AN2425 Application note
Using an ST7ULTRALITE microcontroller to drive a TRIAC or an AC switch for a Mains supply
Introduction
This document describes how to design a light dimmer or motor speed control device using an ST7ULTRALITE microcontroller as a driver for a TRIAC or AC switch on the mains supply. This electronic equipment is typically used in home appliances or in industrial applications for a variety of purposes such as motor regulation in washing machines, vacuum cleaner control, light dimming in a lamp, heating in a coffee machine, or motor regulation in a ventilator. The STEVAL-ILL004V2 evaluation board illustrates ST's solution for these kinds of applications. This design is mainly based on the solution presented in Application Note AN2263: Universal motor speed control and light dimmer with TRIAC and ST7LITE microcontroller which provides a complete design description for the STEVAL-ILL004V1 evaluation board. The main difference between these two evaluation boards is the microcontroller; the STEVAL-ILL004V2 uses the smaller 8-pin ST7ULTRALITE microcontroller while the STEVAL-ILL004V1 uses a 16-pin ST7FLITE09 microcontroller. This document presents only new and important information concerning the STEVALILL004V2 evaluation board in order to get quickly started with evaluation. Application Note AN2263 can be used as a reference for complete design solution and provides examples of capacitive power supply circuit design calculation, TRIAC power dissipation calculation, recommended TRIAC summary, ZCD (zero crossing detection) resistor calculation and gate-limiting resistor calculation. STEVAL-ILL004V2 evaluation board
September 2006
Rev 1
1/21
www.st.com
Contents
AN2425
Contents
1 2 Basic principle . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Universal motor speed control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.1 Application schematic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3
Light dimmer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3.1 2-load configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
4
EMC testing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 EN 55015 for the light dimmer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 EN 61000-3-2 class A for light dimmer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 EN 55014 for motor speed control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 EN 61000-3-2 class A for motor speed control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
5
Software . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
5.1 5.2 5.3 Main.c module . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Por ts.c module . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Pwm_ar_timer_12bit.c module . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
6
References and related materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Appendix A
Revision history . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
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AN2425
Basic principle
1
Basic principle
Control techniques for monophase motors, light dimmers or any AC load are based on phase-angle adjusting. The block schematic of this principle is shown in Figure 1. The TRIAC is turned ON by the control signal coming from the microcontroller with a given delay after the zero crossing, and is automatically turned OFF when its current reaches a zero value. It is the same for positive and negative voltages. The total power delivered to the LOAD depends on the time, when the TRIAC is turned ON. The "heart" of this application is the small, 8-pin ST7ULTRALITE microcontroller. The synchronization used to switch ON the TRIAC at the same time for each of the cycles is provided by zero crossing detection (ZCD). The MCU detects the zero crossing after each period of the input signal and sets the time to switch on the TRIAC in relation to the value of the voltage on the potentiometer or button. Due to the low power consumption, the evaluation board includes a low-cost capacitive power supply. As the TRIAC produces a noise when it is turned "ON" or "OFF," an input EMI filter is connected on the board. Figure 1. STEVAL-ILL004V2 board block schematic
Warning:
The MCU is directly linked to the mains voltage supply. No insulation is ensured between the accessible parts and the high voltage. The STEVAL-ILL004V2 evaluation board must be used with care and only by persons qualified for working with electricity at mains voltage levels. Certain precautions have to be taken during emulation to avoid damaging development tools.
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Universal motor speed control
AN2425
2
Universal motor speed control
The STEVAL-ILL004V2 evaluation board shows STMicroelectronics' solution for driving a universal motor or any other AC load using a small, 8-pin microcontroller. The left side of the board includes two connectors; one is the mains connector for the input voltage supplied to the board and the other is the connector for the universal motor. Due to the universality of the board, the load can be controlled either by a button or a potentiometer. The way it is controlled is selected by Switch S2 ("Button" or "Potentiometer") before the input voltage is connected. The button should not be used to control the motor speed, but only for adjusting the brightness of the light bulb when the lamp is connected as the load (light dimmer application). The potentiometer stands by on the board to control the speed of the motor. The tables on the board show how to connect the jumpers for the input EMI filter for the motor speed control and light dimmer. The maximum power range of the evaluation board depends on the TRIAC and the size of its heatsink. For example, the board shown on page 1 was tested with a 1600W AC vacuum cleaner motor. For high power (higher than approximately 350W), it is necessary to use the heatsink on the TRIAC due to the power dissipation. The STEVAL-ILL004V2 evaluation board includes a TRIAC with an assembled heatsink for the maximum output power (approximately 1000W). The application is independent of the input frequency because there is software frequency detection, and so 50 or 60Hz can be selected without any problems. The input voltage can be from 110 up to 240V AC with an ACST76S TRIAC connected on the board. If a BTB16 TRIAC is used in the application with the input voltage 110V, the capacitor C4 = 330nF must be replaced by C4 = 470nF in order to have enough energy to turn ON the TRIAC because the supply voltage is delivered from a capacitive source and depends on the input voltage.
2.1
Application schematic
Figure 2 shows the application schematic diagram of the universal motor speed control. Appendix A lists the bill of materials for this application. Components L1, C9, C8 and R9 are not used for the motor speed control (jumpers J1 and J2 are connected and jumper J3 is disconnected). Due to the universality of the evaluation board, the EMI filter (C7, L1, and C9) is designed as a CLC connection (p-element) to reduce the noise coming from the board to the mains. For motor control applications, it is enough to use only an input capacitor (for example, C7 = 470nF) to guarantee the requested specifications. Section 4: EMC testing describes EMC issues. STMicroelectronics offers a family of TRIACs (snubberless TRIACs), with an integrated snubber, and so it is not necessary to use external components as overvoltage protection. If the standard TRIAC is used, the snubber circuit (C8 and R9) should be assembled to prevent the TRIAC from spurious turn-on. The power supply circuit (R6, R7, R10, C4, ZD1, D1 and C5) is developed to supply the microcontroller. If both neutral and phase lines are available on the board, the maximum output current with the input voltage of 230V is 11.08mA. The total consumption of the microcontroller is approximately 3.26mA and consumption of the application is 3.97mA (measured value) and so 11.08mA is really enough to supply the MCU. If the microcontroller is in Halt mode, its consumption is only 6.09A.
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AN2425
Universal motor speed control The Zero Cross Detector (ZCD) is realized by R1, R2, and C2 and the signal is connected to the PA2 port of the microcontroller. A new software implementation can be easily done on the board, due to the ICC connector used to program the microcontroller. As stated above, Switch S2 selects the control method (button or potentiometer). The TRIAC is driven by high-current capability port PA4 of the microcontroller with maximum current up to 20mA. If there is not enough power to switch ON the TRIAC, Jumper J5 can be connected to two ports in parallel configuration. In this case, the maximum current capability is 25mA. Jumper J4 must be disconnected in order to use the reset pin as the output. This action must be also supported by software modification, because the reset pin must be set as the output (port A3). To configure this pin as output, write 55h to MUXCRO and AAh to MUXCR1 registers. For more information, please refer to the ST7ULTRALITE datasheet.
Note:
The STEVAL-ILL004V2 demonstrates both the light dimmer and motor speed control. It means the potentiometer and button is used. If one type of solution is requested, only the potentiometer or button can be used and therefore the next two high-sink ports of the microcontroller can be available (Switch S2 is also not used). It can increase current capability up to 60mA.
5/21
6/21
JUMPER 2 1 2 L1 0.1mH / 5A J2 1 2 LOAD OR SHORT CONNECTION (IF LAMP IS IN SERIAL) C1 100nF Bu tto n 12 S3 3 R3 4 1M R4 47 C8 2.2nF F1 FUSE C7 470nF ~275V AC X2 C9 100nF Snubber R9 1k P1 10K
1 2 3
Figure 2.
Universal motor speed control
JUMPER 4 2 1
Use PIN4 as RESET or Port
Application schematic
R1 VC C J3 160K IO1 VSS PA 8 PA 2 5 2 1 VDD 4 RESE T PA5 3 46 7 AIN0 PA 1 ST 7ULT RALI TE R11 4K 7
R2 160K J4 C2 100pF
2
2
JUMPER 3
JUMPER 1 1
VARISTO R
MAINS J1 1 2 N
C3 10nF
J5
1
1
Q1
21 JUMPER 5
~275 L
BTB16 or ACST67S TR IA C
VC C
2 4 6 8 10
R12 20K
ICC
1 3 5 7 9
R13 4K 7 R10 150 VC C VC C ZD1 R7 150 R6 150 C4 330nF ~275V AC X2 5.6V C5 D1 D4007 + 470uF/16V S2 1 Sw itch 3 2 R8 20K
VC C R5 20K S1 1 Bu tto n 3 2 4
C6 1nF
LIGHT DIMMER SERIAL CONFIGURATION PRALLEL CONFIGURATION JUMPER 1 DIS. CON. JUMPER 1 JUMPER 2 JUMPER 2 DIS. DIS. JUMPER 3 JUMPER 3 DIS. CON.
AI12634
MOTOR CONTROL PARALLEL CONFIGURATION JUMPER 1 CON. JUMPER 2 CON. JUMPER 3 DIS.
USE PIN4 OF ST7ULTRALITE AS RESET OUTPUT JUMPER 4 CON. JUMPER 4 DIS. JUMPER 5 DIS. JUMPER 5 CON.
AN2425
AN2425
Light dimmer
3
Light dimmer
The STEVAL-ILL004V2 evaluation board is also used for light dimmer applications. This solution is based on the same design principle as the motor speed control; meaning that all information provided in Section 2: Universal motor speed control is also valid for light dimmers. In regards to lighting specifications, a different type of input filter is selected compared with the motor speed control. A CLC filter (C7 = 470nF, C9 = 100nF and L1 = 0.1mH) is used. In order to control the light (typical of dimmer applications), the use of Switch S2 must be taken into account when designing the application to enable certain features such as decreasing or increasing lamp brightness. If the switch is pressed twice quickly (between 0 and 40ms), nothing happens. If pressed between 40ms and 240ms, it means turn "ON" or "OFF" device. If the lamp is turned "OFF", the brightness level is stored in the memory of the microcontroller. When pressed for longer than 240ms, the brightness "automatically" increases until it reaches its maximum value at which point the brightness starts decreasing and so on.
3.1
2-load configuration
In many lighting applications, the phase and neutral lines are not both available. A general example is the switch on the wall, where very often only the phase is connected as shown in Figure 3 - part 2. The lamp is connected in series with the evaluation board and the microcontroller is supplied from the voltage on the TRIAC when the TRIAC is turned "OFF". So if the TRIAC is turned "ON" for a long time during half of the signal period, there is not enough time (voltage) to save the energy and the device will not work. This limitation means that it is not possible to switch "ON" the TRIAC for 100%. Using the power supply designed in this application, the maximum time for opening the TRIAC is approximately 80% (Figure 4). This value was measured using a 500W halogen lamp connected in series with the evaluation board.
Caution:
If the load is connected in series with the evaluation board, the input filter must not be assembled (especially the input capacitors) because the input capacitors can produce a large di/dt on the TRIAC when the device is turned "ON" that may damage the TRIAC. If the lamp is directly connected to the evaluation board (Figure 3 - part 1), the capacitive power supply is able to provide enough energy for the microcontroller because the phase and neutral lines are both available. In this case, the time for opening the TRIAC is unlimited, but, for example, it makes no sense to design software for more than 95% because there is almost no brightness difference between 95 and 100%. Due to the universality of the evaluation board (motor speed control, lamp available on the board or lamp in series with the board), the software is designed to limit opening time for TRIAC at 80% in order to guarantee correct functioning for a lamp in series with the evaluation board. Of course, there is no problem to change this limit for applications where both the phase and neutral lines are available.
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Light dimmer Figure 3.
1.
AN2425 2-load configuration
2.
1. Both phase and neutral lines are available 2. Phase and neutral lines are not both available.
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AN2425 Figure 4.
Light dimmer Maximum time for switching ON the TRIAC with lamp in series
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EMC testing
AN2425
4
EMC testing
Light dimmer applications are tested for compliance with EN55015 and motor speed control applications with EN55014-1 and EN61000-3-2 class A specifications.
EN55015 specifications describe the limits and methods of measurement of radio disturbance characteristics for electrical lighting and similar equipment. EN55014-1 specifications describe electromagnetic compatibility - requirements for household appliances, electric tools, and similar devices - part 1: emission. EN61000-3-2 specifications describe the limits for harmonic current emissions (equipment input current up to and including 16A per phase).
For more information, please refer to Application Note AN2263: Universal motor speed control and light dimmer with TRIAC and ST7LITE microcontroller. The evaluation board was tested for compliance with these three specifications. Note that for any other design of these applications (light dimmer, motor control, etc.), the results will not be the same and the tests must therefore be repeated. In conclusion, only a certification laboratory can provide and approve the compliance with specifications for the products to be sold on the market.
Warning:
The MCU is directly linked to the mains voltage supply. No insulation is ensured between the accessible parts and the high voltage. The STEVAL-ILL004V2 evaluation board must be used with care and only by persons qualified for working with electricity at mains voltage levels. Certain precautions have to be taken during emulation to avoid damaging development tools.
4.1
EN 55015 for the light dimmer
In order to guarantee these specifications, a CLC input filter is selected. The value of the filtering capacitors is C7 = 470nF and C9 = 100nF (~275V AC X2) and the inductor L1 has the value of 0.1H. A 150W bulb load is connected on the board, which means the phase and neutral lines are available for the power supply circuit. As the output power can be regulated by the switching time of the TRIAC, there are many states for testing, but the only the worst case (the highest noise) is measured. This happens if the TRIAC is turned ON in the maximum voltage of the sinusoidal waveform. Measuring the peak value shows that its real waveform is under the requested limit, proving that this type of EMI filter is suitable for light dimmer applications (Figure 5).
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AN2425 Figure 5. Peak measurement for the light dimmer
EMC testing
4.2
EN 61000-3-2 class A for light dimmer
Phase-controlled dimmers up to 1kW do not need to be tested for harmonic current emissions because harmonic current limits are not specified in this specification for independent dimmers for incandescent lamps with a rated power less than or equal to 1kW. The STEVAL-ILL004V2 evaluation board includes a heatsink and is designed to deliver an output power up to 1kW and therefore does not require testing.
4.3
EN 55014 for motor speed control
Only one input capacitor (C7 = 470nF) connected in parallel is able to obtain real measured waveforms below their limits, which means it is possible to guarantee compliance with these specifications using just this type of filter. In any case, when the AC motor is used as a load, the serial inductor is not needed in the application. For testing purposes, a load of 1600W from a vacuum cleaner motor was used. The motor was connected to the board, so the both the phase and neutral lines were available for the power supply circuit. As stated above, the output power can be regulated by the switching time of the TRIAC. There are many states for testing, but the measurement is provided only for the worst case (the highest noise). This happens when the TRIAC is turned ON in the maximum voltage of the sinusoidal waveform. As above, two measurements are requested in these specifications. One is a quasi peak value and the second one is an average value. Both real waveforms are below the requested limits, which mean this type of EMI filter is suitable for an AC motor (Figure 6 and Figure 7).
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EMC testing Figure 6. Quasi peak measurement for the motor speed control
AN2425
Figure 7.
Average value measurement for the motor speed control
4.4
EN 61000-3-2 class A for motor speed control
The STEVAL-ILL004V2 evaluation board is almost the same as the STEVAL-ILL004V1; the only difference is the microcontroller. The EN61000-3-2 was already tested on the STEVALILL004V1 and is described in Application Note AN2263: Universal motor speed control and light dimmer with TRIAC and ST7LITE microcontroller. Therefore it was not tested to fulfill specification requirements for the STEVAL-ILL004V2. Generally the input capacitor C7 = 470nF is used on the board in order to guarantee compliance with these specifications.
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AN2425
Software
5
Software
The software is written in C language, structured, and well-commented. It contains several modules, but the main functions necessary for the proper operation of the evaluation board reside in the following:
Main.c Por ts.c Pwm_ar_timer_12bit.c Lite_timer_8bit.c Adc_8bit.c
Note:
The overall code is less than 1KB so that it will fit the ST7 ULTRALITE memory. The working principle of using the TRIAC to drive either the incandescent lamp or onephase AC motor is to switch ON the TRIAC at the exact time in both half-periods of the sine wave. The TRIAC is closed automatically upon zero crossing detection. The minimum and maximum opening time for the TRIAC is set as a constant value inside the software and it can be easily modified in order to guarantee the required power range for various applications. The main idea of the software is to synchronize the internal timer inside the ST7 ULTRALITE microcontroller using the Zero Crossing (ZC) events of the mains sinusoidal waveform. The voltage from the mains is applied on Pin PA2 which is set up as an input interrupt in a pull-up configuration. In the case of an internal counter that is not synchronized with the ZC event, the user may have difficulty with the performance of the following interrupts: 1. 2. Interrupt from the input pin Interrupt from the timer (e.g. overflow interrupt)
Note:
This can influence driver stability if in one period the TRIAC is switched ON at a different time compared to the second one. The 12-bit Auto-reload Timer (AT timer) is used in Output Compare (OC) mode. The AT timer is over-flowed on address FFFh to the value set in the Auto-reload register (ATR, in this configuration, 000h). At each ZC synchronized (sync) event interval (Figure 8), the DCR register is filled by the actual counter state from CNTR and the value corresponding to the 0.2ms interval (640 hrs). From that time, the ZC is synchronized on the mains. After that, an OC interrupt occurs every 0.2ms where DCR = DCR + the value corresponding to the 0.2ms interval (640 hrs). Each OC interrupt is incremented in the software counter (Figure 9). The main advantage of this design is that the CNTR register is readable at any time and the new value can be written immediately to the DCR register without any delay. The 0.2ms interval is the smallest step required for firing the TRIAC. The TRIAC is fired from PA4 pin, which can source the gate up to 20mA (max.). If the application requires more power (e.g. for a bigger TRIAC), change the RESET pin to output push-pull and use a jumper add it to PA4. To do this, modify the source code in the lib.h module to uncomment "#define RESETOUT" line and compile it again. This changes the port configuration and certain constants used for firing the TRIAC. The Watchdog is used in a hardware configuration set up using the option byte.
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Software Figure 8. ZC events
AN2425
ZC sync.
ZC
ZC sync.
ZC
ZC sync.
Period
Period
AI12629
Figure 9.
Auto-reload timer principle
OC int. OC int. OC int. OC int. OC int. OC int. OC int. OC int. ZC sync. FFF
OC int. OC int. OC int.
ZC sync.
DCR = CNTR + 640 hrs 000 ATR = 000
DCR = DCR + 640 hrs DCR = DCR + 640 hrs
AI12630
5.1
Main.c module
After the MCU is turned ON, all active peripherals (e.g., ports, LITE Timer, and 12-bit Autoreload), the ADC and Watchdog refresh (WDG) are set up in the "Main" program in this module. After this, all of the variables are set up and the MCU will enter Wait For Interrupt (WFI) mode. This leads to minimum power consumption because the program is performed only in interrupts (from ZC and the OC timer) as shown in Figure 10.
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AN2425 Figure 10. Main programming flowchart
Software
MAIN
PORTS settings TIMER settings ADC settings WDG refresh
Set all variables
WFI
END
AI12631
5.2
Ports.c module
All timers are switched OFF until the first ZC event occurs. This interrupt is handled in the ports.c module using the PORTS_0_Interrupt routine (Figure 11) which checks the Port A pin 2 (PA2) on the falling edge. This pin is set up as the input interrupt that is in pull-up configuration. After catching the first interrupt, the AT timer is switched ON and the DRC is loaded with the 0.2ms value for the compare interrupt. The timer is then synchronized with the ZC event. The ZC window is set up for 50Hz and the interrupt routine finishes. From this point, the AR_TIMER_OC_Interrupt routine is performed every 0.2ms (Figure 12). After the 50/60Hz mains has been ON for a time period (approximately 20 to 16.7ms), the second ZC interrupt occurs. At this point, the interval between ZC events is measured and, based on this value, the corresponding flags are set (50 or 60Hz). If this event does not fit either the 50 or 60Hz parameters, all of the timer flags and the counter are re-initialized for another synchronization attempt. The ZC window interval is 1.2ms. At the end of this interval, a new ZC event is set up. After a successful synchronization phase, the next ZC event is monitored during the following ZC interrupt and monitored to see if the ZC interval passes synchronization parameters, or if the timer needs to be synchronized again. The new value used to fire the TRIAC (via the 'Read from' button or potentiometer) is also measured here. If the ZC interval is missed the first time, the program continues with the synchronization values measured from the previous ZC interrupt. If the next ZC interval is missed again, the microcontroller is reset by the WDG.
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Software
AN2425
5.3
Pwm_ar_timer_12bit.c module
The AT timer in OC mode is used as the main time counter. This interrupt is handled in the AR_TIMER_OC_Interrupt routine in the pwm_ar_timer_12bit.c module. This routine generates the 0.2ms time base used for push-button handling, TRIAC firing, WDG refresh, and software counter incrementing (Figure 12). The button checking and handling routine checks the state of the button driving pin every 0.2ms. Figure 11. PORTS_0_Interrupt
PORTS_0_ Interrupt
1 NO NO NO 1st ZC missed? YES Set MISSED flag 60Hz 50Hz, 60Hz or ? 50Hz Use previous measured period Set normal run flags NO Fit signal ZC window? YES Synchronize TIMER Measure period
1st interrupt?
2nd interrupt?
YES Synchronize TIMER Set ZC window RETURN
YES Synchronize TIMER Measure period Other Hz
Set all flags + counter for new synch. Set 50Hz flag
Set ZC window Set 60Hz flag Set ZC window Set ZC window for 50Hz or 60Hz Reset Micro by WDG Synchronize TIMER WDG on Prepare new value for triac firing (read from button or potentiometer)
RETURN
Micro is already synchronized
1
AI12632
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AN2425 Figure 12. AR_TIMER_OC_Interrupt
AR_TIMER_0C _ Interrupt
Software
Set next 0.2ms period
1st ZC missed? NO Button checking and handling Dimming direction handling
YES
Recount edges for firing the triac
Is it the time to fire the triac? NO 2nd ZC missed? NO Counter ++ WDG refresh RETURN
YES Fire the triac
YES
Reset the Micro
AI12633
17/21
References and related materials
AN2425
6
References and related materials
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. AN 2263: Universal motor speed control and light dimmer with TRIAC and ST7LITE micro AN 1255: New circuital solution to efficiently drive an AC monophase motor or AC load ACST6-7S Datasheet BTB16 Datasheet AN1512: ST FIVE control of an AC monophase motor without harmonic distortion ST7ULTRALITE Datasheet AN 392/1098: Using Microcontrollers and TRIACs on a 110/240V mains supply.
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AN2425
Appendix A
Table 1.
Item 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30
Bill of material STEVAL - ILL004V2
Quantity 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 5 2 3 1 1 1 2 1 1 3 3 1 2 2 1 1 1 Reference CONNECTOR2 C1 C2 C3 C4 C5 C6 C7 C8 C9 D1 F1 IO1 J1, J2, J3, J4, J5 J6, J7 J8, J9, J10 L1 P1 Q1 R1, R2 R3 R4 R5, R8, R12 R6, R7, R10 R9 R11, R13 S1, S3 S2 ZD1 ~275 Part ICC 100nF/50V 100pF/50V 10nF/50V 330nF/~275V AC X2 470F/16V 1nF/50V 470nF/~275V AC X2 2.2nF (NC) 100nF/~275V AC X2 D4007 FUSE- 10A ST7ULTRALITE JUMPER CON3 CON1 0.1mH/5A 10K BTB16 160K 1M 47 20K 150 1k (NC) 4,7k Button Switch 5,6V VARISTOR BTB16-600CW ST7FLITEUS5B6 Ordering code
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Revision history
AN2425
Revision history
Table 2.
Date 7-Sept-2006
Document revision history
Revision 1 Initial release. Changes
20/21
AN2425
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