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Slua 660 A

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85 views

Slua 660 A

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Kuni Kaze
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Application Report

SLUA660A – November 2012 – Revised September 2014

bq40z50 Advanced Gas Gauge Circuit Design

............................................................................................................ Battery Management Solutions

ABSTRACT
Components in the bq40z50 reference design are explained in this application report. Design analysis and
suggested tradeoffs are provided, where appropriate.

Contents
1 Introduction ................................................................................................................... 1
2 High-Current Path ........................................................................................................... 2
3 Gas Gauge Circuit ........................................................................................................... 5
4 Secondary-Current Protection.............................................................................................. 9
5 Secondary-Overvoltage Protection ...................................................................................... 14
6 Reference Design Schematic ............................................................................................. 15

List of Figures
1 bq40z50 Protection FETs ................................................................................................... 2
2 FUSE Circuit .................................................................................................................. 3
3 Lithium-Ion Cell Connections ............................................................................................... 4
4 Sense Resistor ............................................................................................................... 4
5 Differential Filter.............................................................................................................. 5
6 Power Supply Decoupling .................................................................................................. 6
7 System Present Pull-Down Resistor ...................................................................................... 7
8 System Present ESD and Short Protection .............................................................................. 8
9 ESD Protection for SMB Communication ................................................................................. 8
10 FUSE Circuit .................................................................................................................. 9
11 Cell and BAT Inputs ........................................................................................................ 10
12 bq40z50 PACK and FET Control......................................................................................... 11
13 Thermistor Drive ............................................................................................................ 12
14 LEDs ......................................................................................................................... 12
15 PTC Thermistor ............................................................................................................. 13
16 bq294700 Cell Inputs and Time-Delay Capacitor ...................................................................... 14
17 bq40z50 Schematic ........................................................................................................ 15

List of Tables

1 Introduction
The bq40z50 advanced gas gauge has approximately 61 components in the reference design for a four-
thermistor, five-LED, four-cell application. The device is divided into the following classifications: High-
Current Path, Gas Gauge Circuit, Secondary-Current Protection and Cell-Balancing Circuit, and
Secondary-Voltage Protection.
This discussion is based on the four-cell reference design for the bq40z50 and bq294700 chipset.
Figure 17 shows the bq40z50 reference design schematic.

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2 High-Current Path
The high-current path begins at the PACK+ terminal of the battery pack. As charge current travels through
the pack, it finds its way through protection FETs, a chemical fuse, the lithium-ion cells and cell
connections, and the sense resistor, and then returns to the PACK– terminal (see Section 6). In addition,
some components are placed across the PACK+ and PACK– terminals to reduce effects from electrostatic
discharge.

2.1 Protection FETs


The N-channel charge and discharge FETs must be selected for a given application. Most portable battery
applications are a good match for the Si7114DN. The Vishay Si7114DN is an 18.3-A, 30-V device with
Rds(on) of 7.5 mΩ when the gate drive voltage is 10 V.
If a precharge FET is used, R1 is calculated to limit the precharge current to the desired rate. Be sure to
account for the power dissipation of the series resistor. The precharge current is limited to (Vcharger –
Vbat) / R1 and maximum power dissipation is (Vcharger – Vbat)2/R1.
The gates of all protection FETs are pulled to the source with a high-value resistor between the gate and
source to ensure they are turned off if the gate drive is open.
Capacitors C1 and C2 help protect the FETs during an ESD event. The use of two devices ensures
normal operation if one of them becomes shorted. In order to have good ESD protection, the copper trace
inductance of the capacitor leads must be designed to be as short and wide as possible. Ensure that the
voltage rating of both C1 and C2 are adequate to hold off the applied voltage if one of the capacitors
becomes shorted.

Figure 1. bq40z50 Protection FETs

2 bq40z50 Advanced Gas Gauge Circuit Design SLUA660A – November 2012 – Revised September 2014
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2.2 Chemical Fuse


The chemical fuse (Dexerials, Uchihashi, and so forth) is ignited under command from either the
bq294700 secondary voltage protection IC or from the FUSE pin of the gas gauge. Either of these events
applies a positive voltage to the gate of Q5, shown in Figure 2, which then sinks current from the third
terminal of the fuse, causing it to ignite and open permanently.
It is important to carefully review the fuse specifications and match the required ignition current to that
available from the N-channel FET. Ensure that the proper voltage, current, and Rds(on) ratings are used
for this device. The fuse control circuit is discussed in detail in Section 3.5.

Figure 2. FUSE Circuit

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2.3 Lithium-Ion Cell Connections


The important thing to remember about the cell connections is that high current flows through the top and
bottom connections; therefore, the voltage sense leads at these points must be made with a Kelvin
connection to avoid any errors due to a drop in the high-current copper trace. The location marked 4P in
Figure 3 indicates the Kelvin connection of the most positive battery node. The connection marked 1N is
equally important. The VC5 pin (a ground reference for cell voltage measurement), which is in the older
generation devices, is not in the bq40z50 device. Hence, the single-point connection at 1N to the low-
current ground is needed to avoid an undesired voltage drop through long traces while the gas gauge is
measuring the bottom cell voltage.

Figure 3. Lithium-Ion Cell Connections

2.4 Sense Resistor


As with the cell connections, the quality of the Kelvin connections at the sense resistor is critical. The
sense resistor must have a temperature coefficient no greater than 50 ppm in order to minimize current
measurement drift with temperature. Choose the value of the sense resistor to correspond to the available
overcurrent and short-circuit ranges of the bq40z50. Select the smallest value possible in order to
minimize the negative voltage generated on the bq40z50 VSS node(s) during a short circuit. This pin has
an absolute minimum of –0.3 V. Parallel resistors can be used as long as good Kelvin sensing is ensured.
The device is designed to support a 1-mΩ to 3-mΩ sense resistor.
The ground scheme of bq40z50 is different from the older generation devices. In previous devices, the
device ground (or low current ground) is connected to the SRN side of the Rsense resistor pad. The
bq40z50, however, connects the low-current ground on the SRP side of the Rsense resistor pad, close to
the battery 1N terminal (see Section 2.3). This is because the bq40z50 has one less VC pin (a ground
reference pin VC5) compared to the previous devices. The pin was removed and was internally combined
to SRP.

Figure 4. Sense Resistor

4 bq40z50 Advanced Gas Gauge Circuit Design SLUA660A – November 2012 – Revised September 2014
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2.5 ESD Mitigation


A pair of series 0.1-μF ceramic capacitors is placed across the PACK+ and PACK– terminals to help in
the mitigation of external electrostatic discharges. The two devices in series ensure continued operation of
the pack if one of the capacitors becomes shorted.
Optionally, a tranzorb such as the SMBJ2A can be placed across the terminals to further improve ESD
immunity.

3 Gas Gauge Circuit


The Gas Gauge Circuit includes the bq40z50 and its peripheral components. These components are
divided into the following groups: Differential Low-Pass Filter, PBI, System Present, SMBus
Communication, FUSE circuit, and LED.

3.1 Coulomb-Counting Interface


The bq40z50 uses an integrating delta-sigma ADC for current measurements. Add a 100-Ω resistor from
the sense resistor to the SRP and SRN inputs of the device. Place a 0.1-µF (C18) filter capacitor across
the SRP and SRN inputs. Optional 0.1-µF filter capacitors (C19 and C20) can be added for additional
noise filtering, if required for your circuit. Place all filter components as close as possible to the device.
Route the traces from the sense resistor in parallel to the filter circuit. Adding a ground plane around the
filter network can add additional noise immunity.

Figure 5. Differential Filter

SLUA660A – November 2012 – Revised September 2014 bq40z50 Advanced Gas Gauge Circuit Design 5
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3.2 Power Supply Decoupling and PBI


The bq40z50 has an internal LDO that is internally compensated and does not require an external
decoupling capacitor.
The PBI pin is used as a power supply backup input pin providing power during brief transient power
outages. A standard 2.2-µF ceramic capacitor is connected from the PBI pin to ground as shown in
Figure 6.

Figure 6. Power Supply Decoupling

6 bq40z50 Advanced Gas Gauge Circuit Design SLUA660A – November 2012 – Revised September 2014
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3.3 System Present


The System Present signal is used to inform the gas gauge whether the pack is installed into or removed
from the system. In the host system, this pin is grounded. The PRES pin of the bq40z50 is occasionally
sampled to test for system present. To save power, an internal pullup is provided by the gas gauge during
a brief 4-μs sampling pulse once per second. A resistor can be used to pull the signal low and the
resistance must be 20 kΩ or lower to insure that the test pulse is lower than the VIL limit. The pull-up
current source is typically 10 µA to 20 µA.

Figure 7. System Present Pull-Down Resistor

Because the System Present signal is part of the pack connector interface to the outside world, it must be
protected from external electrostatic discharge events. An integrated ESD protection on the PRES device
pin reduces the external protection requirement to just R29 for an 8-kV ESD contact rating. However, if it
is possible that the System Present signal may short to PACK+, then R28 and D4 must be included for
high-voltage protection.

SLUA660A – November 2012 – Revised September 2014 bq40z50 Advanced Gas Gauge Circuit Design 7
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Figure 8. System Present ESD and Short Protection

3.4 SMBus Communication


The SMBus clock and data pins have integrated high-voltage ESD protection circuits, however, adding a
Zener diode (D2 and D3) and series resistor (R24 and R26) provides more robust ESD performance.
The SMbus clock and data lines have internal pulldown. When the gas gauge senses that both lines are
low (such as during removal of the pack), the device performs auto-offset calibration and then goes into
sleep mode to conserve power.

Figure 9. ESD Protection for SMB Communication

8 bq40z50 Advanced Gas Gauge Circuit Design SLUA660A – November 2012 – Revised September 2014
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3.5 FUSE Circuitry


The FUSE pin of the bq40z50 is designed to ignite the chemical fuse if one of the various safety criteria is
violated. The FUSE pin also monitors the state of the secondary-voltage protection IC. Q5 ignites the
chemical fuse when its gate is high. The 7-V output of the bq294700 is divided by R16 and R6, which
provides adequate gate drive for Q5 while guarding against excessive back current into the bq294700 if
the FUSE signal is high.
Using C3 is generally a good practice, especially for RFI immunity. C3 may be removed, if desired,
because the chemical fuse is a comparatively slow device and is not affected by any sub-microsecond
glitches that come from the FUSE output during the cell connection process.

Figure 10. FUSE Circuit

When the bq40z50 is commanded to ignite the chemical fuse, the FUSE pin activates to give a typical 8-V
output. The new design makes it possible to use a higher Vgs FET for Q5. This improves the robustness
of the system, as well as widens the choices for Q5.

4 Secondary-Current Protection
The bq40z50 provides secondary overcurrent and short-circuit protection, cell balancing, cell voltage
multiplexing, and voltage translation. The following discussion examines Cell and Battery Inputs, Pack and
FET Control, Temperature Output, and Cell Balancing.

4.1 Cell and Battery Inputs


Each cell input is conditioned with a simple RC filter, which provides ESD protection during cell connect
and acts to filter unwanted voltage transients. The resistor value allows some trade-off for cell balancing
versus safety protection.
The integrated cell balancing FETs allow the AFE to bypass cell current around a given cell or numerous
cells, effectively balancing the entire battery stack. External series resistors placed between the cell
connections and the VCx I/O pins set the balancing current magnitude. The intern FETs provide a 200-Ω
resistance (2 V < VDS < 4 V). Series input resistors between 100 Ω and 1 kΩ are recommended for
effective cell balancing.

SLUA660A – November 2012 – Revised September 2014 bq40z50 Advanced Gas Gauge Circuit Design 9
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The BAT input uses a diode (D1) to isolate and decouple it from the cells in the event of a transient dip in
voltage caused by a short-circuit event.
Also, as described previously in Section 2, the top and bottom nodes of the cells must be sensed at the
battery connections with a Kelvin connection to prevent voltage sensing errors caused by a drop in the
high-current PCB copper.

Figure 11. Cell and BAT Inputs

10 bq40z50 Advanced Gas Gauge Circuit Design SLUA660A – November 2012 – Revised September 2014
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4.2 External Cell Balancing


Internal cell balancing can only support up to 10 mA. External cell balancing provide as another option for
faster cell balancing. For details, refer to the application note, Fast Cell Balancing Using External
MOSFET (SLUA420).

4.3 PACK and FET Control


The PACK and VCC inputs provide power to the bq40z50 from the charger. The PACK input also provides
a method to measure and detect the presence of a charger. The PACK input uses a 100-Ω resistor,
whereas the VCC input uses a diode to guard against input transients and prevents misoperation of the
date driver during short-circuit events.

Figure 12. bq40z50 PACK and FET Control

The N-channel charge and discharge FETs are controlled with 5.1-kΩ series gate resistors, which provide
a switching time constant of a few microseconds. The 10-MΩ resistors ensure that the FETs are off in the
event of an open connection to the FET drivers. Q4 is provided to protect the discharge FET (Q3) in the
event of a reverse-connected charger. Without Q4, Q3 can be driven into its linear region and suffer
severe damage if the PACK+ input becomes slightly negative.
Q4 turns on in that case to protect Q3 by shorting its gate to source. To use the simple ground gate
circuit, the FET must have a low gate turn-on threshold. If it is desired to use a more standard device,
such as the 2N7002 as the reference schematic, the gate should be biased up to 3.3 V with a high-value
resistor. The bq40z50 device has the capability to provide a current-limited charging path typically used for
low battery voltage or low temperature charging. The bq40z50 device uses an external P-channel, pre-
charge FET controlled by PCHG.

SLUA660A – November 2012 – Revised September 2014 bq40z50 Advanced Gas Gauge Circuit Design 11
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4.4 Temperature Output


For the bq40z50 device, TS1, TS2, TS3, and TS4 provide thermistor drive-under program control. Each
pin can be enabled with an integrated 18-kΩ (typical) linearization pullup resistor to support the use of a
10-kΩ at 25°C (103) NTC external thermistor such as a Mitsubishi BN35-3H103. The reference design
includes four 10-kΩ thermistors: RT1, RT2, RT3, and RT4. The bq40z50 device supports up to four
external thermistors. Connect unused thermistor pins to VSS.

Figure 13. Thermistor Drive

4.5 LEDs
Three LED control outputs provide constant current sinks for the driving external LEDs. These outputs are
configured to provide voltage and control for up to 5 LEDs. No external bias voltage is required. Unused
LEDCNTL pins can remain open or they can be connected to VSS. The DISP pin should be connected to
VSS, if the LED feature is not used.

Figure 14. LEDs

12 bq40z50 Advanced Gas Gauge Circuit Design SLUA660A – November 2012 – Revised September 2014
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4.6 Safety PTC Thermistor


The bq40z50 device provides support for a safety PTC thermistor. The PTC thermistor is connected
between the PTC pin and VSS. It can be placed close to the CHG/DSG FETs to monitor the temperature.
The PTC pin outputs a very small current, typical ~370 nA , and the PTC fault will be triggered at ~0.7 V
typical. A PTC fault is one of the permanent failure modes. It can only be cleared by a POR.
To disable this feature, connect a 10-kΩ resistor between PTC and VSS.

Figure 15. PTC Thermistor

SLUA660A – November 2012 – Revised September 2014 bq40z50 Advanced Gas Gauge Circuit Design 13
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5 Secondary-Overvoltage Protection
The bq294700 provides secondary-overvoltage protection and commands the chemical fuse to ignite if
any cell exceeds the internally referenced threshold. The peripheral components are Cell Inputs and Time
Delay Capacitor.

5.1 Cell Inputs


An input filter is provided for each cell input. This comprises the resistors R13, R14, R15, and R18 along
with capacitors C4, C5, C9, and C11. This input network is completely independent of the filter network
used as input to the bq40z50. To ensure independent safety functionality, the two devices must have
separate input filters.
Because the filter capacitors are implemented differentially, a low-voltage device can be used in each
case.

Figure 16. bq294700 Cell Inputs and Time-Delay Capacitor

5.2 Time-Delay Capacitor


C7 sets the time delay for activation of the output after any cell exceeds the threshold voltage. The time
delay is calculated as td = 1.2 V × DelayCap (μF)/0.18 μA.

14 bq40z50 Advanced Gas Gauge Circuit Design SLUA660A – November 2012 – Revised September 2014
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www.ti.com Reference Design Schematic

6 Reference Design Schematic


Figure 17 shows the bq40z50 reference design schematic.
C1 C2
4P
0.1uF 0.1uF
R1
3 2

300 Q1
FDN358P

1
1 F1 2 PACK+

1
2
3

3
2
1
Q4

2
R2 Q3 R3 2N7002K
SFDxxxx Q2 Si7116DN 1

3
10M Si7116DN 10M

4
FUSE
R5

3
Wake

1
R4

1
10M R32
10K A B
4P PACK+
A' B'
10K S1

5
2
1
R11
Q5
3
Si1406DH FUSEPIN

6
CHGND

1
100 R7 R8 R9 R10
3

1
5.1K 10M 100 5.1K

4
For Thumbus-SMB

6
R13 DSG R12
R6 C3 J6

1
U2 10K 1
1K 51K I2C_VOUT

1
C4 BQ2947xyDSG 0.1uF

CHGND
1 8 2
VDD OUT SMBD
0.1uF
2 7 CHG 3
R14 V4 CD SMBC

1
3 6 4
V3 VSS

1
1K C5 4 5 5
V2 V1 PACK+
4P

EP

0.1uF C6 C7 AGND C12 0.1uF


R15 C8
9

7
0.1uF 0.1uF R16 R17
0.1uF
RT1 10K
1K C9 5.1K 5.1K
BAT
GND
0.1uF 2 CHGND C10
BAT BAT 0.1uF
R18
GND
1

BAT J4

33

32

31

30

29

28

27

26

25
1

2 PACK-
1K C11
1

NC

VCC

FUSE
CHG

PCHG

DSG
BAT
PWPD
PACK- ACK+

PACK
0.1uF
3 s Pres
3 2 PACK+ S
D1 1 P
BAT 54HT1 C13 2.2uF D5 D6

1
1 24 LED3 LED4 J3
PBI PTCEN
2 23
VC4 PTC
U1

2
GND SIDE

GND SIDE
3 22
VC3 LEDCNTLC
BQ40Z50RSM D9
C14 4 21 LED5 CHGND
VC2 LEDCNTLB
0.1uF C15 5 20
VC1 LEDCNTLA
D7 D8
0.1uF C16 6 19 LED1 LED2
SRN SMBC
4
0.1uF C17 7 18
NC SMBD

SMBC

SMBD
SMBC
J1 0.1uF 8 17

1
R20 SRP DISP
1

1
R21 SMBD

PRESorSHUTDN
2 100

1
R22 R24 R25
2P P N P3 P y 100 GND

BTP_INT

1
R23
1 1J5 31 100 200 100 4
VSS

TS1

TS2

TS3

TS4

NC
R26 R27
2 100 TP3 3
SMBD
1

10

11

12

13

14

15

16
1 200 1 100 2
SMBC
2
1

A B 1
1

SMBD

SMBC
VSS
NT1 A' B' J7
1

Net-Tie GND S2 J2
SRP SRN TP12
GND LED DISPLAY
1

GND CHGND
RT2 RT3 RT4 RT5
1

R28 R29
AGND GND
10K 10K 10K 10K
C18 SHUTDOWN 200 1K

D2 D3 D4

MM3ZxxVyC

MM3ZxxVyC

MM3ZxxVyC

1
1 IC ground should be connected to the 1N cell tab. 0.1uF A B
A' B'
C20 S3
C19 R30 R31 GND GND GND GND

2
GND SIDE

GND SIDE
Place RT1 close to Q2 and Q3. DNP
2
DNP 100 100 C21 CHGND
GND
DNP
Replace D1 and R9 with a 10 ohm resistor for single cell applications
3
CHGND

R19 GND
GND

0.001

Figure 17. bq40z50 Schematic

SLUA660A – November 2012 – Revised September 2014 bq40z50 Advanced Gas Gauge Circuit Design 15
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Revision History www.ti.com

Revision History

Changes from Original (November 2012) to A Revision ................................................................................................ Page

• Changed Sony Chemical to Dexerials in the Chemical Fuse section. ............................................................. 3


• Added paragraph and System Present Pull-Down Resistor image to the end of the first paragraph in the System Present
section. ..................................................................................................................................... 7
• Changed two thermistors to four external thermistors in the first paragraph of the Temperature Ouput section. ......... 12
• Added sentence to the end of the first paragraph in the Temperature Ouput section. ........................................ 12
• Added two sentences to the first paragraph in the LEDs section. ................................................................ 12
• Changed bq40z50 schematic. ......................................................................................................... 15

NOTE: Page numbers for previous revisions may differ from page numbers in the current version.

16 Revision History SLUA660A – November 2012 – Revised September 2014


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