Low-dropout linear regulators deliver constant currents
( 01 Aug 2006 )
Budge Ing, Maxim Integrated Products Inc., Sunnyvale, CA
Linear voltage regulators offer a simple method of producing a constant current by connecting a fixed resistor between the regulator’s output and ground nodes. The regulator’s constant output voltage produces a constant current through the resistor. You can use the basic circuit as either a high-side or a low-side current source. The high-side current source uses a positive-output linear voltage regulator, IC1, a Maxim MAX1818, to provide a constant current of 25mA to the load resistance (Figure 2). The design imposes two conditions: First, the voltage between IC1’s VCC and ground terminals must not exceed 5.5V. Second, the voltage between IC1’s input and ground terminals must meet or exceed 2.5V, the minimum voltage for proper operation. To satisfy these conditions, choose an output resistance value that allows 2.5 to 5.5V between input and ground and provides a fixed output of 1.5V across the output resistance at the desired load current.
In addition to the programmed load current, both configurations allow the regulator’s quiescent current to flow through the load and introduce a source of error that varies with the voltage you apply between the regulator’s input and ground connections. You can minimize the error by choosing a voltage regulator that draws low quiescent current or whose quiescent current remains constant through the operating range and allows you to compensate the error by adjusting the value of the output resistance. Quiescent currents for the devices in Figures 1 and 2 typically average 130μA and vary less than 40μA for a regulator input-voltage range of 2.5 to 5V.
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