Reverse-Current Circuitry Protection - Application Note - Maxim - AN636
Reverse-Current Circuitry Protection - Application Note - Maxim - AN636
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Figure 1. The simplest protection against reversed-battery current is a series (a) or shunt (b) diode. As an improved battery-reversal measure, you can add a pnp transistor as a high-side switch between the battery and the load ( Figure 2a ). When you install the battery correctly, the current-limiting resistor in the base lead forward-biases the base-emitter junction. A backward-installed battery reverse-biases the transistor, and no current can flow. This arrangement is better than the series diode, because the saturated pnp transistor offers a lower voltage drop than most diodes and thereby improves operating efficiency by lowering the power dissipation.
Figure 2. Because its forward drop is lower, a high-side pnp transistor (a) offers better reverse-current protection than does a diode. Better yet is a low-side npn transistor (b) whose higher beta means a lower base current and lower power loss.
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Figure 3. A low-side logic-level NMOS FET for reverse-current protection handles more current than an equivalent bipolar transistor. A low-side switch has one drawback: Ground-return currents flowing through the switch produce small voltage drops that can interfere with circuit operation. The alternative is a high-side switch. However, using an NMOS FET as a high-side switch still requires a gate drive in excess of the source voltage, that is, a gate drive higher than the battery voltage. Figure 4 shows one solution in which a chargepump device (IC 1 ) boosts the gate voltage well above the source. This circuit fully enhances the MOSFET when the battery is installed correctly.
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Figure 4. To provide reverse-current protection without disrupting ground-return currents, add a high-side NMOS FET driven by a charge-pump IC. In Figure 4, IC1 accepts battery voltages of 3.5V to 16.5V and regulates the battery's output to (VBATT +10V). This circuit allows standard, enhancement-mode, NMOS FETs to operate from battery voltages as low as 3.5V. Because the charge pump runs on the battery voltage and thus also needs protection from battery reversal, the circuit connects a diode between the battery's positive terminal and the IC's VCC terminal. PMOS FETs operate on the high side and require no extra circuitry for gate drive. However, the PMOS switch is generally twice as expensive and has nearly three times the on-resistance as an NMOS device of comparable power-handling capability operating with a similar drain-to-source voltage. You can enhance currently available PMOS transistors with 5V or even 3V of gate drive. If your circuit's battery voltage is at least 10V, you can connect the gate of the PMOS FET directly to the battery return ( Figure 5 ). As before, you must connect the transistor backward (with respect to normal practice) to orient its body diode in the direction of normal current flow. This connection applies the battery voltage between the gate and the drain, but the voltage between the gate and the source controls the channel resistance. The body diode, however, produces a source voltage one diode drop below the drain when you first apply VBATT . The result is a hard gate-source voltage equal to -(VBATT VDIODE) that quickly enhances the FET, bringing the VDS drop to a desired minimum.
Figure 5. This high-side PMOS FET switch offers simple reverse-current protection in exchange for higher on-resistance and cost.
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Figure 6. Using a high-side PMOS FET switch with low battery voltage requires a charge pump (D1 , D 2 , and C 1 ) to drive the gate voltage below ground. One or two battery cells don't necessarily produce enough gate-source voltage to fully turn on the FET. However, the switching node of IC1's step-up DC/DC converter drives a simple charge pump, comprising C 1 , D 1 , and D 2 , that generates more than enough drive for that purpose. For VIN = 2V, the gate drive is approximately -(VIN+V OUT ) = -7V. A battery reversal makes the CMOS DC/DC converter resemble a forward-biased diode; the converter turns off the switch by hauling the gate voltage at least one diode drop above the source. The 100kilohm pulldown resistor discharges the gate capacitance within 140msec yet loads the charge pump lightly and offers no interference with enhancing the MOSFET. Again, the circuit connects the MOSFET backward to prevent the FET's body diode from being forward-biased during a battery reversal. You can also use an NMOS low-side switch for protection by using the DC/DC converter output to boost the gate voltage ( Figure 7 ). When regulating normally, the converter (IC1) pulls the MOSFET's gate above its source. If you install the battery backward, the load resistance discharges the output-filter capacitor, which turns off the MOSFET by holding the gate and the source at the same potential.
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Figure 7. The output of IC1's boost converter drives this low-side NMOS FET switch. On the other hand, if the load is light and you first install the battery correctly and then quickly reverse it, the output capacitor's charge holds the MOSFET on and allows reverse current to flow through the regulator. For the components shown, this condition persists for about 100msec while the capacitor discharges through the regulator. The MOSFET then turns off and blocks current flow thereafter.
A similar version of this article appeared in the March 1, 1996 issue of EDN.
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