This thread has been locked.
If you have a related question, please click the "Ask a related question" button in the top right corner. The newly created question will be automatically linked to this question.
Hi,
A TL4050 5V device cathode is connected to a 10V voltage source through 500 Ohms. When the 10V source is powered, the TL4050 cathode rises to 250mV above the 5V desired output.
The overshoot lasts for about 100uS.
Is there a specified limit on the overshoot amplitude and duration?
Is the overshoot voltage source dependent? In other words, if the source voltage changes to 20V, will the overshoot amplitude and duration change?
Thanks,
Dave
Hi Diego,
There is a 0.47uF capacitor connected between the cathode and ground.
The load is a few OpAmps that draw a total of 1.5mA.
The 10V input rise-time is about 500uSec.
Thanks,
Dave
Hi Dave,
Could you share a scope shot of the supply rail, cathode, and anode.
I tested the TL4050A25 under those conditions and I did get around 5% overshoot, but it only took about 50us to settle.
If you want to decrease the overshoot I'd recommend slowing down the input transient, which can be done with a simple RC circuit up front.
If the issue is the length of time I'd recommend decreasing the capacitor between the cathode and ground, or adding a small resistor in parallel with it to empty the capacitor after overshoot.
One last option is to add a small series resistance at the output, while this will help with the overshoot and decrease the noise, it will cause a small decrease in you reference value.
Regards, Diego
The red trace is the Cathode input, through 500 Ohms, and the yellow trace is the Cathode voltage.
The overshoot itself is not a problem, provided i know what causes it and that it is limited to 0.5V.
Can you explain why there is overshoot and will it vary from part-to-part and temperature?
I thought it might be related to the regulation response speed of the part, but you folks are the experts.
Thanks,
Dave
Hi Dave,
You are correct, the overshoot is due to the loop response time.
This is not a value we can guarantee since it is heavily dependent on the application. We have a couple of graphs on the LM4050-N-Q1 datasheet (section 6.11.1) that go over the usual response for very fast input transients.
If you would like, I can run a test on three LM4050A50-Q1's to see how they behave under various start-up times.
Regards, Diego Lewis
Hello Diego,
In many applications knowing how large the overshoot could be is important to safeguarding connected devices.
Will a transient simulation show this behavior?
If so, is there a SPICE model for this part?
Thanks,
David
Hi David,
We don't have a SPICE model for the TL4050, but we do have some transient SPICE and TI-TINA models for some of the LM4050-N's.
Regards,
Hi Diego,
TI-TINA models for the LM4050 would be excellent.
Can you please post them.
Thanks,
David