Figure 1 represents this design equation (Fig. 1a), including
graphical and mathematical descriptions of the main circuit
elements: temperature sensor circuitry (Fig. 1b), a differentialvoltage-
to-voltage converter (Fig. 1c), and a voltage-to-highcurrent
converter (Fig. 1d). The circuit measures the two relevant
temperatures, TB and TA, individually using two matched
low-cost silicon-diode temperature sensors.
The sensor outputs, VB and VA, are applied to the inputs of
a differential amplifier that subtracts, scales, and offsets these
voltages, producing a single-ended control voltage (VSET)
that’s inversely proportional to TDIFF. Finally, a voltage-tohigh-
current converter delivers the needed charging current
(ICH), which is directly proportional to VSET.
Figure 1 shows that at a TDIFF of 0°C
(VDIFF = 0 V), VSET is chosen to be 2.5 V
and will set the maximum charging current
of 250 mA. When the TDIFF rises to 10°C
(VDIFF = -20 mV), VSET will have linearly
dropped to 0 V, causing ICH to drop to 0
and charging to cease.
The design begins by writing three linear
equations that describe each of the circuit
elements depicted graphically. The two
temperature-derived diode voltages (Fig.
2) are applied to the inputs of a standard
difference amplifier (IC1), which subtracts
sensor voltage VA = (-2 mV/°C)TA + 670
mV from VB = (-2 mV/°C)TB + 670 mV to
produce a differential voltage (VDIFF):