Data Sheet
ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790
Optical Isolation Amplifier in 15-mm Stretched
SO-8 Package
Description
The Broadcom® ACNT-H79B/H79A/H790 isolation
amplifiers are designed for current and voltage sensing in
electronic power converters for applications including motor
drives and renewable energy systems. In a typical motor
drive implementation, current flows through an external
resistor and the resulting analog voltage drop is sensed by
the isolation amplifier. A differential output voltage that is
proportional to the current is created on the other side of the
optical isolation barrier.
For general applications, the ACNT-H79A (±1% gain
tolerance) and the ACNT-H790 (±3% gain tolerance) are
recommended. For high-precision applications, the
ACNT-H79B (±0.5% gain tolerance) can be used. The
ACNT-H79B/H79A/H790 offers wide creepage and
clearance with a high common-mode transient immunity of
15 kV/µs. These features allow the ACNT-H79B/H79A/
H790 to provide the precision and stability needed to
accurately monitor motor current in high noise motor control
environments, providing for smoother control (less “torque
ripple”) in various types of motor control applications. The
ACNT-H79B/H79A/H790 operates from a single 5V supply
and provides excellent linearity and dynamic performance
of 60dB SNR. With 200 kHz bandwidth, 1.6-µs fast
response time, the ACNT-H79B/H79A/H790 captures
transients in short circuit and overload conditions.
Combined with superior optical coupling technology, the
ACNT-H79B/H79A/H790 uses sigma-delta (-)
analog-to-digital modulation, chopper stabilized amplifiers,
and a fully differential circuit topology to provide unequaled
isolation-mode noise rejection, low offset, high gain
accuracy and stability. This performance is delivered in a
compact, auto-insertable 15 mm Stretched SO-8 package
that meets worldwide regulatory safety standards.
Broadcom
Features
±0.5% gain accuracy (ACNT-H79B)
–50 ppm/°C low gain drift
0.6-mV input offset voltage
0.05% excellent linearity
60-dB SNR
200-kHz wide bandwidth (Typ)
–40°C to +105°C operating temperature range
Advanced sigma-delta (-) A/D modulation technology
15-mm stretched SO-8 package
0.5-mm distance through insulation (DTI)
15-kV/µs common-mode transient immunity
Safety and regulatory approvals:
– IEC/EN/DIN EN 60747-5-5: 2262Vpeak working
insulation voltage
– UL 1577: 7500Vrms/1min double protection rating
– CSA: Component Acceptance Notice #5
Applications
Current/voltage sensing in AC/servo motor drives
Mid-voltage drives
Solar inverters, wind turbine inverters
Industrial process control
General-purpose analog signal isolation
Hall effect current transducer replacements
CAUTION! It is advised that normal static precautions be
taken in handling and assembly of this
component to prevent damage and/or
degradation that may be induced by ESD. The
components featured in this data sheet are not
to be used in military or aerospace applications
or environments.
AV02-4715EN
May 15, 2020
ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790 Data Sheet
Optical Isolation Amplifier in 15-mm Stretched SO-8 Package
Functional Diagram
Figure 1: Functional Diagram
VDD1 1
IDD1
IDD2
8 VDD2
VIN+ 2
+
+
7 VOUT+
VIN- 3
-
-
6 VOUT-
GND1 4
5 GND2
SHIELD
A 0.1 µF bypass capacitor mus be connected between pins 1 and 4 and between pins 5 and 8.
NOTE:
Table 1. Pin Description
Pin Number
Symbol
Description
1
VDD1
2
VIN+
Positive input (±200 mV recommended)
3
VIN–
Negative input (normally connected to GND1)
4
GND1
Input side ground
5
GND2
Output side ground
6
VOUT–
Negative output
7
VOUT+
Positive output
8
VDD2
Supply voltage for input side (4.5V to 5.5V), relative to GND1
Supply voltage for output side (3V to 5.5V), relative to GND2
Table 2. Ordering Information
ACNT-H79B/H79A/H790 is UL recognized with 7500 Vrms/1 minute rating per UL 1577.
Part Number
ACNT-H790
ACNT-H79A
ACNT-H79B
Option
(RoHS Compliant)
Package
Surface Mount
-000E
15-mm Stretched SO-8
X
-500E
X
Tape and Reel
X
IEC/EN/DIN
EN 60747-5-5
Quantity
X
80 per tube
X
1000 per reel
To order, choose a part number from the part number column and combine with the desired option from the option column
to form an order entry.
Example:
ACNT-H79A-500E to order product of Surface Mount package in Tape and Reel packaging with IEC/EN/DIN
EN 60747-5-5 Safety Approval and RoHS compliance.
Broadcom
AV02-4715EN
2
ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790 Data Sheet
Optical Isolation Amplifier in 15-mm Stretched SO-8 Package
Package Outline Drawings
ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790 Stretched SO-8 Package
Figure 2: ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790 Stretched SO-8 Package
Recommended Pb-Free IR Profile
Recommended reflow condition as per JEDEC Standard, J-STD-020 (latest revision). Non-Halide Flux should be used.
Regulatory Information
The ACNT-H79B/H79A/H790 is approved by the following organizations.
IEC/EN/DIN EN 60747-5-5
Approved with Maximum Working Insulation Voltage VIORM = 2262Vpeak.
UL
Approval under UL 1577, component recognition program up to VISO = 7500 Vrms/1min. File E55361.
CSA
Approval under CSA Component Acceptance Notice #5, File CA 88324.
Broadcom
AV02-4715EN
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ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790 Data Sheet
Optical Isolation Amplifier in 15-mm Stretched SO-8 Package
Table 3. Insulation and Safety Related Specifications
Parameter
Symbol
Value
Units
Minimum External Air Gap
(External Clearance)
L(101)
14.2
mm
Measured from input terminals to output terminals,
shortest distance through air
Minimum External Tracking
(External Creepage)
L(102)
15
mm
Measured from input terminals to output terminals,
shortest distance path along body
0.5
mm
Through insulation distance, conductor to conductor,
usually the direct distance between the photoemitter and
photodetector inside the optocoupler cavity
>300
V
Minimum Internal Plastic Gap
(Internal Clearance)
Tracking Resistance
(Comparative Tracking Index)
CTI
Isolation Group
IIIa
Conditions
DIN IEC 112/VDE 0303 Part 1
Material Group (DIN VDE 0110, 1/89, Table 1)
Table 4. IEC/EN/DIN EN 60747-5-5 Insulation Characteristics (See Note)
Description
Symbol
Installation classification per DIN VDE 0110/1.89, Table 1
for rated mains voltage ≤ 150 Vrms
Value
Units
I-IV
I-IV
I-IV
I-IV
I-IV
for rated mains voltage ≤ 300 Vrms
for rated mains voltage ≤ 450 Vrms
for rated mains voltage ≤ 600 Vrms
for rated mains voltage ≤ 1000 Vrms
Climatic Classification
55/105/21
Pollution Degree (DIN VDE 0110/1.89)
2
VIORM
2262
Vpeak
Input to Output Test Voltage, Method b
VIORM × 1.875 = VPR, 100% Production Test with tm = 1 second, Partial Discharge < 5 pC
VPR
4242
Vpeak
Input to Output Test Voltage, Method a
VIORM × 1.6 = VPR, Type and Sample Test, tm = 10 seconds, Partial Discharge < 5 pC
VPR
3619
Vpeak
VIOTM
12000
Vpeak
TS
175
230
600
°C
mA
mW
>109
Maximum Working Insulation Voltage
Highest Allowable Overvoltage (Transient Overvoltage, tini = 60 sec)
Safety-limiting values (Maximum values allowed in the event of a failure)
Case Temperature
Input Current
IS,INPUT
Output Power
PS,OUTPUT
Insulation Resistance at TS, VIO = 500 V
NOTE:
Broadcom
RS
Insulation characteristics are guaranteed only within the safety maximum ratings, which must be ensured by
protective circuits within the application.
AV02-4715EN
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ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790 Data Sheet
Optical Isolation Amplifier in 15-mm Stretched SO-8 Package
Table 5. Absolute Maximum Rating
Parameter
Symbol
Min.
Max.
Units
Storage Temperature
TS
–55
+125
°C
Ambient Operating Temperature
TA
–40
+105
°C
VDD1, VDD2
–0.5
6.0
V
Steady-State Input Voltagea, b
VIN+, VIN–
–2
VDD1 + 0.5
V
Two-Second Transient Input Voltagec
VIN+, VIN–
–6
VDD1 + 0.5
V
VOUT+, VOUT–
–0.5
VDD2 + 0.5
V
Supply Voltages
Output Voltages
Lead Solder Temperature
260°C for 10 sec., 1.6 mm below seating plane
a. DC voltage of up to –2 V on the inputs does not cause latch-up or damage to the device; tested at typical operating conditions.
b. Absolute maximum DC current on the inputs = 100 mA, no latch-up or device damage occurs.
c. Transient voltage of 2 seconds up to –6V on the inputs does not cause latch-up or damage to the device; tested at typical operating conditions.
Table 6. Recommended Operating Conditions
Parameter
Symbol
Min.
Max.
Units
TA
–40
+105
°C
VDD1 Supply Voltage
VDD1
4.5
5.5
V
VDD2 Supply Voltage
VDD2
3
5.5
V
VIN+, VIN–
–200
+200
mV
Ambient Operating Temperature
Input Voltage Range
a
a. ±200 mV is the nominal input range. Full scale input range (FSR) is ±300 mV. Functional input range is ±2V.
Broadcom
AV02-4715EN
5
ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790 Data Sheet
Optical Isolation Amplifier in 15-mm Stretched SO-8 Package
Table 7. Electrical Specifications
Unless otherwise noted, TA = –40°C to +105°C, VDD1 = 4.5V to 5.5V, VDD2 = 3V to 5.5V, VIN+ = –200 mV to +200 mV, and
VIN– = 0 V (single-ended connection).
Symbol
Min.
Typ. a
Max.
Unit
VOS
–2
-0.2
2
mV
|dVOS/dTA|
—
0.6
5
Gain (ACNT-H79B, ±0.5%)
G0
8.16
8.2
8.24
V/V
TA = 25°C; Note b, VDD1= 5V
6, 7
Gain (ACNT-H79A, ±1%)
G1
8.14
8.2
8.26
V/V
TA = 25°C; Note b, VDD1= 5V
6, 7
Gain (ACNT-H790, ±3%)
G3
7.97
8.2
8.42
V/V
TA = 25°C; Note b, VDD1= 5V
6, 7
dG/dVDD1
—
0.0041
—
V/V/V
dG/dTA
—
–0.00041
—
V/V/°C T = –40°C to +105°C; Note c
A
NL200
—
0.055
0.13
Parameter
Test Conditions/Notes
Figure
DC Characteristics
Input Offset Voltage
Magnitude of Input Offset Change vs.
Temperature
Gain Change vs. VDD1
Magnitude of Gain Change vs.
Temperature
Nonlinearity over ±200 mV Input Voltage
TA = 25°C
3, 4
µV/°C TA = –40°C to +105°C;
absolute value
%
5
VIN+ = –200 mV to +200 mV,
9, 10
TA = 25°C; Note b
Magnitude of NL200 Change vs.
Temperature
Nonlinearity over ±100 mV Input Voltage
dNL200/dTA
—
0.0003
—
%/°C
NL100
—
0.015
0.06
%
TA = –40°C to +105°C
11
VIN+ = –100 mV to +100 mV,
9, 10,
11
TA = 25°C; Note b
Inputs and Outputs
Full-Scale Differential Voltage Input Range
FSR
—
±300
—
mV
VIN = VIN+ – VIN–; Note d
12
Input Bias Current
IIN+
–1
–0.1
—
µA
VIN+ = 0, VIN– = 0 V; Note e
13
dIIN+/dTA
—
–0.05
—
nA/°C
RIN
—
27
—
k
VIN+ or VIN–, single-ended
14
Output Common-Mode Voltage
VOCM
—
1.23
—
V
VOUT+ or VOUT-; Note f
Output Voltage Range
OVR
—
0 to 2.65
—
V
VOUT+ or VOUT-; Note d
Output Short-Circuit Current
|IOSC|
—
11
—
mA
Output Resistance
ROUT
—
21
—
VOUT+ or VOUT-
CMRRIN
—
76
—
dB
Note b
SNR
—
60
—
dB
VIN+ = 300 mVpp 10 kHz sine
wave; Note g
15, 16
Signal-to-(Noise + Distortion) Ratio
SNDR
—
56
—
dB
VIN+ = 300 mVpp 10 kHz sine
wave; Note h
15, 16
Small-Signal Bandwidth (–3 dB)
f–3 dB
140
200
—
kHz
Magnitude of IIN+ Change vs.
Temperature
Equivalent Input Impedance
Input DC Common-Mode Rejection Ratio
12
VOUT+ or VOUT-, shorted to
GND2 or VDD2
AC Characteristics
Signal-to-Noise Ratio
Broadcom
17, 18
AV02-4715EN
6
ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790 Data Sheet
Optical Isolation Amplifier in 15-mm Stretched SO-8 Package
Symbol
Min.
Typ. a
Max.
Unit
10%-10%
tPD10
—
1.6
2.3
µs
200 mV/µs step input
19
50%-50%
tPD50
—
2.0
2.6
µs
200 mV/µs step input
19
90%-90%
tPD90
—
2.6
3.3
µs
200 mV/µs step input
19
tR/F
—
1.7
—
µs
Step input
Common Mode Transient Immunity
CMTI
15
20
—
Power Supply Rejection
PSR
—
–78
—
Parameter
Input to Output Propagation
Delay
Output Rise/Fall Time (10%-90%)
Test Conditions/Notes
kV/µs V
CM = 1 kV, TA = 25°C; Note
dB
Figure
19
b
1 Vpp 1 kHz sine wave ripple
on VDD1, differential output;
Note i
Power Supplies
Input Side Supply Current
IDD1
—
19
28
mA
VIN+ =±400 mV; see Note j
20
Output Side Supply Current
IDD2
—
7
11
mA
5 V supply
20
—
6.5
10
mA
3.3 V supply
20
a. All Typical values are under Typical Operating Conditions at TA = 25°C, VDD1 = 5V, VDD2 = 3.3V.
b. See Definitions.
c. Gain temperature drift can be normalized and expressed as Temperature Coefficient of Gain (TCG) of –50 ppm/°C.
d. When FSR is exceeded, outputs saturate.
e. Because of the switched-capacitor nature of the input sigma-delta converter, time-averaged values are shown.
f. Under Typical Operating Conditions, part-to-part variation ±0.04V.
g. Under Typical Operating Conditions, part-to-part variation ±1 dB.
h. Under Typical Operating Conditions, part-to-part variation ±1 dB.
i.
Ripple voltage applied to VDD1 with a 0.1 µF bypass capacitor connected; differential amplitude of the ripple outputs measured. See
Definitions.
j.
The input supply current decreases as the differential input voltage (VIN+ – VIN–) decreases.
Table 8. Package Characteristics
Parameter
Symbol
Min.
Typ.
Max.
Unit
Test Condition
Input-Output Momentary Withstand
Voltage
VISO
7500
—
—
Vrms
Resistance (Input-Output)
RI-O
—
109
—
VI-O = 500 VDC
c
Capacitance (Input-Output)
CI-O
—
0.5
—
pF
f = 1 MHz
c
RH < 50%, t = 1 min.,
TA = 25°C
Note
a, b
a. In accordance with UL 1577, each optocoupler is proof tested by applying an insulation test voltage ≥ 9000Vrms for 1 second (leakage
detection current limit, II-O ≤ 5µ A). This test is performed before the 100% production test for partial discharge (method b) shown in IEC/EN/
DIN EN 60747-5-5 Insulation Characteristic Table.
b. The Input-Output Momentary Withstand Voltage is a dielectric voltage rating that should not be interpreted as an input-output continuous
voltage rating. For the continuous voltage rating, refer to the IEC/EN/DIN EN 60747-5-5 insulation characteristics table and your equipment
level safety specification.
c. This is a two-terminal measurement: pins 1–4 are shorted together and pins 5–8 are shorted together.
Broadcom
AV02-4715EN
7
ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790 Data Sheet
Optical Isolation Amplifier in 15-mm Stretched SO-8 Package
Typical Performance Plots
Unless otherwise noted, TA = 25°C, VDD1 = 5V, VDD2 = 3.3V.
Figure 3: Input Offset vs. Supply VDD1
Figure 4: Input Offset vs. Supply VDD2
-0.2
1.5
-0.4
1.0
-0.6
OFFSET - mV
OFFSET - mV
2.0
0.5
0.0
-0.5
-1.2
V DD2 = 3.3V
-1.5
4.50
4.75
5.00
5.25
VDD1 - SUPPLY VOLTAGE - V
-1.4
3.0
5.50
Figure 5: Input Offset vs. Temperature
-0.5
8.24
-0.6
8.23
GAIN - V/V
OFFSET - mV
-0.9
8.21
5.5
8.18
8.17
-20
0
20
40
60
TA - TEMPERATURE - °C
80
100
120
Figure 7: Gain vs. Supply VDD2
8.23
8.22
8.22
GAIN - V/V
8.23
V DD1 = 5.0 V
8.19
5.50
8.2
8.19
8.18
8.17
8.17
4.0
4.5
VDD2 - SUPPLY VOLTAGE - V
5.00
5.25
VDD1 - SUPPLY VOLTAGE - V
8.21
8.18
3.5
4.75
Figure 8: Gain vs. Temperature
8.24
8.20
V DD2 = 5.0V
8.16
4.50
8.24
8.21
V DD2 = 3.3V
8.19
-1.1
Broadcom
5.0
8.20
-1.0
8.16
3.0
4.0
4.5
VDD2 - SUPPLY VOLTAGE - V
8.22
-0.8
-1.2
-40
3.5
Figure 6: Gain vs. Supply VDD1
-0.7
GAIN - V/V
-1
V DD2 = 5.0V
-1.0
-2.0
V DD1 = 5.0 V
-0.8
5.0
5.5
8.16
-40
-20
0
20
40
60
TA - TEMPERATURE - °C
80
100
120
AV02-4715EN
8
ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790 Data Sheet
Optical Isolation Amplifier in 15-mm Stretched SO-8 Package
Figure 9: Nonlinearity vs. Supply VDD1
0.08
0.08
NL 200 , V DD2 = 3.3V
0.06
NL 200 , V DD2 = 5.0V
0.05
0.04
0.03
NL 100, V DD2 = 5.0V
0.02
0.01
4.75
5.00
5.25
VDD1 - SUPPLY VOLTAGE - V
0.03
0.02
3.00
0.12
2.50
0.10
NL 200
0.08
0.06
0.04
0.00
-40
NL 100
-20
0
20
40
60
TA - TEMPERATURE - °C
80
100
4.00
4.50
5.00
VDD2 - SUPPLY VOLTAGE - V
5.50
V OUT+
V OUT-
2.00
1.50
1.00
0.50
-0.50
-0.4
120
-0.3
-0.2
-0.1
0
0.1
0.2
VIN+ - INPUT VOLTAGE - V
0.3
0.4
Figure 14: Input Impedance vs. Temperature
29
20
RIN - INPUT IMPEDANCE - KOhm
15
10
5
0
-5
-10
-15
-20
Broadcom
3.50
0.00
Figure 13: Input Current vs. Input Voltage
-25
-0.6
NL 100
Figure 12: Output Voltage vs. Input Voltage
VOUT - OUTPUT VOLTAGE - V
NL - NONLINEARITY - %
0.04
0.14
0.02
V DD1 = 5V
0.05
0.00
3.00
5.50
Figure 11: Nonlinearity vs. Temperature
IIN+ - INPUT CURRENT - μA
0.06
0.01
NL 100 , V DD2 = 3.3V
0.00
4.50
NL 200
0.07
NL - NONLINEARITY - %
0.07
NL - NONLINEARITY - %
Figure 10: Nonlinearity vs. Supply VDD1
-0.4
-0.2
0.0
0.2
VIN+ - INPUT VOLTAGE - V
0.4
0.6
V IN+ = 0 to 300mV
28
27
26
25
-40
-20
0
20
40
60
TA - TEMPERATURE - °C
80
100
120
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ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790 Data Sheet
Optical Isolation Amplifier in 15-mm Stretched SO-8 Package
Figure 15: SNR, SNDR vs. Temperature
Figure 16: SNR, SNDR vs. Input Voltage
64
64
61
61
SNR
SNDR
55
52
49
43
-20
0
20
40
60
TA - TEMPERATURE - °C
80
100
3
180
0
135
-3
90
-6
-9
-135
100,000
1,000,000
Figure 19: Propagation Delay, Output Rise/Fall vs.
Temperature
Broadcom
400
-45
-18
10,000
FREQUENCY - Hz
350
0
-90
1,000
200
250
300
VIN+ - INPUT VOLTAGE - m Vpp
45
-15
-21
100
150
Figure 18: Phase Frequency Response
PHASE - DEGREES
NORMALIZED GAIN - dB
49
40
100
120
-12
-180
100
1,000
10,000
FREQUENCY - Hz
100,000
1,000,000
Figure 20: Supply Current vs. Input Voltage
21
19
IDD - SUPPLY CURRENT - mA
PROPAGATION DELAY - μs
52
43
VIN+ = 300mVpp 10 kHz sine wave
Figure 17: Gain Frequency Response
3.2
3.0
2.8
2.6
2.4
2.2
2.0
1.8
1.6
1.4
1.2
1.0
0.8
0.6
-40
SNDR
55
46
46
40
-40
SNR
58
SNR, SNDR - dB
SNR, SNDR - dB
58
tPD90
tPD50
tPD10
tR/F
17
IDD1 (VDD1 = 5V)
15
13
11
9
IDD2 (VDD2 = 5V)
7
IDD2 (VDD2 = 3.3V)
5
-20
0
20
40
60
TA - TEMPERATURE - °C
80
100
120
3
-0.4
-0.3
-0.2
-0.1
0
0.1
VIN+ - INPUT VOLTAGE - V
0.2
0.3
0.4
AV02-4715EN
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ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790 Data Sheet
Optical Isolation Amplifier in 15-mm Stretched SO-8 Package
Definitions
Application Information
Gain
Application Circuit
Gain is defined as the slope of the best-fit line of differential
output voltage (VOUT+ – VOUT–) vs. differential input voltage
(VIN+ – VIN–) over the nominal input range, with offset error
adjusted out.
The typical application circuit is shown in Figure 21. A
floating power supply (which in many applications could be
the same supply that is used to drive the high-side power
transistor) is regulated to 5V using a simple three-terminal
voltage regulator (U1). The voltage from the current sensing
resistor, or shunt (RSENSE), is applied to the input of the
ACNT-H79B/H79A/H790 through an RC anti-aliasing filter
(R5 and C3). And finally, the differential output of the
isolation amplifier is converted to a ground-referenced
single-ended output voltage with a simple differential
amplifier circuit (U3 and associated components). Although
the application circuit is relatively simple, a few
recommendations should be followed to ensure optimal
performance.
Nonlinearity
Nonlinearity is defined as half of the peak-to-peak output
deviation from the best-fit gain line, expressed as a
percentage of the full-scale differential output voltage.
Input DC Common Mode Rejection
Ratio, CMRRIN
CMRRIN is defined as the ratio of the differential signal gain
(signal applied differentially between pins VOUT+ and
VOUT–) to the input side common-mode gain (input pins tied
together and the signal applied to both inputs with respect to
pin GND1), expressed in dB.
Common Mode Transient Immunity,
CMTI, also known as Common Mode
Rejection
CMTI is tested by applying an exponentially rising/falling
voltage step on pin 4 (GND1) with respect to pin 5 (GND2).
The amplitude of the step is adjusted until the differential
output (VOUT+ – VOUT-) exhibits more than a 200 mV
deviation from the average output voltage for more than
1µs. The ACNT-H79B/H79A/H790 will continue to function
if more than 15 kV/µs common mode slopes are applied, as
long as the breakdown voltage limitations are observed.
Power Supply Rejection, PSR
PSR is the ratio of differential amplitude of the ripple outputs
over power supply ripple voltage, referred to the input,
expressed in dB.
Broadcom
AV02-4715EN
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ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790 Data Sheet
Optical Isolation Amplifier in 15-mm Stretched SO-8 Package
Figure 21: Typical Application Circuit for Motor Phase Current Sensing
HV+
POSITIVE
FLOATING
SUPPLY
GATE DRIVE
CIRCUIT
U1
78L05
IN OUT
C1
0.1
PF R5
C9
4.7PF
***
R3
***
10.0 K
VDD2 (+5 V)
VDD1
C2
0.1
PF
+15 V
1
8
2
7
R1
6
10.0 K
R2
C3
47 nF 3
10
MOTOR
C5
220 pF
U2
C4
0.1 PF
10.0 K
+ –
RSENSE
4
GND1
5
C6
220 pF
ACNT-H79x
***
GND2
C8
0.1 PF
GND2
–
U3
+ TL032A
VOUT
C7
R4
0.1 PF
10.0 K
-15 V
GND2
GND2
HV-
Power Supplies and Bypassing
As mentioned above, an inexpensive 78L05 three-terminal
regulator can be used to reduce the gate-drive power supply
voltage to 5 V. To help attenuate high frequency power
supply noise or ripple, a resistor or inductor can be used in
series with the input of the regulator to form a low-pass filter
with the regulator’s input bypass capacitor.
The power supply for the isolation amplifier is most often
obtained from the same supply used to power the power
transistor gate drive circuit. If a dedicated supply is required,
in many cases it is possible to add an additional winding on
an existing transformer. Otherwise, some sort of simple
isolated supply can be used, such as a line powered
transformer or a high-frequency DC-DC converter.
As shown in Figure 21, 0.1-µF bypass capacitors (C2, C4)
should be located as close as possible to the pins of the
isolation amplifier. The bypass capacitors are required
because of the high-speed digital nature of the signals
inside the isolation amplifier. A 47 nF bypass capacitor (C3)
is also recommended at the input pins due to the
switched-capacitor nature of the input circuit. The input
bypass capacitor also forms part of the anti-aliasing filter,
which is recommended to prevent high-frequency noise
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from aliasing down to lower frequencies and interfering with
the input signal. The input filter also performs an important
reliability function—it reduces transient spikes from ESD
events flowing through the current sensing resistor.
PC Board Layout
The design of the printed circuit board (PCB) should follow
good layout practices, such as keeping bypass capacitors
close to the supply pins, keeping output signals away from
input signals, the use of ground and power planes, etc. In
addition, the layout of the PCB can also affect the isolation
transient immunity (CMTI) of the ACNT-H79B/H79A/H790,
due primarily to stray capacitive coupling between the input
and the output circuits. To obtain optimal CMTI
performance, the layout of the PC board should minimize
any stray coupling by maintaining the maximum possible
distance between the input and output sides of the circuit
and ensuring that any ground or power plane on the PC
board does not pass directly below or extend much wider
than the body of the ACNT-H79B/H79A/H790. Figure 22
shows an example PCB layout.
AV02-4715EN
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ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790 Data Sheet
Optical Isolation Amplifier in 15-mm Stretched SO-8 Package
Figure 22: Example Printed Circuit Board Layout
TO GND1 TO VDD1
TO VDD2 TO GND2
C4
C2
U2
TO RSENSE+
R5
VOUT+
VOUT–
C3
TO RSENSE–
Note: Drawing not to scale
ACNT-H79x
Shunt Resistor Selection
The current sensing resistor should have low resistance (to
minimize power dissipation), low inductance (to minimize di/
dt induced voltage spikes which could adversely affect
operation), and reasonable tolerance (to maintain overall
circuit accuracy). Choosing a particular value for the resistor
is usually a compromise between minimizing power
dissipation and maximizing accuracy. Smaller sense
resistance decreases power dissipation, while larger sense
resistance can improve circuit accuracy by utilizing the full
input range of the ACNT-H79B/H79A/H790.
The first step in selecting a sense resistor is determining
how much current the resistor will be sensing. The graph in
Figure 23 shows the RMS current in each phase of a threephase induction motor as a function of average motor output
power (in horsepower, hp) and motor drive supply voltage.
The maximum value of the sense resistor is determined by
the current being measured and the maximum
recommended input voltage of the isolation amplifier. The
maximum sense resistance can be calculated by taking the
maximum recommended input voltage and dividing by the
peak current that the sense resistor should see during
normal operation. For example, if a motor will have a
maximum RMS current of 10A and can experience up to
50% overloads during normal operation, then the peak
current is 21.1A (=10 × 1.414 × 1.5). Assuming a maximum
input voltage of 200 mV, the maximum value of sense
resistance in this case would be about 10 m.
The maximum average power dissipation in the sense
resistor can also be easily calculated by multiplying the
sense resistance times the square of the maximum RMS
current, which is about 1W in the previous example. If the
power dissipation in the sense resistor is too high, the
resistance can be decreased below the maximum value to
decrease power dissipation. The minimum value of the
sense resistor is limited by precision and accuracy
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requirements of the design. As the resistance value is
reduced, the output voltage across the resistor is also
reduced, which means that the offset and noise, which are
fixed, become a larger percentage of the signal amplitude.
The selected value of the sense resistor will fall somewhere
between the minimum and maximum values, depending on
the particular requirements of a specific design.
When sensing currents large enough to cause significant
heating of the sense resistor, the temperature coefficient
(tempco) of the resistor can introduce nonlinearity due to the
signal dependent temperature rise of the resistor. The effect
increases as the resistor-to-ambient thermal resistance
increases. This effect can be minimized by reducing the
thermal resistance of the current sensing resistor or by
using a resistor with a lower tempco. Lowering the thermal
resistance can be accomplished by repositioning the current
sensing resistor on the PC board, by using larger PC board
traces to carry away more heat, or by using a heat sink.
For a two-terminal current sensing resistor, as the value of
resistance decreases, the resistance of the leads become a
significant percentage of the total resistance. This has two
primary effects on resistor accuracy. First, the effective
resistance of the sense resistor can become dependent on
factors such as how long the leads are, how they are bent,
how far they are inserted into the board, and how far solder
wicks up the leads during assembly (these issues will be
discussed in more detail shortly). Second, the leads are
typically made from a material, such as copper, which has a
much higher tempco than the material from which the
resistive element itself is made, resulting in a higher tempco
overall.
Both of these effects are eliminated when a four-terminal
current sensing resistor is used. A four-terminal resistor has
two additional terminals that are Kelvin connected directly
across the resistive element itself; these two terminals are
used to monitor the voltage across the resistive element
while the other two terminals are used to carry the load
current. Because of the Kelvin connection, any voltage
drops across the leads carrying the load current should
have no impact on the measured voltage.
When laying out a PC board for the current sensing
resistors, a couple of points should be kept in mind. The
Kelvin connections to the resistor should be brought
together under the body of the resistor and then run very
close to each other to the input of the ACNT-H79B/H79A/
H790; this minimizes the loop area of the connection and
AV02-4715EN
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ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790 Data Sheet
Also, multiple layers of the PC board can be used to
increase current carrying capacity. Numerous platedthrough vias should surround each non-Kelvin terminal of
the sense resistor to help distribute the current between the
layers of the PC board. The PC board should use 2 oz or
4 oz copper for the layers, resulting in a current carrying
capacity in excess of 20A. Making the current carrying
traces on the PC board fairly large can also improve the
sense resistor’s power dissipation capability by acting as a
heat sink. Liberal use of vias where the load current enters
and exits the PC board is also recommended.
Shunt Resistor Connections
The typical method for connecting the ACNT-H79B/H79A/
H790 to the current sensing resistor is shown in Figure 21.
VIN+ (pin 2) is connected to the positive terminal of the
sense resistor, while VIN– (pin 3) is shorted to GND1 (pin 4),
with the power-supply return path functioning as the sense
line to the negative terminal of the current sense resistor.
This allows a single pair of wires or PC board traces to
connect the isolation amplifier circuit to the sense resistor.
By referencing the input circuit to the negative side of the
sense resistor, any load current induced noise transients on
the resistor are seen as a common-mode signal and will not
interfere with the current-sense signal. This is important
because the large load currents flowing through the motor
drive, along with the parasitic inductances inherent in the
wiring of the circuit, can generate both noise spikes and
offsets that are relatively large compared to the small
voltages that are being measured across the current
sensing resistor.
If the same power supply is used both for the gate drive
circuit and for the current sensing circuit, it is very important
that the connection from GND1 of the ACNT-H79B/H79A/
H790 to the sense resistor be the only return path for supply
current to the gate drive power supply in order to eliminate
potential ground loop problems. The only direct connection
between the ACNT-H79B/H79A/H790 circuit and the gate
drive circuit should be the positive power supply line.
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Differential Input Connection
The differential analog inputs of the ACNT-H79B/H79A/
H790 are implemented with a fully-differential,
switched-capacitor circuit. In the typical application circuit
(Figure 21), the isolation amplifier is connected in a
single-ended input mode. Given the fully differential input
structure, a differential input connection method (balanced
input mode as shown in Figure 24) is recommended to
achieve better performance. The input currents created by
the switching actions on both of the pins are balanced on the
filter resistors and cancelled out each other. Any noise
induced on one pin will be coupled to the other pin by the
capacitor C and creates only common mode noise that is
rejected by the device. Typical value for Ra and Rb is 10
and 22 nF for C.
Figure 23: Motor Output Horsepower vs. Motor Phase Current
and Supply Voltage
40
MOTOR OUTPUT POWER - HORSEPOWER
reduces the possibility of stray magnetic fields from
interfering with the measured signal. If the sense resistor is
not located on the same PC board as the isolation amplifier
circuit, a tightly twisted pair of wires can accomplish the
same thing.
Optical Isolation Amplifier in 15-mm Stretched SO-8 Package
440 V
380 V
220 V
120 V
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
0
5
20
10
25
15
MOTOR PHASE CURRENT - A (rms)
30
35
Output Side
The op-amp used in the external post-amplifier circuit
should be of sufficiently high precision so that it does not
contribute a significant amount of offset or offset drift relative
to the contribution from the isolation amplifier. Generally,
op-amps with bipolar input stages exhibit better offset
performance than op-amps with JFET or MOSFET input
stages.
In addition, the op-amp should also have enough bandwidth
and slew rate so that it does not adversely affect the
response speed of the overall circuit. The post-amplifier
circuit includes a pair of capacitors (C5 and C6) that form a
AV02-4715EN
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ACNT-H79B, ACNT-H79A, ACNT-H790 Data Sheet
single-pole low-pass filter; these capacitors allow the
bandwidth of the post-amp to be adjusted independently of
the gain and are useful for reducing the output noise from
the isolation amplifier.
The gain-setting resistors in the post-amp should have a
tolerance of 1% or better to ensure adequate CMRR and
adequate gain tolerance for the overall circuit. Resistor
networks can be used that have much better ratio
tolerances than can be achieved using discrete resistors.
A resistor network also reduces the total number of
components for the circuit as well as the required board
space.
Optical Isolation Amplifier in 15-mm Stretched SO-8 Package
Figure 24: Simplified Differential Input Connection Diagram
5V
VDD1
Ra
VIN+
+Input
Rb
–Input
ACNT-H79x
C
VIN–
GND1
Voltage Sensing
The ACNT-H79B/H79A/H790 can also be used to isolate
signals with amplitudes larger than its recommended input
range with the use of a resistive voltage divider at its input.
The only restrictions are that the impedance of the divider
be relatively small (less than 1 k) so that the input
resistance (27 k) and input bias current (0.1 µA) do not
affect the accuracy of the measurement. An input bypass
capacitor is still required, although the 10 series damping
resistor is not (the resistance of the voltage divider provides
the same function). The low-pass filter formed by the divider
resistance and the input bypass capacitor may limit the
achievable bandwidth.
Broadcom
AV02-4715EN
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