A. As Table 1 suggests, the lower inputs ALI and BLI dominate the upper inputs. That is, when one of the lower inputs is high, it doesnt matter what the level of the upper input is, because the lower will turn on and the upper will remain off.
TABLE 1. INPUT LOGIC TRUTH TABLE INPUT ALI, BLI X 1 0 0 X AHI, BHI X X 1 0 X U/V X 0 0 0 1 DIS 1 0 0 0 X OUTPUT ALO, BLO 0 1 0 0 0 AHO, BHO 0 0 1 0 0
150
90
60
30
10
50
100
150
200
250
The input sensitivity of the DIS input pin is best described as enhanced TTL levels. Inputs which fall below 1.0V or rise above 2.5V are recognized, respectively, as low level or high level inputs.
VDD 16 AHI 7
80V
1 BHB HIP4081/HIP4081A 12V DIS PWM INPUT 2 BHI 3 DIS 4 VSS 5 BLI 6 ALI 7 AHI 8 HDEL 9 LDEL 10 AHB
BHO 20 BHS 19 BLO 18 BLS 17 VDD 16 VCC 15 ALS 14 ALO 13 AHS 12 AHO 11 12V LOAD
+ 6V
GND
Application Considerations
To successfully apply the HIP4081A the designer should address the following concerns: General Bias Supply Design Issues Upper Bias Supply Circuit Design Bootstrap Bias Supply Circuit Design
Driver Circuits
Each of the four output drivers are comprised of bipolar high speed NPN transistors for both sourcing and sinking gate charge to and from the MOSFET switches. In addition, the sink driver incorporates a parallel-connected N-Channel MOSFET to enable the gate of the power switch gate-source voltage to be brought completely to 0V. The propagation delays through the gate driver sub-circuits while driving 500pF loads is typically less than 10ns. Nevertheless, the gate driver design nearly eliminates all gate driver shoot-through which significantly reduces IC power dissipation. 4
A bootstrap capacitor 10 times larger than the equivalent gate-source capacitance of the driven MOSFET prevents the drop in bootstrap supply voltage from exceeding 10% of the bias supply voltage during turn-on of the MOSFET. When operating without the bootstrap diode the time required to replenish the charge on the bootstrap capacitor will be the same time as it would take to charge up the equivalent gate capacitance from 0V. This is because the charge lost on the bootstrap capacitor is exactly equal to the charge transferred to the gate capacitance during turn-on. Note that the very first time that the bootstrap capacitor is charged up, it takes much longer to do so, since the capacitor must be charged from 0V. With a bootstrap diode, the initial charging of the bootstrap supply is almost instantaneous, since the charge required comes from the low-side bias supply. Therefore, before any upper MOSFETs can initially be gated, time must be allowed for the upper bootstrap supply to reach full voltage. Without a bootstrap diode, this initial charge time can be excessive. If the switching cycle is assumed to begin when an upper MOSFET is gated on, then the bootstrap capacitor will undergo a charge withdrawal when the source driver connects it to the equivalent gate-source capacitance of the MOSFET. After this initial dump of charge, the quiescent current drain experienced by the bootstrap supply is infinitesimal. In fact, the quiescent supply current is more than offset by the charge pump current. The charge pump continuously supplies current to the bootstrap supply and eventually would charge the bootstrap capacitor and the MOSFET gate capacitance back to its initial value prior to the beginning of the switching cycle. The problem is that eventually may not be fast enough when the switching frequency is greater than a few hundred Hz.
Although not recommended, one may employ a bootstrap capacitor without a bootstrap diode. In this case the charge pump is used to charge up a capacitor whose value should be much larger than the equivalent gate-source capacitance of the driven MOSFET. A value of bootstrap capacitance about 10 times greater than the equivalent MOSFET gatesource capacitance is usually sufficient. Provided that sufficient time elapses before turning on the MOSFET again, 5
Just after the switch cycle begins and the charge transfer from the bootstrap capacitor to the gate capacitance is complete, the voltage on the bootstrap capacitor is the lowest that it will ever be during the switch cycle. The charge lost on the bootstrap capacitor will be very nearly equal to the charge transferred to the equivalent gate-source capacitance of the MOSFET as shown in Equation 1.
Q G = ( V BS1 V BS2 ) C BS (EQ. 1)
complete refreshing. Figure 7 illustrates the circuit path for refreshing the bootstrap capacitor.
HIGH VOLTAGE BUS VBUS TO B-SIDE OF H-BRIDGE
HIP 4081A AHB HIGH SIDE DRIVE AHO AHS DBS CBS
TO LOAD
VSS
NOTE: Only A-side of H-Bridge Is shown for simplicity. Arrows show bootstrap charging path. FIGURE 7. BOOTSTRAP CAPACITOR CHARGING PATH
As soon as the upper MOSFET is turned off, the voltage on the phase terminal (the source terminal of the upper MOSFET) begins its descent toward the negative rail of the high voltage bus. When the phase terminal voltage becomes less than the VCC voltage, refreshing (charging) of the bootstrap capacitor begins. As long as the phase voltage is below VCC refreshing continues until the bootstrap and VCC voltages are equal. The off-time of the upper MOSFET is dependent on the gate control input signals, but it can never be shorter than the dead-time delay setting, which is set by the resistors connecting HDEL and LDEL to VSS. If the bootstrap capacitor is not fully charged by the time the upper MOSFET turns on again, incomplete refreshing occurs. The designer must insure that the dead-time setting be consistent with the size of the bootstrap capacitor in order to guarantee
The bootstrap charging and discharging paths should be kept short, minimizing the inductance of these loops as mentioned in the section, Lower Bias Supply Design.
(EQ. 3)
where: IDR = Bootstrap diode reverse leakage current IQBS = Upper supply quiescent current QRR = Bootstrap diode reverse recovered charge 6
AN9405.5 December 11, 2007
driving small to medium size MOSFETs. Often when driving larger MOSFETs, such as RFP25N06 and above, it may be necessary to extend the dead-time adjustment available through adjustment of the RDEL resistors by adding a Schottky diode in parallel with an appropriately sized gate resistor. The gate resistor slows down the turn-on rate of the MOSFET, while the other MOSFET in each of the bridge legs can rapidly turn off through the Schottky diode. A Schottky diode is recommended in order to keep the drop across it to a minimum which also aids in holding off a MOSFET in the process of turning off during the time that the Miller Effect is trying to turn it back on. An added protection feature to keep the AHS and BHS pins from flying below ground (VSS) potential when an upper MOSFET turns off is achieved by adding a series resistor between the upper MOSFET source terminals and the AHS and BHS terminals of the driver, respectively. The value of this resistor can usually be in the order of several ohms. Using it, however, provides a means to tailor the turn-off time of the upper MOSFETs in an effort to control how hard the source drives down (and often past) the VSS potential. It is desirable in order to protect the HIP4081A driver that the extent of the undershoot of VSS does not exceed about 4V. Often, the source return resistor recommended above is sufficient to limit the current pulled out of the HIP4081A when the source of the upper MOSFET flys below VSS for a small period of time during the turn-off transient of the upper MOSFETs. Sometimes it is necessary in addition to adding the source return resistor to also add another diode, cathode to AHS and BHS, and anode(s) to VSS close to the VSS terminal of the HIP4081A.
Therefore a bootstrap capacitance of 0.033mF will result in less than a 1.0V droop in the voltage across the bootstrap capacitor during the turn-on period of either of the upper MOSFETs. If typical values of gate charge and bootstrap diode recovered charge are used rather than the maximum value, the voltage droop on the bootstrap supply will be only about 0.5V
of Equation 5 through Equation 7 to calculate total power dissipation is at best difficult. The equations do, however, allow users to understand the significance that MOSFET choice, switching frequency and bus voltage play in determining power dissipation. This knowledge can lead to corrective action when power dissipation becomes excessive. Fortunately, there is an easy method which can be used to measure the components of power dissipation rather than calculating them, except for the tiny tub capacitance component.
The high voltage level-shifter power dissipation is much more difficult to evaluate, although the equation which defines it is simple as shown in Equation 6. The difficulty arises from the fact that the level-shift current pulses, ION and IOFF, are not perfectly in phase with the voltage at the upper MOSFET source terminals, VSHIFT due to propagation delays within the IC. These time-dependent source voltages (or phase voltages) are further dependent on the gate capacitance of the driven MOSFETs and the type of load (resistive, capacitive or inductive) which determines how rapidly the MOSFETs turn on. For example, the level-shifter ION and IOFF pulses may come and go and be latched by the upper logic circuits before the phase voltage even moves. As a result, little level-shift power dissipation may result from the ION pulse, whereas the IOFF pulse may have a significant power dissipation associated with it, since the phase voltage generally remains high throughout the duration of the IOFF pulse.
I T - ( I ( t ) + I OFF ( t ) ) V SHIFT ( t ) dt PSHIFT = -T 0 ON
(EQ. 6)
Lastly, there is power dissipated within the IC due to charge transfer in and out of the capacitance between the upper driver circuits and VSS . Since it is a charge transfer phenomena, it closely resembles the form of Equation 5, except that the capacitance is much smaller than the equivalent gate-source capacitances associated with power MOSFETs. On the other hand, the voltages associated with the level-shifting function are much higher than the voltage changes experienced at the gate of the MOSFETs. The relationship is shown in Equation 7.
2 f PWM P TUB = C TUB V SHIFT
(EQ. 7)
The power associated with each of the two high voltage tubs in the HIP4081A derived from Equation 7 is quite small, due to the extremely small capacitance associated with these tubs. A tub is the isolation area which surrounds and isolates the high side circuits from the ground referenced circuits of the IC. The important point for users is that the power dissipated is linearly related to switching frequency and the square of the applied bus voltage. The tub capacitance in Equation 7 varies with applied voltage, VSHIFT, making its solution difficult, and the phase shift of the ION and IOFF pulses with respect to the phase voltage, VSHIFT, in Equation 6 are difficult to measure. Even the QIC in Equation 5 is not easy to measure. Hence the use 8
100K
12V
The low voltage charge transfer switching currents are shown in Figure 9. Figure 9 does not include the quiescent bias current component, which is the bias current which flows in the IC when switching is disabled. The quiescent bias current component is approximately 10mA. Therefore the quiescent power loss at 12V would be 120mW. Note that the bias current at a given switching frequency grows almost proportionally to the load capacitance, and the current is directly proportional to switching frequency, as previously suggested by Equation 5.
100K 100K
CL 12V -+
CL
IS
Figure 11 shows that the high voltage level-shift current varies directly with switching frequency. This result should not be surprising, since Equation 6 can be rearranged to show the current as a function of frequency, which is the reciprocal of the switching period, 1/T. Notice that the current increases somewhat with applied bus voltage. This is due to the finite output resistance of the level-shift transistors in the IC.
TABLE 2. LAYOUT PROBLEMS AND EFFECTS PROBLEM Bootstrap circuit path too long EFFECT Inductance may cause voltage on bootstrap capacitor to ring, slowing down refresh and/or causing an overvoltage on the bootstrap bias supply. Can cause ringing on the phase lead(s) causing BHS and AHS to ring excessively below the VSS terminal causing excessive charge extraction from the substrate and possible malfunction of the IC.
Lack of tight power circuit layout (long circuit path between upper/lower power switches)
FIGURE 11. HIGH VOLTAGE LEVEL-SHIFT CURRENT vs FREQUENCY AND BUS VOLTAGE
Excessive gate lead Can cause gate voltage ringing and lengths subsequent modulation of the drain current and impairs the effectiveness of the sink driver from minimizing the miller effect when an opposing switch is being rapidly turned on.
10
11
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For information regarding Intersil Corporation and its products, see www.intersil.com 12
AN9405.5 December 11, 2007
IN2
IN1
+12V Q1 R29 JMPR5 CONTROL LOGIC SECTION + C6 DRIVER SECTION CR2 HIP4080A/81A U1 C4 1 BHB BHO 20 2 HEN/BHI BHS 19 3 DIS BLO 18 4 V BLS 17 SS 5 OUT/BLI V 16 DD 6 IN+/ALI VCC 15 7 IN-/AHI ALS 14 8 HDEL 9 LDEL R33 10 JMPR4 3 IN-/AHI 2 CW CD4069UB 1 2 CW 1 R34 3 CR1 C3 CX C5 CY 10 AHB ALO 13 AHS 12 AHO 11 +12V R22 R21 1
POWER SECTION B+ 2 C8
3 1
Q3
13
1 U2 CD4069UB 13 12 2 U2 CD4069UB 5 U2 CD4069UB 11 6 U2 ENABLE IN I R32 3 U2 4 CD4069UB 9 U2 8 CD4069UB NOTES:
AN9405.5 December 11, 2007
JMPR1
OUT/BLI
3 L1 AO Q2 R23 1 3 Q4 R24 1 3 2 2 C1 L2 BO C2
JMPR2
IN+/ALI
JMPR3 HEN/BHI
R30
R31 COM
O ALS BLS
1. Device CD4069UB Pin 7 = COM, Pin 14 = +12V. 2. Components L1, L2, C1, C2, CX, CY, R30, R31, not supplied. Refer to application note for description of input logic operation to determine jumper locations for JMPR1 - JMPR4. FIGURE 13. HIP4080A/81AEVALZ EVALUATION PC BOARD SCHEMATIC