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Brushless 17 Click is a compact add-on board suitable for controlling brushless DC (BLDC) motors with any MCU. This board features the L6229Q, DMOS fully integrated three-phase BLDC motor driver with overcurrent protection from STMicroelectronics. This motor driver combines isolated DMOS power transistors with CMOS and bipolar circuits on the same chip, realized in BCD (Bipolar-CMOS-DMOS) multipower technology. It includes all the circuitry for a three-phase BLDC motor drive, including a three-phase DMOS bridge, a constant off-time PWM current controller, and the decoding logic for single-ended hall sensors that generate the required sequence for the power stage.
- Author : Stefan Filipovic
- Date : Jan 2022.
- Type : PWM type
We provide a library for the Brushless 17 Click as well as a demo application (example), developed using MikroElektronika compilers. The demo can run on all the main MikroElektronika development boards.
Package can be downloaded/installed directly from NECTO Studio Package Manager(recommended way), downloaded from our LibStock™ or found on Mikroe github account.
This library contains API for Brushless 17 Click driver.
brushless17_cfg_setup
Config Object Initialization function.
void brushless17_cfg_setup ( brushless17_cfg_t *cfg );
brushless17_init
Initialization function.
err_t brushless17_init ( brushless17_t *ctx, brushless17_cfg_t *cfg );
brushless17_default_cfg
Click Default Configuration function.
err_t brushless17_default_cfg ( brushless17_t *ctx );
brushless17_set_duty_cycle
This function sets the PWM duty cycle in percentages ( Range[ 0..1 ] ).
err_t brushless17_set_duty_cycle ( brushless17_t *ctx, float duty_cycle );
brushless17_switch_direction
This function switches the direction by toggling the DIR pin state.
void brushless17_switch_direction ( brushless17_t *ctx );
brushless17_get_diagnostic_pin
This function returns the DIAG pin logic state.
uint8_t brushless17_get_diagnostic_pin ( brushless17_t *ctx );
This example demonstrates the use of the Brushless 17 click board by driving the motor in both directions at different speeds.
The demo application is composed of two sections :
Initializes the driver and performs the click default configuration.
void application_init ( void )
{
log_cfg_t log_cfg; /**< Logger config object. */
brushless17_cfg_t brushless17_cfg; /**< Click config object. */
/**
* Logger initialization.
* Default baud rate: 115200
* Default log level: LOG_LEVEL_DEBUG
* @note If USB_UART_RX and USB_UART_TX
* are defined as HAL_PIN_NC, you will
* need to define them manually for log to work.
* See @b LOG_MAP_USB_UART macro definition for detailed explanation.
*/
LOG_MAP_USB_UART( log_cfg );
log_init( &logger, &log_cfg );
log_info( &logger, " Application Init " );
// Click initialization.
brushless17_cfg_setup( &brushless17_cfg );
BRUSHLESS17_MAP_MIKROBUS( brushless17_cfg, MIKROBUS_1 );
if ( PWM_ERROR == brushless17_init( &brushless17, &brushless17_cfg ) )
{
log_error( &logger, " Communication init." );
for ( ; ; );
}
if ( BRUSHLESS17_ERROR == brushless17_default_cfg ( &brushless17 ) )
{
log_error( &logger, " Default configuration." );
for ( ; ; );
}
log_info( &logger, " Application Task " );
}
Controls the motor speed by changing the PWM duty cycle every 500ms. The duty cycle ranges from 40% to 80%. At the minimal speed, the motor switches direction. Each step will be logged on the USB UART where you can track the program flow.
void application_task ( void )
{
static int8_t duty_cnt = 4;
static int8_t duty_inc = 1;
float duty = duty_cnt / 10.0;
brushless17_set_duty_cycle ( &brushless17, duty );
log_printf( &logger, "> Duty: %d%%\r\n", ( uint16_t )( duty_cnt * 10 ) );
duty_cnt += duty_inc;
if ( 8 == duty_cnt )
{
duty_inc = -1;
}
else if ( 3 == duty_cnt )
{
duty_inc = 1;
duty_cnt = 4;
log_printf( &logger, " Switch direction\r\n\n" );
brushless17_switch_direction ( &brushless17 );
}
if ( !brushless17_get_diagnostic_pin ( &brushless17 ) )
{
log_info ( &logger, " An overcurrent or overtemperature event has occured " );
}
Delay_ms( 500 );
}
The full application code, and ready to use projects can be installed directly from NECTO Studio Package Manager(recommended way), downloaded from our LibStock™ or found on Mikroe github account.
Other Mikroe Libraries used in the example:
- MikroSDK.Board
- MikroSDK.Log
- Click.Brushless17
Additional notes and informations
Depending on the development board you are using, you may need USB UART click, USB UART 2 Click or RS232 Click to connect to your PC, for development systems with no UART to USB interface available on the board. UART terminal is available in all MikroElektronika compilers.