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  functional block diagram rev. c information furnished by analog devices is believed to be accurate and reliable. however, no responsibility is assumed by analog devices for its use, nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties which may result from its use. no license is granted by implication or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of analog devices. a low power, programmable temperature controller tmp01* ? analog devices, inc., 1995 one technology way, p.o. box 9106, norwood. ma 02062-9106, u.s.a. tel: 617/329-4700 fax: 617/326-8703 features C55 8 c to +125 8 c (C67 8 f to +257 8 f) operation 6 1.0 8 c accuracy over temperature (typ) temperature-proportional voltage output user programmable temperature trip points user programmable hysteresis 20 ma open collector trip point outputs ttl/cmos compatible single-supply operation (4.5 v to 13.2 v) low cost 8-pin dip and so packages applications over/under temperature sensor and alarm board level temperature sensing temperature controllers electronic thermostats thermal protection hvac systems industrial process control remote sensors general description the tmp01 is a temperature sensor which generates a voltage output proportional to absolute temperature and a control signal from one of two outputs when the device is either above or below a specific temperature range. both the high/low tempera- ture trip points and hysteresis (overshoot) band are determined by user-selected external resistors. for high volume production, these resistors are available on-board. the tmp01 consists of a bandgap voltage reference combined with a pair of matched comparators. the reference provides both a constant 2.5 v output and a voltage proportional to abso- lute temperature (vptat) which has a precise temperature co- efficient of 5 mv/k and is 1.49 v (nominal) at +25 c. the comparators compare vptat with the externally set tempera- ture trip points and generate an open-collector output signal when one of their respective thresholds has been exceeded. * protected by u.s. patent no. 5,195,827. hysteresis is also programmed by the external resistor chain and is determined by the total current drawn out of the 2.5 v refer- ence. this current is mirrored and used to generate a hysteresis offset voltage of the appropriate polarity after a comparator has been tripped. the comparators are connected in parallel, which guarantees that there is no hysteresis overlap and eliminates erratic transitions between adjacent trip zones. the tmp01 utilizes proprietary thin-film resistors in conjunc- tion with production laser trimming to maintain a temperature accuracy of 1 c (typ) over the rated temperature range, with excellent linearity. the open-collector outputs are capable of sinking 20 ma, enabling the tmp01 to drive control relays di- rectly. operating from a +5 v supply, quiescent current is only 500 m a (max). the tmp01 is available in the low cost 8-pin epoxy mini-dip and so (small outline) packages, and in die form. vptat v+ temperature sensor & voltage reference 2.5v sensor 1 2 3 4 8 7 6 5 hysteresis generator window comparator r1 tmp01 vref set high set low gnd r2 r3 under over
tmp01ep/fp, tmp01es/fsCspecifications rev. c C2C plastic dip and surface mount packages (v+ = +5 v, gnd = o v, C40 8 c t a +85 8 c unless otherwise noted) parameter symbol conditions min typ max units inputs set high, set low offset voltage v os 0.25 mv offset voltage drift tcv os 3 m v/ c input bias current, e i b 25 50 na input bias current, f i b 25 100 na output vptat 1 output voltage vptat t a = +25 c, no load 1.49 v scale factor tc vptat 5 mv/k temperature accuracy, e t a = +25 c, no load C1.5 0.5 1.5 c temperature accuracy, f t a = +25 c, no load C3 1.0 3 c temperature accuracy, e 10 c < t a < 40 c, no load 0.75 c temperature accuracy, f 10 c < t a < 40 c, no load 1.5 c temperature accuracy, e C40 c < t a < 85 c, no load C3.0 1 3.0 c temperature accuracy, f C40 c < t a < 85 c, no load C5.0 2 5.0 c temperature accuracy, e C55 c < t a < 125 c, no load 1.5 c temperature accuracy, f C55 c < t a < 125 c, no load 2.5 c repeatability error d vptat note 4 0.25 degree long term drift error notes 2 and 6 0.25 0.5 degree power supply rejection ratio psrr t a = +25 c, 4.5 v v+ 13.2 v 0.02 0.1 %/v output vref output voltage, e vref t a = +25 c, no load 2.495 2.500 2.505 v output voltage, f vref t a = +25 c, no load 2.490 2.500 2.510 v output voltage, e vref C40 c < t a < 85 c, no load 2.490 2.500 2.510 v output voltage, f vref C40 c < t a < 85 c, no load 2.485 2.500 2.515 v output voltage, e vref C55 c < t a < 125 c, no load 2.5 0.01 v output voltage, f vref C55 c < t a < 125 c, no load 2.5 0.015 v drift tc vref C10 ppm/ c line regulation 4.5 v v+ 13.2 v 0.01 0.05 %/v load regulation 10 m a i vref 500 m a 0.1 0.25 %/ma output current, zero hysteresis i vref 7 m a hysteresis current scale factor sf hys (note 1) 5.0 m a/ c turn-on settling time to rated accuracy 25 m s open-collector outputs over, under output low voltage v ol i sink = 1.6 ma 0.25 0.4 v output low voltage v ol i sink = 20 ma 0.6 v output leakage current i oh v+ = 12 v 1 100 m a fall time t hl see test load 40 ns power supply supply range v+ 4.5 13.2 v supply current i sy unloaded, +v = 5 v 400 500 m a supply current i sy unloaded, +v = 13.2 v 450 800 m a power dissipation p diss +v = 5 v 2.0 2.5 mw notes 1 k = c + 273.15. 2 guaranteed but not tested. 3 does not consider errors caused by heating due to dissipation of output load currents. 4 maximum deviation between +25 c readings after temperature cycling between C55 c and +125 c. 5 typical values indicate performance measured at t a = +25 c. 6 observed in a group sample over an accelerated life test of 500 hours at 150 c. specifications subject to change without notice. test load 20pf 1k w v+
tmp01 rev. c C3C tmp01fjCspecifications to-99 metal can package (v+ = +5 v, gnd = o v, C40 8 c t a +85 8 c unless otherwise noted) parameter symbol conditions min typ max units inputs set high, set low offset voltage v os 0.25 mv offset voltage drift tcv os 3 m v/ c input bias current, f i b 25 100 na output vptat 1 output voltage vptat t a = +25 c, no load 1.49 v scale factor tc vptat 5 mv/k temperature accuracy, f t a = +25 c, no load C3 1.0 3 c temperature accuracy, f 10 c < t a < 40 c, no load 1.5 c temperature accuracy, f C40 c < t a < 85 c, no load C5.0 2 5.0 c temperature accuracy, f C55 c < t a < 125 c, no load 2.5 c repeatability error d vptat note 4 0.25 degree long term drift error notes 2 and 6 0.25 0.5 degree power supply rejection ratio psrr t a = +25 c, 4.5 v v+ 13.2 v 0.02 0.1 %/v output vref output voltage, f vref t a = +25 c, no load 2.490 2.500 2.510 v output voltage, f vref C40 c < t a < 85 c, no load 2.480 2.500 2.520 v output voltage, f vref C55 c < t a < 125 c, no load 2.5 0.015 v drift tc vref C10 ppm/ c line regulation 4.5 v v+ 13.2 v 0.01 0.05 %/v load regulation 10 m a i vref 500 m a 0.1 0.25 %/ma output current, zero hysteresis i vref 7 m a hysteresis current scale factor sf hys (note 1) 5.0 m a/ c turn-on settling time to rated accuracy 25 m s open-collector outputs over, under output low voltage v ol i sink = 1.6 ma 0.25 0.4 v output low voltage v ol i sink = 20 ma 0.6 v output leakage current i oh v+ = 12 v 1 100 m a fall time t hl see test load, note 2 40 ns power supply supply range v+ 4.5 13.2 v supply current i sy unloaded, +v = 5 v 400 500 m a supply current i sy unloaded, +v = 13.2 v 450 800 m a power dissipation p diss +v = 5 v 2.0 2.5 mw notes 1 k = c + 273.15. 2 guaranteed but not tested. 3 does not consider errors caused by heating due to dissipation of output load currents. 4 maximum deviation between +25 c readings after temperature cycling between C55 c and +125 c. 5 typical values indicate performance measured at t a = +25 c. 6 observed in a group sample over an accelerated life test of 500 hours at 150 c. specifications subject to change without notice.
tmp01 rev. c C4C wafer test limits parameter symbol conditions min typ max units inputs set high, set low input bias current i b 100 na output vptat temperature accuracy t a = +25 c, no load 1.5 c output vref nominal value vref t a = +25 c, no load 2.490 2.510 v line regulation 4.5 v v+ 13.2 v 0.05 %/v load regulation 10 m a i vref 500 m a 0.25 %/ma open-collector outputs over, under output low voltage v ol i sink = 1.6 ma 0.4 mv output low voltage v ol i sink = 20 ma 1.0 v output leakage current i oh 100 m a power supply supply range v+ 4.5 13.2 v supply current i sy unloaded 600 m a notes electrical tests are performed at wafer probe to the limits shown. due to variations in assembly methods and normal yield loss, yield after packaging is not guaranteed for standard product dice. consult factory to negotiate specifications based on dice lot qualification through sample lot assembly and testing. dice characteristics die size 0.078 0.071 inch, 5,538 sq. mils (1.98 1.80 mm, 3.57 sq. mm) transistor count: 105 for additional dice ordering information, refer to databook. 8 7 6 5 1 2 3 4 4 1. vref 2. sethigh 3. setlow 4. gnd (two places) (connected to substrate) 5. vptat 6. under 7. over 8. v+ (v dd = +5.0 v, gnd = 0 v, t a = +25 8 c, unless otherwise noted)
tmp01 rev. c C5C absolute maximum ratings maximum supply voltage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C0.3 v to +15 v maximum input voltage (sethigh, setlow) . . . . . . . . . C0.3 v to [(v+) +0.3 v] maximum output current (vref, vptat) . . . . . . . . . 2 ma maximum output current (open collector outputs) . . 50 ma maximum output voltage (open collector outputs) . . . . 15 v operating temperature range . . . . . . . . . . . . C55 c to +150 c dice junction temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +150 c storage temperature range . . . . . . . . . . . . C 65 c to +150 c lead temperature (soldering, 60 sec) . . . . . . . . . . . . . +300 c package type q ja q jc units 8-pin plastic dip (p) 103 1 43 c/w 8-lead soic (s) 158 2 43 c/w 8-lead to-99 can (j) 150 1 18 c/w notes 1 q ja is specified for device in socket (worst case conditions). 2 q ja is specified for device mounted on pcb. caution 1. stresses above those listed under absolute maximum rat- ings may cause permanent damage to the device. this is a stress rating only and functional operation at or above this specification is not implied. exposure to the above maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. 2. digital inputs and outputs are protected, however, permanent damage may occur on unprotected units from high energy electrostatic fields. keep units in conductive foam or packag- ing at all times until ready to use. use proper antistatic han- dling procedures. 3. remove power before inserting or removing units from their sockets. ordering guide temperature package package model/grade range l description option tmp01ep xind plastic dip n-8 tmp01fp xind plastic dip n-8 tmp01es xind soic so-8 TMP01FS xind soic so-8 tmp01fj 2 xind to-99 can h-08a tmp01gbc +25 c die notes 1 xind = C40 c to +85 c. 2 consult factory for availability of mil/883 version in to-99 can. general description the tmp01 is a very linear voltage-output temperature sensor, with a window comparator that can be programmed by the user to activate one of two open-collector outputs when a predeter- mined temperature setpoint voltage has been exceeded. a low drift voltage reference is available for setpoint programming. the temperature sensor is basically a very accurately tempera- ture compensated, bandgap-type voltage reference with a buff- ered output voltage proportional to absolute temperature (vptat), accurately trimmed to a scale factor of 5 mv/k. see the applications information following. the low drift 2.5 v reference output vref is easily divided ex- ternally with fixed resistors or potentiometers to accurately es- tablish the programmed heat/cool setpoints, independent of temperature. alternatively, the setpoint voltages can be supplied by other ground referenced voltage sources such as user- programmed dacs or controllers. the high and low setpoint voltages are compared to the temperature sensor voltage, thus creating a two-temperature thermostat function. in addition, the total output current of the reference (i vref ) determines the magnitude of the temperature hysteresis band. the open collec- tor outputs of the comparators can be used to control a wide va- riety of devices. vptat v+ enable tmp01 vref set high set low gnd 7 8 1 2 3 4 6 hysteresis current current mirror i hys voltage reference and sensor 1k w hysteresis voltage 5 temperature output window comparator under over figure 1. detailed block diagram
tmp01 rev. c C6C temperature hysteresis the temperature hysteresis is the number of degrees beyond the original setpoint t emperature that must be sensed by the tmp01 before the setpoint comparator will be reset and the output dis- abled. figure 2 shows the hysteresis profile. the hysteresis is programmed by the user by setting a specific load on the refer- ence voltage output vref. this output current i vref is also called the hysteresis current, which is mirrored internally and fed to a buffer with an analog switch. lo hi output voltage over, under temperature hysteresis low hysteresis high = hysteresis low t setlow t sethigh hysteresis high figure 2. tmp01 hysteresis profile after a temperature setpoint has been exceeded and a compara- tor tripped, the buffer output is enabled. the output is a cur- rent of the appropriate polarity which generates a hysteresis offset voltage across an internal 1000 w resistor at the compara- tor input. the comparator output remains on until the volt- age at the comparator input, now equal to the temperature sensor voltage vptat summed with the hysteresis offset, has returned to the programmed setpoint voltage. the comparator then returns low, deactivating the open-collector output and disabling the hysteresis current buffer output. the scale factor for the programmed hysteresis current is: i hys = i vref = 5 m a / c + 7 m a thus since vref = 2.5 v, with a reference load resistance of 357 k w or greater (output current 7 m a or less), the temperature setpoint hysteresis will be zero degrees. see the temperature programming discussion below. larger values of load resistance will only decrease the output current below 7 m a and will have no effect on the operation of the device. the amount of hyster- esis is determined by selecting a value of load resistance for vref, as shown below. programming the tmp01 in the basic fixed-setpoint application utilizing a simple resistor ladder voltage divider, the desired temperature setpoints are programmed in the following sequence: 1. select the desired hysteresis temperature. 2. calculate the hysteresis current i vref . 3. select the desired setpoint temperatures. 4. calculate the individual resistor divider ladder values needed to develop the desired comparator setpoint voltages at sethigh and setlow. the hysteresis current is readily calculated, as shown. for example, for 2 degrees of hysteresis, i vref = 17 m a. next, the setpoint voltages v sethigh and v setlow are determined using the vptat scale factor of 5 mv/k = 5 mv/( c + 273.15), which is 1.49 v for +25 c. we then calculate the divider resis- tors, based on those setpoints. the equations used to calculate the resistors are: v sethigh = (t sethigh + 273.15)(5 mv / c ) v setlow = (t setlow + 273.15) (5 mv / c ) r 1 ( k w ) = (v v ref C v sethigh )/i vref = = (2.5 v C v sethigh )/i vref r 2 ( k w ) = (v sethigh C v setlow )/i vref r 3 ( k w ) = v setlow /i vref 1 2 3 4 8 7 6 5 (v vref ?v sethigh )/i vref = r1 tmp01 (v sethigh ?v setlow )/i vref = r2 v setlow /i vref = r3 v sethigh v setlow v vref = 2.5v i vref gnd v+ vptat under over figure 3. tmp01 setpoint programming the total r1 + r2 + r3 is equal to the load resistance needed to draw the desired hysteresis current from the reference, or i vref . the formulas shown above are also helpful in understanding the calculation of temperature setpoint voltages in circuits other than the standard two-temperature thermostat. if a setpoint function is not needed, the appropriate comparator should be disabled. sethigh can be disabled by tying it to v+, set- low by tying it to gnd. e ither output can be left uncon nected. 218 248 273 298 323 348 373 398 ?5 ?5 ?8 0 25 50 75 100 125 ?7 ?5 0 32 50 77 100 150 200 212 257 vptat k c f 1.09 1.24 1.365 1.49 1.615 1.74 1.865 1.99 figure 4. temperaturevptat scale
tmp01 rev. c C7C understanding error sources the accuracy of the vptat sensor output is well characterized and specified, however preserving this accuracy in a heating or cooling control system requires some attention to minimizing the various potential error sources. the internal sources of setpoint programming error include the initial tolerances and temperature drifts of the reference voltage vref, the setpoint comparator input offset voltage and bias current, and the hys- teresis current scale factor. when evaluating setpoint program- ming errors, remember that any vref error contribution at the comparator inputs is reduced by the resistor divider ratios. the comparator input bias current (inputs sethigh, setlow) drops to less than 1 na (typ) when the comparator is tripped. this can account for some setpoint voltage error, equal to the change in bias current times the effective setpoint divider ladder resistance to ground. the thermal mass of the tmp01 package and the degree of thermal coupling to the surrounding circuitry are the largest factors in determining the rate of thermal settling, which ulti- mately determines the rate at which the desired temperature measurement accuracy may be reached. thus, one must allow sufficient time for the device to reach the final temperature. the typical thermal time constant for the plastic package is approximately 140 seconds in still air! therefore, to reach the final temperature accuracy within 1%, for a temperature change of 60 degrees, a settling time of 5 time constants, or 12 min- utes, is necessary. the setpoint comparator input offset voltage and zero hyster- esis current affect setpoint error. while the 7 m a zero hysteresis current allows the user to program the tmp01 with moderate resistor divider values, it does vary somewhat from device to de- vice, causing slight variations in the actual hysteresis obtained in practice. comparator input offset directly impacts the pro- grammed setpoint voltage and thus the resulting hysteresis band, and must be included in error calculations. external error sources to consider are the accuracy of the pro- gramming resistors, grounding error voltages, and the overall problem of thermal gradients. the accuracy of the external programming resistors directly impacts the resulting setpoint accuracy. thus in fixed-temperature applications the user should select resistor tolerances appropriate to the desired programming accuracy. resistor temperature drift must be taken into account also. this effect can be minimized by select- ing good quality components, and by keeping all components in close thermal proximity. applications requiring high measure- ment accuracy require great attention to detail regarding thermal gradients. careful circuit board layout, component placement, and protection from stray air currents are necessary to minimize common thermal error sources. also, the user should take care to keep the bottom of the setpoint programming divider ladder as close to gnd (pin 4) as possible to minimize errors due to ir voltage drops and cou- pling of external noise sources. in any case, a 0.1 m f capacitor for power supply bypassing is always recommended at the chip. safety considerations in heating and cooling system design designers should anticipate potential system fault conditions which may result in significant safety hazards which are outside the control of and cannot be corrected by the tmp01-based circuit. governmental and industrial regulations regarding safety requirements and standards for such designs should be observed where applicable. 20 5 015 10 supply voltage ?volts supply current ? m a 550 350 400 375 450 425 475 500 525 +25 c +125 c +85 c ?5 c ?0 c 5.0 3.0 4.5 3.5 4.0 ?5 125 ?0 100 75 50 25 0 ?5 temperature ? c minimum supply voltage ?volts figure 6. minimum supply voltage vs. temperature figure 5. supply current vs. supply voltage
tmp01 rev. c C8C ?5 125 ?0 100 75 50 25 0 ?5 +2.0 ?.0 +1.0 ?.0 0 +1.5 +0.5 ?.5 ?.5 temperature ? c vptat error ? c v+ = +5v figure 7. vptat accuracy vs. temperature 2.508 2.496 2.500 2.504 2.506 2.502 2.498 ?5 125 ?0 100 75 50 25 0 ?5 v+ = +5v temperature ? c vref ?volts figure 8. vref accuracy vs. temperature 6.0 0 3.0 1.0 2.0 5.0 4.0 50 10 0 40 30 20 v c = +15v v+ = +5v t a = +25 c i c ?ma v ce ?volts figure 9. open-collector output ( over , under ) satura- tion voltage vs. output current 2.510 2.490 2.496 2.492 2.494 2.502 2.498 2.500 2.504 2.506 2.508 1000 200 0 800 400 600 x + 3 s x x ?3 s curves not normalized extrapolated from operating life data t = hours of operation at 125 c; v+ = +5v vref ?volts figure 10. vref long term drift accelerated by burn-in 100 1k 1m 100k 10k ?0 100 40 20 0 60 80 frequency ?hz psrr ?db v+ = +5v i vref = 10 m a figure 11. vref power supply rejection vs. frequency temperature ? c 1.0 0.1 0.01 ?5 ?0 125 100 75 50 25 0 ?5 offset voltage ?mv v+ = +5v i vref = 7.5 m a figure 12. set high, set low input offset voltage vs. temperature
tmp01 rev. c C9C 8 0 2 1 4 3 5 6 7 ?.4 ?.24 ?.32 0 ?.08 ?.16 0.16 0.08 offset ?mv number of devices v+ = +5v t a = +25 c i vref = 5 m a figure 13. comparator input offset distribution 7.2 6.2 7 6.8 6.6 6.4 8 7.8 7.6 7.4 reference current ? m a number of devices 10 0 2 1 4 3 5 6 7 8 9 v+ = +5v t a = +25 c figure 14. zero hysteresis current distribution applications information self-heating effects in some applications the user should consider the effects of self- heating due to the power dissipated by the open-collector out- puts, which are capable of sinking 20 ma continuously. under full load, the tmp01 open-collector output device is dissipating p diss = 0.6 v . 020 a = 12 mw which in a surface-mount so package accounts for a tempera- ture increase due to self-heating of d t = p diss q ja = .012 w 158 c/w = 1.9 c. this will of course directly affect the accuracy of the tmp01 and will for example cause the device to switch the heating out- put off 2 degrees early. alternatively, bonding the same package to a moderate heatsink limits the self-heating effect to approximately d t = p diss q jc = .012 w 43 c/w = 0.52 c. which is a much more tolerable error in most systems. the vref and vptat outputs are also capable of delivering suffi- cient current to contribute heating effects and should not be ignored. buffering the voltage reference as mentioned before, the reference output vref is used to gen- erate the temperature setpoint programming voltages for the tmp01 and also is used to determine the hysteresis temperature band by the reference load current i vref . the on-board output buffer amplifier is typically capable of 500 m a output drive into as much as 50 pf load (max). exceeding this load will affect the accuracy of the reference voltage, could cause thermal sensing errors due to dissipation, and may induce oscillations. selection of a low drift buffer functioning as a voltage follower with high input impedance will ensure optimal reference accuracy, and will not affect the programmed hysteresis current. amplifiers which offer the low drift, low power consumption, and low cost appropriate to this application include the op295, and members of the op90, op97, op177 families, and others as shown in the following applications circuits. with excellent drift and noise characteristics, vref offers a good voltage reference for data acquisition and transducer exci- tation applications as well. output drift is typically better than C10 ppm/ c, with 315 nv/ ? hz (typ) noise spectral density at 1 khz. preserving accuracy over wide temperature range operation the tmp01 is un ique in offering both a wide-range temperature sensor and the associated detection circuitry needed to imple- ment a complete thermostatic control function in one mono- lithic device. while the voltage reference, setpoint comparators, and output buffer amplifiers have been carefully compensated to maintain accuracy over the specified temperature range, the user has an additional task in maintaining the accuracy over wide op- erating temperature ranges in this application. since the tmp01 is both sensor and control circuit, in many applications it is pos- sible that the external components used to program and inter- face the device may be subjected to the same temperature extremes. thus it may be necessary to locate components in close thermal proximity to minimize large temperature differen- tials, and to account for thermal drift errors where appropriate, such as resistor matching tempcos, amplifier error drift, and the like. circuit design with the tmp01 requires a slightly dif- ferent perspective regarding the thermal behavior of electronic components. thermal response time the time required for a temperature sensor to settle to a speci- fied accuracy is a function of the thermal mass of the sensor, and the thermal conductivity between the sensor and the object being sensed. thermal mass is often considered equivalent to capacitance. thermal conductivity is commonly specified using the symbol q, and can be thought of as the reciprocal of thermal resistance. it is commonly specified in units of degrees per watt of power transferred across the thermal joint. thus, the time re- quired for the tmp01 to settle to the desired accuracy is depen- dent on the package selected, the thermal contact established in that particular application, and the equivalent power of the heat source. in most applications, the settling time is probably best determined empirically.
tmp01 rev. c C10C switching loads with the open-collector outputs in many temperature sensing and control applications some type of switching is required. whether it be to turn on a heater when the temperature goes below a minimum value or to turn off a motor that is overheating, the open-collector outputs over and under can be used. for the majority of applications, the switches used need to handle large currents on the order of 1 amp and above. because the tmp01 is accurately measuring tempera- ture, the open-collector outputs should handle less than 20 ma of current to minimize self-heating. clearly, the over-temp and under-temp outputs should not drive the equipment directly. instead, an external switching device is required to handle the large currents. some examples of these are relays, power mosfets, thyristors, igbts, and darlingtons. figure 15 shows a variety of circuits where the tmp01 controls a switch. the main consideration in these circuits, such as the relay in figure 15a, is the current required to activate the switch. motor shutdown 2604-12-311 coto in4001 or equiv. +12v r1 r2 r3 temperature sensor & voltage reference 1 2 3 4 7 hysteresis generator window comparator tmp01 vptat vref 8 5 6 figure 15a. reed relay drive it is important to check the particular relay you choose to ensure that the current needed to activate the coil does not exceed the tmp01s recommended output current of 20 ma. this is easily determined by dividing the relay coil voltage by the specified coil resistance. keep in mind that the inductance of the relay will create large voltage spikes that can damage the tmp01 out- put unless protected by a commutation diode across the coil, as shown. the relay shown has a contact rating of 10 watts maxi- mum. if a relay capable of handling more power is desired, the larger contacts will probably require a commensurately larger coil, with lower coil resistance and thus higher trigger current. as the contact power handling capability increases, so does the current needed for the coil. in some cases an external driving transistor should be used to remove the current load on the tmp01 as explained in the next section. power fets are popular for handling a variety of high current dc loads. figure 15b shows the tmp01 driving a p-channel mosfet transistor for a simple heater circuit. when the out- put transistor turns on, the gate of the mosfet is pulled down to approximately 0.6 v, turning it on. for most mosfets a gate-to-source voltage or vgs on the order of C2 v to C5 v is suf- ficient to turn the device on. figure 15c shows a similar circuit for turning on an n-channel mosfet, except that now the gate to source voltage is positive. because of this reason an external transistor must be used as an inverter so that the mosfet will turn on when the under temp output pulls down. nc = no connect nc nc irfr9024 or equiv. heating element 2.4k w (12v) 1.2k w (6v) 5% v+ r1 r2 r3 temperature sensor & voltage reference 1 2 3 4 7 hysteresis generator window comparator tmp01 vptat vref 8 5 6 figure 15b. driving a p-channel mosfet irf130 nc = no connect nc nc 2n1711 heating element v+ r1 r2 r3 4.7k w 4.7k w temperature sensor & voltage reference 1 2 3 4 hysteresis generator window comparator tmp01 vptat vref 7 8 5 6 figure 15c. driving a n-channel mosfet isolated gate bipolar transistors (igbt) combine many of the benefits of power mosfets with bipolar transistors, and are used for a variety of high power applications. because igbts have a gate similar to mosfets, turning on and off the devices is relatively simple as shown in figure 15d. the turn on voltage for the igbt shown (irgbc40s) is between 3.0 and 5.5 volts. this part has a continuous collector current rating of 50 a and a maximum collector to emitter voltage of 600 v, enabling it to work in very demanding applications. irgbc40s nc = no connect nc nc 2n1711 v+ r1 r2 r3 4.7k w 4.7k w temperature sensor & voltage reference 1 2 3 4 hysteresis generator window comparator tmp01 vptat vref 7 8 5 6 motor control figure 15d. driving an igbt
tmp01 rev. c C11C the last class of high power devices discussed here are thyris- tors, which includes scrs and triacs. triacs are a useful alter- native to relays for switching ac line voltages. the 2n6073a shown in figure 15e is rated to handle 4a (rms). the optoisolated moc3011. triac shown features excellent electri- cal isolation from the noisy ac line and complete control over the high power triac with only a few additional components. nc = no connect nc nc v+ = 5v r1 r2 r3 300 w 150 w temperature sensor & voltage reference 1 2 3 4 hysteresis generator window comparator tmp01 vptat vref 7 8 5 6 moc3011 1 2 34 5 6 load ac 2n6073a figure 15e. controlling the 2n6073a triac high current switching as mentioned above, internal dissipation due to large loads on the tmp01 outputs will cause some temperature error due to self-heating. external transistors remove the load from the tmp01, so that virtually no power is dissipated in the internal transistors and no self-heating occurs. figure 16 shows a few ex- amples using external transistors. the simplest case, using a single transistor on the output to invert the output signal is shown in figure 16a. when the open-collector of the tmp01 turns on and pulls the output down, the external transistor q1s base will be pulled low, turning off the transistor. another transistor can be added to reinvert the signal as shown in figure 16b. now, when the output of the tmp01 is pulled down, the first transistor, q1, turns off and its collector goes high, which turns q2 on, pulling its collector low. thus, the output taken from the collector of q2 is identical to the output of the tmp01. by picking a transistor that can accommodate large amounts of current, many high power devices can be switched. 2n1711 v+ r1 r2 r3 4.7k w temperature sensor & voltage reference 1 2 3 4 hysteresis generator window comparator tmp01 vptat vref 7 8 5 6 i c q1 figure 16a. an external resistor minimizes self-heating q1 q2 2n1711 v+ r1 r2 r3 4.7k w temperature sensor & voltage reference 1 2 3 4 hysteresis generator window comparator tmp01 vptat vref 7 8 5 6 i c 4.7k w 2n1711 figure 16b. second transistor maintains polarity of tmp01 output an example of a higher power transistor is a standard darling- ton configuration as shown in figure 16c. the part chosen, tip-110, can handle 2a continuous which is more than enough to control many high power relays. in fact the darlington itself can be used as the switch, similar to mosfets and igbts. motor switch relay +12v 2n1711 v+ r1 r2 r3 4.7k w temperature sensor & voltage reference 1 2 3 4 hysteresis generator window comparator tmp01 vptat vref 7 8 5 6 i c 4.7k w tip-110 figure 16c. darlington transistor can handle large currents
tmp01 rev. c C12C buffering the temperature output pin the vptat sensor output is a low impedance dc output volt- age with a 5 mv/k temperature coefficient, and is useful in a number of measurement and control applications. in many ap- plications, this voltage needs to be transmitted to a central loca- tion for processing. the buffered vptat voltage output is capable of 500 m a drive into 50 pf (max). as mentioned in the discussion above regarding buffering circuits for the vref out- put, it is useful to consider external amplifiers for interfacing vptat to external circuitry to ensure accuracy, and to mini- mize loading which could create dissipation-induced tempera- ture sensing errors. an excellent general-purpose buffer circuit using the op177 is shown in figure 17 which is capable of driv- ing over 10 ma, and will remain stable under capacitive loads of up to 0.1 m f. other interfacing ideas are shown below. differential transmitter in noisy industrial environments, it is difficult to send an accu- rate analog signal over a significant distance. however, by send- ing the signal differentially on a wire pair, these errors can be significantly reduced. since the noise will be picked up equally on both wires, a receiver with high common-mode input rejec- tion can be used to cancel out the noise very effectively at the figure 17. buffer vptat to handle difficult loads receiving end. figure 18 shows two amplifiers being used to send the signal differentially, and an excellent differential receiver, the amp03, which features a common-mode rejection ratio of 95 db at dc and very low input and drift errors. 0.1 m f v+ v c l v out vptat op177 v+ r1 r2 r3 100 w temperature sensor & voltage reference 1 2 3 4 hysteresis generator window comparator tmp01 vptat vref 7 8 5 6 10k w v out vptat 1/2 op297 v+ r1 r2 r3 50 w temperature sensor & voltage reference 1 2 3 4 hysteresis generator window comparator tmp01 vptat vref 7 8 5 6 10k w v+ v 10k w 1/2 op297 10k w amp03 50 w figure 18. send the signal differentially for noise immunity
tmp01 rev. c C13C 4 ma-20 ma current loop another, very common method of transmitting a signal over long distances is to use a 4 ma-20 ma loop, as shown in fig- ure 19. an advantage of using a 4 ma-20 ma loop is that the accuracy of a current loop is not compromised by voltage drops across the line. one requirement of 4 ma-20 ma circuits is that the remote end must receive all of its power from the loop, meaning that the circuit must consume less than 4 ma. operat- ing from +5 v, the quiescent current of the tmp01 is 500 m a max, and the op90s is 20 m a max, totaling less than 4 ma. although not shown, the open collector outputs and tempera- ture setting pins can be connected to do any local control of switching. the current is proportional to the voltage on the vptat out- put, and is calibrated to 4 ma at a temperature of C40 c, to 20 ma for +85 c. the main equation governing the operation of this circuit gives the current as a function of vptat: i out = 1 r 6 vptat r 5 r 2 vref r 3 r 3 + r 1 1 + r 5 r 2 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? the resulting temperature coefficient of the output current is 128 m a/ c. 5 8 1 4 r l 2n1711 vref gnd v+ vptat tmp01 r5 100k w r2 39.2k w 7 6 4 3 2 op90 r1 243k w r3 100k w r6 100 w 4?0ma +5v to +13.2v figure 19. 4-20 ma current loop to determine the resistor values in this circuit, first note that vref remains constant over temperature. thus the ratio of r5 over r2 must give a variation of i out from 4 ma to 20 ma as vptat varies from 1.165 v at C40 c to 1.79 v at +85 c. the absolute value of the resistors is not important, only the ratio. for convenience, 100 k w is chosen for r5. once r2 is calcu- lated, the value of r3 and r1 is determined by substituting 4 ma for i out and 1.165 v for vptat and solving. the final values are shown in the circuit. the op90 is chosen for this cir- cuit because of its ability to operate on a single supply and its high accuracy. for initial accuracy, a 10 k w trim potentiometer can be included in series with r3, and the value of r3 lowered to 95 k w . the potentiometer should be adjusted to produce an output current of 12.3 ma at 25 c. temperature-to-frequency converter another common method of transmitting analog information is to convert a voltage to the frequency domain. this is easily done with any of the low cost monolithic voltage-to-frequency converters (vfcs) available, which feature a robust, open-col- lector digital output. a digital signal is very immune to noise and voltage drops because the only important information is the frequency. as long as the conversions between temperature and frequency are done accurately, the temperature data can be suc- cessfully transmitted. a simple circuit to do this combines the tmp01 with an ad654 vfc, as shown in figure 20. the ad654 outputs a square wave that is proportional to the dc input voltage accord- ing to the following equation: f out = v in 10 ( r 1 + r 2) c t by simply connecting the vptat output to the input of the ad654, the 5 mv/ c temperature coefficient gives a sensitivity of 25 hz/ c, centered around 7.5 khz at 25 c. the trimming resistor r2 is needed to calibrate the absolute accuracy of the ad654. for more information on that part, please consult the ad654 data sheet. finally, the ad650 can be used to accu- rately convert the frequency back to a dc voltage on the receiv- ing end. 4 3 7 6 8 1 2 5 ad654 vptat v+ r1 r2 r3 temperature sensor & voltage reference 1 2 3 4 hysteresis generator window comparator tmp01 vptat vref 7 8 5 6 r1 1.8k w osc v+ f out c t 0.1 m f 5k w v+ r2 500 w figure 20. temperature-to-frequency converter
tmp01 rev. c C14C figure 21. isolation amplifier isolation amplifier in many industrial applications the sensor is located in an envi- ronment that needs to be electrically isolated from the central processing area. figure 21 shows a simple circuit that uses an 8-pin optoisolator (il300xc) that can operate across a 5,000 v barrier. ic1 (an op290 single-supply amplifier) is used to drive the led connected between pins 1 to 2. the feedback actually comes from the photodiode connected from pins 3 to 4. the op290 drives the led such that there is enough current gener- ated in the photodiode to exactly equal the current derived from the vptat voltage across the 470 k w resistor. on the receiving end, an op90 converts the current from the second photodiode to a voltage through its feedback resistor r2. note that the other amplifier in the dual op290 is used to buffer the 2.5 v reference voltage of the tmp01 for an accurate, low drift led bias level without affecting the programmed hysteresis current. a ref43 (a precision 2.5 v reference) provides an accurate bias level at the receiving end. to understand this circuit, it helps to examine the overall equa- tion for the output voltage. first, the current (i1) in the photo- diode is set by: i 1 = 2.5 v vptat 470 k w note that the il300xc has a gain of 0.73 (typical) with a min and max of 0.693 and 0.769 respectively. since this is less than 1.0, r2 must be larger than r1 to achieve overall unity gain. to show this the full equation is: v out = 2. 5 v i 2 r 2 = 2. 5 v 0.7 2. 5 v vptat 470 k w ? ? ? ? 644 k w= vptat a trim is included for r2 to correct for the initial gain accuracy of the il300xc. to perform this trim, simply adjust for an out- put voltage equal to vptat at any particular temperature. for example, at room temperature, vptat = 1.49 v, so adjust r2 until v out = 1.49 v as well. both the ref43 and the op90 operate from a single supply, and contribute no significant error due to drift. in order to avoid the accuracy trim, and to reduce board space, compl ete isolation amplifiers are available, such as the high accuracy ad202. out-of-range warning by connecting the two open collector outputs of the tmp01 together into a wired-or configuration, a temperature out- of-range warning signal is generated. this can be useful in sen- sitive equipment calibrated to work over a limited temperature range. r1, r2, and r3 in figure 22 are chosen to give a tem- perature range of 10 c around room temperature (25 c). thus, if the temperature in the equipment falls below +15 c or rises above +35 c, the undertemp output or overtemp output re- spectively will go low and turn the led on. the led may be replaced with a simple pull-up resistor to give a logic output for controlling the instrument, or any of the switching devices dis- cussed above can be used. led vptat v+ r1 47.5k w r2 4.99k w r3 71.5k w 200 w temperature sensor & voltage reference 1 2 3 4 hysteresis generator window comparator tmp01 vptat vref 7 8 5 6 figure 22. out-of-range warning in4148 i 1 i 2 6 5 3 4 1 2 2.5v v+ ref43 4 6 2 1.16v to 1.7v isolation barrier op290 v+ v+ r1 r2 r3 100 w temperature sensor & voltage reference 1 2 3 4 hysteresis generator window comparator tmp01 vptat vref 7 8 5 6 7 6 4 3 2 op290 680pf r1 470k w v+ 7 6 4 3 2 op90 604k w 100k w il300xc 680pf
tmp01 rev. c C15C translating 5 mv/k to 10 mv/ c a useful c ircuit is shown in figure 23 that tran slates the vptat output voltage, which is calibrated in kelvins, into an output that can be read directly in degrees celsius on a voltmeter display. to accomplish this, an external amplifier is configured as a differential amplifier. the resistors are scaled so the vref voltage will exactly cancel the vptat voltage at 0.0 c. 5 1 +15v ?5v 10pf v out (10mv/ c) (v out = 0.0v @ t = 0.0 c) 487 w 7 6 4 3 2 op177 100k w 100k w 4.12k w vptat vref tmp01 4.22k w 105k w figure 23. translating 5 mv/k to 10 mv/ c however, the gain from vptat to the output is two, so that 5 mv/k becomes 10 mv/ c. thus, for a temperature of +80 c, the output voltage is 800 mv. circuit errors will be due prima- rily to the inaccuracies of the resistor values. using 1% resistors the observed error was less than 10 mv, or 1 c. the 10 pf feedback capacitor helps to ensure against oscillations. for bet- ter accuracy, a adjustment potentiometer can be added in series with either 100 k w resistor. translating vptat to the fahrenheit scale a very similar circuit to the one shown in figure 23 can be used to translate vptat into an output that can be read directly in degrees fahrenheit, with a scaling of 10 mv/ f. only unity gain or less is available from the first stage differentiating circuit, so the second amplifier provides a gain of two to complete the con- version to the fahrenheit scale. using the circuit in figure 24, a temperature of 0.0 f gives an output of 0.00 v. at room tem- perature (70 f) the output voltage is 700 mv. a C40 c to +85 c operating range translates into C40 f to +185 f. the errors are essentially the same as for the circuit in figure 23. v out = 0.0v @ t = 0.0 f (10mv/ f) 5 1 +15v ?5v 10pf 121 w 7 6 4 3 2 1/2 op297 100k w 100k w 6.49k w vptat vref tmp01 1.0k w 90.9k w 100k w 7 6 5 1/2 op297 100k w figure 24. translating 5 mv/k to 10 mv/ f
tmp01 rev. c C16C outline dimensions dimensions shown in inches and (mm). 8-pin epoxy dip 0.160 (4.06) 0.115 (2.93) 0.130 (3.30) min 0.210 (5.33) max 0.015 (0.381) typ 0.430 (10.92) 0.348 (8.84) 0.280 (7.11) 0.240 (6.10) 4 5 8 1 0.070 (1.77) 0.045 (1.15) 0.022 (0.558) 0.014 (0.356) 0.325 (8.25) 0.300 (7.62) 0 - 15 0.100 (2.54) bsc 0.015 (0.381) 0.008 (0.204) seating plane 0.195 (4.95) 0.115 (2.93) 8-pin soic seating plane 0.0500 (1.27) bsc 4 5 8 1 0.2440 (6.20) 0.2284 (5.80) 0.1574 (4.00) 0.1497 (3.80) 0.1968 (5.00) 0.1890 (4.80) 0.0500 (1.27) 0.0160 (0.41) 0 -8 45 0.0196 (0.50) 0.0099 (0.25) 0.0098 (0.25) 0.0075 (0.19) 0.102 (2.59) 0.094 (2.39) 0.0192 (0.49) 0.0138 (0.35) 0.0098 (0.25) 0.0040 (0.10) 8-pin to-99 45 bsc 0.115 (2.92) bsc 0.034 (0.86) 0.027 (0.69) 0.045 (1.14) 0.027 (0.69) 0.160 (4.06) 0.110 (2.79) 0.115 (2.92) bsc 0.230 (5.84) bsc 6 8 5 7 1 4 2 3 reference plane base & seating plane 0.335 (8.51) 0.305 (7.75) 0.370 (9.40) 0.335 (8.51) 0.750 (19.05) 0.500 (12.70) 0.045 (1.14) 0.010 (0.25) 0.050 (1.27) max 0.040 (1.02) max 0.019 (0.48) 0.016 (0.41) 0.021 (0.53) 0.016 (0.41) 0.185 (4.70) 0.165 (4.19) 0.250 (6.35) min c1802bC5C7/95 printed in u.s.a.


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