L6562 STMicroelectronics, L6562 Datasheet - Page 9

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L6562

Manufacturer Part Number
L6562
Description
Transition mode
Manufacturer
STMicroelectronics
Datasheet

Specifications of L6562

Input Voltage
90 to 265 Vac, 50 - 60 Hz
Pout
250 W
Power Factor
≥ 0.94 at 230 Vac

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L6562
When the load of a PFC pre-regulator is very low, the output voltage tends to stay steadily above the nom-
inal value, which cannot be handled by the Dynamic OVP. If this occurs, however, the error amplifier out-
put will saturate low; hence, when this is detected, the external power transistor is switched off and the IC
put in an idle state (Static OVP). Normal operation is resumed as the error amplifier goes back into its lin-
ear region. As a result, the L6562 will work in burst-mode, with a repetition rate that can be very low.
When either OVP is activated the quiescent consumption of the IC is reduced to minimize the discharge
of the Vcc capacitor and increase the hold-up capability of the IC supply system.
4.2 THD optimizer circuit
The L6562 is equipped with a special circuit that reduces the conduction dead-angle occurring to the AC
input current near the zero-crossings of the line voltage (crossover distortion). In this way the THD (Total
Harmonic Distortion) of the current is considerably reduced.
A major cause of this distortion is the inability of the system to transfer energy effectively when the instan-
taneous line voltage is very low. This effect is magnified by the high-frequency filter capacitor placed after
the bridge rectifier, which retains some residual voltage that causes the diodes of the bridge rectifier to be
reverse-biased and the input current flow to temporarily stop.
Figure 22. THD optimization: standard TM PFC controller (left side) and L6562 (right side)
Input current
Input current
Rectified mains voltage
Rectified mains voltage
Imains
Input current
Imains
Input current
Vdrain
MOSFET's drain voltage
Vdrain
MOSFET's drain voltage
To overcome this issue the circuit embedded in the L6562 forces the PFC pre-regulator to process more
energy near the line voltage zero-crossings as compared to that commanded by the control loop. This will
result in both minimizing the time interval where energy transfer is lacking and fully discharging the high-
frequency filter capacitor after the bridge. The effect of the circuit is shown in figure 23, where the key
waveforms of a standard TM PFC controller are compared to those of the L6562.
Essentially, the circuit artificially increases the ON-time of the power switch with a positive offset added to
9/16

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