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HV850
  • HV850

HV850

In Production

HV850 is a high voltage electroluminescent (EL) Lamp Driver IC. It is designed to drive EL lamps of up to 1.5in2, with capacitive values up to 5.0nF. The HV850 converts a low voltage DC input to a high voltage AC output across an EL lamp. It uses a charge pump scheme to boost the input voltage, eliminating the need for external inductors, diodes, and high voltage capacitors, components commonly found in conventional topologies. The charge pump circuit discharges its energy into an EL lamp through a high voltage H-bridge. Once the voltage reaches its regulated limit, it is turned off to conserve power. The EL lamp is then discharged to ground and the H-bridge changes state to allow the charge pump to charge the EL lamp in the opposite direction. The EL lamp frequency can be set either by ...

Microchip Technology HV850 Product Info

16 April 2026 0

Parameters

Type

Single Inductorless Lamp Driver

Input Voltage Low (V)

3.0

Input Voltage High (V)

4.2

Nominal Output Voltage (V)

±70

Max Switch Resistance (Ω)

--

Output Regulation

Yes

Max Lamp Size per Device (in2)

1.5

Package

MSOP-8

Operating Iq (µA)

0

Frequency(EL, Typical)

50Hz - 500Hz

Oja (C/W)

--

VOUT

140

Features

    • No external components required when using an external EL clock frequency
    • EL frequency can be set by an external resistor
    • Low noise
    • DC to AC converter
    • Drives up to 5.0nF load (approx. 1.5in2 lamp)
    • Output voltage regulation
    • Enable function
    • EL Lamp dimming

Description

HV850 is a high voltage electroluminescent (EL) Lamp Driver IC. It is designed to drive EL lamps of up to 1.5in2, with capacitive values up to 5.0nF. The HV850 converts a low voltage DC input to a high voltage AC output across an EL lamp. It uses a charge pump scheme to boost the input voltage, eliminating the need for external inductors, diodes, and high voltage capacitors, components commonly found in conventional topologies. The charge pump circuit discharges its energy into an EL lamp through a high voltage H-bridge. Once the voltage reaches its regulated limit, it is turned off to conserve power. The EL lamp is then discharged to ground and the H-bridge changes state to allow the charge pump to charge the EL lamp in the opposite direction. The EL lamp frequency can be set either by an external resistor, REL, or by applying an external clock, where the clock frequency is divided by 128 to set the EL lamp frequency.

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