The Elmos System-on-a-Chip (SoC) family E523.3x controls four high-side driven relays, alternatively two of them lowside driven, or three bistable relays (activation in sequential order). The low-side driven relay holding current can be... read more
The Elmos System-on-a-Chip (SoC) family E523.3x controls four high-side driven relays, alternatively two of them lowside driven, or three bistable relays (activation in sequential order). The low-side driven relay holding current can be programmed by closed loop current controlled output stages, using a chopper principle. The high-side drivers do not support current control. The IC is controlled over a LIN 2.x(1.3), SAE-J2602 compliant communication interface. It’s node address within the LIN cluster can be determined at run time by using the “auto-addressing” feature (officially referred to as “SNPD” in the LIN specification). Neither a pin address coding or a pre-programming is needed in this case. So this is the optimal solution for following the „equal parts strategy“.
Alternatively the IC can be controlled by a PWM-interface, with diagnosis feedback. The IC core is an 8-bit microcontroller which is assisted by powerful circuitry. For relay diagnosis the IC provides three GPIO ADC input pins. ICs with FLASH memory are programmable via JTAG interface or via LIN boot loader function in normal or high speed mode. The LIN boot loader is placed in SysROM area for max. programming security and reducing the code size of the application program. For fast time-to-market Elmos provides demo-boards as well as design-in support, LIN library routines, demo code and training on the software development tool-chain.