Design Goals
Input Supply | Comparator Output Status (OUT) | Radiation |
---|
Operating Range | 26V ≤ Vin ≤ 30V | Vin < 26V or Vin > 30V | Total Ionizing Dose (TID) | SEL Immunity to LET |
20 V to 36 V | Vout = Vpu | Vout = GND | 100 krad(Si) | 85 MeV·cm2/mg |
Design Description
This application brief shows how to implement a voltage window comparator circuit, targeted to monitor a 28-V power rail, a spacecraft bus voltage commonly found in smaller aircraft. This wide single-supply window comparator circuit utilizes a dual open-collector comparator and 3 resistors to set the window voltage. A shunt regulator, TL1431-SP, is used to provide a reference voltage from the input voltage. Therefore, only a single power supply is utilized for the input portion of the circuit. The LM193AQML-SP was used for its open collector output, radiation specifications, and two channel count. Whenever the input voltage, Vin, is within the window of comparison (26 V to 30 V), the output of the circuit, VOUT, is high. Whenever Vin is outside of the window of comparison, the VOUT is pulled down to GND.
Design Notes
- Select a high-voltage comparator with an open collector output stage.
- Select a comparator with low input offset voltage
to optimize accuracy.
- Calculate values for the resistor divider so that VOUT goes high whenever V1 crosses VREF and goes low whenever V2 crosses VREF.
- Calculate R5 such that shunt regulator is within
sink current specification for entire operating range.
Design Steps
- Select a high-voltage comparator with an
open collector output stage that can operate at the highest possible supply voltage. In
this design, the highest input/supply voltage is 36 V.
- Determine an appropriate reference level,
VREF, for the window comparator. The TL1431-SP internal reference voltage,
2.5 V, was used for ease of calculations. If another reference voltage were to be used
with the TL1431-SP, a voltage divider would be needed between the cathode and anode of the
shunt regulator, with VREF between the resistors.
- Calculate the value of R5, the
resistor across VIN and VREF, by relating VREF to the
operating voltage range. Ensure that R5 is at a level where the shunt regulator
is sufficiently biased for the entire operating range. The current needed to bias the
TL1431-SP, IBias, has to be between 1 mA and 100 mA. A 4.7-kΩ resistor was
chosen as it kept the bias current within this range for the entire voltage operating
range.
Equation 1.
Equation 1.
Values between 350 Ω and 16 kΩ could be used in this design.
Consideration was made to minimize the bias current, yet give some buffer from the 1 mA
minimum specification. If VREF is seen to be noisy, a decoupling capacitor can
be placed between the node and GND to filter out the noise.
- The positive input to the top comparator,
V1, and the negative input to the bottom comparator, V2, can be
related to Vin through voltage division:
Equation 1.
The window
comparator trips when V1 passes VREF to output high, and again
when V2 passes VREF to output low. The comparator is low if
V1 is less than VREF. In this design, the window comparator will
trip high when Vin equals 26 V and trip low when Vin equals 30 V;
both while VREF equals 2.5 V.
Equation 1.
Equation 1.
- Solve both equations from step 4 for
(R1+R2+R3) and substitute one equation for the
other.
Equation 1.
Equation 1.
Equation 1.
Equation 1.
- Using the relationship obtained in step 5,
solve for a relationship between R1 and R2.
Equation 1.
Equation 1.
- Using the equations derived in steps 5 and
6, size resistors R1, R2, and R3 accordingly. For this
design, R2 was set to be 2.55 kΩ, which meant R1 and R3
would be 179.775 kΩ and 16.575 kΩ, respectively. The magnitude of these resistors were
chosen based off of the current consumption across the voltage divider (around 100 to 180
μA across the operating condition).
- Select a 5% tolerant resistor to act as the
pullup resistor, R4, from the output of the window comparator to
VPU. Size this component large enough to ensure the current sinked by the
comparator is not large, but small enough that the leakage current drawn by the comparator
output when high is not causing too large of a voltage drop.
- The values obtained in step 7 were adjusted
for 1% resistor tolerances to be 178 kΩ, 2.55 kΩ, and 16.5 kΩ for R1,
R2, and R3, respectively. Due to these changes, the window of
comparison was shifted to trip earlier for overvoltage conditions and later for
undervoltage conditions. In the DC Simulation Results, the window of comparison is between 25.8595 V
and 29.856 V.
Design Simulations
DC Simulation Results
Transient Simulation Results
References:
- SPICE Simulation File: http://www.ti.com/lit/zip/snom708.
Design Featured Comparator
LM193QML-SP |
---|
VS | 2 V to 36 V |
VinCM | 0 V to 34.5 V |
VOUT | Open-Collector |
VOS | 5 mV |
IQ | 200 μA/channel |
tPD(HL) | 2.50 μs |
TID Radiation Lot Acceptance Test (RLAT) / RHA | 100 krad(Si) |
TID Characterization (ELDRS-Free) | 100 krad(Si) |
SEL Immune to LET | SEL Immune (Bipolar process) |
http://www.ti.com/product/LM193QML-SP |
Design Featured Shunt Reference
TL1431-SP |
---|
VKA | 2.5 V to 36 V |
IKA | 1 mA to 100 mA |
VI(ref) | 2.5 V |
Initial Accuracy | 0.4% |
TID | 100 krad(Si) |
SEL Immune to LET | SEL Immune (Bipolar process) |
www.ti.com/product/TL1431-SP |
Design Alternate Comparator
|
TLV1704-SEP
|
LM139AQML-SP
|
VS |
2.2 V to 36 V |
2 V
to 36 V |
VinCM |
Rail-to-rail |
0 V to 34 V
|
VOUT |
Open-Collector, Rail-to-rail
|
Open-Collector |
VOS |
500 µV |
2 mV
|
IQ |
55 µA/channel |
200 μA/channel
|
tPD(HL) |
460 ns |
2.50 μs |
TID Characterization
(ELDRS-Free)
|
30 krad(Si) |
100 krad(Si)
|
TID Radiation Lot Acceptance
Test (RLAT) / RHA |
20 krad(Si) |
100 krad(Si)
|
SEL Immune to LET |
43 MeV·cm2/mg |
SEL
Immune (Bipolar process) |
|
https://www.ti.com/product/TLV1704-SEP |
https://www.ti.com/product/LM139AQML-SP
|