Abstract:
The present invention relates to a current sense device for a load arranged in a diagonal of a H-bridge comprising MOS transistors (M1, M2, M3, M4) and operating in class AB, characterized in that it includes sensor, independent from the H-bridge, for measuring the current flowing in the load. A current-voltage converter converts the current measured by said sensor into a voltage proportional to said current. The voltage is applied to a sense amplifier that determines the transconductance gain of a control amplifier of the transistors of the H-bridge.

Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     1. Field of the Invention 
     The present invention relates to a device for sensing the load current for a control circuit of a H-bridge comprising MOS transistors and operating in class AB. 
     It applies for example to a control circuit of a voice coil used for positioning the actuator or the read/write heads of a control circuit of a disk on a desired track. The position of the heads is controlled through the current in the coil. The control of the movable coil uses a transconductance amplifier wherein the output current is proportional to the input voltage. Therefore, it is necessary to know the direction and the magnitude of the load current. The transconductance amplifier or control amplifier operates on the coil through a H-bridge, the coil being arranged in a diagonal of the bridge. 
     2. Discussion of the Related Art 
     Conventionally, in such a control circuit of a movable coil, the transconductance loop is closed through a sensing resistor serially connected with the load. 
     FIG. 1 shows a first example of a conventional circuit. The illustrated H-bridge includes four N-channel MOS transistors connected between a supply voltage Vdd and ground. The bridge is controlled by a control amplifier (not shown) connected to the gates of the four transistors. The drains of the two first transistors M1, M2, or high-side transistors, are connected to the supply voltage Vdd. Their respective sources are connected to the drains of two other transistors M3, M4, or low-side transistors, whose sources are grounded. The source of the first high-side transistor M1 is connected to a first terminal of a load 1 while the second terminal of the load 1 is connected through a sense resistor Rs to the source of the second high-side transistor M2. The two terminals of resistor Rs are connected to a sense amplifier (not shown) that transmits the voltage across resistor Rs to the control amplifier for controlling its gain. The load 1 corresponds for example to a resistor R serially connected with an inductor L. 
     FIG. 2 shows a second conventional control circuit of a moving coil. The difference with the circuit of FIG. 1 is that the load current sense resistor Rs is connected between the common sources of the two low-side transistors M3, M4 and ground. The terminals of resistor Rs are still connected to a sense amplifier. 
     In both circuits, the load current flows in the sense resistor Rs wherein a relatively high power dissipation occurs. Additionally, this causes a limitation of the load current for a given supply voltage Vdd. 
     A third conventional circuit is shown in FIG. 3. It includes three MOS transistors M1, M2, M3, an operational amplifier 2 and two mirror-connected NPN transistors T1, T2. Two high-side transistors M1, M2 have their respective drains connected to the supply voltage Vdd and their gates connected to a first terminal of the control amplifier. The source of transistor M1 is connected to the inverting input of the operational amplifier 2 and to the source of the low-side transistor M3. The output of the operational amplifier 2 is connected to the gate of transistor M3 whose source is connected to the collector of a first bipolar transistor T1. The two transistors T1, T2 have their bases connected with the collector of transistor T1 and their emitters grounded. The collector of transistor T2 is connected to the second terminal of the control amplifier. The non-inverting input of the operational amplifier 2 is connected to the source of the high-side transistor M2 and to a first terminal of load 1. The second terminal of load 1 is grounded. Such a circuit limits the power dissipated in as much as no serial resistor is used for sensing the load current. However, this circuit is operative only for class A control circuits where the current of the high-side power transistor M2 always flows in the load 1. Such a circuit cannot be used when the output is operated in class AB where the load current is different from the current flowing through the power transistor. 
     An object of the present invention is to avoid the above drawbacks of the existing sense circuits and to provide a load current sense circuit operable in class AB with a low dissipated power. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     To attain this object, the present invention provides a current sense device for a load arranged in a diagonal of a H-bridge comprising MOS transistors and operating in class AB, comprising first means, independent from the H-bridge, for measuring the current flowing in the load. 
     According to an embodiment of the invention, the current sense device includes a current-voltage converter for converting the current measured by a sensor into a voltage proportional to the current. This voltage is applied to a sense amplifier that determines the transconductance gain of a control amplifier of the transistors of the H-bridge. 
     According to an embodiment of the invention, the current sense device further includes a proportionally device for maintaining the voltage linearly proportional to the current flowing in the load, by making said voltage independent from the current in the two high-side transistors of the H-bridge. 
     According to an embodiment of the invention, the sensor includes current mirrors for reproducing the currents flowing in the two low-side transistors of the H-bridge. 
     According to an embodiment of the invention, the current-voltage converter includes an operational amplifier whose inputs are connected to the terminals of a resistor arranged in a diagonal of an auxiliary bridge having MOS transistors. The currents reproduced by the current mirrors constitute the control signals of the auxiliary bridge. 
     According to an embodiment of the invention, the proportionally device includes two current comparators. Each comparator receives one of the currents reproduced by the current mirrors and a biasing current. Each comparator provides a current representing the difference between the biasing current and one of the currents reproduced by the mirrors; if it is positive, the result of the comparison and its inverted value are reproduced at the terminals of the resistor of the auxiliary bridge. 
     According to an embodiment of the invention, each of the current mirrors includes a MOS transistor, whose source is grounded, whose gate is connected to the gate of one of the low-side transistors of the H-bridge, and whose drain constitutes one of the terminals of the transconductance control amplifier. 
     According to an embodiment of the invention, the value of the resistor of the current-voltage converter determines, through the sense amplifier, the transconductance gain of the control amplifier of the H-bridge. 
     According to an embodiment of the invention, the load includes a moving coil for positioning the read/write head of a hard disk. 
     The provision of a device independent from the H-bridge for sensing the load current reduces the power dissipated in the bridge. This power corresponds only to the power dissipated in the load. Additionally, as no current is absorbed in the bridge for sensing the current, the maximum operational current of the bridge is higher. 
     Indeed, in all the prior art circuits, the current sense depends upon the H-bridge. In the case of the circuit of FIG. 2, the sense resistor Rs shifts the voltage of the sources of the low-side transistors of the bridge. The circuit of FIG. 3 cannot operate in class AB and the bipolar transistors have an effect on the bridge. 
     The use of MOS transistors for making current mirrors is motivated by the fact that those transistors are voltage-controlled whereby the mirror ratio is optimum. 
     Comparing the currents reproduced by the mirrors to a biasing current additionally improves the control of the H-bridge by suppressing the errors due to the operation in class AB which could cause the current-voltage characteristic of the converter to be non linear, in particular for low load currents. 
     The use, inside the current-voltage converter, of an auxiliary bridge of MOS transistors enables an easy arrangement for determining the transconductance gain of the control amplifier. 
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS 
     Those objects, features and advantages, and others, of the present invention will be explained in more detail in the following description of specific embodiments made, in a non-limitative way, in connection with the attached drawings wherein: 
     FIGS. 1-3, above-disclosed, illustrate schematically conventional H-bridge and current sense arrangements; 
     FIG. 4 is a schematical block diagram of an embodiment of a sensing device according to the present invention; 
     FIG. 5 shows an embodiment of the current mirrors of the device of FIG. 4; 
     FIG. 6 shows an embodiment of a currant-voltage converter of the device of FIG. 4; and 
     FIG. 7 is a block diagram of an embodiment of the current comparators of the device of FIG. 4. 
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION 
     As shown in FIG. 4, the H-bridge includes, like in FIG. 2, four N-channel MOS transistors M1, M2, M3, M4. The respective drains of the first two, high-side, transistors M1, M2 are connected to a supply voltage Vdd. The respective sources are connected to the drains of two low-side transistors M3, M4 whose sources are grounded. A load 1 is connected between the sources of transistors M1, M2. The gates of transistors M1, M2, M3, M4 are connected to a transconductance control amplifier (not shown). The gates of the low-side transistors M3, M4 additionally constitute two input terminals (Is+, Is-) of the sense circuit according to the invention. 
     The sense circuit according to the present invention includes a current-voltage converter 3, two current mirrors 4, 5 and two current comparators 6, 7. 
     Each current mirror 4, 5 attempts to reproduce the current flowing in one of the lower transistors M3, M4 so that the difference between the two currents can be converted into a voltage by the current-voltage converter 3. This difference is sent, as a voltage, by the converter 3 to the sense amplifier that determines the transconductance of the control amplifier. The control amplifier, by acting on the gates of the transistors of the H-bridge, modifies the current in load 1. 
     As shown in FIG. 5, each current mirror 4, 5 includes a N-channel MOS transistor M5, M6 whose source is grounded. The gate of each transistor M5, M6 is connected to the gate of the associated transistor M3, M4. The drains of transistors M5, M6 are connected to the sense amplifier (not shown). As the difference between the currents flowing in the low-side transistors M3, M4 corresponds to the current flowing in load 1, the use of the mirrors provides this current without perturbating the circuit. One of the benefits is that the MOS transistors are voltage-controlled. For bipolar transistors, the base current would have an influence on the outputs Is+ and Is-. 
     The currents flowing in the mirror transistors M5, M6 are respectively proportional to the currents in transistors M3, M4 with a ratio equal to the ratio between the gate widths (W) of two associated transistors. The gate lengths (L) are considered identical for two associated transistors, respectively M3-M5 and M4-M6, and the modulation due to the drain-source voltage of transistors can be neglected. The ratio between the gate lengths of two associated transistors can be easily precisely determined for this type of mirror. When the power MOS transistors are vertical DMOS transistors of a plurality of identical cells, some cells of the power transistor are used for implementing the mirroring transistor. Thus, the channel length of the cells of the mirroring transistor is strictly identical to the channel length of the cells of the power transistor. 
     The reason the modulation due to the drain-source voltage of transistors can be neglected is that the polarization voltage of the transistors operating in class AB is generally fixed so that the output voltage of the bridge is about half of the supply voltage Vdd. Therefore, with a low load current, the output voltage varies within a small range with respect to its initial value. 
     The current-voltage converter 3 is schematically shown in FIG. 6. This converter provides an output voltage Vout that is proportional to the difference between the currents reproduced by the mirroring transistors M5, M6. The voltage Vout is proportional to the current flowing through a resistor Rg. If this current through resistor Rg is proportional to the current in the load 1, the voltage Vout is proportional to the current in the load 1. 
     The gate of transistor M5 that corresponds to a first input terminal Is+ of the converter 3 is connected to the gate of an enhancement DMOS transistor M7, whose parasitic diode is symbolized by a diode D1. The source of transistor M7 is grounded. The drain of transistor M7 is connected to the gate of a P-channel MOS transistor M8 that constitutes a first high-side transistor of an auxiliary bridge formed around resistor Rg. The drain of transistor M8 is connected to the supply voltage Vdd while its source is connected to the drain of a first low-side N-channel MOS transistor M9. The source of transistor M9 is grounded. The same circuit is reproduced on the side of the second input terminal Is- of the converter 3. The gate of transistor M6 is connected to the gate of an enhancement DMOS transistor M10, its parasitic diode being symbolized by a diode D2, and whose source is grounded. The drain of transistor M10 is connected to the gate of a P-channel MOS transistor M11 that constitutes a second high-side transistor of the auxiliary bridge. The drain of transistor M11 is connected to the supply voltage Vdd while its source is connected to the drain of a second low-side N-channel transistor M12. The source of transistor M12 is grounded. 
     To reproduce in transistor M8 the current I1 flowing in transistor M5, the gate of transistor M8 is connected to the gate of two mirror-connected P-channel MOS transistors M13, M14. The drains of transistors M13, M14 are connected to the supply voltage Vdd. The transistor M14 is diode-connected, its source being connected to its gate, while the source of transistor M13 is connected to the drain of an N-channel MOS transistor M15, also diode-connected. The source of transistor M15 is grounded while its gate is connected to its drain and to the gate of a second low-side transistor M12 of the auxiliary bridge. The same circuit is implemented to reproduce the current I2 flowing through transistor M6 in transistor M11. The gate of transistor M11 is connected to the gate of two mirror-connected P-channel MOS transistors M16, M17. The drains of transistors M16, M17 are connected to the supply voltage Vdd. Transistor M17 is diode-connected, its gate being connected to its source, while the source of transistor M16 is connected to the drain of a diode-connected N-channel MOS transistor M18. The source of transistor M18 is grounded and its gate is connected to its drain and to the gate of transistor M9. 
     Resistor Rg is inserted in a diagonal of the bridge and its terminals are respectively connected to the inputs of an operational amplifier 14. This operational amplifier is connected as a current-voltage converter. Its non-inverting input is connected, through a resistor R1, to the source of transistor M8, that is to a terminal A of resistor Rg. This non-inverting input is also connected, through a resistor R2, to a reference voltage Vref. Its inverting input is connected, through a resistor R3, to the source of transistor M11, that is to the second terminal B of resistor Rg. The feed-back loop between the output and the inverting input of the operational amplifier 14 comprises a resistor R4. The output Vout of the operational amplifier 14 varies around the reference voltage Vref. 
     It will be shown that the amplitude of the variation of Vout with respect to Vref is proportional to the current I flowing in the load 1. The direction of the oscillation corresponds to the direction of the current in load 1. 
     Indeed, for a given load current I, the difference between the currents flowing in the transistors M3, M4 (FIG. 4) is equal to the value of this load current I. The direction of the current corresponds to the sign of this difference. The difference between currents I1 and I2 flowing in the mirror transistors M5, M6 is proportional to the value of the load current I. The direction of this current always corresponds to the sign of this difference. 
     If we assume, for example, that all the load current I flows in the transistor M3, that is the current flowing in the transistor M4 is null, the current I1 is I1=W(M5)/W(M3)*I, where W(M5)/W(M3) represents the ratio between the widths (W) of the gates of transistors M5 and M3. As the current I1 is reproduced in transistor M8 and as no current flows in transistors M11 and M9 (I2 being null), the current I1 flows in resistor Rg. So, Vout=W(M5)/W(M3)*I*Rg*Av, where Av is the gain of the operational amplifier 14. 
     Conversely, if we assume that all the load current I flows in transistor M4, that is the current flowing in transistor M3 is null, I2=W(M6)/W(M4)*I, where W(M6)/W(M4) is the ratio between the widths (W) of the gates of transistors M6 and M4. As the current I1 is reproduced in transistor M11 and as no current flows in the transistors M8 and M12 (I1 being null), the current I2 flows in resistor Rg. The potential across resistor Rg is -I2*Rg and Vout=-W(M6 )/W(M4)*I*Rg*Av. 
     The output voltage Vout varies between these two values as a function of the variations of the load current I. The output voltage Vout is provided to the sense amplifier so that the latter determines a suitable transconductance of the control amplifier. As this voltage is proportional to the value of resistor Rg, resistor Rg is sized so that the sense amplifier can vary the transconductance as desired. 
     The H-bridge arranged around load 1 is polarized to operate in class AB to avoid distortions in the bridge and transistors M1, M2 are permanently conducting. Accordingly, the current flowing in the low-side transistors M3, M4 corresponds to the sum of the current in load 1 and of the currents in the high-side transistors M2, M1. To avoid that the additional current originating from the high-side transistors M1, M2 causes the voltage across resistor Rg to be non-linear, in particular for low load currents, the currents I1 and I2 are compared to a biasing current Ibias. This comparison is made by comparators 6, 7 (FIG. 4) that compare the currents I1 and I2 with a biasing current Ibias. They provide the difference between the current Ibias and the currents I1 and I2 to the current-voltage converter 3. 
     FIG. 7 illustrates the compensation realized by the comparators 6, 7. The transistors M8, M9, M11, M12 constituting the auxiliary bridge around the resistor Rg are symbolized by the current sources 8, 9, 10, 11. The transistors M7, M13, M14, M15 and M10, M16, M17, M18 reproducing the currents I1 and I2 are symbolized by current sources 12, 13. The mirror transistors M5, M6 in which flow the currents I1 and I2 are symbolized by current sources 4, 5. The dotted lines symbolize the control links of the current sources implemented by the connections between the gates of the various transistors. 
     The comparators 6, 7 are respectively implemented by two mirror-connected current sources 15, 16 and 17, 18. The biasing current Ibias provided to each comparator 6, 7 is respectively symbolized by a current source 19, 20 between the supply voltage Vdd and the current source 4, 5 to which the comparator is associated. The inputs of sources 15, 17 are connected to the junction of sources 19, 4 and 20, 5. The outputs of the two sources 15, 17 are connected to the node A corresponding to one terminal of resistor Rg. The two mirror sources 16, 18 are connected between the node B, corresponding to the second terminal of resistor Rg, and ground. 
     In such a circuit, the difference between the biasing current Ibias and the current I1 or I2, if it is positive, is drawn from node B and sent to node A. Only the positive difference is taken into account. Indeed, if, for example, I1 is higher than Ibias, the difference Ibias-I1 is sent by source 15 to node A. This difference is also drawn by source 16 from node B. On the other hand, if I2 is higher than Ibias, the value Ibias-I2 is negative. This value cannot be drawn from node A as a negative current cannot be absorbed by the source 18 which is connected to ground. The same explanation applies to node B and to source 16 if I1 is higher than Ibias, that is if the direction of current I in load 1 is inverted. 
     Accordingly, the current in resistor Rg is always proportional to the current in the load I with a fixed ratio corresponding to the ratio between the gate widths of transistors M3, M5 and M4, M6. The functional circuit illustrated in FIG. 7 relative to comparators 6, 7 can easily be implemented by these skilled in the art. 
     Of course, the invention is liable to various variants and modifications that will appear to those skilled in the art. In particular, the invention applies to any load 1 arranged in the diagonal of a H-bridge operating in class AB. Additionally, each of the disclosed components can be replaced by one or a plurality of elements having the same function. 
     Having thus described at least one illustrative embodiment of the invention, various alterations, modifications and improvements will readily occur to these skilled in the art. Such alterations, modifications and improvements are intended to be within the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the foregoing description is by way of example only and is not intended as limiting. The invention is limited only as defined in the following claims and the equivalents thereto.