LED Strip Control Design

0:34

Below is a concise design outline for driving two LED rails (warm white and cool white) at 24 V, each drawing up to 400 mA:

1. Discrete MOSFET Drive (Low-Side Switching)
  1. Power Rail:
    • Supply a stable 24 V rail capable of at least 800 mA total (to cover both warm and cool strips at full brightness).
  2. MOSFET Selection:
    • Use two N-channel MOSFETs with each drain connected to one LED rail’s negative terminal.
    • Common anode of the LED strip goes to +24 V.
    • Key parameters for each MOSFET:
      • Drain–Source Voltage ≥ 30 V.
      • Continuous Drain Current ≥ 1 A (for margin over 400 mA).
      • Low R_DS(on) to minimize heat dissipation.
  3. Gate Drive / PWM Control:
    • Connect MOSFET gates to a microcontroller PWM output (possibly through a gate driver if logic-level gating is insufficient).
    • PWM frequency in the hundreds of Hz or higher is typical for LED dimming.
    • Add a pull-down resistor (e.g., Rxx) on each gate to ground to prevent floating gates when the microcontroller is off.
  4. Current Sense (Optional):
    • If you need current feedback or fault detection, place a small sense resistor (e.g., 0.1 Ω0.2 Ω) in series with each MOSFET source.
    • Amplify the sense voltage via a low-offset op amp or dedicated current-sense amplifier.
  5. Flyback or Snubber (Rarely Needed):
    • Because these strips are resistive LED strings rather than inductive loads, a simple snubber is generally not required. However, if you notice voltage spikes or EMI, consider adding small RC snubbers across MOSFET drains and sources.

2. Integrated Dual-Channel LED Driver
  1. Driver IC Features:
    • A dual-channel driver with two low-side switches or current regulators, each supporting up to 400–500 mA from a 24 V supply.
    • Integrated PWM dimming inputs or digital interface (I²C, SPI) for brightness control.
    • Built-in thermal shutdown, short-circuit, or over-current protection.
  2. Wiring:
    • The driver’s two channel outputs each connect to one LED rail negative terminal.
    • The LED strip positive terminals go to the +24 V rail.
    • Keep an input capacitor near the driver’s supply pin if recommended by its datasheet.
  3. Thermal Considerations:
    • Drivers with integrated MOSFETs typically have robust thermal protection but may need heat sinking if running at higher power or enclosed in a small space.

Next Step
Measure or estimate the actual current for each strip segment (warm + cool at full brightness) to confirm the <400 mA target. This ensures you select properly rated MOSFETs or drivers. Once confirmed, you can finalize the power supply capacity and any heat dissipation provisions.
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Find some Nmos families that would work for this application
392 days

0:37

Below are a few logic-level N-channel MOSFET families commonly used to switch ≤1 A at 24 V:
    • Logic-level gate threshold, low R_DS(on) for higher efficiency.
    • Small SMD package, suitable for up to ~1 A with proper heat dissipation.
    • Through-hole “classic” MOSFET, ample current rating with low conduction losses.
    • Compact package, low gate charge and R_DS(on), good for moderate currents.
Any of these (or similar) logic-level N-channel FETs with a drain–source rating ≥ 30 V and an on-state current ≥1 A will work well for your 24 V, 400 mA LED strip switching application.
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