BPS Amperes PCB

Status

In progress

Owner

@Nathan Lemma

Contributors

@Nathan Lemma

Approver

@Lakshay Gupta

Due date

Nov 30, 2024

On this page

🌍 Overview

This is the design document for the Amperes Board. As one of the four important boards within our system, we need to be able to track the current within the car so that it is safe and manageable. We also want to consider how we can record the current and apply the result to a State of Charge (SoC) algorithm.


 Problem statement


BPS is tasked with securing the safety and monitoring of the battery, such as current monitoring. Overcurrent can damage internal components and pose a risk to the driver.

 Research insights


There are 2 ways to measure current: using a shunt resistor connected to the load or a hall-effect sensor. Each has its pros and cons, but they solve the same problem.

 Solution hypothesis


The solution would be successful if we could track current reliably and transmit that data to the leaderboard.

Old Design

image-20241019-163804.png
Limited by the original chip's use of isoSPI, this design (credited to Tianda Huang) used a current sense amplifier to measure the current on the chip's low side.

 Design options

There are only two ways to measure current. We can measure the voltage across a resistor in series with the load, or we can measure the magnetic field of the wire. Invasive vs non-invasive

 

Option 1 - Voltage Across a Resistor

Option 2 - Magnetic Field of Wire

 

Option 1 - Voltage Across a Resistor

Option 2 - Magnetic Field of Wire

Overview

Current Sense Amplifier or Isolated Modulators/ADC

Hall-Effect Current Sensing

Screenshot

image-20240907-165605.png

Pros and cons

Accuracy

Simplicity and cost

Affected by electric noise

Decision 1

  1. Option 1 - Making the PCB through a shunt resistor

Members can look into the second option for a hall-effect version in the future.


Ideas

Figure 1 is a standard method to measure current using a shunt-resistor. There are three steps to read the current:

  1. The differential voltage is fed into the Current Sense Amplifier and converted to a single-ended signal.

  2. This single-ended signal is connected to an ADC, digitizing the signal.

  3. The signal is sent to a microcontroller for processing.


High Side vs Low Side

For reading the current, there are two different configurations you can have your device hooked up to.

See Introduction to Current Sense Amplifiers to learn more


Figure 2 shows an example of the current sense amplifier connected to the shunt resistor in a high-side sensing configuration.

Advantages:

  • Able to detect load short to ground

  • Current is monitored directly from the source

Disadvantages:

  • High voltage can limit the variety of devices


Figure 3 shows an example of the current sense amplifier connected to the shunt resistor in a low-side sensing configuration.

Advantages:

  • Wide range of available options

  • It does not need an advanced sensor

Disadvantages:

  • Difficult to detect load short to ground


Decision 2

  1. Both?!: use high and low-side sensing

We will get the advantages of both and no disadvantages except cost. Plus, built-in fault monitoring.


🖼️ Chips to pick

You can choose different chips to make your life easier. The current sense amplifier is great, but you could also use an isolated modulator (an integrated ADC) to track the voltage differential. Below is the selected shunt resistor that was given as a requirement.

Current Shunt Resistor: WSBM8518L5000JK

  • Resistance: 500 µOhms


📢 Amplifier types

There are many ways to measure the voltage across a resistor, as different components can perform different functions during assembly and testing. Below is a list of variations on calculating the same thing.


The Operational Amplifier (Op Amp) is the most straightforward building block of all the technologies listed below, as shown in Figure 4. An op amp amplifies the voltage difference between two input pins and outputs that voltage difference. Based on the resistor and wire combination connections you add to the inputs and outputs, you can mimic several behaviors. Unfortunately, it is challenging to configure these devices to handle a differential voltage accurately, as any selected resistors are super specific (5.121235 Ohms) and super expensive.


Current Sense Amplifiers are the next option for current sensing, like the example shown in Figure 5. These op amps have built-in specific resistor values that have been fine-tuned to handle these differential voltages at an affordable price.

Configurations include:

  • High Side - Specialized to handle high-voltage differentials

  • Low Side - Specialized to handle low-voltage differentials

  • Bidirectional current - Specialized to measure in both directions


Isolated amplifiers have properties similar to current sense amplifiers, except for the benefit of physically separating the high and low-voltage sides, preventing issues like ground loops, shown in Figure 6. The component is more resistant to input and ground noise, which is helpful in noisy environments. They are also not limited to the high-low side configurations of current sense amplifiers, as they measure the voltage at any level, eliminating common-mode voltage limitations. It comes at the cost of accuracy due to the isolation barrier, similar to a hall effect sensor. This component is necessary as we work with a 120V battery while the PCBs use 3.3V-5V.


Isolated ADCs are the “All-in-one PCs, “similar to the isolated amplifier, as shown in Figure 7. Using this chip is almost too easy.

Advantages:

  • Often includes integrated isolation barrier

  • Digital output already compatible with MCUs

Disadvantages:

  • Many are Sigma-Delta, which have inherent latency

  • It can be 5-10x the cost of other solutions ($5-$10 for a single chip)


Decision 3

  1. Battery → Shunt → Isolated Amplifier → ADC → MCU

We would like to minimize the latency of the components, and I don’t like all-in-one computers.


📃 Choice of Isolated Amplifier

I have decided to use the AMC1306M25. Here are the specifications and reasons why.

Input Specifications:

  • Input voltage range: ±250mV (matches the 500μΩ shunt)

  • Programmable Gain: 8 (default)

  • Input common-mode range: -0.1V to +0.1V

Performance:

  • Sample rate: 21 MSPS

  • SNR: 82dB

  • SFDR: 83dB

  • Resolution: 16-bit

Isolation:

  • Reinforced isolation: 5000 Vrms

  • Working voltage: 1500 Vrms

  • CMTI: 50 kV/μs (common mode transient immunity)

  • Creepage/Clearance: 8.5mm

Interface/Power:

  • Serial CMOS interface

  • Supply voltage: 3.3V

  • Power consumption: 42.4mW typical

  • Temperature range: -40°C to 125°C

Physical:

  • Package: SOIC-8

  • Single channel

Cost: $1.80 (standard version)

These specs are particularly relevant because:

  1. The input range matches the shunt resistor

  2. Isolation specs exceed the 120V battery requirements

  3. Sample rate and resolution are good for current monitoring

  4. Power and interface compatible with standard MCUs

 

 Follow up

#

Decision

Status

Next steps

#

Decision

Status

Next steps

1

Decision 1 - Shunt Resistor

Completed

Decide the location of the shunt resistor

2

Decision 2 - Both Sided Current Sensor

Completed

What chips will you pick to sense?

3

Decision 3 - Isolated Amplifer

Completed

What is the exact chip?

4

Decision 4 - ADC Chip Choice

In Progress

 

5

 

Up next

 

6

 

Up next

 

 

Vocab

Current Sense Amplifier: Amplifies the small voltage drop across a shunt resistor to measure current accurately in circuits.

Isolated Modulator: Converts analog signals to digital while maintaining electrical isolation, often used in high-voltage or noisy environments.

Hall-Effect Sensor: Detects magnetic fields to measure position, speed, or current without direct electrical contact.

Zero-drift: the phenomenon where a sensor's output signal shifts away from its baseline (or zero) value when there is no actual current flowing through the sensor; affects Hall-Effect Sensor

 Resource files

How to Sense Current

Hall-Effect White Paper

Shunt vs Hall-Effect

Isolated Amplifiers vs Isolated Modulators

Introduction to Current Sense Amplifiers