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 Dynamic Differential Hall Effect Sensor Data Sheet Version 3.0 (valid for 8" product)
TLE4926C-HTN E6747
Features * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * High sensitivity Single chip solution Symmetrical thresholds High resistance to Piezo effects Advanced performance by dynamic self calibration principle South and north pole pre-induction possible 1Hz low cut-off frequency Digital output signal Two-wire and three-wire configuration possible Wide operating temperature range Fast start-up time Large operating airgaps Reverse voltage protection at Vs- PIN Short- circuit and over temperature protection of output No external filter capacitor required Digital output signal (voltage interface) Module style package with two integrated capacitors: * * * * 4.7nF between Q and GND 47nF1 between VS and GND: Needed for micro cuts in power suply
PG-SSO-3-91
High temperature profile Package: PG-SSO-3-91 with nickel plating instead of standard 100% Sn plating
Type TLE4926C-HTN E6747
1
Marking 26C8
Ordering Code SP000269347
Package PG-SSO-3-91
value of capacitor: 47nF10%; (excluded drift due to temperature and over lifetime); ceramic: X7R; maximum voltage: 50V.
TLE4926C-HTN E6747 General Information TLE4926C is an active Hall sensor suited to detect the motion and position of ferromagnetic and permanent magnet structures. An additional self-calibration module has been implemented to achieve optimum accuracy during normal running operation. It comes in a three-pin package for the supply voltage and an open drain output.
VS
GND
Q
47nF
4.7nF
Figure 1: Pin configuration in PG-SSO-3-91
Pin No. 1 2 3
Symbol VS GND Q
Function Supply Voltage Ground Open Drain Output
Functional Description The differential Hall sensor IC detects the motion and position of ferromagnetic and permanent magnet structures by measuring the differential flux density of the magnetic field. To detect ferromagnetic objects the magnetic field must be provided by a back biasing permanent magnet (south or north pole of the magnet attached to the rear unmarked side of the IC package). Offset cancellation is achieved by advanced digital signal processing. Immediately after power-on motion is detected (start-up mode). After a few transitions the sensor has finished self-calibration and switches to a high-accuracy mode (running mode). In running mode switching occurs at signal zero-crossing of the arithmetic mean of max and min value of magnetic differential signal. B is defined as difference between hall plate 1 and hall plate 2.
Data Sheet Page 2 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747
Q VS clamping & reverse voltage protection power supply regulator analog supply digital supply main comp enable hyst comp overtemperature & short-circuit protection clamping
n-channel open drain
interface Hall probes
++ + amplifier -Offset DAC
filter
Tracking ADC
digital min max algorithm
actual switching level bias for temperature & technology compensation
oscillator
GND
reset
Figure 2: Block Diagram of TLE4926C Basics of self-calibration A magnetic signal generated by a typical toothed wheel looks somewhat like a sinusoid. Optimum switching points lie near the zero crossings of the curve. Due to backbiasing conditions and imperfections in the IC the signal is superposed by an offset. Therefore the main task to accomplish is to remove this offset. This is done by measuring the minimum and maximum values of the curve and by calculating the resulting offset. By subtracting this offset from the original signal, the signal is centered on its zero crossings and these can be detected by a normal comparator. The detection of the minimum and maximum values as well as the complete signal correction strategy is implemented in a digital way. Therefore first the signal has to be digitized. Digitizing the signal A tracking A/D converter basically does signal conversion from analog into digital domain. The converter has a resolution of 6 bits. This (including some averaging calculation described later on) is sufficient for characterizing the signal if the signal is not too small. Therefore, a programmable gain amplifier (PGA) enhances the A/D converter. Its amplification can be modified by powers of two. 7 different positions are possible; the amplification range lies between 1/2 and 32 (Full scale A/D converter range referred to full-scale range of the offset- Dac). The gain of the PGA tracks the amplitude of the signal so that sufficient resolution of the converter is ensured. The gain of the PGA is decreased by 1 step (a factor of 2) whenever a signal overrun in the tracking converter is detected. On the other hand, the gain of the PGA is increased by 1 step, when during an offset update low signal amplitude is detected. This means, that the actual minimum value is larger or equal 50H (on an 8 bit base referred to the averaged Gain- Dac) and the actual maximum value is smaller than
Data Sheet Page 3 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747 B0H. This procedure ensures a sufficient resolution for each signal amplitude. After doing the 6 bit A/D conversion running at system clock speed (1.455MHz), the values are put into a simple decimation filter, which sums up 8 consecutive values and, by truncating the least significant bit, delivers an 8 bit output signal at 1/8 system speed (182kHz). The rest of the digital calibration process now refers to this 8 bit data (MinMax finding, offset calculation). The tracking converter as well as the PGA is protected against overflow or underflow, so no wrap-around or undefined condition can occurs. Instead the signal is clipped to a maximum or minimum value. Finding the minimum and maximum values During operation a dedicated logic block looks for the smallest numerical input value. If the signal is falling, this block permanently stores new input values. If the signal is larger than the stored value, the stored value remains memorized. If, after a minimum value, the signal increases for a certain amount (digital noise constant) this memorized value is called a minimum and propagated to another register (minimum register). The same procedure (with opposite sign) applies to maximum values. The digital noise constant has a value 30H with one exception: If the PGA is in maximum amplification the digital noise constant is 48H. The noise constant is referred to the 8 bit Gain- Dac value. Each newly identified maximum starts another search for a new minimum. Each newly identified minimum starts another search for a new maximum. In this way alternating new minimum and maximum values can be identified. This ensures, that "all time high" or -low values do not remain in memory. Instead, only recent minimum and maximum values are obtainable. Valid and invalid min/max values After initialization, new calibration and PGA-changes the circuit starts a new search for minimum and maximum values. Assuming the process starts at a rising signal slope, then the initial point may become to a minimum since it is the lowest observed value so far. This occurrence is memorized, but the minimum is called an invalid minimum. The same can occur if the search starts at a falling edge for a maximum. A minimum is called a valid minimum if it is preceded by any (valid or invalid) maximum. The same is true for maximum values. Any minimum or maximum value is discarded immediately, if there is a new initialization, new calibration or a PGAchange. Startup of the device After power on or an internal reset a new calibration procedure is started. First, the external comparator output is locked. Second, the offset-DAC is set in that way, that it compensates the incoming signal. This is done by a successive approximation search. For a steady state input signal the offset DAC therefore gets the value of this input signal and the digital inputs are the digital representation of this value. For a varying signal the approximation search ends up in a value which is somewhere near the input signal during the duration of the successive approximation search. This is the initial calibration value. Of course the remaining offset value may still be quite large. Then the minimum and maximum search is started. After having found the first minimum or maximum the output switches according to the definition (low output
Data Sheet Page 4 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747 stage for maximum because of falling edge and high output stage for minimum because of rising edge). This behaviour continues until the first valid minimum and maximum values are found. With this pair of values there is sufficient information for getting a quite accurate new calibration result, so that the output can switch with the result given by the internal comparator. The average of the minimum and maximum value gives a representation of the offset. More precisely, the minimum and maximum value (8 bit values respectively) is summed up, the result is subtracted by 256 (=100H), this result is shifted to the correct position taking into account the current setting of the PGA, and finally this value is added to the current offset value. The whole procedure can be repeated for many times and converges to an offset value which compensates for the signal offset. In other words, if the minimum and the maximum have equal magnitude, their sum will be 100H (80H is the mid-value) and after subtraction of 100H a correction value of zero will appear. The shifter, which multiplies the sum off minimum a maximum in corresponding to the PGA position, calculates the offset- update. In PGA = 3 no shift is applied and the sum is added (or subtracted) directly from the offset. In PGA = 2 the sum is divided by 2, in PGA = 4 the sum is multiplied by 2 and so on. But the so calculated update is not applied every time; in fact there is a nonlinear filter that avoids small offsetcorrection in order to improve jitter. Continuous calibration Once the device has finished its first calibration it enters a continuous calibration mode. Basically this means that after each edge transition going out of the circuit a new offset value can be adjusted. To avoid a offset- jumping due to a unregular wheel or noise there is implemented a fincal state and a update filter. The algorithm enter in the fincal state if the difference between the maximum and minimum is less then 8 Lsb, and the finecal state will be left if the difference is more then 16 Lsb. Below the 8 Lsb value the offset is not changed, between 16 Lsb and 8 Lsb only 1 Lsb steps are done, and over the 16 Lsb threshold value full adjustment is possible. The update- filter lets perform the calculated update- step only if the last and the current update are over the 8 Lsb threshold an if the update- directions are the same. This avoids unwanted offset- updates due to long notches or teeth (long notches generate higher amplitudes). The offset calculation unit is protected against overrun errors so it will clip the values at zero and full scale (3FFH). A set of rules apply to the calibration process which regulate under which condition and to what amount an offset calibration is done. Mathematical relation between max, min, PGA and offset: Offset(mT)=Offset(Lsb) * Fullscale/1023(Lsb) - Fullscale/2; 120mT = Full-scale of the Offsetdac with 1023 Bit; Max(mT)=Offset(mT) + (Max(Lsb) - 128)*2^(PGA -3) * Fullscale/1023(Lsb); Min(mT)= Offset(mT) - (128 - Min(Lsb))*2^(PGA -3) * Fullscale/1023(Lsb);
Data Sheet
Page 5 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747 Trigger rules for offset update in running mode As already mentioned, at either a positive or negative comparator edge the offset may be updated. At this time, several circuit conditions are checked. The following rules apply: After a modification of the PGA setting the update capability is disabled. With the 3rd following comparator edge the update capability is enabled again. After an offset update the update capability is disabled. With the 2nd following comparator edge the update capability is enabled again. At any offset update the circuit checks if there has been a larger signal value than that which is stored in the maximum register. In this case, the larger value will be taken. The same (with opposite sign) is true for minimum values. If a valid minimum or a valid maximum has been found and none of the above rules is against it, a calibration may occur. This must not be the first calibration after the initial calibration. Any calibration may occur only at the correct comparator edge. This means that a negative signal shift due to offset correction may occur only during the negative going signal slope. The same is true for positive signal shift and the rising signal slope. Watchdog operation If for a certain time (2^20 clock pulses - 0.7 s) there is no switching at the output the watchdog will start a new observation period. It is responsible for a new initialization by issuing a system reset. So a new selfcalibration (successive approximation of offset) is started and the PGA and GainDac are reseted (PGA=0, GainDac=100000 binary). During the selfcalibration the output is held to the old value, afterwards it is switched according to the edge-detection. The second check that is implemented is the PGA decrement: if no max or min is found during 16 output- switching events the PGA is decremented by 1. No other actions are performed if such a situation is detected. Digital main-comparator The digital main-comparator receives the output of the three threshold comparators hypcomp_low, main_comp and hypcomp_high. This inputs are used in an asynchronous way, so that no clock-delay is introduced. The function of the digital main-comparator is to implement a hidden hysteresis; that means, that the ouput switches accordingly to the main_comp threshold and the upper and lower hysteresis limits are used to lock the output. In this way no hysteresis is visible in the switching behavior and we have a high noise rejection. Summary The IC monitors the positive and negative peak values of the signal to adjust its offset properly. For large deviations the actual offset correction value is calculated as accurate as possible, for smaller deviations also a slow calibration mode by only incrementing and decrementing or by not changing the offset value can be entered. The device is monitored by a watchdog, which starts a new initialization if there is no input signal.
Data Sheet Page 6 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747
peak detection offset= (max + min) / 2
offset
offset correction
startup-mode
running-mode
Figure 3: Startup of the device At transition from startup-mode to running mode switching timing is moving from low-accuracy to high accuracy zero-crossing.
Data Sheet
Page 7 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747 1.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings
No. 1.1.1 Parameter Supply voltage Symbol VS min -18 -24 -26 -28 1.1.2 1.1.3 Supply current Output OFF voltage IS VQ -10 -0.3 -18 -18 -1.0 typ max 18 24 26 28 25 18 24 26 Unit V V V V mA V V V V 1h with RSeries 2002 5min with RSeries 2001 1min with RSeries 2001 1h with RLoad 500 5min with RLoad 500 1h (protected by internal series resistor) 1.1.4 Output ON voltage VQ 16 V Current internal limited by Short circuit protection (72h @ TA < 40C). 18 V Current internal limited by short circuit protection (1h @ TA < 40C). 24 V Current internal limited by short circuit protection (1min @ TA < 40C). 1.1.5 1.1.6 Continuous output current Junction temperature Tj -40 155 165 175 195 1.1.7 1.1.8 Storage temperature Thermal resistance junction-air TS Rth JA -40 150 190 C C C C C C K/W 5000 h (not additive) 2500 h (not additive) 500 h (not additive) 10x1 h (additive to the other life times). Lower values are possible with overmolded device. IQ -50 50 mA Remarks
Note: Stresses above those listed here may cause permanent damage to the device. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability.
2
Accumulated life time Data Sheet
Page 8 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747 1.2 Electro Magnetic Compatibility - (values depend on RSeries!)
Ref. ISO 7637-2; see test circuit of figure 4; BPP = 10mT (ideal sinusoidal signal); VS=13.5V 0.5V, fB= 1000Hz; T= 25C; RSeries 200; No. 1.2.1 Parameter Testpulse 1 Testpulse 2 Testpulse 3a Testpulse 3b Testpulse 4 Testpulse 5 Symbol VEMC Level/typ III / -90V III / 40V IV / -150V IV / 100V IV / -7V III / 66.5V Status C A3 A A A C
Note: Test criteria for status A: No missing pulse no additional pulse on the IC output signal plus duty cycle and jitter are in the specification limits. Test criteria for status B: No missing pulse no additional pulse on the IC output signal. (Output signal "OFF" means switching to the voltage of the pull-up resistor). Test criteria for status C: One or more parameter can be out of specification during the exposure but returns automatically to normal operation after exposure is removed. Test criteria for status E: IC destroyed. Ref. ISO 7637-3; TP 1 and TP 2 ref. DIN 40839-3; see test circuit of figure 4; BPP = 10mT (ideal sinusoidal signal); VS=13.5V 0.5V, fB= 1000Hz; T= 25C; RSeries 200; No. 1.2.2 Parameter Testpulse 1 Testpulse 2 Testpulse 3a Testpulse 3b Symbol VEMC Level/typ IV / -30V IV / 30V IV / -60V IV / 40V Status A A A A
Ref. ISO 11452-3; see test circuit of figure 4; measured in TEM-cell BPP = 4mT (ideal sinusoidal signal); VS=13.5V 0,5V, fB= 200Hz; T= 25C; RSeries 200; No. 1.2.3 Parameter EMC field strength Symbol ETEM-Cell Level/max IV / 200V/m Remarks AM=80%, f=1kHz;
Note: Stresses above those listed here may cause permanent damage to the device. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. Test condition for the trigger window: fB-field=200Hz, Bpp=4mT, vertical limits are 200mV and horizontal limits are 200s.
3
Valid for general function, current consumption and jitter may be out of spec during test pulse 2. Page 9 of 27
Data Sheet
TLE4926C-HTN E6747
1.3 ESD Protection
No. 1.3.1 Parameter ESD - protection Symbol VESD max 4 Unit kV Remarks According to standard EIA/JESD22-A114-B Human Body Model (HBM).
5V RSeries 200 VEMC CInt-package 47nF VS GND CInt-package Q 4.7nF CLoad 50pF RLoad 4.7k
Figure 4: Test circuit for EMC-tests
Data Sheet
Page 10 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747 2.1 Operating Range
No. 2.1.1 Parameter Supply voltage Symbol VS Min 3.3 typ max 18 24 26 Unit V V V Remarks Continuous 1h with RSeries 200; 5min with RSeries 200. Extended limits for parameters in characteristics. 3 V During test pulse 4 RSeries=200; Ta=25C Limited performance possible (jitter) VS=13V; 0 < f < 50kHz Continuous 1h with RLoad 500 VQmax=0.6V Time to achieve specified accuracy After power on the output of the IC is always in high-state. After internal resets output is locked4. 2.1.6 Operating junction temperature Tj -40 155 165 175 C C C C 5000 h (not additive) 2500 h (not additive) 500 h (not additive) reduced signal quality permittable (e.g. jitter). Note: Unless otherwise noted, all temperatures refer to junction temperature. For the supply voltage lower than 28V (RSeries 200) and junction temperature lower than 195C the magnetic and AC/DC characteristics can exceed the specification limits.
2.1.2 2.1.3
Supply voltage ripple Continuous output OFF voltage
VSAC VQ 0 0 IQ ton 0
6 18 24 20 1
Vpp V V mA ms
2.1.4 2.1.5
Continuous output ON current Power on time
Output of the IC is locked in present state (high-state or low-state) after an internal reset is launched. This reset happens typically every 780ms when there is no output switching in either case. See also 2.2.14. A voltage reset causes a release of the output and output is in high state after power on again. Data Sheet Page 11 of 27
4
TLE4926C-HTN E6747 2.2 AC/DC Characteristics
Over operating range, unless otherwise specified. Typical values correspond to VS=12V and TA=25C No. 2.2.1 2.2.2 2.2.3 Parameter supply current supply current @ 3.3V supply current @ 24V Symbol IS ISVmin ISmax VQsat IQleak IQshort Tprot tr5 4 12 20 s VLoad = 4.5 to 24V RLoad = 1.2k; CLoad = 4.7nF included in package 2.2.9 Output fall time tf6 0.5 0.65 0.9 1.15 1.3 1.65 s s VLoad = 5V VLoad = 12V RLoad = 1.2k; CLoad = 4.7nF included in package 2.2.10 Delay time Falling edge Rising edge td 7 12.5 18 25
7
min 3 3 3
typ 6.8 6.7 7
max 9 8 9.5
Unit mA mA mA -
Remarks
VS=3.3V VS=24V RSeries 200 IQ= 20mA VQ= 18V -
2.2.4 2.2.5 2.2.6 2.2.7 2.2.8
Output saturation voltage Output leakage current Current limit for shortcircuit protection Junction temperature limit for output protection Output rise time
0.25 0.1 30 195 60 210
0.6 10 80 230
V A mA C
s s s
Only valid for Tj=25C. Tj=-40C -Tj=175C Tj=-40C -Tj=175C Higher magnetic slopes and over -shoots reduce td, because the signal is filtered internal.9 Time over specified temperature range; not additional to td.
20
8
2.2.11
Temperature drift of delay time of output to magnetic edge
td
-6
310
6
s
5
value of capacitor: 4.7nF10% (excluded drift due to temperature); ceramic: X7R; maximum voltage: 100V. The rise time is defined as the time between the 10 and 90% value. 6 see footnote 3. 7 Only valid for the falling edge 8 Not subject to production test-verified by design/characterisation 9 measured with a sinusoidal-field with 10mTpp and a frequency of 1kHz. 10 related to Tj=175C. Data Sheet Page 12 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747
2.2.12 2.2.13 Frequency range Oscillator frequency f fOSC treset VSclamp VQclamp VsReset 0.001 1.08 625 24 24 1.34 780 27.5 27.5 2.35 2.9 8 1.68 970 kHz MHz ms V V V Operation below 1Hz11 Output locked to state before recalibration IS = 20mA < 5min. IQ = 20mA < 5min. -
2.2.14 Offset recalibration time after last output change 2.2.15 Clamping voltage VS-Pin 2.2.16 Clamping voltage Q- Pin 2.2.17 Note: Analog reset voltage
The listed AC/DC and magnetic characteristics are ensured over the operating range of the integrated circuit. Typical characteristics specify mean values expected over the production spread. If not other specified, typical characteristics apply at Tj = 25 C and VS = 12 V.
2.3 Magnetic Characteristics in Running Mode
No. 2.3.1 2.3.2 2.3.3 2.3.4 2.3.5 Parameter Bias preinduction Differential bias induction Minimum signal amplitude Maximum signal amplitude Resistivity against mechanical stress (piezo) Note: The listed characteristics are ensured over the operating range of the integrated circuit. Typical characteristics specify mean values expected over the production spread. If not otherwise specified, typical characteristics apply at Tj=25C and the given supply voltage. Bmin -0.2 0.2 mT F= 2N Bmax 100 mT Additional to B0 12. Symbol B0 B0 Bmin min -500 -30 0.55 typ max 500 30 1.5 Unit mT mT mT Remarks
3.1 Self-calibration Characteristics
No. 3.1.1 Parameter No. of magnetic edges for first output switching No. of magnetic edges to enter calibrated mode Symbol nStart min typ max 2 Unit Remarks latest 2nd magnetic edge will cause output switching Low phase accuracy permitted. See 3.1.7 7th edge with high accuracy (calibrated)
3.1.2
nCalib
613
-
11
Output will switch if magnetic signal is changing more that 2xBmin within offset recalibration time even below 1Hz once per magnetic edge, increased phase error is possible. 12 Exceeding this limit might result in decreased duty cycle performance. With higher values the internal measured signal will be clipped. This will decrease the phase accuracy. 13 Valid for sinusoidal signal without noise influence Data Sheet Page 13 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747
3.1.3 Duty cycle in running mode Dty 45 50 55 % BPP = 10mT ideal sinusoidal input signal (Tj=25C) 40 50 60 % BPP = 10mT ideal sinusoidal input signal (-40C Tj < 175C) 3.1.4 Signal jitter in running mode; 1 sigma value
5
1
0.1114
%
BPP = 10mT ideal sinusoidal input signal; Tj<150C
2
0.16
%
BPP = 10mT ideal sinusoidal input signal; 150C Tj < 175C
3.1.5
Signal Jitter in running mode at Vs=13V and ripple 3V 1 sigma value*
3
0.11
%
BPP = 10mT ideal sinusoidal input signal; Tj<150C
3.1.6
Effective noise value of the magnetic switching points, 1 sigma value
Bneff
25 70
T T
Tj = 25C; 15 The max value corresponds to the rms-values in the full temperature range and includes technological spreads. Related to calibrated switching behaviour. BPP = 10mT ideal sinusoidal input signal
16
3.1.7
Uncalibrated phase error Magnetic edge 1-2 After 3rdedge Magnetic edge 1-3 90 55 90
Magnetic fields close to 2xBmin -
3.1.8
Frequency distribution of signal jitter
Jitter shall be distributed like white noise
depends largely onBmin, magnetic signal steepness and also on frequency. The magnetic noise is normal distributed, nearly independent to frequency and without sampling noise or digital noise effects. The typical value represents the rms-value here and corresponds therefore to 1 probability of normal distribution. Consequently a 3 value corresponds to 0.3% probability of appearance. 16 smaller phase errors are possible at higher signal amplitudes, because sinus signal changes to a more rectangle signal.
15
14
Data Sheet
Page 14 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747
B Bmax
B 50% BPP
Bmin
BPP = 2 x B
B=B1-B2 (signal amplitude)
t
UQ VQ-High
tr 90%
tf
td
50%
VQ-Low
10% t1 T
t
Figure 5
Signal T
Switching direction
T
t
1... 3 =
1 1 (T ) 2 T (n - 1)
measurement condition: n 1000
Figure 6
Definition of signal jitter
Data Sheet
Page 15 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747 Application Configurations Two possible applications are shown in Figure 7 and Figure 8 (Toothed and Magnet Wheel). The difference between two-wire and three-wire application is shown in Figure 11 for the TLE 4926C. Gear Tooth Sensing In the case of ferromagnetic toothed wheel application the IC has to be biased by the south or north pole of a permanent magnet (e.g. SmCO5 (Vacuumschmelze VX145)) with the dimensions 8 mm x 5 mm x 3 mm) which should cover both Hall probes. The maximum air gap depends on - the magnetic field strength (magnet used; pre-induction) and - the toothed wheel that is used (dimensions, material, etc.; resulting differential field).
a
centered distance of Hall probes b Hall probes to IC surface L IC surface to tooth wheel a = 2.5 mm b = 0.3 mm
S N N S
b L a
AEA01259
Figure 7
Sensor Spacing
T
d
AEA01260
Conversion DIN - ASA m = 25.4 mm/p T = 25.4 mm CP ASA p diameter pitch p = z/d (inch) PD pitch diameter PD = z/p (inch) CP circular pitch CP = 1 inch x /p
DIN d z m T
diameter (mm) number of teeth module m = d/z (mm) pitch T = x m (mm)
Figure 8
Toothed Wheel Dimensions
Data Sheet
Page 16 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747
Gear Wheel
HallSensor 1 1 Hall Sensor
Hall Sensor 2
Signal Processing Circuitry
S (S) N (N) N (S) S (N)
Permanent Magnet
AEA01261
Figure 9
TLE 4926C, with Ferromagnetic Toothed Wheel
Magnet Wheel
S N
Hall Sensor 1
S
Hall Sensor 2
Signal Processing Circuitry
AEA01262
Figure 10
Data Sheet
TLE4926C, with Magnet Wheel
Page 17 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747
1 3 2
for example: RL=1,2k RS=120
1 3 2
for example: RP200 RL=1,2k
Figure 11
Application Circuits TLE4926C
Data Sheet
Page 18 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747
S (N) N (S) Pin 3 (Q) B2 B1 Branded Side Crankshaft Wheel Profile Pin 1 (Vs)
Magnetic Field Difference B=B1-B2
Large airgap Small airgap
BENOP=1mT Hidden Hysteresis BHYS=2mT
BENRP=-1mT
Output Signal VQ
Enabling point for releasing output: B1-B2BENOP switches the output ON (VQ=LOW) BHYS=|BENOP-BENRP| Outside of a permanent magnet the magnetic induction (=flux density) points from north to the south pole. It is common to define positive flux if the south pole of a magnet is on the branded side of the IC. This is equivalent to the north pole of the magnet on the rear side of the IC.
Figure 12
System Operation with hidden hysteresis
Data Sheet
Page 19 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747
PG-SSO-3-91 (Plastic Single Small Outline)
Figure 13
Data Sheet
Package Dimensions (PG-SSO-3-91)
Page 20 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747
Figure 14
Hall probe spacing in the PG-SSO-3-91 package
Data Sheet
Page 21 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747
Figure 15
Tape Loading Orientation in the PG-SSO-3-91 package
Data Sheet
Page 22 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747
Appendix:
Calculation of mechanical errors:
Magnetic Signal
Output Signal
Figure 16: Systematic Error and Stochastic Error

Systematic Phase Error
The systematic error comes in because of the delay-time between the threshold point and the time when the output is switching. It can be calculated as follows:
=
n td
360 * n * td 60
... systematic phase error in -1 ... speed of the camshaft-wheel in min ... delay time (see specification) in sec
Systematic Phase Error The systematic phase error includes the error due to the variation of the delay time with temperature and the error caused by the resolution of the threshold. It can be calculated in the following way:
Data Sheet Page 23 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747
d =
d n td
360 * n * td 60
... systematic phase error due to the variation of the delay time over temperature in ... speed of the camshaft wheel in min-1 ... variation of delay time over temperature in sec
Jitter (Repeatability)
B
B
Bdiff_max Bdiff_typ 1 3
Noise
The phase jitter is normally caused by the analogue system noise. If there is an update of the offset-DAC due to the algorithm, what could happen after each tooth, then an additional step in the phase occurs (see description of the algorithm). This is not included in the following calculations. The noise is transformed through the slope of the magnetic edge into a phase error. The phase jitter is determined by the two formulas:
Phase-Jitter
Figure17: Phase-Jitter
Jitter _ typ =
* (Bneff _ typ ) B
Jitter _ max =
Jitter_typ Jitter_max
B
* (Bneff _ max ) B
... ... ... ... ...
typical phase jitter at Tj=25C in (1Sigma) maximum phase jitter at Tj=175C in (3Sigma) inverse of the magnetic slope of the edge in /T typical value of Bdiff in T (1-value at Tj=25C) maximum value of Bdiff in T (3-value at Tj=175C)
Bneff_typ Bneff_max
Data Sheet
Page 24 of 27
TLE4926C-HTN E6747
Example:
Assumption: n = 4500 min-1 td = 14 s td = 3 s
B
= 3 mT/
Bneff_typ = 40 T (1-value at Tj=25C) Bneff_max = 210 T (3-value at Tj=175C) Calculation: = 0.378 d = 0.081 Jitter_typ = 0.013 Jitter_max = 0.07 ... ... ... ... systematic phase error systematic phase error due to delay time variation typical phase jitter (1-value at Tj=25C) maximum phase jitter (3-value at Tj=175C)
Data Sheet
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TLE4926C-HTN E6747 Appendix A: Marking & data matrix code information: Product is RoHS (restriction of hadzardous substances) compliant when marked with letter "G" in front or after the date code marking. As mentioned in information note N 136/03 a data matrix code with 8x18 fields according to the ECC200 standard may be used for sensor production. Furthermore the marking technique on the front side of the device may be changed from a mask to a writing laser equipment. The information content (date code and device type) will hereby not be changed. Please refer to your Key account team or regional sales responsible if you need further information. Example for data matrix code (rear side of sensor):
Data Sheet
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TLE4926C-HTN E6747
Revision History:
April 2007
Version 3.0
Previous Version: 2.1
Page 1 1 6 8, 11 9 10 11 Subjects (major changes since last revision) Data sheet is valid for 8" products Ordering code updated Watchdog reset condition updated Output OFF voltage typing error corrected EMC performance conducted pulses ISO7637-1 TP1 and TP5 updated ESD performance updated Footnote 2: Watchdog reset condition updated
Infineon Technologies AG (c) Infineon Technologies AIM SC All Rights Reserved.
http://www.infineon.com/products/sensors
We Listen to Your Comments Any information within this document that you feel is wrong, unclear or missing at all? Your feedback will help us to continuously improve the quality of this document. Please send your proposal (including a reference to this document) to: Sensors@infineon.com
Data Sheet
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