低功耗的PWM输出控制LED亮度-Low-Power PWM

液晶电视

1人已加入

描述

Abstract: A common brightness-control circuit for LEDs uses an electrically controlled potentiometer (EPOT) to achieve digital control of the LED brightness. Replacing the EPOT with an RC network, however, reduces both the IC count and the required number of control lines.

A system in which a microcontroller or programmable logic controls one or more LEDs often requires the capability of controlling LED brightness. A common approach for achieving this adjusts an electrically controlled potentiometer (EPOT), which in turn, controls the LED driver (Figure 1). For large systems, however, that approach can require many EPOTs, each requiring two control lines, or address decoding, or both.

led
Figure 1. A common brightness-control circuit for LEDs uses an electrically controlled potentiometer (EPOT) to achieve digital control of the LED brightness.

There is an alternative that reduces the number of ICs and control lines. You can control each LED driver directly with a single output port. Simply replace the EPOT with a simple RC integrator and program the port to output a PWM signal (Figure 2). The average voltage at ADJ (pin 4) varies with the PWM signal and enables the IC (a current regulator for LEDs) to control the LED brightness. An RC time constant at least 50 times the PWM period produces a smooth average voltage across the capacitor. The circuit also includes a 6.65kΩ resistor across the integrating capacitor, which reduces the 5V PWM signal to 1.25V as required by the IC's ADJ input.

led
Figure 2. Replacing the EPOT of Figure 1 with an RC network reduces both the IC count and the required number of control lines.

A similar article appeared as a Design Idea in the February 20, 2006 edition of EET.


打开APP阅读更多精彩内容
声明:本文内容及配图由入驻作者撰写或者入驻合作网站授权转载。文章观点仅代表作者本人,不代表电子发烧友网立场。文章及其配图仅供工程师学习之用,如有内容侵权或者其他违规问题,请联系本站处理。 举报投诉
  • 相关推荐
  • 热点推荐
  • led

全部0条评论

快来发表一下你的评论吧 !

×
20
完善资料,
赚取积分