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Hot-swap switch provides easy thermal protection

Remove power from your circuit when things get too hot.

Donald Schelle, National Semiconductor Corp, Santa Clara, CA; Edited by Martin Rowe and Fran Granville -- EDN, July 9, 2009

It is often difficult to design an effective thermal-management scheme that minimizes the risk of meltdown or fire. System orientation, placement, or both complicate matters by generating hot spots at varying locations on a PCB (printed-circuit board). A hot-swap switch and carefully placed temperature sensors mitigate thermal issues by disconnecting system power when a temperature exceeds a safe limit. The circuit in Figure 1 uses a hot-swap switch to monitor overvoltage, undervoltage, and overcurrent conditions. When the ambient temperature exceeds a preset threshold, a carefully placed temperature sensor, IC1, forces the hot-swap controller, IC2, to disconnect system power. You can use multiple temperature switches to isolate hot spots when you mount the system in varying orientations. The circuit requires neither a microcontroller nor a costly temperature-monitoring IC. Thermal events cut power to the system using a robust, nondestructive technique.

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In a typical overtemperature condition (Figure 2), a thermal event (upper trace) causes the LM26 to trip, forcing the LM25069 to disconnect power from the system (middle and lower traces). When the system temperature decreases below the LM26’s trip point, system power returns. Incorrect placement or orientation can cause overtemperature events, forcing the system to turn on and off like clockwork; support personnel can easily diagnose this symptom. Inexpensive temperature sensors and an innovative power-limiting hot-swap controller reduce the cost of this circuit to approximately $2 in low-volume applications.

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