TIDA-00940 is a 3W non-isolated bias power supply with up to 80% efficiency and excellent EMI performance, designed for motor control and drive subsystems in major appliances, saving system costs and having other features described here Main advantages. This reference design uses a buck topology to provide two non-isolated outputs, implemented using TI's UCC28881 and TPS5405 controllers, to provide comprehensive protection. The hardware is designed and tested to comply with EN-55014 Class B requirements for household appliances.
This reference design operates over an 8V - 16V input range and delivers 5V @ 1A at the output. This design is content from the presentation material of the TI Power Workshop. This design has been built and tested and the design files and test report are included. This is a good low cost design that demonstrates the fundamentals of a non-isolated, non-synchronous dc-dc buck converter.
The TIDA-00601 design uses isolated shunt sensors to implement a Class 0.5% three-phase energy metering system. Isolation is achieved by using an isolated Delta-Sigma modulator with a capacitively isolated output circuit. The energy metering SoC takes different bit streams from the isolated modulator and uses its onboard digital filter to generate ADC sample readings. The energy metering SoC is also used to sense voltages, calculate metering parameter values, drive the board LCD, and communicate with the PC GUI via the board's isolated RS-232 circuitry.
This reference design uses a low-cost MSP430 and two DRV8860 eight-channel low-side drivers to drive eight seven-segment displays with brightness control. The display module benefits from the DRV8860's wide power supply range, high current, PWM brightness control, serial daisy-chain connectivity, and output scalability to hundreds of LEDs. It is a complete solution, equipped with six demonstration display modes via the onboard MCU program, with integrated protection against short circuit, under voltage and over temperature.
This reference design is a resistance thermometer (RTD) front end with an IO-Link compatible sensor transmitter. This design uses the well-proven IO-LINK PHY and stack, and a 6mm wide form factor (compatible with standard M12 connectors) to quickly start IO-Link device development. TI also provides test results demonstrating the high accuracy of this RTD design (measurement error of 0.17°C over the -200°C to 850°C temperature range). The design also complies with IEC 61000-4-2, IEC 61000-4-4, IEC 61000-4-5 and IEC 60255-5 standards, ensuring reduced time to market for real-world industrial applications. This design comes with a software package that provides a complete solution to speed your sensor transmitter time to market.
The Energy Monitor is designed as a complete set of tools for measuring and displaying the energy consumption of individual loads within a smart building, such as major appliances. This tool allows engineers to quickly evaluate TI's solutions for low-cost energy metering applications. The reference design comes with hardware and software design files to speed engineers' development process. The energy monitor design can also be expanded to integrate with TI's ZigBee and Wifi reference designs to add wireless communication capabilities to the end product.
This reference design is ideal for running IR LEDs (up to 3A) in high current pulse mode in automotive ADAS systems. The design supports continuous and pulsed operation even during load dump and hot start events. Other features include analog dimming and CISPR-25 Class 3 EMI filtering.
TI reference design TIDA-00948 demonstrates a 15mmx20mm, 94% efficient low electromagnetic interference (EMI) DC/DC module using the TPS54202, replacing low dropout regulators (LDOs) in most appliance applications. High efficiency eliminates the need for a heat sink, resulting in a smaller, lower cost solution. Higher current capacity enables the addition of more functionality (WiFi, sensors, etc.). High efficiency and low current consumption help achieve stringent energy efficiency ratings.
The PMP7800.1 reference design is a dropout design using the LMR14203 for computer and peripheral applications. It generates a non-isolated 3.3 volt output (0.07 amps) from a 21.6 to 26.4 volt DC input.
This board is a SFF (Small Form Factor) complete miniature wireless receiver solution. The output is 5Vdc (1A), which can be used to power or charge battery-powered devices using any industry-standard WPC or PMA compliant transmitter.
This is a 24-A DC/DC space-grade power supply hardware reference design.
With the advancement of FPGA and ASIC technology, the core voltage requirements are getting lower and lower, but the current requirements are getting larger and larger. The latest space-grade FPGAs and ASICs require low voltage and high current to meet their core power consumption.
TI reference design TIDA-00949 demonstrates a 15mmx20mm, 92% efficient low electromagnetic interference (EMI) DC/DC module using the TPS54202, replacing low dropout regulators (LDOs) in most appliance applications. High efficiency eliminates the need for a heat sink, resulting in a smaller, lower cost solution. Higher current capacity enables the addition of more functionality (WiFi, sensors, etc.). High efficiency and low current consumption help achieve stringent energy efficiency ratings.
This design pairs the ultra-low-power MSP430 MCU with a sub-1GHz RF transceiver to achieve a battery-powered wireless sensor monitoring solution. This design demonstrates access points and wireless nodes that can share sensor data wirelessly using the network protocol "SimpliciTI". A PC-side GUI is also provided to visually display wireless data transmitted/received between various nodes and access points.