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  rp-21000 series description the rp-21000 series (formerly ssp- 21110 series) of 28 vdc, solid-state power controllers (sspcs) replace electromagnetic circuit breakers and solid-state relays rated from 2 through 25 amperes. these sspcs offer sta- tus outputs and permit external input logic control so that they may be remotely located near to the load. there are five models in the series, differing only in rated current, so that fault and i 2 t trip characteristics can be selected to protect wiring and loads. using power mosfet switches, these power controllers offer low ?on? resistance, low voltage drop, high ?off? impedance, and low power dissipa- tion. built with power mosfets and custom monolithics and using thick- film hybrid technology, they offer small size, low power, and high reliability. built-in-test (bit) has been provided to monitor, in real time, the status of the internal circuitry as well as cir- cuitry external to the sspc. this bit monitors mosfet failure and con- trol circuit failure. the rp-21000 series will operate over the full mil temperature range from -55c to +125c with no thermal derating. see ordering information for more details. applications designed to replace circuit breakers in land, air, and space vehicles, these solid-state power controllers provide status outputs for light and heavy overloads as well as minimum load current. features  available in 2, 5, 10, 15, 20 and 25 amp ratings  true i 2 t protection  compliant to mil-std-704 and mil-h-38534  isolated control circuitry  status outputs  instant trip protection  no thermal derating  low power dissipation  solid-state reliability vcc1 vcc2 mosfet driver, short circuit control, vee1 vbias supply input status circuit, and isolated control circuit status1 status2 vbias supply common latches internal power supplies r sense power in pins 6,7 pins 6,7 power out pins 9,10 pins 9,10 slew control pin 8 pin 8 high side switch config. low side switch config. +28 vdc +28 vdc load load or system gnd power in power out slew control control cmd figure 1. rp-21000 series block diagram -883 b quali fied ? 1990, 1999 data device corporation 28 vdc solid-state power controllers
2 notes: 1. -55 c case temperature 125 c. 2. 'a' is amps of rated sspc current. 3. control input must never be left floating. 4. an external 0.1f ceramic capacitor from vbias to the +5v return ground is rec- ommended. * i-max is the maximum continuous current. ** specified for -55 to +105 c case temperature; please increase by 0.6%/ c between +105 c and +125 c max limit. 50 continuous 100 volts, 50 ms transient 50 continuous -0.5 to vbias +0.5 -100 to +100 -0.5 to +7.0 -1000 to +1000 +300 (within 10 sec.) +150 vdc vdc vdc vdc vdc vdc c c power in to power out power out to slew control control input to signal ground power out to signal ground vbias voltage (see note 4) pin-to-case lead temperature (soldering) junction temperature value unit parameter table 1. absolute maximum ratings table 2. recommended operating conditions parameter power in to power out control input to signal ground power out to signal ground vbias voltage (see note 4) vdc vdc vdc vdc unit value +9.0 to +40.0 +4.5 to vbias -40 to +40 +4.5 to +5.5 power out voltage > power in voltage 1.0 typ a output-to-input parasitic diode, continuous current per amp of rated current see note 2 300 typ pf/a output capacitance 30 min ms trip reset time unlimited unlimited a rupture capacity power in = 9 - 40 v (see note 2 ) 0.1 max ma/a power input leakage current to power out power in = 9 - 40 v (see note 2 ) 36 typ f/a max load capacitance for start-up at 100 vdc 1000 typ pf signal ground to power out isolation see table 4 "on" resistance see table 4 power dissipation power circuit max. continuous current -0.5 to 0.8 v control turn-off voltage control voltage = 5.0 v 50 max a control input current control voltage = 2.4 v 50 max a control input current control voltage = 0.8 v -50 min a control input current 0.4 max v status output voltage v cc = 4.5v,i oh = -1.0ma 2.4 min v status output voltage see table 5 status truth table 2.0 to 5.5 v control turn-on voltage vcc = 4.5 to 5.5 vdc 30 typ 70 max ma vbias supply current note 3 ttl/cmos compatible control circuit logic type conditions value unit parameter table 3. rp-21000 specifications (see notes 1 and 2) see figure 3 response time see figure 4 65 max g physical characteristics size weight -55 to +125 -55 to +150 c c temperature range operating (case) storage rated load 0.5 12 10 c/w c/w c thermal resistance case to sink ( cs ) case to ambient ( ca ) temperature rise, junction-to-case pin-to-case voltage = 100vdc 50 min m ? isolation resistance any pin to case power ground to signal ground voltage = 50vdc 50 min m ? isolation resistance power out to signal ground across pins 6&7, 9&10 0.25 max vdc voltage drop see figure 2 trip characteristics power out voltage > power in voltage 1.8 max v output-to-input parasitic diode, forward voltage at continuous current power out voltage > power in voltage pulse width 100 s 4.0 typ a conditions value unit parameter table 3. rp-21000 specifications (contd) 5 1.6 0.03 rp-21005 10 2.6 0.023 rp-21010 15 3.5 0.015 rp-21015 20 5.0 0.012 rp-21020 25 7.7 0.012 rp-21025 2 0.6 0.1 rp-21002 i-max* (amps) power dissipation (watts)** ?on? resistance (ohms)** part number table 4. see table 4 v cc = 4.5v,i ol = 2.5 ma power circuit (continued) output-to-input parasitic diode, pulsed current per amp of rated current
3 functional description the rp-21000 series of solid-state power controllers incorpo- rate the wire protection feature of electromechanical circuit breakers and the reliability of solid-state relays. in addition to the solid-state relay's input logic compatibility, the rp-21000 series provide logic compatible status outputs. a ttl/cmos compatible input provides external control of the power switch's "on/off" state. a logic high on this control input turns the power to the load "on." a logic low will turn the power switch off, which removes power from the load. in the event of an overload the rp-21000 series will trip, just like a circuit breaker, and automatically remove power from the load. in order to turn back on the control input must be brought to a logic low, and then returned to a logic high state. as in a circuit breaker, the sspc ? s time to trip depends on the current level. slight overloads will cause longer trip times. heavy overloads will cause shorter trip times. the fault ("instant trip") and i 2 t trip curve (see figure 2) shows the trip time as a function of current for a single trip or repetitive trips with at least 10 seconds between trip and turn on. attempts to repeatedly turn on into an overload will result in the thermal memory short- ening each trip time. this "memory" protects the wire, load and solid-state power controller. the status lines are ttl/cmos compatible outputs which reflect the state of the sspc, the load, and the built-in-test (bit) cir- cuits. the status permits an external subsystem to monitor and ultimately control the sspc. table 5 defines the status lines' states which indicate the various states of the sspc. further explanation of the status lines appears in the applications infor- mation section. the rp-21000 series sspcs are characterized by their current rating and maximum "on" resistance listed in table 4. these parameters are established by the number of power fets placed in parallel within the sspc. the trip function is implemented by two separate circuits, a true i 2 t trip comparator and a short circuit fault comparator. they are independent of each other but work together to protect the sys- tem. if the load current is less than 110% of rated current, the sspc will never trip. if the load current is greater than 145%, the sspc will always trip. for load currents less than 800%, the trip time can be found from figure 2 by drawing a horizontal line on figure 2 at the cur- rent level of interest. the sspc will always trip at a time between the two curves. this is true i 2 t tripping. when the sspc trips in accordance with the i 2 t characteristics, the fall time is 200 s, maximum. for load currents greater than 1200%, the sspc will turn off in less than 25 s. between 800% and 1200%, the sspc will turn off in a time less than the "max. trip limit" shown in figure 2 and may turn off in less than 25 s. when the sspc turns off under these fault conditions, the fall time is less than 25 s. 10,000 1,200 1,000 800 600 400 200 0 10 1.0 0.1 0.01 0.001 s 25 145% 1 10% load curre nt%i - max time - seconds al way s trip neve r trip max . trip limit instant trip min. trip limit figure 2. trip characteristics
4 applications information in some applications, low side switching will be required as shown in figure 1. in this configuration the load is being switched through to system ground. the external 28 vdc is con- nected directly to the load while the return is connected to pins 9 and 10, which are the power out pins. the slew control (pin 8) is connected to maintain a controlled turn-on and turn-off of the load current. selection the selection of a proper sized sspc is essential for protection of the wire and load. this selection should be based on the steady state and transient overload currents. the shape of the trip curve (i 2 t) is selected as optimum to pro- tect the system wiring. the power dissipated in the wire is the wire resistance times the load current squared, and the temper- ature of the wire is determined by the length of time that this power is being dissipated. this makes the wire temperature pro- portional to the current squared times the on time. since the trip curve follows this same characteristic the sspc can accurately predict the wire temperature rise as a result of overloads and while the sspc will always turn off in less than 25 s when the load current is greater than 1200%, the actual current may "spike" to a value higher than 1200% due to circuit delays. the mosfets inherently self-limit the maximum current, depending on the number of mosfets and their rating. during turn-on and turn-off the rise and fall time of the output voltage is controlled to be less than 200 s. this value is a com- promise between faster response time with a greater amount of rfi and emi generated, and slower response time with less rfi and emi but greater power dissipated in the sspc during transi- tions. since the power mosfet switches are not saturated dur- ing transitions, the switching power dissipation is much greater than the static dissipation, and longer transitions result in a larg- er temperature rise. if the sspc is rapidly turned on and off, the high average dissipation could result in a significant temperature rise in the sspc. for this reason do not turn the sspc off and on more rapidly than 30 msec. this will limit the maximum tem- perature of the switches to a safe level. the rp-21000 has been designed to derive its internal power requirements from the bias supply input (+5 vdc). control input load current trip point status 2 status 1 t1 t2 t3 t4 t5 t6 t7 t8 t9 t10 t11 t12 t13 note: *voltage rise/fall time is specified for power in equal to 28 vdc and is proportional to the power in voltage. figure 3. solid-state power controller timing * s 200 voltage fall time t7-t8 ms 5.0 trip turn-off status 1 delay t11-t13 s see fig. 2 trip time after turn-on t10-t11 *load current < 800% s 200 voltage fall time after trip t11-t12 s 350 turn-on delay t1-t2 ns 350 status 1 & status 2 rise and fall time t4-t5 s 350 turn off delay t6-7 ms 7.5 status 1 & status 2 turn on delay t1-t4 * s 200 voltage rise time t2-3 ms 5.0 status 1 & status 2 turn off delay t6-t9 *load current > 1200% s 25 voltage fall time after trip t11-t12 notes unit maximum description time solid-state power controller timing at 28 vdc
5 remove load current before the wiring is damaged from overtem- perature. of course, the wire i 2 t product should be greater than the sspc i 2 t product for the sspc to protect the wire. precautions when a short-circuit causes turn off of the sspc, precautions have to be taken to limit the transient voltages generated by the wire inductance. the magnitude of this voltage is l*di/dt, where "l" is the wire inductance in henries and "di/dt" is the rate of change of output current. if the sspc turns off in 10 sec from a 250 amp overload (1000% for 25 amp unit) with a wire induc- tance of only 10 h, it would generate a spike of 125 volts. this exceeds the voltage rating of the mosfets. in order to provide protection from these transients, a transient voltage suppressor should be used between the power in terminal and slew control (power ground) and a power diode should be used between the power output terminals and slew control (power ground). (in low side switch configuration, the power diode is not required). the rating of the transient voltage suppressors should be select- ed so that at the maximum expected short-circuit current, the transient voltage suppressor voltage drop would not exceed the sspc voltage rating, and the power to be dissipated can be safely absorbed without transient suppressor failure. while circuit inductance can cause high voltage transients dur- ing turn off, lack of circuit inductance can cause current tran- sients prior to turn off. if the output of the sspc is shorted and there is no circuit inductance, the current from the source can rise instantaneously to a high value. the sspc will limit the cur- rent to about 100 times its rating (10,000%). circuit inductance will limit the rate of rise of this current. the sspc can take 25 s to turn off. the current will always overshoot the 1200% max- imum level of the sspc due to this 25 s delay. if the current rises slowly due to circuit inductance the overshoot will be negli- gible; if the current rises quickly the overshoot will be more sig- nificant. in any case, the current spike will be less than 25 s. in most real applications there will always be significant circuit inductance. the problem to guard against is voltage transients, not current transients. when testing individual sspcs, be careful to simulate actual system conditions. power-on reset when power is first applied the sspc will be off regardless of the control cmd input. if the control cmd input is a logic low the sspc is turned on by bringing the control cmd to a logic high. if the control cmd input is at a logic high when power is applied the sspc may be turned on by cycling the control cmd input to a logic low and then to a logic high. the system controller can be programmed to do this cycling of the con- trol cmd input. subsequent loss of the bias supply power causes the sspc to turn off. re-application of the bias supply power again causes a power-on reset (refer to optional power-on reset.) loss of power to the power in terminals does not turn off the sspc and re-application of this power does not cause a power-on reset. status codes this section contains a fuller explanation of the conditions and meaning of the status codes shown in table 5. each paragraph number corresponds to the state in table 5. the first four conditions show the control input has commanded the sspc to be off: 1) the sspc has failed or shorted to ground. status 1 indicates the load is drawing current but the sspc should be off. 2)the sspc has failed. status 1 indicates the load is drawing current; status 2 indicates the power mosfet switch is on; the sspc should be off. 3) normal off condition. status 1 indicates the load is not drawing current; status 2 indicates the power mosfet switch is off. 4) the sspc has failed or status 2 has shorted to the bias supply. status 1 indicates the load is not drawing current; status 2 indicates the power mosfet is on; the sspc should be off. the next four conditions show the control input has commanded the sspc to be on: 5) the sspc has failed or there is a short to ground on the status 2 output. status 1 indicates the load is drawing current but status 2 indicates the power mosfet switch is off. 6) normal on condition. status 1 indicates the load is notes: 1) status 1 indicates a logic low when the load is > 15% of rated sspc current. 2) status 2 indicates a logic high when the power mosfet switch is on. 3) any trip condition per figure 2. normal power out with load < 5% of rated sspc current. h h h 8 h l h 6 load ? off ? ; showing ? trip ? (see note 3). l h h 7 sspc failure or short to ground on status 2 line. l l h 5 sspc failure or status 2 shorted to bias supply h h l 4 l h l 3 load ? on ? ; showing sspc failure. h l l 2 sspc failure or short to ground. l l l 1 power controller and load status output status 2 (see note 2) output status 1 (see note 1) input control state table 5. status codes load ? off ? ; showing normal ? off ? condition. load ? on ? ; showing normal ? on ? condition.
6 drawing current and status 2 indicates the power mos- fet switch is on. 7) tripped condition. status 1 indicates the load is not drawing current and status 2 indicates the power mos- fet switch is off. the sspc can be turned back on by cycling the input control to a logic low and then back to a logic high. if the excessive load has not been removed, the sspc will trip again. 8) no load current. status 1 indicates the load is not draw- ing current; status 2 indicates the power mosfet switch is on. loads the rp-21000 series can be used with any type of load: any combination of inductive, resistive, and capacitive. in addition, they can be used with dc motors and lamps. inductive loads require protecting the sspc against voltage tran- sients. see the section on precautions above. capacitive loads require comparing the load in-rush current to the trip curve of figure 2. the inrush current must be below the minimum trip curve to avoid tripping on the inrush current. the inrush current can be calculated from the voltage rise time by using i=c*dv/dt. use the minimum rise time for calculation. the minimum rise time is 25% of the maximum rise time speci- fied in figure 3. capacitive loads can present a discharge problem. the sspcs use power mosfets as the switching element. the mosfets contain a parasitic diode which will be forward biased if the sspc power output terminal is more positive than the power input terminal. if the 28 vdc source is turned off while a charge is held on the capacitive load, this diode will turn on and dis- charge the load through the generator. the sspc can carry a reverse current equal to its forward current rating, however, the dissipation with reverse current is up to seven times the forward current dissipation for the same current. the user must ensure that the maximum case temperature is not exceeded. the trip circuit will activate for reverse currents, however, the parasitic diode will continue to conduct. when the power input terminals are brought more positive than the power output terminals the power controller will be off. incandescent lamps must be treated like capacitive loads for inrush current. since they do not store charge, they do not pre- sent a discharge problem. dc motors also must be treated like capacitive loads for in-rush current. if they continue rotating when power is removed, reverse current is a possibility due to back emf. voltage transients must also be considered when using dc motors as loads on sspcs. heatsinking the rp-21000 series are designed so that the junction temper- ature can never exceed its maximum rating if the case tempera- ture is held to 125 c or less. heatsinking is recommended to keep the case temperature to 125 c when operating at high ambient temperatures. the sspcs may be operated at room temperature without a heat sink. the maximum ambient tem- perature, t a , for operation without a heat sink is 125 - p d x ca (where p d is the power dissipation from table 4 and ca is the thermal resistance from case-to-ambient from table 3). the same expression is used for finding the maximum ambient temperature with a heat sink except ca is now the sum of the thermal resistance from case-to-sink and from sink-to-ambient. advantages of the rp-21000 series no offset voltage the power mosfet used in the ddc sspcs have no inherent voltage offset. the voltage drop across the power mosfet is solely dependent on the current flowing through the device and its "on" resistance. bipolar transistors, on the other hand, have an inherent dc offset voltage to which is added a voltage drop proportional to the devices' "on" resistance and the current flowing through it. it is this inherent offset voltage that is missing from the power mos- fet. the power mosfet, in many applications, leads to a lower voltage drop and power dissipation as an sspc switch. in addi- tion, the power mosfet ? s driver logic requirements are much simpler, especially when multiple mosfets are used as in the sspc product. no secondary breakdown and paralleling sspcs a bipolar transistor has a set of current-voltage limits that form an envelope that cannot be exceeded; this is known as the safe operating area of the device. if this envelope is exceeded, local hot spots will occur. these hot spots conduct currents more readily then adjacent cool areas and tend to become hotter. this thermal runaway leads to the ultimate destruction of the device; called secondary breakdown. the power mosfets have the opposite characteristics from that of thermal runaway in bipolar devices. a local hot-spot will steer current away from itself as its resistance in this area goes up. this results in even current sharing throughout the entire device, thereby eliminating hot-spots. the inherent advantage of not having secondary breakdown is that the entire mosfet has to exceed its temperature limitations before damage results. this characteristic makes the power mosfet more rugged when used for power switching then bipolar devices. due to the current sharing aspects of the power mosfet, they can be placed in parallel and share the load equally. ddc has a standard 28 vdc 80 amp power module which uses this tech- nique. isolation of control and status the sspc was designed with isolation between the load power and the five volt control logic input and the status outputs. this is necessary to prevent noise caused by transients or power spikes on the power line from adversely affecting the operation of the
7 sspc. therefore the case, power in, and control circuit are all electrically isolated. figure 1 shows this isolation as the "isolated control circuit." the electrical isolation is supported by an internal power oscilla- tor that electrically isolates separate internal power supplies that will power the internal analog and digital monolithics. this isola- tion prevents load or logic ground loops from affecting the prop- er operation of the sspc. the isolation also insures that a fault of the switch (mosfet) could never propagate back into the sspc logic or cause damage to the logic side. sspc failure or status 2 shorted to ground low high low load is ? off ? , normal condition high high low sspc failure or status 2 shorted to ground low low high load is ? on ? , normal condition high low high load is ? off ? , tripped low high high load is ? on ? , load < 5.0% rated current high high high sspc failure or status1 shorted to ground high low low sspc failure, or status1 and status 2 short- ed to ground, or no bias low low system status status 2 low status 1 control table 6. optional status truth table status 1 indicates a logic low if > 15% of the rated current is flowing. status 2 indicates a logic low if the sspc is tripped due to overcurrent. options the following characteristics can be factory modified on special orders:  i 2 t trip curve: k-factor adjustments  output rise and fall times: turn-off and turn-on times can be factory modified (e.g., capacitive loads)  current range  power-on reset: other options are available  input control: ttl or cmos or both with hysteresis (schmitt trigger char- acteristics)  custom packaging  optional status truth table (see table 6)
8 0.600 (15.24) 1.340 (34.04) 1.025 (26.04) 0.800 (20.24) 0.270 (6.86) 0.112 (2.85) 0.200 (5.08) 0.400 (10.16) 1.550 (39.37) 0.040 0.002 dia pin (5 req'd) (1.02 0.05) 2.525 (64.14) 2.740 (69.60) 0.595 (15.11) 5 4 3 2 1 6 7 8 9 10 contrasting colored bead to denote pin 1 pin numbers for ref only 0.062 0.002 dia pin (5 req.d) (1.58 0.05) 0.117 + 0.004 - 0.003 dia (4 holes) (2.97 + 0.10 - 0.08) 2.280 (57.91) 0.470 (11.94) front view bottom view side view 0.065 (1.65) 0.240 0.010 (typ) (6.10 0.25) 0.325 max (8.26) dimensions are in inches (mm) 0.105 (2.67) figure 4. mechanical outline power in power in slew control power out power out 6 7 8 9 10 5 4 3 2 1 function pin control command status 1 status 2 vbias supply common vbias supply input function pin table 7. pinouts
9 ordering information rp-210xx dx-xx0x supplemental process requirements: s = pre-cap source inspection l = pull test q = pull test and pre-cap inspection k = one lot date code w = one lot date code and precap source y = one lot date code and 100% pull test z = one lot date code, precap source and 100% pull test blank = none of the above process requirements: 0 = standard ddc processing, no burn-in (see table below.) 1 = mil-prf-38534 compliant 2 = b* 3 = mil-prf-38534 compliant with pind testing 4 = mil-prf-38534 compliant with solder dip 5 = mil-prf-38534 compliant with pind testing and solder dip 6 = b* with pind testing 7 = b* with solder dip 8 = b* with pind testing and solder dip 9 = standard ddc processing with solder dip, no burn-in (see table below.) temperature grade/data requirements: 1 = -55 c to +125 c 2 = -40 c to +85 c 3 = 0 c to +70 c 4 = -55 c to +125 c with variables test data 5 = -40 c to +85 c with variables test data 8 = 0 c to +70 c with variables test data options: 0 = standard product 1 = ttl schmitt 2 = cmos i/o package: d = dip current regulation: 02 = 2 amps 05 = 5 amps 07 = 7 amps** 10 = 10 amps 15 = 15 amps 25 = 25 amps *standard ddc processing with burn-in and full temperature test ? see table below. **contact factory for availability. standard ddc processing mil-std-883 test method(s) condition(s) inspection 2009, 2010, 2017, and 2032 ? seal 1014 a and c temperature cycle 1010 c constant acceleration 2001 a burn-in 1015, table 1 ?
10 notes
11 notes
12 the information in this data sheet is believed to be accurate; however, no responsibility is assumed by data device corporation for its use, and no license or rights are granted by implication or otherwise in connection therewith. specifications are subject to change without notice. 105 wilbur place, bohemia, new york 11716-2482 for technical support - 1-800-ddc-5757 ext. 7381 headquarters - tel: (631) 567-5600 ext. 7381, fax: (631) 567-7358 southeast - tel: (703) 450-7900, fax: (703) 450-6610 west coast - tel: (714) 895-9777, fax: (714) 895-4988 europe - tel: +44-(0)1635-811140, fax: +44-(0)1635-32264 asia/pacific - tel: +81-(0)3-3814-7688, fax: +81-(0)3-3814-7689 world wide web - http://www.ddc-web.com f-11/99-500 printed in the u.s.a. ilc data device corporation registered to iso 9001 file no. a5976


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