Témakör:
Inova Semiconductors provides standalone ISELED LED driver & controller in volume production and AEC-Q100 qualified
Megjelent: 2020. július 14.
In addition to its LED driver/controller die, integrated in smart ISELED LED modules, Inova Semiconductors offers the driver chip as a standalone solution. The standalone ISELED driver is now available in volume production and is AEC-Q100 qualified.
The INLC10AQ (originally introduced as INLC100Q16) will be used to construct custom LED chains that can be controlled via a bidirectional two-wire differential bus, enabling up to 4079 daisy-chained LED driver & controller devices in a single array. Additionally, smart LED modules integrating both the driver & controller and RGB LEDs in one single package are available from different vendors both in high volume and automotive qualified. Both the integrated LED modules and the standalone solution enable innovative solutions in ambient lighting, roof lighting, display backlight and functional lighting.
The Inova INLC10AQ is very flexible, intuitive and easy to program, providing functions such as color/brightness control and low light dimming support. It supports calibration of an LED's brightness, while the dominant wavelength provides temperature compensation for red LEDs and features a built-in one-time programmable (OTP) memory for storing calibration and compensation data values, which abolishes the need for LED binning. Developed with design simplicity in mind, the driver & controller chip includes a built-in oscillator, thus eliminating the need for additional external components. It only requires a single supply voltage and also integrates a built-in LDO (low dropout regulator), a temperature sensor, and comprehensive diagnostic features.
LED chains can be built up by daisy-chaining several INLC10AQ devices or other ISELED products via a differential bidirectional serial bus with 2 Mbps and CRC (Cyclic Redundancy Check). The chip provides three independent, constant current sinks, each controlled via PWM (488 Hz, 12 bit). In an LED chain, each device is individually addressable via the serial bus, using a proprietary bus protocol.