An9324 HIP4080
An9324 HIP4080
An9324 HIP4080
Application Note
March 2003
AN9324.4
Author: George E. Danz
Introduction
80V
12V
HIP4080
GND
GND
+80V
HIP408X
GND
CAUTION: These devices are sensitive to electrostatic discharge; follow proper IC Handling Procedures.
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Input Logic
The HIP4080 accepts inputs which control the output state of
the power MOSFET H-bridge and provides a comparator
output pin, OUT, which can provide compensation or
hysteresis.
The DIS, Disable, pin disables gate drive to all H-bridge
MOSFETs regardless of the command states of the input
pins, IN+, IN_ and HEN. The HEN, High Enable, pin
enables and disables gate drive to the two high side
MOSFETs. A high level on the HEN pin enables high side
gate drive as further determined by the states of the IN+ and
IN_ comparator input pins, since the IN+ and IN_ pins control
which diagonal pair of MOSFETs are gated. Upper drive can
be modulated through use of the HEN pin while drive to
diagonally opposing lower MOSFETs is continuous. To
simultaneously modulate both upper and lower drivers, HEN
is continuously held high while modulating the IN+ and IN_
pins.
Modulating only the upper switches can nearly halve the
switching losses in both the driver IC and in the lower
MOSFETs. The power dissipation saved at high switching
frequencies can be significant. Table 1 summarizes the input
control logic.
TABLE 1. INPUT LOGIC TRUTH TABLE
IN+ > IN-
DIS
HEN
ALO
AHO
BLO
X = DONT CARE
1 = HIGH/ON
BHO
0 = LOW/OFF
The input sensitivity of the DIS and HEN input pins are best
described as enhanced TTL levels. Inputs which fall below
1.0V or above 2.5V are recognized, respectively, as low level
or high level inputs. The IN+ and IN- comparator inputs have
a common mode input voltage range of 1.0V to VDD -1.5V,
whereas the offset voltage is less than 5mV. For more
information on the comparator specifications, see Intersil
Data Sheet HIP4080, File Number 3178.
80V
C1
R2
6V
R3
R1
IN
R4
1 BHB
BHO 20
2 HEN
BHS 19
3 DIS
BLO 18
4 VSS
BLS 17
5 OUT
VDD 16
6 IN+
VCC 15
7 IN-
ALS 14
8 HDEL
ALO 13
9 LDEL
AHS 12
10 AHB
AHO 11
12V
GND
Ro
A1
Ri
+
Ri
6V
Ro
Rsh
Rsh
GND
DRIVER
LEVEL SHIFT
AND LATCH
CBS
AHS
VDD 16
HEN
AHO
11
12
TURN-ON
DELAY
DBS
DIS
3
15
OUT
IN+
IN_
HDEL
LDEL
VSS
DRIVER
TURN-ON
DELAY
+
-
VCC
ALO
13
ALS
CBF
+12VDC
BIAS
SUPPLY
14
DEAD-TIME (ns)
120
90
60
30
10
50
100
150
200
250
Level-Translation
The lower power MOSFET gate drive signals from the
propagation delay and control circuits go to amplification
circuits which are described in more detail under the section
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.
Application Considerations
To successfully apply the HIP4080 the designer should
address the following concerns:
General Bias Supply Design Issues
Upper Bias Supply Circuit Design
Bootstrap Bias Supply Circuit Design
GATE
INITIATION
SIGNAL
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.
BOOT STRAP
VOLTAGE
(XHB - XHS)
Q G = ( V BS1 V BS2 ) C BS
GATE VOLTAGE
(XHO - XHS)
(EQ. 1)
where:
FIGURE 6.
(EQ. 2)
HIP 4080
TO B-SIDE
OF
H-BRIDGE
AHB
HIGH SIDE
DRIVE
AHO
AHS
DBS
CBS
TO LOAD
VCC
LOW SIDE
DRIVE
ALO
ALS
VSS
+VBIAS
LOWER
MOSFET
SUPPLY
BYPASS
CAPACITOR
(12VDC)
TO B-SIDE
OF H-BRIDGE
(EQ. 3)
where:
IDR = Bootstrap diode reverse leakage current
IQBS = Upper supply quiescent current
QRR = Bootstrap diode reverse recovered charge
QG = Turn-on gate charge transferred
fPWM = PWM operating frequency
VBS1 = Bootstrap capacitor voltage just after refresh
VBS2 = Bootstrap capacitor voltage just after upper turn on
CBS = Bootstrap capacitance
From a practical standpoint, the bootstrap diode reverse
leakage and the upper supply quiescent current are
negligible, particularly since the HIP4080s internal charge
pump continuously sources a minimum of about 30A. This
current more than offsets the leakage and supply current
components, which are fixed and not a function of the
switching frequency. The higher the switching frequency, the
lower is the charge effect contributed by these components
and their effect on bootstrap capacitor sizing is negligible, as
shown in Equation 3. Supply current due to the bootstrap
diode recovery charge component increases with switching
frequency and generally is not negligible. Hence, the need to
use a fast recovery diode. Diode recovery charge
information can usually be found in most vendor data sheets.
For example, if we choose a Intersil IRF520R power
MOSFET, the data book states a gate charge, Qg, of 12nC
typical and 18nC maximum, both at VDS = 12V. Using the
maximum value of 18nC the maximum charge we should
have to transfer will be less than 18nC.
Suppose a General Instrument UF4002, 100V, fast recovery,
1A, miniature plastic rectifier is used. The data sheet gives a
reverse recovery time of 25ns. Since the recovery current
waveform is approximately triangular, the recovery charge can
be approximated by taking the product of half the peak reverse
current magnitude (1A peak) and the recovery time duration
(25ns). In this case the recovery charge should be 12.5nC.
(EQ. 4)
(EQ. 5)
(EQ. 6)
(EQ. 7)
The power associated with each of the two high voltage tubs
in the HIP4080 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
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.
A
+
12V
20K
20K
100K
20
HEN 2
DIS 3
VSS
4
OUT
5
IN+
6
IN7
HDEL
8
LDEL
9
AHB
10
19
18
17
HIP4080
16
15
14
13
12
11
BHO
CL
BHS
BLO
CL
BLS
VDD
VCC
ALS
ALO
AHS
AHO
CL
CL
100K
CL = GATE LOAD CAPACITANCE
200
CL = 10,000pF
100
3,000pF
50
20
1,000pF
10
100pF
5
2
1
0.5
0.2
0.1
1
5
10
20
50
100 200
SWITCHING FREQUENCY (kHz)
500
1000
12V
1 BHB
BHO 20
2 HEN
BHS 19
3 DIS
BLO 18
4 VSS
5 OUT
BLS 17
6 IN+
VCC 15
100K
12V
VDD 16
7 IN-
ALS 14
8 HDEL
ALO 13
9 LDEL
AHS 12
10 AHB
CL
-+
CL
AHO 11
100K
A
IS
VBUS
(0VDC TO 80VDC)
1000
PROBLEM
500
200
EFFECT
100
50
20
10
80V
60V
40V
2
20V
1
1
10
20
50
100
200
500 1000
Layout Issues
In fast switching, high frequency systems, poor layout can
result in problems. It is crucial to consider PCB layout. The
10
EFFECT
Bootstrap capacitor(s)
too large
Smaller values of RGATE reduces turnon/off times and may cause excessive emi
problems. Incorporating a series gate
resistor with an anti-parallel diode can
solve EMI problem and add to the dead
time, reducing shoot-through tendency.
IN2 IN1
POWER SECTION
+12V
B+
2
+
C6
JMPR5
CONTROL LOGIC
SECTION
R29
12
CD4069UB
13
U2
12
JMPR2
IN+/ALI
CD4069UB
5
CD4069UB
11
U2
R34
R33
10
JMPR4
3
IN-/AHI
BLS 17
16
V
6 IN+/ALI
7 IN-/AHI
VCC 15
ALS 14
8 HDEL
9 LDEL
ALO 13
AHS 12
CW
2
1
3
AO
2
+12V
DD
R23
Q2
L2
C1
BO
C2
3
2
R24
CR1
Q4
C3
Q3
L1
ALO 11
2
CW
CD4069UB
4 V
SS
5 OUT/BLI
10 AHB
C8
Q1
CX
CY
R30
C5
R31
COM
ALS
BLS
O
VDD
VDD
ENABLE
NOTES:
TO DIS
56K
56K
2N3906
8.2V
U2
CD4069UB
100K
U2
I
0.1MFD
CD4069UB
U2
JMPR3
HEN/BHI
R22
C4
U1
1 BHB
BHO 20
2 HEN/BHI BHS 19
3 DIS
BLO 18
OUT/BLI
CR2
HIP4080/81
JMPR1
U2
R21
DRIVER SECTION
13
C1
R26
COM
C8
C6
R28
JMPR5
R29
C7
B+
CR2
AO
+
Q1
C4
U1
Q3
R22
BHO
JMPR1
JMPR2
JMPR3
JMPR4
I
O
IN2
ALS
ALO
C2
Q2
R23
Q4
R21
AHO
R34
CY
R31
R33
BLS
R30
CR1
CX
C3
C5
ALS
HDEL
LDEL
L2
BLO
BLS
L1
IN1
HIP4080/81
R24
DIS
U2
BO
R32
R27
+12V
GND
HIP4081
The HIP4081 has four inputs, one for each output. Outputs
ALO and BLO are directly controlled by input ALI and BLI. By
holding ALI and BLI low during start-up no shoot-through
conditions can occur. To set the latches to the upper drivers
such that the driver outputs, AHO and BHO, are off, the DIS
pin must be toggled from low to high after power is applied.
This is accomplished with a simple resistor divider, as shown
below in Figure 14. As the VDD/VCC supply ramps from zero
up, the DIS voltage is below its input threshold of 1.7V due to
the R1/R2 resistor divider. When VDD/VCC exceeds
approximately 9V to 10V, DIS becomes greater than the
input threshold and the chip disables all outputs. It is critical
that ALI and BLI be held low prior to DIS reaching its
R1
15K
ENABLE
R2
3.3K
HIP4080
The HIP4080 does not have an input protocol like the
HIP4081 that keeps both lower power MOSFETs off other
than through the DIS pin. IN+ and IN- are inputs to a
comparator that control the bridge in such a way that only
one of the lower power devices is on at a time, assuming DIS
is low. However, keeping both lower MOSFETs off can be
accomplished by controlling the lower turn-on delay pin,
LDEL, while the chip is enabled, as shown in Figure 15.
Pulling LDEL to VDD will indefinitely delay the lower turn-on
delays through the input comparator and will keep the lower
MOSFETs off. With the lower MOSFETs off and the chip
enabled, i.e., DIS = low, IN+ or IN- can be switched through
a full cycle, properly setting the upper driver outputs. Once
this is accomplished, LDEL is released to its normal
operating point. It is critical that IN+/IN- switch a full cycle
while LDEL is held high, to avoid shoot-through. This startup procedure can be initiated by the supply voltage and/or
the chip enable command by the circuit in Figure 15.
ENABLE
1 BHB
BHO 20
2 BHI
BHS 19
3 DIS
BLO 18
4 VSS
BLS 17
5 BLI
VDD 16
6 ALI
VCC 15
6 ALI
VCC 15
7 AHI
ALS 14
7 AHI
ALS 14
8 HDEL
ALO 13
8 HDEL
ALO 13
9 LDEL
AHS 12
9 LDEL
10 AHB
R1
15K
R2
3.3K
AHO 11
BHO 20
2 BHI
BHS 19
3 DIS
BLO 18
4 VSS
BLS 17
5 BLI
VDD 16
10 AHB
FIGURE 13.
14
1 BHB
AHS 12
AHO 11
VDD
VDD
ENABLE
56K
2N3906
56K
VDD
8.2V
RDEL
100K
100K
1 BHB
BHO 20
2 HEN
BHS 19
3 DIS
BLO 18
4 VSS
BLS 17
5 OUT
VDD 16
6 IN+
VCC 15
7 IN-
ALS 14
8 HDEL
ALO 13
9 LDEL
RDEL
0.1F
10 AHB
AHS 12
AHO 11
FIGURE 14.
Timing Diagrams
VDD
VDD
DIS
DIS
LDEL
1.7V
5.1V
t1
t1
NOTE:
=10ms
t2
NOTE:
1. ALI and/or BLI may be high after t1, whereupon the ENABLE pin
may also be brought high.
1. Between t1 and t2 the IN+ and IN- inputs must cause the OUT pin
to go through one complete cycle (transition order is not
important). If the ENABLE pin is low after the undervoltage
circuit is satisfied, the ENABLE pin will initiate the 10ms time
delay during which the IN+ and IN- pins must cycle at least once.
FIGURE 15.
FIGURE 16.
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15