TPS92602-Q1
TPS92602-Q1 is Single- and Dual-Channel Automotive Headlight LED Driver manufactured by Texas Instruments.
- Part of the TPS92601-Q1 comparator family.
- Part of the TPS92601-Q1 comparator family.
Features
- 1 Qualified for Automotive Applications
- AEC-Q100 Qualified With the Following Results:
- Device Temperature Grade 1:
- 40°C to 125°C Ambient Operating Temperature
- Device HBM ESD Classification Level 2
- Device CDM ESD Classification Level C4B
- Input Voltage: 4 V- 40 V (45 V Abs. Max.)
- Output Voltage: 4 V- 75 V (80 V Abs. Max.)
- Fixed-Frequency Current-Mode Controller With Integrated Slope pensation
- Two Regulation Loops, Constant-Current Output and Constant-Voltage Output of Each Channel
- High-Side Current Sense:
- 150-m V or 300-m V Sense Voltage (EEPROM
Option)
- ±6-m V Offset (Achieving Approx. 4% or 2%
LED Current Accuracy)
- Output Voltage Sense, Internal Voltage
Reference: 2.2 V ±5%
- Integrated Low-Side NMOS-FET Driver: Peak
Gate-Drive Current Typ. 0.7 A
- Frequency Synchronization
- Both PWM Dimming and Analog Dimming
- Diagnostic:
- High-Side Current (LED Current) Available as Analog Output
- Open-LED and Short-to-GND Detection
- Shorted Output Protection
- Internal Under- and Overvoltage Lockout
2 Applications
- Automotive Headlight LED Driver
- High-Brightness LED Applications
3 Description
The TPS9260x-Q1 family of devices is a singlechannel and dual-channel high-side-current LED driver. With full protection and diagnostics, this family of devices is dedicated for and ideally suited to automotive front lighting. The base of each independent driver is a peak-current-mode boost controller. Each controller has two independent feedback loops, a current-feedback loop with a highside current-sensing shunt and a voltage-feedback loop with an external resistor-divider network. The controller delivers a constant output voltage or a constant output current. The connected load determines whether the device regulates a constant output current (if the circuit reaches the current setpoint earlier than voltage set-point) or a constant output voltage (if the circuit reaches the voltage setpoint is reached first, for example, in an open-load...