Mounting Considerations - National Semiconductor LM26 Series Manual

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TABLE 1. Resistive compensation for capacitive
loading of V
C
LOAD
≤100pF
1nF
10nF
100nF
≥1µF
a) R in series with capacitor
b) R in series with signal path
FIGURE 2. Resistor placement for capacitive loading
compensation of V
NOISE CONSIDERATIONS
The LM26 has excellent power supply noise rejection. Listed
below is a variety of signals used to test the LM26 power
supply rejection. False triggering of the output was not ob-
served when these signals where coupled into the V+ pin of
the LM26.
• square wave 400kHz, 1Vp-p
• square wave 2kHz, 200mVp-p
• sine wave 100Hz to 1MHz, 200mVp-p
Testing was done while maintaining the temperature of the
LM26 one degree centigrade way from the trip point with the
output not activated.

MOUNTING CONSIDERATIONS

The LM26 can be applied easily in the same way as other
integrated-circuit temperature sensors. It can be glued or
cemented to a surface. The temperature that the LM26 is
sensing will be within about +0.06˚C of the surface tempera-
ture to which the LM26's leads are attached to.
www.national.com
(Continued)
TEMP
R (Ω)
0
8200
3000
1000
430
10132317
10132318
TEMP
6
This presumes that the ambient air temperature is almost the
same as the surface temperature; if the air temperature were
much higher or lower than the surface temperature, the
actual temperature measured would be at an intermediate
temperature between the surface temperature and the air
temperature.
To ensure good thermal conductivity, the backside of the
LM26 die is directly attached to the GND pin (pin 2). The
temperatures of the lands and traces to the other leads of the
LM26 will also affect the temperature that is being sensed.
Alternatively, the LM26 can be mounted inside a sealed-end
metal tube, and can then be dipped into a bath or screwed
into a threaded hole in a tank. As with any IC, the LM26 and
accompanying wiring and circuits must be kept insulated and
dry, to avoid leakage and corrosion. This is especially true if
the circuit may operate at cold temperatures where conden-
sation can occur. Printed-circuit coatings and varnishes such
as Humiseal and epoxy paints or dips are often used to
ensure that moisture cannot corrode the LM26 or its connec-
tions.
The junction to ambient thermal resistance (θ
rameter used to calculate the rise of a part's junction tem-
perature due to its power dissipation. For the LM26 the
equation used to calculate the rise in the die junction tem-
perature is as follows:
where T
is the ambient temperature, V
A
voltage, I
is the quiescent current, I
Q
current on the V
output, V
TEMP
DO
output, and I
is the load current on the digital output. Since
DO
the LM26's junction temperature is the actual temperature
being measured, care should be taken to minimize the load
current that the LM26 is required to drive.
The tables shown in Figure 3 summarize the thermal resis-
tance for different conditions and the rise in die temperature
of the LM26 without any loading on V
resistor on an open-drain digital output with a 5.5V power
supply.
SOT23-5
no heat sink
θ
T
−T
JA
J
(˚C/W)
(˚C)
Still Air
250
0.11
Moving Air
TBD
TBD
FIGURE 3. Thermal resistance (θ
rise due to self heating (T
) is the pa-
JA
(3)
+
is the power supply
is the load
L_TEMP
is the voltage on the digital
and a 10k pull-up
TEMP
SOT23-5
small heat sink
θ
T
−T
A
JA
J
A
(˚C/W)
(˚C)
TBD
TBD
TBD
TBD
) and temperature
JA
−T
)
J
A

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