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V/F Converter

David Brooks
Associate II
Posted on September 08, 2016 at 22:31

Any Forum Discussions, App Notes or sample projects on using a micro to create a simple V/F converter? This isn't rocket science, but I do not want to reinvent the wheel either.

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6 REPLIES 6
Rogers.Gary
Senior II
Posted on September 09, 2016 at 02:28

You might want to look at this device as a start:

http://www.digikey.ca/product-detail/en/microchip-technology/TC9400EOD/TC9400EOD-ND/6152269

from Microchip.

mark239955_stm1
Associate II
Posted on September 09, 2016 at 13:09

Use ADC samples to update a TIM configured for PWM.

As you say, not rocket science.

christoph2399
Associate II
Posted on September 09, 2016 at 13:56

what i would do configure both adc and timer in a way that the dma will transfere the adc-value directly into the timer-compare register without software interaction.

i just like to let the hardware do its job :D
mark239955_stm1
Associate II
Posted on September 10, 2016 at 01:59

Unfortunately, it's not that simple.  In order to change the frequency of a PWM signal, you need to change both the ARR and CCRx registers (or, just the PSC - but that gives poor granularity and linearity).  Some manipulation of the ADC value is probably required as well (e.g. divide-by-2 before loading into CCRx).  I can't see a way to make it a purely hardware process; CPU time is required, probably in an ADC interrupt, to process the ADC output and use the results to update multiple TIM registers.

waclawek.jan
Super User
Posted on September 10, 2016 at 22:26

For 50% duty the toggle mode can be used, with compare set very low. Then it's enough to manipulate ARR.

But I can't see why manipulating PSC would yield different resolution and ''linearity'' (except in the 32-bit timers). Period is always reciprocal to frequency.

JW

mark239955_stm1
Associate II
Posted on September 11, 2016 at 00:46

Toggle mode hadn't occurred to me, possibly because I've never had cause to use it.  That would solve one problem.

Fair point about PSC -v- ARR; they're on the same number line, which is always non-linear (y=1/x).  Some alternate approach - an NCO, perhaps - would be required for linearity.

I still can't see any way to avoid needing to process the ADC output.