MIC2777-22YM5-TR

MIC2777 Micrel, Inc.
MIC2777 4 November 2005
Timing Diagram
V
TH
V
IN
0V
V
HYST
V
DD
0V
V
/RST
(ACTIVE LOW)
V
OH
V
OL
V
RST
(ACTIVE HIGH)
V
OH
V
OL
t
RST
t
RST
A
A
A
V
REF
V
HYST
Propagation delays not shown for clarity.
Note A. The MIC2777 ignores very brief transients.
See “Applications Information” for details.
November 2005 5 MIC2777
MIC2777 Micrel, Inc.
Functional Diagram
GND
V
DD
IN
MIC2777
V
REF
V
REF
RST
R
S
Q
/Q
/RST
Delay
Line
One Shot
Functional Description
IN, Under-Voltage Detector Input
The voltage present at the IN pin is compared to the internal
300mV reference voltage. A reset is triggered if and when V
IN
falls below V
REF
. Typically, a resistor divider is used to scale
the input voltage to be monitored such that V
IN
will fall below
V
REF
as the voltage being monitored falls below the desired
trip-point. Hysteresis is employed to prevent chattering due
to noise. The comparator on the IN input is relatively immune
to very brief negative-going transients.
V
DD
Input
The V
DD
pin is both the power supply terminal and a monitored
input voltage. The voltage at this pin is continually compared
against the internal reference. The trip-point at which a reset
occurs is factory programmed. A reset is triggered if and
when V
DD
falls below the trip-point. Hysteresis is employed
to prevent chattering due to noise. The comparator on the
V
DD
input is relatively immune to very brief negative-going
transients.
RST, /RST Reset Output
Typically, the MIC2777 is used to monitor the power supplies
of intelligent circuits such as microcontrollers and micropro
-
cessors. By connecting the appropriate reset output of a
MIC2777 to the reset input of a µC or µP, the processor will
be properly reset at power-on and during power-down and
brown-out conditions.
The reset outputs are asserted any time V
DD
or V
IN
drops
below the corresponding threshold voltage. The reset outputs
remain asserted for t
RST
(min) after V
IN
and/or V
DD
subsequent
return above the threshold boundaries and/or /MR is released.
A reset pulse is also generated at power-on.
Manual Reset
The ability to initiate a reset via external logic or a manual
switch is provided in addition to the MIC2777’s automatic
supervisory functions. Typically, a momentary push-button
switch is connected such that IN is shorted to ground when
the switch contacts close. Assuming V
DD
and V
IN
are within
tolerance when the switch is released, the reset outputs will
be de-asserted no less than 140ms later. IN can also be driven
by an open-drain or open-collector logic signal.
MIC2777 Micrel, Inc.
MIC2777 6 November 2005
Application Information
Programming the Voltage Threshold
Referring to the “Typical Application Circuit”, the voltage
threshold on the IN pin is calculated as follows:
V V
R1 R2
R2
TH REF
= ×
+
( )
where V
REF
= 0.300V
In order to provide the additional criteria needed to solve
for the resistor values, the resistors can be selected such
that the two resistors have a given total value, that is, R1
+ R2 = R
TOTAL
. Imposing this condition on the resistor val-
ues provides two equations that can be solved for the two
unknown resistor values. A value such as 1MΩ for R
TOTAL
is a reasonable choice since it keeps quiescent current to a
generally acceptable level while not causing any measurable
errors due to input bias currents. The larger the resistors, the
larger the potential errors due to input bias current (I
IN
). The
maximum recommended value of R
TOTAL
is 3MΩ.
Applying this criteria and rearranging the V
TH
expression to
solve for the resistor values gives:
R2
R V
V
TOTAL
REF
TH
=
( )
( )
R1 = R
TOTAL
R2
Application Example
Figure 1 illustrates a hypothetical MIC2777-23 application
in which the MIC2777-23 is used to monitor the core and
I/O supplies of a high-performance CPU or DSP. The core
supply, V
CORE
, in this example is 1.0V ±5%. The main power
rail and I/O voltage, V
I/O
, is 2.5V ±5%. As shown in Figure 1,
the MIC2777 is powered by V
I/O
. The minimum value of V
I/O
is 2.5V –5% = 2.375V; the maximum is 2.5V +5% = 2.625V.
This is well within the MIC2777’s power supply range of
1.5V to 5.5V.
Resistors R1 and R2 must be selected to correspond to the
V
CORE
supply of 1.0V. The goal is to insure that the core
supply voltage is adequate to insure proper operation, i.e.,
V
CORE
(1.0V –5%) = 0.950V. Because there is always a
small degree of uncertainty due to the accuracy of the resis-
tors, variations in the devices’ voltage reference, etc., the
threshold will be set slightly below this value. The potential
variation in the MIC2777’s input voltage reference (V
REF
) is
specified as ±1.5%. The resistors chosen will have their own
tolerance specification. This example will assume the use of
1% accurate resistors. The potential worst-case error contri-
bution due to input bias current can be calculated once the
resistor values are chosen. If the guidelines above regarding
the maximum total value of R1+R2 are followed, this error
contribution will be very small thanks to the MIC2777’s very
low input bias current.
To summarize, the various potential error sources are:
Variation in V
REF
: specified at ±1.5%
Resistor tolerance: chosen by designer (typically ≤
±1%)
Input bias current, I
IN
: calculated once resistor values
are known, typically very small
Taking the various potential error sources into account, the
threshold voltage will be set slightly below the minimum V
CORE
specification of 0.950V so that when the actual threshold
voltage is at its maximum, it will not intrude into the normal
operating range of V
CORE
. The target threshold voltage will
be set as follows:
Given that the total tolerance on V
TH
for the IN pin is [V
REF
tolerance] + [resistor tolerance]
= ±1.5% + ±1% = ±2.5%,
and V
TH(max)
= V
CORE(min)
,
then V
CORE(min)
= V
TH
+ 2.5% V
TH
= 1.025 V
TH
,
therefore, solving for V
TH
results in
Solving for R1 and R2 using this value for V
TH
and the equa-
tions above yields:
R1 = 676.3kΩ 673kΩ
R2 = 323.7kΩ 324kΩ
The resulting circuit is shown in Figure 1.
Input Bias Current Effects
Now that the resistor values are known, it is possible to cal-
culate the maximum potential error due to input bias current,
I
IN
. As shown in the “Electrical Characteristics” table, the
maximum value of I
IN
is 10nA. (Note that the typical value
is a much smaller 5pA) The magnitude of the offset caused
by I
IN
is given by:
V
ERROR
= I
IN(max)
× (R1||R2) =
V
ERROR
= ±1 × 10
-8
A × 2.189 ×10
5
Ω =
V
ERROR
= ±2.189 × 10
-3
V =
V
ERROR
= ±2.189mV
The typical error is about three orders of magnitude lower
than this– close to one microvolt! Generally, the error
due to input bias can be discounted. If it is to be taken
into account, simply adjust the target threshold voltage
downward by this amount and recalculate R1 and R2. The
resulting value will be very close to optimum. If accuracy
is more important than the quiescent current in the
resistors, simply reduce the value of R
TOTAL
to minimize
offset errors.

MIC2777-22YM5-TR

Mfr. #:
Manufacturer:
Microchip Technology / Micrel
Description:
Supervisory Circuits Dual Voltage Supervisor with 0.3V and 2.25V Thresholds, Active-High and Active-L
Lifecycle:
New from this manufacturer.
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