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Texas Instruments mantiene que sus dos nuevos sensores de efecto Hall superan
estos problemas con una deriva muy baja (lo llaman "deriva cero", y aunque es muy,
muy bajo, en realidad no es "cero", por supuesto) y otros atributos deseables. La
precisión ultra alta del TMCS1100 (error máximo del 1%) y el TMCS1101 (error
máximo del 1,5%) puede minimizar o incluso eliminar la necesidad de una
recalibración costosa y disruptiva del dispositivo y el apagado asociado (Fig. 1) .
Their analog output voltage is proportional to the input current with four available
fixed gains of 50, 100, 200, and 400 mV/A, depending on model suffix. This fixed
sensitivity enables operation from a single 3- to 5.5-V power supply, eliminates
ratiometric errors, and improves supply-noise rejection. The TMCS1100 and similar
TMCS1101 provide current sensing along with 3 kVrms of galvanic isolation, a benefit
in some designs but very much an absolute necessity in many others.
There’s a slight functional difference between the two devices. The TMCS1100
requires an external voltage reference for differential measurement, enabling
engineers to optimize their design to meet the most stringent performance goals. The
TMCS1101, however, integrates the voltage reference, providing high performance in
a pin-to-pin industry-standard implementation to simplify designs while reducing
total cost. In addition, some of the accuracy-related specifications of the TMCS1101
are slightly reduced compared to the TMCS1100.
Other key attributes include a robust 600-V lifetime working voltage (dielectric
deterioration is the concern here), which is up to 40% higher than competitive
devices in the same package, bidirectional and unidirectional current sensing, and a
signal bandwidth of 80 kHz. The devices have been rigorously tested beyond
industry-standard UL and VDE requirements for greater design margin and device
lifetime. Anticipated safety-related certifications include listing by the UL 1577
Component Recognition Program with 60-second isolation and IEC/CB 62368-1
approval.
Both Hall-effect current sensors come in 4.90- × 3.90-mm SOIC-8 packages and are
priced at $1.50 in 1,000-unit quantities. Also, TMCS1100EVM and TMCS1101EVM
evaluation modules (Fig. 2) are available for $59.00 each. These modules allow the
user to drive the maximum operating current through the Hall-input side while
measuring the isolated output. Each module consists of a single PCB that can be
broken into four individual pieces to enable evaluation of the different device
variants.
2. These evaluation boards for the multiple members of the TMCS1100 (top) and TMCS1101
(bottom) Hall-e ect sensor series are each designed to handle the four range/gain variants of
model.