Texas Instruments BQ2000PN-B3, BQ2000SN-B5TR, BQ2000SN-B5, BQ2000SN-B3, BQ2000PN-B5 Datasheet

1
Features
Safe management of fast charge for NiCd, NiMH, or Li­Ion battery packs
High-frequency switching con
­troller for efficient and simple charger design
Pre-charge qualification for detecting shorted, damaged, or overheated cells
Fast-charge termination by peak voltage (PVD), minimum current (Li-Ion), maximum temperature, and maximum charge time
Selectable top-off mode for
achieving maximum capacity in NiMH batteries
Programmable trickle-charge
mode for reviving deeply dis­charged batteries and for post­charge maintenance
Built-in battery removal and
insertion detection
Sleep mode for low power consumption
General Description
The bq2000 is a programmable, monolithic IC for fast-charge manage
­ment of nickel cadmium (NiCd), nickel metal-hydride (NiMH), or lith
­ium-ion (Li-Ion) batteries in single- or multi-chemistry applications. The bq2000 detects the battery chemistry and proceeds with the optimal charg
­ing and termination algorithms. This process eliminates undesirable under
­charged or overcharged conditions and allows accurate and safe termi
­nation of fast charge.
Depending on the chemistry, the bq2000 provides a number of charge termination criteria:
n
Peak voltage, PVD (for NiCd and NiMH)
n Minimum charging current (f or
Li-Ion)
n
Maximum temperature
n
Maximum charge time
For safety, the bq2000 inhibits fast charge until the battery voltage and temperature are within user-defined limits. If the battery voltage is below the low-voltage threshold, the bq2000 uses trickle-charge to condition the battery. For NiMH batteries, the bq2000 provides an optional top-off charge to maximize the battery capacity.
The integrated high-frequency com
­parator allows the bq2000 to be the basis for a complete, high-efficiency power-conversion circuit for both nickel-based and lithium-based chemistries.
bq2000
SNS Current-sense input
V
SS
System ground
LED
Charge-status output
BAT Battery-voltage
input
1
PN-2000.eps
8-Pin DIP or Narrow SOIC
or TSSOP
2
3
4
8
7
6
5
SNS
LED
BAT
V
SS
MOD
V
CC
TS
RC
Pin Connections
Pin Names
Programmable Multi-Chemistry
Fast-Charge Management IC
SLUS138A–FEBRUARY 2000 E
TS Temperature-sense
input
RC Timer-program input
V
CC
Supply-voltage input
MOD Modulation-control
output
2
Pin Descriptions
SNS
Current-sense input
Enables the bq2000 to sense the battery cur
­rent via the voltage developed on this pin by an external sense-resistor connected in se
­ries with the battery pack
V
SS
System Ground
LED
Charge-status output
Open-drain output that indicates the charg
­ing status by turning on, turning off, or flashing an external LED
BAT
Battery-voltage input
Battery-voltage sense input. A simple resistive divider, across the battery terminals, generates this input.
TS
Temperature-sense input
Input for an external battery-temperature monitoring circuit. An external resistive di­vider network with a negative tempera­ture-coefficient thermistor sets the lower and upper temperature thresholds.
RC
Timer-program input
RC input used to program the maximum charge-time, hold-off period, and trickle rate during the charge cycle, and to disable or enable top-off charge
V
CC
Supply-voltage input
MOD
Modulation-control output
Push-pull output that controls the charging current to the battery. MOD switches high to enable charging current to flow and low to inhibit charging- current flow.
Functional Description
The bq2000 is a versatile, multi-chemistry battery­charge control device. See Figure 1 for a functional block diagram and Figure 2 for a state diagram.
bq2000
bq2000BD.eps
Voltage
Reference
Internal
OSC
Clock
Phase
Generator
ADC
OSC
SNS
TS
MOD
RC
BAT
LED
V
CCVSS
Timer
PVD ALU
Voltage
Comparator
Voltage
Comparator
Charge Control
Figure 1. Functional Block Diagram
3
bq2000
Charge
Initialization
4.0V < V
C
C
< 6.0V
Sleep Mode
Charge
Suspended
Battery
Conditioning
Current
Regulation
Voltage
Regulation
Current Taper
or
Time = MTO
Time < MTO
and
V
B
A
T
> V
M
C
V
Maintenance
Charge
Done
Top-Off
Yes
No
V
C
C
Reset or Battery Replacement or Capacity Depletion (Li-Ion)
V
C
C
Reset
V
B
A
T
>
V
M
C
V
Time = MTO or V
T
S
< V
T
C
O
PVD (after hold-off period), or V
T
S
< V
T
C
O
or
Time = MTO
Battery Voltage
(checked at all times)
Battery Temperature
(checked at all times)
Top-Off
Selected?
V
B
A
T
< V
S
L
P
V
B
A
T
< V
M
C
V
V
T
S
> V
H
T
F
V
B
A
T
< V
L
B
A
T
or
V
T
S
> V
L
T
F
V
L
B
A
T
< V
B
A
T
< V
M
C
V
and
V
H
T
F
< V
T
S
< V
L
T
F
V
LB
A
T
< V
B
A
T
< V
M
C
V
and
V
H
T
F
< V
T
S
< V
L
T
F
V
T
S
< V
H
T
F
V
S
L
P
< V
B
A
T
< V
C
C
V
M
C
V
< V
B
A
T
< V
S
LP
SD2000.eps
V
B
A
T
>
V
M
C
V
Figure 2. State Diagram
Initiation and Charge Qualification
The bq2000 initiates a charge cycle when it detects
n
Application of power to V
CC
n
Battery replacement
n
Exit from sleep mode
n
Capacity depletion (Li-Ion only)
Immediately following initiation, the IC enters a charge-qualification mode. The bq2000 charge qualifica
-
tion is based on battery voltage and temperature. If voltage on pin BAT is less than the internal threshold, V
LBAT
, the bq2000 enters the charge-pending state. This condition indicates the possiblility of a defective or shorted battery pack. In an attempt to revive a fully depleted pack, the bq2000 enables the MOD pin to trickle-charge at a rate of once every 1.0s. As explained in the section “Top-Off and Pulse-Trickle Charge,” the trickle pulse-width is user-selectable and is set by the value of the resistance connected to pin RC.
During this period, the LED
pin blinks at a 1Hz rate,
indicating the pending status of the charger.
Similarly, the bq2000 suspends fast charge if the battery temperature is outside the V
LTF
to V
HTF
range. (See Table
4.) For safety reasons, however, it disables the pulse trickle, in the case of a battery over-temperature condition (i.e., V
TS<VHTF
). Fast charge begins when the battery
temperature and voltage are valid.
Battery Chemistry
The bq2000 detects the battery chemistry by monitoring the battery-voltage profile during the initial stage of the fast charge. If the voltage on BAT input rises to the in
-
ternal V
MCV
reference, the IC assumes a Li-Ion battery.
Otherwise the bq2000 assumes NiCd/NiMH chemistry.
As shown in Figure 6, a resistor voltage-divider between the battery pack’s positive terminal and V
SS
scales the battery voltage measured at pin BAT. In a mixed-chemistry design, a common voltage-divider is used as long as the maximum charge voltage of the nickel-based pack is below that of the Li-Ion pack. Oth
-
erwise, different scaling is required.
Once the chemistry is determined, the bq2000 completes the fast charge with the appropriate charge algorithm (Table 1). The user can customize the algorithm by programming the device using an external resistor and a capacitor connected to the RC pin, as discussed in later sections.
NiCd and NiMH Batteries
Following qualification, the bq2000 fast-charges NiCd or NiMH batteries using a current-limited algorithm. Dur­ing the fast-charge period, it monitors charge time, tem­perature, and voltage for adherence to the termination criteria. This monitoring is further explained in later sections. Following fast charge, the battery is topped off, if top-off is selected. The charging cycle ends with a trickle maintenance-charge that continues as long as the voltage on pin BAT remains below V
MCV
.
4
bq2000
GR2000CA.eps
I
MAX
I
MIN
Trickle
V
LBAT
V
MCV
Current
Voltage
Qualification
Time
Phase 1 Phase 2
Fast Charge
Voltage
Current
Figure 3. Lithium-Ion Charge Algorithm
Lithium-Ion Batteries
The bq2000 uses a two-phase fast-charge algorithm for Li-Ion batteries (Figure 3). In phase one, the bq2000 reg
-
ulates constant current until V
BAT
rises to V
MCV
. The bq2000 then moves to phase two, regulates the battery with constant voltage of V
MCV
, and terminates when the
charging current falls below the I
MIN
threshold. A new charge cycle is started if the cell voltage falls below the V
RCH
threshold.
During the current-regulation phase, the bq2000 monitors charge time, battery temperature, and battery voltage for adherence to the termination criteria. During the final constant-voltage stage, in addition to the charge time and temperature, it monitors the charge current as a termination criterion. There is no post-charge maintenance mode for Li-Ion batteries.
Charge Termination
Maximum Charge Time (NiCD, NiMH, and Li-Ion)
The bq2000 sets the maximum charge-time through pin RC. With the proper selection of external resistor and ca
­pacitor, various time-out values may be achieved. Figure 4 shows a typical connection.
The following equation shows the relationship between the R
MTO
and C
MTO
values and the maximum charge
time (MTO) for the bq2000:
MTO = R
MTO
C
MTO
35,988
MTO is measured in minutes, R
MTO
in ohms, and C
MTO
in farads. (Note: R
MTO
and C
MTO
values also determine
other features of the device. See Tables 2 and 3 for de
­tails.)
For Li-Ion cells, the bq2000 resets the MTO when the battery reaches the constant-voltage phase of the
charge. This feature provides the additional charge time required for Li-Ion cells.
Maximum Temperature (NiCd, NiMH, Li-Ion)
A negative-coefficient thermistor, referenced to VSSand placed in thermal contact with the battery, may be used as a temperature-sensing device. Figure 5 shows a typi­cal temperature-sensing circuit.
During fast charge, the bq2000 compares the battery temperature to an internal high-temperature cutoff threshold, V
TCO
. As shown in Table 4, high-temperature termination occurs when voltage at pin TS is less than this threshold.
Peak Voltage (NiCd, NiMH)
The bq2000 uses a peak-voltage detection (PVD) scheme to terminate fast charge for NiCd and NiMH batteries. The bq2000 continuously samples the voltage on the BAT pin, representing the battery voltage, and triggers the peak detection feature if this value falls below the maximum sampled value by as much as 3.8mV (PVD). As shown in Figure 6, a resistor voltage-divider between the battery pack’s positive terminal and V
SS
scales the
battery voltage measured at pin BAT.
For Li-Ion battery packs, the resistor values R
B1
and
R
B2
are calculated by the following equation:
R R
N
V
V
B1
B2
CELL
MCV
=∗
 
 
1
where N is the number of cells in series and V
CELL
is the manufacturer-specified charging voltage. The end-to-end input impedance of this resistive divider network should be at least 200kand no more than 1M.
A NiCd or NiMH battery pack consisting of N series­cells may benefit by the selection of the R
B1
value to be
N-1 times larger than the R
B2
value.
In a mixed-chemistry design, a common voltage-divider is used as long as the maximum charge voltage of the
5
Battery Chemistry Charge Algorithm
NiCd or NiMH
1. Charge qualification
2. Trickle charge, if required
3. Fast charge (constant current)
4. Charge termination (peak voltage, maximum charge time)
5. Top-off (optional)
6. Trickle charge
Li-Ion
1. Charge qualification
2. Trickle charge, if required
3. Two-step fast charge (constant current followed by constant voltage)
4. Charge termination (minimum current, maximum charge time)
Table 1. Charge Algorithm
bq2000
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