New Industry Products

Stepper Motor Drivers Improve Motion Accuracy and Motor Efficiency

October 05, 2017 by Paul Shepard

Toshiba Electronics Europe (TEE) has introduced two new stepping motor drivers that detect excessive load on a motor and automatically adjust power to the motor to accommodate this load. The new TB67S249FTG and TB67S279FTG enable motors to move with precision at rapid speeds under various loads while minimizing power consumption, heat generation, and system costs.

These drivers are designed for use in robotics, precision manufacturing and 3D printing application that require stable, precise and high speed control.

Toshiba’s new stepper motor drivers incorporate the company’s proprietary anti-stall and active gain control (AGC) technology, guarding motors from stalling and possible damage. The AGC technology constantly monitors motor torque and automatically optimizes motor current to meet load requirements without the need for an additional microcontroller.

By operating at nominal currents instead of high currents, these devices reduce motor power and heat by up to 80% when compared with existing products without the AGC function, while maintaining motor precision and efficiency under a wide variety of workloads and speeds.

Supporting a maximum operating voltage of 50V, the TB67S249FTG drives a 4.5A maximum current, while the TB67S279FTG has a current rating of 2.0A.

In addition, these motor drivers include Toshiba’s proprietary Advanced Current Detection System (ACDS), which eliminates the need for a large, expensive high-power sense resistor to save PCB space and lower system cost.

In order to decrease noise and vibration, these devices offer step resolutions of full, half, quarter, 1/8, 1/16 and 1/32 steps, enabling fast, precise movements.

They also identify a variety of error conditions (thermal, over-current, under-voltage lock out, and motor load open detection) that improve system safety and reliability.

Housed in a thermally-efficient QFN48 (7mm x 7mm) package, all three devices are pin compatible, allowing system manufacturers to design one board to support a variety of performance requirements.

The new stepping motor driver ICs are currently in mass production and available now.