Texas Instruments LMP92064 Digital Current Sensor & Voltage Monitor

Texas Instruments LMP92064 Precision Low-Side Digital Current Sensor and Voltage Monitor is a current sensor and monitor that includes a digital SPI interface. This analog front-end (AFE) includes a precision current sense amplifier to measure a load current across a shunt resistor and a buffered voltage channel to measure the voltage supply of the load. The current and voltage channels are sampled simultaneously by independent 125kSps 12-bit ADC converters, allowing for very accurate power calculations in unidirectional sensing applications. The LMP92064 includes an internal 2.048V reference for the ADCs, eliminating the need for an external reference and reducing component count and board space. A host can communicate with the Texas Instruments LMP92064 using a four-wire SPI interface running at speeds up to 20MHz. The fast SPI interface allows the user to take advantage of the higher bandwidth ADC to capture fast varying signals. The four-wire interface with dedicated unidirectional input and output lines also provides an easy interface to digital isolators in applications where isolation is required.

Features

  • Two simultaneous sampling 12-bit ADCs
    • 125kSps (min.) conversion rate 
  • 12-bit current sense channel
    • ±15μV input-referred offset 
    • –0.2V to 2V common-mode voltage range 
    • +75mV maximum differential input voltage 
    • 25V/V fixed gain 
    • ±0.75% (max) gain error 
    • 70kHz bandwidth (–3dB) 
    • DC PSRR: 100dB
    • DC CMRR: 110dB
  • 12-bit voltage channel
    • INL (±1LSB)
    • ±2mV (max.) offset error 
    • ±0.75% (max.) gain error 
    • +2.048V maximum input voltage 
    • 100kHz bandwidth 
  • Internal reference
  • SPI frequency up to 20MHz
  • –40°C to +105°C temperature range 
  • WSON-16 package

Applications

  • Enterprise servers
  • Telecommunications
  • Power management

Block Diagram

Block Diagram - Texas Instruments LMP92064 Digital Current Sensor & Voltage Monitor
Published: 2013-10-18 | Updated: 2022-03-24