SBAA568 april 2023 AMC1202 , AMC1302 , AMC1302-Q1 , AMC3302 , AMC3302-Q1
Current Source (Nominal) | Current Source (Short) | Input Voltage | Output Voltage | Power Supplies | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
IIN MIN | IIN MAX | ISHORT | VSHUNT, MIN | VSHUNT, MAX | VOUT |
VDD1 | VDD2 |
±10 mA |
±10 A | ±200 A | ±10 µV | ±10 mV | 55 mV – 3.245 V |
5 V |
3.3 V |
Some applications require a circuit to measure small nominal currents while withstanding a high short-circuit current, such as a circuit breaker. This circuit design document describes an isolated current-sensing circuit that can accurately measure nominal load currents from ±10 mA to ±10 A, while withstanding a short-circuit current up to ±200 A. For the purposes of this circuit, assume the output is used with a 3.3-V single-ended ADC, such as one that can be found integrated into an MSP430. The isolation between the line current being measured and the ADC is achieved using an isolated amplifier (AMC1302). With a 1-mΩ shunt resistor, the expected minimum nominal current produces a ±10-µV signal, a signal which is too small to resolve accurately near a zero voltage input due to the delta-sigma modulator dead zone. To remedy this, the circuit uses a 2-channel operational amplifier (TLV9002) to both amplify the signal by a gain of 5 V/V and set the common-mode voltage to 1 V; this not only brings the minimum nominal current out of the dead zone, but also brings the maximum nominal current up to match the full-scale linear input range of the isolated amplifier. The full-scale linear input range of the isolated amplifier is ±50 mV, with a differential output swing of ±2.05 V, on an output common-mode voltage of 1.44 V and a fixed internal gain of 41 V/V. On the output side of the isolated amplifier, a second 2-channel operational amplifier (TLV9002) is used, where: the first channel is used to set the single-ended common-mode voltage to 1.65 V and the second channel transforms the differential output signal from the isolated amplifier into a single-ended that can be used with a 3.3-V single-ended ADC.
Determine the shunt resistor power dissipation during minimum nominal current operation.
Select a shunt resistor with power dissipation reduced by a factor of 5. So, if the short-term overload requirement is 40 W, shunt Pdissipation = 8 W. For more details, see the Design considerations for isolated current sensing analog design journal.
The absolute maximum input voltage for the AMC1302 is 500 mV greater than the high-side supply voltage (as stated in the AMC1302 Precision, ±50-mV Input, Reinforced Isolated Amplifier data sheet). With a 5-V high-side supply voltage, the absolute maximum input voltage rating is not violated.
To stay within the output limitations of TLV9002OUT, the output of the AMC1302 needs to be attenuated by a factor of 3.2 / 4.1. When R9 = R10 and R11 = R12, the following transfer function for the differential to single-ended stage can be used to calculate R11 and R12.
Using standard 0.1% resistor values, a 7.8 kΩ resistor can be used. This provides the maximum output swing within the limitations of the TLV9002.
When the C1 = C2 = 1 nF and R11 = R12 = 7800 Ω, the cutoff frequency can be calculated to be 20.414 kHz.
Simulation Results shows the simulated DC characteristics of the voltage across the shunt, the differential input/output of the AMC1302, and the single-ended output of the TLV9002 amplifier from –10 A to 10 A.
Short-Circuit Event Simulation shows a simulation of the circuit during a short-circuit event by demonstrating how the inputs and outputs react at ±200 A. The red and blue lines going through the graphs mark the points where the output of the AMC1302 begins clipping. From that point on, the purpose of the circuit is to continue operating after the short-circuit event. In the Design Steps section, the values of the gain and shunt-resistance on the high-side of the AMC1302 were chosen to avoid damage during this event. The following simulation validates those choices: the maximum input voltage entering the AMC1302 at the short-circuit event is ±1 V, which is lower than the absolute maximum ratings of the part. Therefore, the simulation confirms that the circuit continues operation after the short-circuit event passes.
AC Simulation shows the AC transfer characteristics of the single-ended output. This simulation shows what gain (dB) to expect as the frequency approaches and surpasses the cutoff that is calculated with the second equation in step 11. The analog front end has a gain of 5 V/V, the AMC1302 has a gain of 41 V/V, and the differential-to-single-ended conversion has a gain of 0.78 V/V; thus a gain of 44.07 dB is expected, which is illustrated in the following figure.
Sine-Wave Simulation shows the output of the shunt, the differential input and output of the AMC1302, and the single-ended output of the TLV9002 in response to a sine wave with an amplitude from –10 A to 10 A. The differential output of the AMC1302 is ±2.05 Vpk-pk as expected, and the single-ended output is 3.19 Vpk-pk and swings from 55 mV to 3.245 V.
See the Analog Engineer's Circuit Cookbooks for TI's comprehensive circuit library and the Interfacing a Differential-Output (Isolated) Amp to a Single-Ended Input ADC application brief for more information on the differential to single-ended output conversion.
AMC1302 | |
---|---|
Working Voltage | 1500 VRMS |
Gain | 41 V/V |
Bandwidth | 280 kHz TYP |
Linear Input Voltage Range | ±50 mV |
Input Resistance | 4.9 kΩ (typ) |
Input Offset Voltage and Drift | ±50 µV (max), ±0.8 µV/°C (max) |
Gain Error and Drift | ±0.2% (max), ±35 ppm/°C (max) |
Nonlinearity and Drift | 0.03% (max), 1 ppm/°C (typ) |
Isolation Transient Overvoltage | 7071 VPEAK |
Common-Mode Transient Immunity, CMTI | 100 kV/µs (min) |
AMC3302 | |
---|---|
Working Voltage | 1200 VRMS |
Gain | 41 V/V |
Bandwidth | 334 kHz TYP |
Linear Input Voltage Range | ±50 mV |
Input Resistance | 4.9 kΩ (typ) |
Input Offset Voltage and Drift | ±50 µV (max), ±0.5 µV/°C (max) |
Gain Error and Drift | ±0.2% (max), ±35 ppm/°C (max) |
Nonlinearity and Drift | ±0.03% (max), 1 ppm/°C (typ) |
Isolation Transient Overvoltage | 6000 VPEAK |
Common-Mode Transient Immunity, CMTI | 95 kV/us (min) |
AMC1202 | |
---|---|
Working Voltage | 1000 VRMS |
Gain | 41 V/V |
Bandwidth | 280 kHz TYP |
Linear Input Voltage Range | ±50 mV |
Input Resistance | 4.9 kΩ (typ) |
Input Offset Voltage and Drift | ±50 µV (max), ±0.8 µV/°C (max) |
Gain Error and Drift | ±0.2% (max), ±35 ppm/°C (max) |
Nonlinearity and Drift | ±0.03% (max), 1 ppm/°C (typ) |
Isolation Transient Overvoltage | 4250 VPEAK |
Common-Mode Transient Immunity, CMTI | 100 kV/µs (min) |