New Industry Products

Allegro Introduces Three-Channel Constant-Current LED Driver with PWM Brightness Control and Oscillator

August 29, 2007 by Jeff Shepard

Allegro MicroSystems, Inc. introduced a new three-channel constant-current LED driver with on-chip oscillator for simple programmable brightness control. It is typically used to drive a cluster of red/green/blue (RGB) LEDs for one pixel in a large display or a lighting fixture. It precisely controls LED brightness via 10-bit pulse-width modulation (PWM) per channel, complemented by 7-bit analog current control per channel to adjust color balance.

Allegro’s A6281 drives up to 150mA per channel and operates from a supply voltage of up to 17V. Applications include large video displays and signs and architectural and decorative lighting. The maximum supply voltage of 17V allows series strings of up to four or more LEDs on each output. An on-chip voltage regulator supplies the internal logic and reduces the number of external components and connections.

Control data is loaded serially, minimizing the number of pins on the device and the package size. Only four control signals are needed: Clock, Serial Data, Latch, and Output Enable. These signals are buffered on the chip to drive the next pixel in a daisychained cascade. What is described as an innovative clock regeneration scheme allows large numbers (hundreds, depending on clock frequency and pixel spacing) of devices to be daisy-chained. Pixel spacing can range up to 3 meters (10 feet).

The A6281 requires only three external components to operate: a resistor to set the maximum output currents and decoupling capacitors for the on-chip voltage regulator and LED supply voltage. The high level of integration and tiny 3 x 3-mm QFN package enable compact board-level designs.

Allegro’s A6281 is available in the "E" extended temperature range of -40 to +85 °C. It is priced at $0.78 in quantities of 1,000 and has a 12-week typical lead-time to market.