David_
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Qestion relating to current-sens amplifiers supply voltage rail.
Hello.
I have been faced with the situation of having the need to derive a low voltage supply from a rather large voltage source(<=65Vdc) and I have been looking at the available current-sense amplifiers such as LTC6102, and they are apparently working with a large input-voltage range. They do not require a low-voltage supply and instead they seem to derive it's power supply from the high-side supply(this is in a high-side current sense situation).
The LTC6102 are sold in two versions, one ordinary 5-60V and one high-voltage(LTC6102HV) that can handle 5-100V, I'm curious about how that is happening,
is it a reasonable thought that such a amplifier would operate at a low voltage rail?,
how is such a high voltage managed without break-down, though probably that is due to which process is used while manufacturing which I don't know anything about and is probably above my head anyway.
The datasheet is showing a very simple illustration of the amplifier connected to a FET of some sort(it may say MOSFET but I can't remember that explicitly), I am interested in any information or insight into this sort of circuit.
Regards
Hello.
I have been faced with the situation of having the need to derive a low voltage supply from a rather large voltage source(<=65Vdc) and I have been looking at the available current-sense amplifiers such as LTC6102, and they are apparently working with a large input-voltage range. They do not require a low-voltage supply and instead they seem to derive it's power supply from the high-side supply(this is in a high-side current sense situation).
The LTC6102 are sold in two versions, one ordinary 5-60V and one high-voltage(LTC6102HV) that can handle 5-100V, I'm curious about how that is happening,
is it a reasonable thought that such a amplifier would operate at a low voltage rail?,
how is such a high voltage managed without break-down, though probably that is due to which process is used while manufacturing which I don't know anything about and is probably above my head anyway.
The datasheet is showing a very simple illustration of the amplifier connected to a FET of some sort(it may say MOSFET but I can't remember that explicitly), I am interested in any information or insight into this sort of circuit.
Regards