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TI Designs <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Description Features Lighting control devices such as wired or wireless switches and dimmers may be used in retrofit environments or in new installations. New installations may have separate line, neutral, and earth wires where the lighting control unit can be powered by connecting it between the line and neutral, whereas in most of the retrofit installations only line and earth wires may be available. In such cases, the lighting control unit has to be powered by connecting it between line and earth terminals while ensuring that the current flowing to earth is limited to 0.5 mA. This necessitates the use of a very low standby consumption, high efficiency power supply. • This TI Design is a wireless lighting control unit using a low quiescent current offline converter that enables excellent efficiency at low power levels, a low-noise, high-PSRR, low quiescent current, good line and load transient response LDO, and a very low standby and low active current specs wireless microcontroller. • • • • • <125-µA Quiescent Current Including Wireless MCU and 69% Efficiency at 35-mW Load Offline Converter With Integrated 700-V Power MOSFET High-Side Current Limit Circuit With Inherent Inrush Current Limiting, Output Overload, and ShortCircuit Protections Low Noise, High PSRR, Low Quiescent Current, Good Load Transient Response LDO for Wireless Control Tested and Characterized With SimpleLink Bluetooth® Low Energy Wireless MCU Having 1µA Standby, Low Rx, Tx, Core and Sensor Controller Currents Enabling Easy Implementation Of Lighting Controls Enables Neutral-less Lighting Control Applications With Earth as Return That Complies With UL773A Applications Resources • TIDA-01097 UCC28881 LP5912 CC2650MODA TPD6E004 Design Folder Product Folder Product Folder Product Folder Product Folder • • • Neutral-less or No Neutral Wireless Lighting Control Switches, Dimmers Photo Control Units Occupancy and Vacancy Sensors Motion Sensors ASK Our E2E Experts TIDA-01097 RF board Power supply board EMI filter CC2650MODA Current limiter L 110-V AC input E/N 5 + Rectifier UCC28881 (Integrated 700-V MOSFET) ± LP5912 LDO + 3.3V PG/ RST GND TPD6E004 ESD JTAG connector Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated 1 System Overview www.ti.com An IMPORTANT NOTICE at the end of this TI reference design addresses authorized use, intellectual property matters and other important disclaimers and information. 1 System Overview 1.1 System Description Lighting control units play an important role in increasing the energy efficiency of commercial and residential buildings. Lighting control may be wired or wireless, with wireless control adoption increasing due to wiring elimination and increased ease of installation. Wireless control consists of simple wireless switches, keypads, dimmers, and sensors. Wireless controls commonly need a compact power supply that may be able to deliver power in the range of sub 100 mW. One of the primary requirements for wireless control power supplies is that they need to have ultra-low quiescent current as they are always "on". The second important requirement is that they need to be compact with high integration.Figure 1 and Figure 2 show typical implementation of Neutral less Lighting control (switches, dimmers) application L Encrypted wireless connection between lighting control and LED driver TIDA-01097 N AC input L TIDA-01097 Power supply board 110-V AC input TIDA-01097 RF board (Wireless lighting control) LED driver with wireless receiver module LED lamp E Input from user to turn ON/OFF and perform dimming operations User input control Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Figure 1. Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Control Application 2 <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback System Overview www.ti.com L 110-V AC input Neutral-less TRIAC dimmer TIDA-01097 N VDD L TIDA-01097 Power supply board 110-V AC input TIDA-01097 RF board (Wireless lighting control) LED+ GND E Input from user to turn ON/OFF and perform dimming operations LED driver CNTL LED lamp LED± TRIAC driver Wired connection between lighting control and LED driver User input control Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Figure 2. Neutral-less TRIAC Dimming Application Installing lighting controls in retrofit applications is more challenging because the older installations may or may not have the neutral wire or the grounded circuit conductor. In such cases, the lighting control unit has to be powered by connecting the unit between the hot wire (line terminal) and the earth wire or ground terminal. The UL773A does allow it with certain restrictions and one of the important requirements is that the current flowing through the ground should be limited to 0.5 mA. This is to ensure that the ground current does not exceed the trip limit of the earth leakage circuit breaker, which may be there in the circuit. In order to meet this requirement and at the same time generate the maximum possible power for powering the lighting control circuit components, the power supply has to be efficient and should have a very low quiescent current. The TI Design TIDA-01097 is designed for such an application leveraging the low quiescent current of the offline converter and the low quiescent current LDO. The reference design is also tested for powering the low energy wireless MCU and characterization data is provided for reference. While this power supply is meant for lighting control systems in a retrofit environment without neutral, it can also be used in newer buildings where neutral wire is readily available. Although the TIDA-01097 is designed and tested for a 3.3-V, 10-mA output, one can redesign the system easily to provide different voltage and higher power. TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated 3 System Overview 1.2 www.ti.com Key System Specifications Table 1. Key System Specifications PARAMETER SYMBOL TEST CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNIT INPUT CHARACTERISTICS Input AC voltage VIN_AC 93.5 110 126.5 V Frequency FAC — 60 — Hz Minimum voltage to start-up VHVIN(min) — 30 — V Input AC current IIN_AC 100 500 800 µA V OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS Output voltage Output current VLDO_IN Voltage before LDO at VIN_AC = 110 V 3.55 3.60 (1) 3.58 VLDO_OUT Voltage after LDO 3.230 3.294 3.360 V IOUT VIN_AC = 110 V 0.005 6.75 (2) 10.74 mA Output voltage ripple Ripple before LDO at VIN_AC = 110 V 72 — 240 mV VIN_AC = 110 V , IIN_AC = 740 µA — 33.2 — mW Efficiency VIN_DC = 155.5 V, IIN_DC = 374 μA — 68.9 (3) — % Protections Overload, output short-circuit, and over-temperature protections (4) Output power (1) (2) (3) (4) 1.3 PLDO_OUT Output voltage before LDO is specified at IIN_AC = 500 μA. Output current is specified at IIN_AC = 500 μA. The efficiency is specified for the flyback power stage only excluding the bridge rectifier, the current limiter circuit at the input, and the LDO at the output. The DC input voltage applied is 155.5 V. The protections specified are features of the UCC28881 device used in the TI Design. Block Diagram TIDA-01097 RF board Power supply board EMI filter CC2650MODA Current limiter L 110-V AC input E/N 5 + Rectifier UCC28881 (Integrated 700-V MOSFET) LP5912 LDO ± + 3.3V PG/ RST GND TPD6E004 ESD JTAG connector Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Figure 3. TIDA-01097 Block Diagram 4 <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback System Overview www.ti.com 1.4 1.4.1 Highlighted Products UCC28881 700-V, 225-mA Low Quiescent Current Offline Converter The UCC28881 integrates the controller and a 14-Ω, 700-V power MOSFET into one monolithic device. The device also integrates a high-voltage current source, enabling start-up and operation directly from the rectified mains voltage. The low quiescent current of the device enables excellent efficiency. With the UCC28881, the most topologies common converter topologies such as buck, buck-boost, and flyback can be built using a minimum number of external components. The UCC28881 incorporates a soft-start feature for the circuit controlled start-up of the power stage, which minimizes the stress on the power-stage components. The key features that make this device unique are: • Integrated 14-Ω, 700-V MOSFET • Integrated high-voltage current source for internal device bias power • Integrated current sense • Internal soft start • Self-biased switcher, thus no aux winding required on inductor or transformer to bias the controller • Supports buck, buck-boost and flyback topologies • <100-μA device quiescent current • Robust current protection during load short circuit • Protection features such as current limiter, overload, and output short circuit, and undervoltage lockout HVIN 5 High Voltage Current Source 8 Thermal Shutdown VDD 4 Gate LDO UVLO DRAIN S Q R Q Current Limit Control and Reference VREF_TH = 1 V + FB 3 PWM Controller and Output Short Circuit Protection Leading Edge Blanking Time LEB 1, 2 GND Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Figure 4. Functional Block Diagram of UCC28881 TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated 5 System Overview 1.4.2 www.ti.com LP5912 500-mA Low-Noise, Low-IQ LDO The LP5912 is a low-noise LDO that can supply up to 500 mA of output current. Designed to meet the requirements of RF and analog circuits, the LP5912 device provides low noise, high PSRR, low quiescent current, and low line and load transient response. The LP5912 offers class-leading noise performance without a noise bypass capacitor and with the ability for remote output capacitance placement. The device is designed to work with a 1-μF input and a 1-μF output ceramic capacitor (no separate noise bypass capacitor required). This device is available with fixed output voltages from 0.8 to 5.5 V in 25-mV steps. Contact Texas Instruments Sales for specific voltage option needs. The key features that make this device unique are: • Input voltage range: 1.6 to 6.5 V • Output voltage range: 0.8 to 5.5 V • Output current: up to 500 mA • Low output-voltage noise: 12 μVRMS typical • PSRR at 1 kHz: 75 dB typical • Output voltage tolerance (VOUT ≥ 3.3 V): ±2% • Low IQ (enabled, no load): 30 μA typical • LDO (VOUT ≥ 3.3 V): 95 mV typical at a 500-mA load • Stable with 1-μF ceramic input and output capacitors • Thermal-overload and short-circuit protection • Reverse current protection • No noise bypass capacitor required • Output automatic discharge for fast turnoff • Power-good output with 140-μs typical delay • Internal soft-start to limit the inrush current • –40°C to 125°C operating junction temperature range Current Limit IN OUT RAD 100 45 k VIN EA Output Discharge + ± VBG PG EN Control EN 140-µs DELAY 3M GND Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Figure 5. LP5912 Functional Block Diagram 6 <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback System Overview www.ti.com 1.4.3 CC2650MODA SimpleLink™ Bluetooth® Low Energy Wireless MCU Module The SimpleLink CC2650MODA device is a wireless microcontroller (MCU) module that targets Bluetooth low energy (BLE) applications. The CC2650MODA device can also run ZigBee® and 6LoWPAN and ZigBee RF4CE™ remote control applications. The module is based on the SimpleLink CC2650 wireless MCU, a member of the CC26xx family of costeffective, ultra-low-power, 2.4-GHz RF devices. Very-low active RF and MCU current and low-power mode current consumption provide excellent battery lifetime and allow for operation on small coin-cell batteries and in energy-harvesting applications. The CC2650MODA module contains a 32-bit ARM Cortex-M3 processor that runs at 48 MHz as the main processor and a rich peripheral feature set that includes a unique ultra-low-power sensor controller. This sensor controller is good for interfacing with external sensors or for collecting analog and digital data autonomously while the rest of the system is in sleep mode. Thus, the CC2650MODA device is good for applications within a wide range of products including industrial, consumer electronics, and medical devices. The CC2650MODA module is pre-certified for operation under the regulations of the FCC, IC, ETSI, and ARIB. These certifications save significant cost and effort for customers when integrating the module into their products. The BLE controller and the IEEE 802.15.4 MAC are embedded in the ROM and are partly running on a separate ARM® Cortex®-M0 processor. This architecture improves overall system performance and power consumption and makes more flash memory available. The key features that make this device unique are: • Operation from 1.8 to 3.8 V • Active-Mode RX: 6.2 mA • Active-Mode TX at 0 dBm: 6.8 mA • Active-Mode TX at 5 dBm: 9.4 mA • Active-Mode MCU: 61 µA/MHz • Active-Mode MCU: 48.5 CoreMark/mA • Active-Mode sensor controller: 0.4 mA + 8.2 µA/MHz • Standby: 1 µA (RTC running and RAM/CPU retention) • Shutdown: 100 nA (wake-up on external events) • 2.4-GHz RF transceiver compatible with BLE 4.2 Specification and IEEE 802.15.4 PHY and MAC • Excellent receiver sensitivity (–97 dBm for BLE and –100 dBm for 802.15.4), selectivity, and blocking performance • Programmable output power up to 5 dBm TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated 7 System Overview 1.4.3.1 www.ti.com Sensor Controller The sensor controller contains circuitry that can be selectively enabled in standby mode. The peripherals in this domain may be controlled by the sensor controller engine, which is a proprietary power-optimized CPU. This CPU can read and monitor sensors or perform other tasks autonomously, thereby significantly reducing power consumption and offloading the main CM3 CPU. The sensor controller is set up using a PC-based configuration tool called Sensor Controller Studio™ and typical use cases may be (but are not limited to): • Analog sensors using integrated ADC • Digital sensors using GPIOs and bit-banged I2C or SPI • UART communication for sensor reading or debugging • Capacitive sensing • Waveform generation • Pulse counting • Keyboard scan • Quadrature decoder for polling rotation sensors • Oscillator calibration The peripherals in the sensor controller include the following: • The low-power clocked comparator can be used to wake the device from any state in which the comparator is active. A configurable internal reference can be used with the comparator. The output of the comparator can also be used to trigger an interrupt or the ADC. • Capacitive sensing functionality is implemented through the use of a constant current source, a timeto-digital converter, and a comparator. The continuous time comparator in this block can also be used as a higher-accuracy alternative to the low-power clocked comparator. The sensor controller will take care of baseline tracking, hysteresis, filtering and other related functions. • The ADC is a 12-bit, 200-ksamples/s ADC with eight inputs and a built-in voltage reference. The ADC can be triggered by many different sources, including timers, I/O pins, software, the analog comparator, and the RTC. • The sensor controller also includes a SPI/I2C digital interface. • The analog modules can be connected to up to eight different GPIOs. 8 <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback System Overview www.ti.com SimpleLinkTM CC2650MOD Wireless MCU Module 32.768-kHz Crystal Oscillator 24-MHz Crystal Oscillator Antenna RF Balun GND 1 25 GND NC 2 24 NC GND 3 23 VDD ADC DIO 0 4 22 VDD ADC DIO 1 5 cJTAG RF core ROM Main CPU: 128-KB Flash ARM® Cortex®-M3 Digital PLL DSP Modem 8-KB Cache 20-KB SRAM 15 GPIOs TRNG AES Temp. / Batt. Monitor 32 ch. µDMA RTC 12-bit ADC, 200 ks/s 18 DIO 11 (Exposed GND Pads) 17 DIO 10 JTAG_TMS 9 10 11 12 2× Analog Comparators 13 14 15 16 DIO 9 Watchdog Timer 19 DIO 12 DIO 8 I2S 8 G4 nRESET 2× SSI (SPI, µWire, TI) DIO 4 G3 20 DIO 13 DIO 7 UART Sensor Controller Engine 7 DIO 6/JTAG_TDI 4× 32-bit Timers Sensor Controller DIO 3 DIO 5/JTAG_TDO I2C ROM 6 G2 JTAG_TCK General Peripherals / Modules ARM® Cortex®-M0 4-KB SRAM DIO 2 21 DIO 14 G1 SPI / I2C Digital Sensor IF Constant Current Source Time-to-Digital Converter DC-DC converter 2-KB SRAM Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Figure 6. CC2650MODA Block Diagram TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback Figure 7. CC2650MODA Pin Diagram <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated 9 System Overview 1.4.4 www.ti.com TPD6E004, Low-Capacitance, 6-Channel ±15-kV ESD Protection Array for High-Speed Data Interfaces The TPD6E004 device is a low-capacitance, ±15-kV ESD-protection diode array designed to protect sensitive electronics attached to communication lines. Each channel consists of a pair of diodes that steers ESD current pulses to VCC or GND. The TPD6E004 protects against ESD pulses up to ±15-kV human body model (HBM), ±8-kV contact ESD, and ±12-kV air-gap ESD as specified in IEC 61000-4-2. This device has a typical 1.6-pF capacitance per channel, making it ideal for use in high-speed data I/O interfaces. The TPD6E004 device is available in the RSE package and is specified for –40°C to 85°C operation. The TPD6E004 device is a six-channel ESD structure designed for USB, Ethernet, FireWire, and JTAG applications. VCC IO1 IO2 IO3 IO4 IO5 IO6 GND Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Figure 8. Functional Block Diagram of TPD6E004 10 <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback System Design Theory www.ti.com 2 System Design Theory This reference design is a power supply for producing a 3.3-V output. For neutral-less lighting control, as the current flowing to the earth terminal has to be limited to 0.5 mA only, the power supply has a linear current limiter circuit implemented using discrete components. Following the current limiter is a nonisolated flyback power supply with output voltage feedback for the regulation. The output voltage from flyback is used for powering a wireless MCU module through the LP5912 LDO. The LDO helps in regulation and as well as reduction of flyback output ripple voltage. 2.1 Input Current Limiter Design Figure 9 shows a simple current limiter circuit implementation. It uses a MOSFET as a series pass element to control the current. Vin Vin Sensing Resistor (R4) N-Channel MOSFET (Q1) 3 1 4 C 2 3 Bias Resistor (R1) Load Capacitor (C) NPN Transistor (Q3) Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Figure 9. Current Limit Circuit Implementation The current sense resistor along with the NPN transistor (Q3) senses the current through the circuit and regulates the MOSFET gate voltage to control the current. The current limit value for this circuit is set by sense resistor (R4) and base to emitter junction voltage (VBE) of transistor Q3 and is calculated by Equation 1. Current limit = ( Current sense resistor (R 4 ) Base to emitter junction voltage V BE ) (1) Although this circuit can work, it has certain limitations. The current-sense resistor, R4, in Figure 9 does not sense the bias current. Hence, when the input terminal voltage increases, it causes increase in bias current which in turn causes the current limit to increase. This change in current limit with respect to the change in line voltage conditions will not be desirable. The other limitation is the change in current limit due to the negative temperature coefficient of the NPN transistor(Q3). The negative temperature coefficient of the base-to-emitter junction causes the current value to vary widely with temperature. TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated 11 System Design Theory www.ti.com Figure 10 shows the modified current limiter circuit that mitigates these two limitations. FCD4N60TM Q1 3 1 4 Vin R2 100k 100k MMBT3906-7-F Q2 3 2 R4 5.11k 1 R1 1 R3 17.8k 3 Q3 D2 2 MMBT2222ALT1G 1SMB5919BT3G 5.6V Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Figure 10. Modified Current Limiter Circuit Resistor R3 and PNP transistor Q2 form a constant-current source to the collector of Q3. The circuit diverts any excess bias current through the collector of Q2 to sense resistor R4. Thus, as the terminal voltage increases, the bias current remains relatively constant, and the current regulation appears much flatter. The negative temperature coefficient of the base-to-emitter junction of transistor Q3 causes another problem with this kind of circuit. The temperature coefficient is approximately −1.6 mV/°C, which causes the current value to vary widely with temperature. One way to approach this problem is to add a 5.6- to 6.2-V Zener diode, D2, in series with the emitter of Q3, which increases the sense voltage (Figure 10). A 5.6-V diode has a positive temperature coefficient, which counteracts the negative temperature coefficient of the transistor. Furthermore, the total sense voltage is much larger, so 100 mV or so of a voltage change with temperature does not seriously affect the regulated current. 2.2 Flyback Circuit Component Design This section details the design process and component selection a designer must follow to complete a flyback converter using the UCC28881. 2.2.1 Design Goal Parameters Table 2 states the design goal parameters for this design. These parameters are used in further calculations to select components. Table 2. Design Goal Parameters PARAMETER DESCRIPTION MIN TYP MAX UNIT INPUT CHARACTERISTICS VIN_DC Input DC voltage to transformer 100 — 400 V Output voltage of flyback transformer — 3.6 5 V OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS VOUT 12 IOUT Output current — 10 — mA FMAX Desired switching frequency — 62 — KHz ŋ Targeted efficiency — 70 — % <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback System Design Theory www.ti.com 2.2.2 Transformer Turns Ratio Calculation The UCC28881 has a 700-V integrated MOSFET, and for the transformer to operate up to 400-V DC input voltage, the flyback reflected voltage (VR) and the maximum drain-to-source MOSFET voltage(VDS) stress are decided accordingly. VR is the voltage across the primary winding when the switching controller IC U1 is turned off. This also affects the maximum drain-to-source voltage (VDS ) rating of MOSFET integrated in UCC28881. The maximum drain-to-source voltage (VDS_MAX) is given by Equation 2. V DS _ MAX = V DC _ IN(MAX ) + V R + V CLAMP (2) where: • VCLAMP is the voltage spike caused by the leakage inductance of the transformer and clamped by the snubber • VR is the reflected voltage across transformer primary winding • VDC_IN(max) is the maximum DC input voltage (400 V) to transformer Assuming VCLAMP to be around 25% of VDS_MAX, where VDS_MAX is taken to be around 630 V. VR is calculated as 630 = 400 + VR + 160. where VR = 70 V Choosing the VR is a compromise between the primary MOSFET and the secondary rectifier voltage stress. Setting it too high, by means of a higher turns ratio, would mean a higher VDS_MAX but lower voltage stress on the secondary diode. Setting it too low, by means of a lower turns ratio, would lower VDS_MAX but increases the secondary diode stress. With the highest output voltage being 5 V, the minimum turns ratio required is determined by Equation 3. VR N PS = V OUT + V DIODE (3) where: • NPS is the turns ratio of transformer for a 5-V output • VOUT is the maximum non-isolated output • VDIODE is the drop across the secondary rectifier diode, assuming 0.7 V N PS = 70 = 12.28 (5 + 0.7 ) The actual turns ratio is chosen to be 12.61. The transformer is designed for 100-V to 400-V DC input voltage, 5-V DC output voltage, and 1-A DC output current with switching frequency of 62 kHz. 2.2.3 Feedback Component Selection The feedback threshold for the UCC28881 is 1.03 V. Hence for a output voltage requirement of 3.6 V, the feedback resistor divider network is selected by Equation 4. R PULL _ DN 1.03 = 3.6 ´ R PULL _ UP + R PULL _ DN (4) To limit the current through the feedback resistor divider network, RPULL_UP shall be chosen around 100 kΩ. With this value of RPULL_UP, the calculated value of RPULL_DN is 40.2 kΩ. The final selected value for RPULL_DN is 40.2 kΩ. TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated 13 System Design Theory 2.2.4 www.ti.com VDD Supply and Biasing Capacitor The supply for operation of the UCC28881 is generated internally and there is no need for an external voltage source (for example, the auxiliary winding of a flyback converter). Use a capacitance of 100 nF on the VDD pin to ensure a high-phase margin of the internal 5-V regulator; place this capacitor close to the VDD pin and GND pins to minimize the series resistance and inductance. 2.2.5 Secondary Rectifying Diode Selection Output diode reverse voltage or blocking voltage at needed secondary side (VDIODE_BLOCKING) can be calculated using Equation 5. V DC _ MAX V DIODE _ BLOCKING = + V OUT N PS (5) For a 3.6-V non-isolated output, the diode blocking voltage is calculated as: V DIODE _ BLOCKING = 400 + 3.6 = 36.9 V 12 For this TI Design, a 100-V, 2-A diode is used for rectifying diode on secondary side (part number: PMEG10020AELRX). A high-current part is used to reduce the voltage drop across the diode. 2.2.6 Output Capacitor Selection The UCC28881 operates under on/off control. When the FB pin voltage is below internal reference 1 V, the converter is switching and sending power to the load. When the FB pin voltage is above internal reference 1 V, the converter shuts off and stops delivering power to the load. Normally, the converter would operate under frequency control, which means the converter is only enabled one switching cycle and then disabled. Next switching cycle starts when output voltage decays and the feedback enable the converter again. This way, the converter appears to operate under variable switching frequency control. This causes larger output voltage ripple. At lower loads, the switching frequency will be very low and vice versa. The output capacitor needs to be calculated to reduce the ripple at the necessary operating load conditions. However in this end application, the load is not constant and is duty cycled. Also when the load is on, the peak current requirement is higher than what the power supply can deliver. The input current limiter circuit limits the input current to the flyback converter. Therefore, the peak current has to be supplied by the output storage capacitor. This necessitates adequate sizing of the output capacitor based on the peak current and the on time of the load, assuming the off time of the load is much higher than the on time. The value of output capacitor can be calculated using Equation 6. DT C OUT = I ´ DV DD (6) where: • I is current supplied to the MCU • ΔT represents the time during which high peak current is supplied to the MCU by the output capacitor • ΔVDD is the allowed drop in the MCU power supply At a 5-dBm power level, the CC2650MODA MCU requires peak current of about 10 mA for a duration of almost 4.7 ms and assuming ΔVDD to be 300 mV. C OUT = 0.01 ´ 0.0047 0.3 For this TI Design, three 47-μF, 10-V DC rated capacitors are used in parallel at the output to supply required peak current by the CC2650MODA MCU. Two capacitors (C4 and C5) are used at the flyback output and the other 47-μF capacitor (C9) is present at the output of the LDO (LP5912). 14 <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback Getting Started Hardware www.ti.com 3 Getting Started Hardware 3.1 Test Equipments Used to Validate Board • • • • 3.2 AC power supply: 0 to 130 V Digital oscilloscope (use isolated channel scope for observing input voltage and current waveform) 61/2 digit multimeter (×4) Resistive load Test Conditions Input Voltage Range The AC source must be capable of varying between VIN_AC of 93.5-V to 126.5-V AC. Set the input current limit to 0.1 A. Output A rheostat or resistive decade box is connected at the output to evaluate the board. Testing is also done by connecting the CC2650 wireless module at the output of the TIDA-01097 power supply board. 3.3 Test Procedure 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Connect the AC source at the input terminals (Connector J1) of the reference board. Connect the output terminal (Connector J2) to the resistive box. Set the position of resistive box to no-load. Gradually increase the input voltage from 0 V to a voltage of 110-V AC. Turn on the load to draw current from the output terminals of the converter. Observe the startup conditions, current limiting, and smooth switching waveforms. TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated 15 Testing and Results 4 www.ti.com Testing and Results Two main tests were performed: one connecting TIDA-01097 power supply board output to a resistive load, and the other one connecting the CC2650MODA wireless module (mounted on TIDA-01097 RF board). When the TIDA-01097 power supply board is connected to the CC2650MODA module, the BLE device monitor sample application was used to transmit data wirelessly. The test results are divided into multiple sections that cover the test data with resistive load, functional performance waveforms, and test results with CC2650MODA wireless module. 4.1 Test Data With Resistive Load For this test, a resistive box is connected at the output terminal of the TIDA-01097 power supply board. 4.1.1 Regulation With Load Variation This section provides test data for regulation with load variation at the output at a different input AC voltage. Table 3. Load Regulation Data at 93.5-V AC Input VIN_AC(V) IIN_AC(mA) IOUT(mA) VLDO_IN(V) VLDO_OUT(V) 93.5 0.80 8.920 3.54 3.294 93.5 0.69 8.050 3.56 3.294 93.5 0.60 7.020 3.57 3.294 93.5 0.50 5.710 3.58 3.294 93.5 0.41 4.470 3.59 3.294 93.5 0.31 3.100 3.59 3.295 93.5 0.21 1.600 3.55 3.295 93.5 0.10 0.008 3.57 3.295 Table 4. Load Regulation Data at 110-V AC Input VIN_AC(V) 16 IIN_AC(mA) IOUT(mA) VLDO_IN(V) VLDO_OUT(V) 110 0.820 10.740 3.55 3.294 110 0.740 10.090 3.57 3.294 110 0.690 9.510 3.58 3.294 110 0.650 8.990 3.59 3.294 110 0.600 8.310 3.59 3.294 110 0.500 6.750 3.60 3.294 110 0.530 7.220 3.60 3.294 110 0.420 5.530 3.61 3.294 110 0.340 4.130 3.61 3.294 110 0.230 2.270 3.60 3.294 110 0.150 0.960 3.59 3.295 110 0.108 0.005 3.59 3.295 <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback Testing and Results www.ti.com Table 5. Load Regulation Data at 126.5-V AC Input VIN_AC(V) 4.1.1.1 IIN_AC(mA) IOUT(mA) VLDO_IN(V) VLDO_OUT(V) 126.5 0.80 12.250 3.58 3.294 126.5 0.69 10.840 3.61 3.294 126.5 0.61 9.590 3.61 3.294 126.5 0.50 7.730 3.63 3.294 126.5 0.41 6.150 3.63 3.294 126.5 0.31 4.190 3.63 3.295 126.5 0.20 2.080 3.62 3.295 126.5 0.10 0.006 3.60 3.295 Input Current versus Output Current Variation Figure 11 shows the variation in input current with a change in output load current at different input AC voltages. 14 Output Load Current (mA) 12 10 8 6 4 110-V Input Voltage 126.5-V Input Voltage 93.5-V Input Voltage 2 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 Input Current (mA) 0.8 0.9 1 D002 Figure 11. Input AC Current versus Output DC Current at Different Input Voltages TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated 17 Testing and Results 4.1.2 www.ti.com Performance Waveforms This section contains various waveforms captured at the input side of the TIDA-01097 board. Input AC current Input AC current Input AC voltage Input AC voltage Figure 12. Input Voltage and Current Waveform at 5.43mA Load at Output With 110-V AC Input Figure 13. Input Voltage and Current Waveform at 10.15mA Load at Output With 110-V AC Input Current waveform across sense resistor of 6.81 NŸ Figure 14. Current Start-up Waveform at 1.93-mA Load at Output With 110-V AC Input NOTE: The current waveforms are captured across sense resistor of a 6.81-kΩ resistor, which is connected in series with the input AC source. 18 <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback Testing and Results www.ti.com 4.1.3 Efficiency Data for Flyback Configuration This section provides efficiency data for the flyback power stage as shown in Figure 15. VDCBUS 100-450VDC U2 T1 D3 275V C3 0.15µF D4 S1J PGND TP3 1 6 2 5 3 4 D5 6 IN 4 C4 47μF EN C7 1µF C5 47μF 2 750343332 OUT NC PGND J2 1 PG 3 GND PAD 5 7 R7 C8 1µF 1 2 3 4 C9 47μF 100k 61300411121 LP5912-3.3DRVR D6 R5 100k U1 2 1 3 4 C1 0.1µF GND GND DRAIN FB VDD PGND 4.7V BZT52C4V7-13-F PGND PGND PGND PGND PGND C6 0.01µF 8 NC 6 HVIN 5 PGND R6 40.2k VDCBUS PGND UCC28881DR PGND Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Figure 15. Schematic of Flyback Topology for Testing Efficiency Table 6. Efficiency Data for Flyback Power Stage VIN_DC (V) IIN_DC (µA) PIN_DC (mW) IOUT (mA) VLDO_IN (V) PLDO_IN (mW) % EFFICIENCY BEFORE LDO VLDO_OUT (V) PLDO_OUT (mW) % EFFICIENCY WITH LDO 155.5 374 58.16 10.74 3.73 40.07 68.90 3.31 35.55 61.13 155.5 328 51.00 9.16 3.73 34.17 66.99 3.31 30.32 59.45 155.5 296 46.03 8.07 3.73 30.08 65.36 3.31 26.71 58.03 155.5 269 41.83 7.14 3.73 26.60 63.58 3.31 23.63 56.50 155.5 257 39.96 6.75 3.72 25.13 62.88 3.31 22.34 55.91 155.5 240 37.32 6.18 3.72 23.00 61.62 3.31 20.46 54.81 155.5 210 32.66 5.15 3.72 19.13 58.59 3.31 17.05 52.20 155.5 191 29.70 4.47 3.71 16.58 55.84 3.31 14.80 49.82 155.5 175 27.21 3.94 3.71 14.60 53.66 3.31 13.04 47.92 155.5 158 24.57 3.34 3.70 12.36 50.30 3.31 11.06 45.00 155.5 132 20.53 2.45 3.69 9.05 44.07 3.31 8.11 39.51 155.5 114 17.73 1.84 3.69 6.78 38.27 3.31 6.09 34.36 155.5 96 14.93 1.19 3.68 4.38 29.34 3.31 3.94 26.39 155.5 87 13.53 0.90 3.68 3.31 24.47 3.31 2.98 22.02 155.5 79 12.28 0.60 3.68 2.21 18.01 3.31 1.99 16.22 155.5 75 11.66 0.45 3.67 1.65 14.18 3.31 1.49 12.77 155.5 67 10.42 0.20 3.67 0.74 7.12 3.31 0.67 6.42 155.5 65 10.11 0.13 3.67 0.48 4.72 3.31 0.43 4.26 TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated 19 Testing and Results 4.1.3.1 www.ti.com Efficiency Plot Figure 16 shows efficiency plotted with a variation in the load current. 80% 70% Efficiency (%) 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% After LDO Before LDO 0 0 2 4 6 8 Output Load Current (mA) 10 12 D001 Figure 16. Efficiency Before and After LDO With Output Load Variation 20 <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback Testing and Results www.ti.com 4.1.4 UCC28881 Integrated MOSFET Switching Node Waveform To measure the voltage at the switch node of the converter, a probe with ground spring is used. Due to the low output current, the UCC28881 is going to operate in discontinuous current mode (DCM). To show the DCM, Figure 17 provides a good orientation by different states, labeled from A to D where two resonant oscillations can be observed: B C D A Figure 17. Switch Node Voltage Waveform at 10.40-mA Output Load With 110-V AC Input Voltage • • • • A: The integrated FET (between the DRAIN pin and GND pin of the UCC28881) is on. As a result, the VDRAIN can be measured on the drain node, and primary winding current flows through the integrated FET and rises. B: The integrated FET goes off. The high-frequency oscillation happened during the initial turn-off event of integrated FET is due to leakage inductance of the transformer (T1) and parasitic capacitance present between drain node and ground. C: The integrated FET is completely turned off now and the secondary side diode (D8) gets forward biased, and the energy is transferred from secondary winding of transformer (T1) to the output load. D: Oscillation 2 happens when the secondary winding energy declines to zero. During this time, both windings of transformer (T1) are open, thus, primary winding inductance of transformer (T1) resonates with the parasitic capacitance at the drain node. TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated 21 Testing and Results 4.1.5 www.ti.com Flyback Power Supply Output Ripple Figure 18 and Figure 19 show the DC voltage captured at the 3.3-V DC output (after the LDO) and before the LDO at different load current. Voltage before LDO Voltage before LDO Voltage after LDO Voltage after LDO Figure 18. DC Voltage Before and After LDO at 1.09-mA Load Current With 110-V Input AC Voltage 4.1.6 Figure 19. DC Voltage Before and After LDO at 10.21-mA Load Current With 110-V Input AC Voltage Start-up and LDO Power Good Waveform This section provides start-up and power good waveform at a 2.33-mA output load. 3.3-V DC output after LDO PG pin of LDO Figure 20. Start-up and Power Good With 110-V AC Input and 3.3-V/2.33-mA DC Output NOTE: The rise time of the 3.3-V DC output is around 290 ms, which is highlighted in Figure 20. 22 <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback Testing and Results www.ti.com 4.2 Test With CC2650MODA Wireless Module For this test, the TIDA-01097 RF board with a CC2650MODA module mounted on it has been connected at the output of the TIDA-01097 power supply board. 4.2.1 Prerequisites To • • • • 4.2.2 test and obtain the results of this TI Design, the following tools were used: AC power supply to power up the board Isolated CRO to capture the current consumption waveforms To measure average power consumption for BLE, the following hardware are required: ❏ TIDA-01097 ❏ INA216A3 (voltage current shunt monitor) ❏ CC2650 LaunchPad™ A Windows® PC installed with: ❏ BLE Stack for CC2650 version 2.0.2.0.31 or higher ❏ Code Composer Studio™ version 6.1.2.00015 or higher ❏ BLE Device Monitor ❏ Smart RF Studio 7 PC Host and Test Board Preparation Follow these steps to set up firmware with the TIDA-01097 and measure current consumption of the CC2650MODA wireless module during various modes such as advertisement, connection, and periodic data exchange like notifications. PC Host Preparation Test Board Preparation 1. Install CCS with version mentioned in prerequisite section. 2. Install BLE Stack for the CC2650. 3. Import Host Test App and Stack from the TI resource explorer in CCS. Ble_sdk_2_02_00_31 → examples → cc2650lp → host_test 4. Connect the CC2650 LaunchPad to the PC. 5. Flash the host_test stack and then the app in the CC2650 LaunchPad 6. Terminate the debugger section and open the BLE Device Manager. 7. Enter the correct serial port mounted by the CC2650 LaunchPad in the BLE Device Monitor and confirm it mounting on the BLE Device Monitor. TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback 1. Connect the TIDA-01097 RF board with the CC2650MODA mounted on it to the CC2650 LaunchPad on the external target jumper. Remember to remove all jumpers from the XDS110 and the CC2650 LaunchPad. 2. Open CCS and import the simple BLE peripheral stack and app project in the workspace from the TI resource explorer: Ble_sdk_2_02_00_31 → examples → cc2650em → simple_peripheral 3. In preprocessor directives, add CC2650DK_5XD and remember to remove CC2650DK_7ID. Build both the projects of stack and app. 4. Flash the simple_peripheral stack and then app in the TIDA-01097 RF board. 5. Terminate the debugger section. 6. Connect the AC power to the TIDA-01097 power supply board. <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated 23 Testing and Results 4.2.3 www.ti.com Test Setup Figure 21 shows the hardware interconnections and wireless connections required for measuring current consumption of the CC2650MODA wireless module when the TIDA-01097 RF board is connected to the TIDA-01097 power supply board. Isolated oscilloscope for capturing the INA216 A3 output waveforms for CC2650MODA current consumption Input AC power source BLE Device Monitor App CC2650MODA mounted on the RF board with the INA216A3 for current measurement TIDA-01097 BLE connection for the CC2650MODA working and configuration CC2650 /DXQFK3DGŒ acting as host as well as flash programmer PC running BLE device monitor to interface and control the CC2650 LaunchPad and to connect to the CC2650MODA Figure 21. Test Setup to Measure Current Consumption of CC2650MODA Figure 22 shows the assembly of the TIDA-01097 RF board on the TIDA-01097 power supply board with the CC2650MODA wireless module mounted on it. Figure 22. TIDA-01097 RF Board Connected to TIDA-01097 Power Supply Board NOTE: For easy and accurate current measurement, the INA216 device is used at the output of LDO LP5912. As this may not needed in the final end application PCB, this is shown as DNP in the schematic. 24 <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback Testing and Results www.ti.com 4.2.4 Test Procedure Figure 23 shows the test flow followed to test current consumption of the CC2650MODA module: TIDA-01097 Prepare test board Prepare PC host Connect oscilloscope probes to test points placed before LDO input and after LDO output at the output of INA216A3 The INA216A3 is being used to measure the typical low current consumption values during various operations of the CC2650MODA like advertisement and connection and periodic data exchange like notifications. Power up the TIDA01097 main board Capture waveform on oscilloscope Perform a SCAN in BLE device monitor at PC As soon as the TIDA-01097 powers up, the CC2650MODA starts sending the BLE advertisement beacon on the configured TX power level on all the advertisement channels. See Figure 23 and Figure 24. Once the CC2650MODA appears in the discovered object list, select it and connect it The discovered node of the CC2650MODA will appear as Simple BLE peripheral with its MAC address and RSSI value of received signal strength. Use the RSSI value to confirm the TX power levels configuration or change provided the TIDA-01097 and CC2650LP are kept at the same distance. On successful connection, observe all characteristics and attributes appearing on the right side of the BLE device monitor window Individually read the attributes of the characteristics. Enable the notification by writing the value 01:00 in characteristic 4, also prompted by the BLE device monitor. This enables periodic data exchange after every 3 seconds apart from the connection refresher process by the BLE stack. Capture waveform on oscilloscope See Figure 25 and Figure 26. Repeat the process for TX power configured to 0 dBm and 5 dBm. By default, the BLE stack has TX power configured to 0 dBm Change the TX power in the BLE stack in the code file ble_user_config.c by updating the value of the DEFAULT_TX_POWER macro as per the txPowerTable array so the values come as 7(0 dBm) and 12 (5 dBm). Figure 23. Test Flow to Test Current Consumption of CC2650MODA TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated 25 Testing and Results 4.2.5 www.ti.com Test Results This section contains waveforms captured at the output of the INA216A3 when the CC2650MODA module is transmitting at different power levels in advertisement and connected mode. 4.2.5.1 CC2650 Advertisement Event Figure 24 and Figure 25 show the waveforms of output voltage of the LDO and output voltage of the INA216A3 (connected after the LDO) when the CC2650MODA is transmitting at power level of 0 dBm and 5 dBm, respectively. 3.3-V DC output 3.3-V DC output Output of INA216 Output of INA216 Figure 24. Output Voltage of LDO and INA216A3 Under 110-V AC Transmitting at 0 dBm in Advertisement Mode Figure 25. Output Voltage of LDO and INA216A3 Under 110-V AC Transmitting at 5 dBm in Advertisement Mode A sense resistor of 3.09 Ω is connected at the input of the INA216A3. The current consumption of the CC2650MODA module can be calculated by capturing the maximum voltage across output of the INA216A3. The current consumption is calculated by Equation 7. Output voltage of INA216A3 Current consumption (I) = (Sense resistor ´ Gain of INA216A3 ) (7) For example, from Figure 24, the peak-to-peak output voltage of the INA216A3 connected after the LDO is 2.12 V. I = 2.12 = 6.86 mA (3.09 ´ 100 ) So, the current consumption of the CC2650MODA wireless module comes out to be 6.86 mA peak when it is transmitting at power level of 0 dBm in advertisement mode. Similarly, the current consumption of the CC2650MODA module can be calculated by measuring the output voltage of the INA216 in connected and periodic data exchange operations operating at different power levels. 26 <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback Testing and Results www.ti.com 4.2.5.2 Connected and Periodic Data Exchange Event Figure 26 and Figure 27 show the waveforms of the output voltage of the LDO and output voltage of the INA216A3 (connected after the LDO) when the CC2650MODA is transmitting and receiving at power level of 0 dBm and 5 dBm, respectively. 3.3-V DC output 3.3-V DC output Output of INA216 Output of INA216 Figure 26. Output Voltage of LDO and INA216A3 Under 110-V AC at 0 dBm in Connected and Data Exchange Mode TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback Figure 27. Output Voltage of LDO and INA216A3 Under 110-V AC at 5 dBm in Connected and Data Exchange Mode <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated 27 Design Files 5 Design Files 5.1 Schematics www.ti.com To download the schematics, see the design files at TIDA-01097. 5.2 Bill of Materials To download the bill of materials (BOM), see the design files at TIDA-01097. 5.3 5.3.1 PCB Layout Recommendations Layout Prints To download the layer plots, see the design files at TIDA-01097. 5.4 Altium Project To download the Altium project files, see the design files at TIDA-01097. 5.5 Gerber Files To download the Gerber files, see the design files at TIDA-01097. 5.6 Assembly Drawings To download the assembly drawings, see the design files at TIDA-01097. 6 Software Files To download the software files, see the design files at TIDA-01097. 7 References 1. EDN Network, Circuit achieves constant current over wide range of terminal voltages, Donald Boughton, Jr, International Rectifier, Orlando, FL; Edited by Martin Rowe and Fran Granville 2. Acuity Brands, Impact of NEC 2011 Section 404.2(C) on Application of Occupancy Sensors, Dave Behnke 3. Texas Instruments, 100-V to 450-V DC, 5-W, 80% Efficiency at 1 W, Auxiliary Supply Reference Design for AC-DC Power Converters, TIDA-00708 Design Guide (TIDUBK7) 7.1 Trademarks All trademarks are the property of their respective owners. 28 <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback About the Authors www.ti.com 8 About the Authors SEETHARAMAN DEVENDRAN is a systems architect at Texas Instruments, where he is responsible for developing reference design solutions for the industrial segment. Seetharaman brings to this role his extensive experience in analog and mixed signal system-level design expertise. Seetharaman earned his bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering (BE, EEE) from Thiagarajar College of Engineering, Madurai, India. SURYA MISHRA is a systems engineer at Texas Instruments where he is responsible for developing reference design solutions for the Lighting, Industrial Segment. Surya earned his bachelor of electronics and communication engineering from the Motilal Nehru National Institute of Technology (MNNIT), Allahabad. ABHED MISRA is a system applications lead at Texas Instruments, where he takes care for LPRF product portfolio support for entire India and is also responsible for doing reference designs for LPRF products. He received his master of technology in communication engineering from NIT, Jaipur, India. TIDUCE6 – December 2016 Submit Documentation Feedback <125-µA Standby, High-Efficiency Power Supply Reference Design for Neutral-less Wireless Lighting Controls Copyright © 2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated 29 IMPORTANT NOTICE FOR TI REFERENCE DESIGNS Texas Instruments Incorporated (‘TI”) reference designs are solely intended to assist designers (“Designer(s)”) who are developing systems that incorporate TI products. TI has not conducted any testing other than that specifically described in the published documentation for a particular reference design. TI’s provision of reference designs and any other technical, applications or design advice, quality characterization, reliability data or other information or services does not expand or otherwise alter TI’s applicable published warranties or warranty disclaimers for TI products, and no additional obligations or liabilities arise from TI providing such reference designs or other items. 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