ENGLISH 简体中文 日本語 한국어  

    로그인 | 회원가입 


   
 
키워드나 부품번호를 입력해주세요    




애플리케이션 노트 3326

PWM Sets Output of LCD/LED Driver

Abstract: The digital, pulse-width-modulation (PWM) output available from many microprocessors is based on an internal 8- or 16-bit counter and features a programmable duty cycle. It is suitable for adjusting the output of an LCD driver, a negative-voltage LED driver, or a current-controlled LED driver.

The digital, pulse-width-modulation (PWM) output available from many microprocessors is based on an internal 8- or 16-bit counter and features a programmable duty cycle. It is suitable for adjusting the output of an LCD driver (Figure 1), a negative-voltage LED driver (Figure 2), or a current-controlled LED driver (Figure 3).

Figure 1. LCD Driver with positive output voltage.
Figure 1. LCD Driver with positive output voltage.

Figure 2. LCD driver with negative output voltage.
Figure 2. LCD driver with negative output voltage.

Figure 3. Current-controlled LED driver.
Figure 3. Current-controlled LED driver.

The circuit consists simply of a PWM source, capacitor C, and resistors RD and RW. For CMOS outputs, you calculate the open-circuit output voltage as:

Equation 1.

where D is the PWM duty cycle and VDD is the logic supply voltage. The control circuit's output impedance is the sum of resistor values RW and RD:

Equation 2.

For the circuit of Figure 1, the output voltage (VOUT) is a function of the PWM average voltage (VCONT):

Equation 3.

where VREF is the reference voltage at the feedback input.

Bear in mind that the initial charge on filter capacitor C produces a turn-on transient. The capacitor forms a time constant with RCONT, which causes the output to initialize at a voltage higher than that intended. You can minimize this overshoot by scaling the value of RD as high as possible with respect to R1 and R2. As an alternative, the µP can disable the LCD until the PWM voltage stabilizes.

For Figure 2, the output voltage (VOUT) is a function of the PWM average voltage (VCONT):

Equation 4.

where VREF is the reference voltage at the feedback input.

For Figure 3, the output current (IOUT) is a function of the PWM average voltage (VCONT):

Equation 5.

where VREF is the reference voltage at the SET output and K is the current-scaling factor.

RD isolates the capacitor from the feedback loop in these PWM-adjustment methods. Assuming a stable voltage at the feedback point, the following equation defines the lowpass filter's cutoff frequency:

Equation 6.

where R = RW   RD. If RD >> RW, R ≈ RW. To minimize ripple voltage at the output, you should set the cutoff frequency at least two decades below the PWM frequency.

This design idea appeared in the May 27, 2004 issue of ED magazine.



자동 업데이트
관심 분야의 애플리케이션 노트가 나올 때 자동으로 업데이트를 원하십니까? 그렇다면 EE-Mail™을 신청하십시오.


We Want Your Feedback!



의견을 보내주세요!
위 내용이 도움이 되셨나요?
여러분의 의견을 기다립니다 — Maxim은 보내주신 정정이나 제안사항을 반영하고 있습니다. 이 페이지를 평가하고 의견을 보내주십시오.

 

다운로드, PDF 형식다운로드, PDF 형식 (62kB)
 AN3326, AN 3326, APP3326, Appnote3326, Appnote 3326

        •         •         •     개인정보보호 정책     •     법적 고지

    Copyright © 2009 by Maxim Integrated Products