MAX6975 Maxim Integrated Products, MAX6975 Datasheet - Page 11

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MAX6975

Manufacturer Part Number
MAX6975
Description
(MAX6974 / MAX6975) 24-Output PWM LED Drivers
Manufacturer
Maxim Integrated Products
Datasheet

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169
The global-intensity PDM value is set to 96
an even distribution of ON subframes out of the 128
possible (shown in
Each subframe can be ON for a PWM duration set by the
individual PWM value. The PWM value setting of
2560
of current ON time (shown in bold trace).
The internal PDM logic spreads the on subframes as
evenly as possible among the off subframes to keep
the effective scanning frequency high.
For applications with a slower clock speed, the
MAX6975 can increase the display refresh rate by a
factor of four to eliminate visible flicker. Setting configu-
ration bit D4 (GLB4) to 1 activates the increased
refresh rate (see
reduces the number of global-intensity settings by a
factor of four (see
The MAX6974 supports up to 60 video frames per
second (fps). The following equation shows the
required clock frequency to support 60 video fps:
The MAX6974 supports up to a 33MHz clock signal
(~63fps).
Figure 4. The three levels of LED current control (CALDAC, global-intensity PDM, and individual PWM) modulate the average output
current.
60 (video fps) x 4096 (clocks per 12-bit PWM period) x
169d = 20
DEC,
DEC
128 (global-intensity subframes) = 31.5MHz.
(mA)
25
15
10
5
setting the port output current level to 21.8mA.
out of 4096 (12-bit) results in a further reduction
30mA MAX
6mA MIN
ONE FRAME IS 2
0
MAX6974 Video-Frame Timing
PWM = 2560/4096
Table
Table
______________________________________________________________________________________
Figure
ON
1
19
(524,288) CLKI CYCLES LONG
3).
6). The increased refresh rate
4 as subframes 1, 3, 4, 5, etc).
2
ON
3
DEC
OUTPUT LED CURRENT
ON
, producing
4
24-Output PWM LED Drivers
ON
5
SUBFRAME NUMBER
Each 12-bit PWM period contains 4096 clock cycles;
multiply that number by 128 (number of global-intensity
subframes) to obtain the required number of clock cycles
(524,288) per video frame. The MAX6974 requires 36
bits (12 bits per color multiplied by three colors) to drive
an RGB pixel. The maximum pixel data that the
MAX6974 can send per video frame is 524,288 / 36 or
14,563 pixels, corresponding to 1820 cascaded
MAX6974s.
The MAX6975 also supports up to 60 video frames per
second (fps). The following equation shows the
required clock frequency to support 60 video fps:
The MAX6975 supports up to a 33MHz clock signal
(~63fps).
Each 14-bit PWM period contains 16,384 clock cycles;
multiply 16,384 by 32 (global-intensity subframes) to
obtain the required number of clock cycles (524,288)
per video frame. The MAX6975 requires 42 bits (14 bits
per color multiplied by three colors) to drive an RGB
pixel. The maximum pixel data that the MAX6975 can
send per video frame is 524,288 / 42 or 12,483 pixels,
corresponding to 1560 cascaded MAX6975s.
6
60 (video fps) x 16,384 (clocks per 14-bit PWM period)
x 32 (global-intensity subframes) = 31.5MHz.
ON
for Message Boards
7
GLOBAL PDM = 96/128 SUBFRAMES
ON
8
MAX6975 Video-Frame Timing
ON
9
10
ON
11
11

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