Contact Information: Contacts: CAP-XX: Michelle Moody Moody & Associates +1-214-363-3460 AnalogicTech: Karolien Cools-Wittry +1-408-737-4600 ON Semiconductor: Helene Acrosse +33 5 34 61 10 00
More Design Tools for High-Power LED BriteFlash in Camera Phones, Digital Cameras
Supercapacitor-Optimized LED Flash Drivers From AnalogicTech, ON Semiconductor Facilitate Design
| Source: CAP-XX
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA--(Marketwire - April 27, 2009) - CAP-XX Limited (LSE : CPX ), developer of
the supercapacitor-driven BriteFlash Power
Architecture, today announced availability of supercapacitor-optimized
LED flash drivers from several power management integrated circuit (PMIC)
companies to facilitate design of high-power LED flash units for
high-resolution camera phones and digital cameras.
AnalogicTech's
AAT1282, and ON Semiconductor's CAT3224
and soon-to-be-released
NCP5680 supercapacitor-optimized LED flash drivers team with a thin,
prismatic supercapacitor to drive today's high-current white LEDs (WLEDs)
in a thin-form solution which provides comparable light energy to a bulky
xenon flash. These LED flash drivers integrate all circuitry required to
charge the supercapacitor, manage in-rush current and control LED current,
thus saving development time, board space and component cost. Both Seoul
Semiconductor and ON Semiconductor have created LED flash module reference
designs that demonstrate the thin-form BriteFlash solution.
"This is valuable for our customers, since it offers a more integrated
approach to incorporating BriteFlash into small mobile handsets and digital
cameras," said Peter Buckle, CAP-XX vice president of sales and marketing.
More supercapacitor-optimized LED flash drivers are in late-stage
development at other PMIC companies, reported CAP-XX.
To produce high-resolution pictures in low-light conditions, cameras of 5
or more megapixels require a high-intensity flash. Today's WLEDs can
deliver such light energy, but need up to 400% more power than a battery
can provide. To support the battery, a thin supercapacitor can drive the
LED flash to full intensity while also handling other peak-power needs --
zoom, auto-focus, audio, video, wireless transmissions, GPS readings and RF
amplification -- without compromising slimline design.
CAP-XX developed the BriteFlash Power Architecture to give designers a
thin-form LED flash solution that delivers light energy that far exceeds
standard battery-powered LED flash and rivals xenon flash.
BriteFlash combines an LED flash driver IC, supercapacitor, battery and
WLEDs. The flash driver's boost converter charges the supercapacitor to
5.5V, which then delivers high-peak current to drive the LED flash. The
battery only supplies average power, and recharges the supercapacitor
between flashes. A white paper explains more at:
http://www.cap-xx.com/resources/pres_wp/pres_wp.htm#wp.
Supercapacitor-optimized LED flash drivers integrate tools to manage the
supercapacitor in power-hungry portable applications. ON Semiconductor's
low-power business unit director, Marie-Therese Capron, explains their two
solutions. "While CAT3224 is an integrated 4A LED driver for compact
camera-flash design, our upcoming NCP5680 is a 10A LED driver featuring
fully-programmable outputs via I2C interface, and power regulation
capability to drive other power-hungry circuitry such as audio. Both
solutions provide high-intensity photo flash plus continuous lighting for
capturing video in dark environments."
Phil Dewsbury, product line director for AnalogicTech, said, "Lithium Ion
batteries simply cannot supply the high-peak currents required for
high-intensity LED flash. Supercapacitors can store the required energy
while keeping the form factor small. However, charging them quickly while
minimizing battery current presented a unique challenge. Our solution was
the AAT1282, a 2A, dual-output LED flash driver IC. Since its introduction,
EDN has named the chip a finalist in the magazine's annual Innovation
Awards. We are also sampling the AAT1282-4 which boosts output to 4A to
support higher-megapixel cameras."
For more about CAP-XX, visit http://www.cap-xx.com.
Note: For a block diagram and photos of LED flash drivers and modules:
http://www.cap-xx.com/news/photogallery.htm#BriteFlash. For photos
comparing LED and xenon flash:
http://www.cap-xx.com/news/photoarchive.htm#Xenon.