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Introduction

  • Who

  • What

    • A USB-C PD sink where we can select the output voltage with resistors

    • Intent for requesting 24V 65W when debugging https://uwarg-docs.atlassian.net/wiki/spaces/EL/pages/2701197313/RPi+Interface+Rev+C?atl_f=content-tree setup without the full drone

      • should support 12V and 5V as well for testing other boards, configured by soldering different resistors

    • Use a USB-C PD chip and the associated required FETs that are required for negotiation

    • Ideally does not require a microcontroller, due to cost constraints (question)

    • USB-C input connector

    • XT30 output connector

    • don't worry about board area too much but it can be tiny

    • no buck converter

Resources

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W13HNsoHj7A&t=615s

https://hackaday.io/project/192576-picopd-usb-c-pd-30-pps-trigger-with-rp2040

https://www.ti.com/interface/usb/type-c-and-power-delivery/products.html#1241=PD%20controller&

Engineering

USB-C PD Controller Selection

There were a few possible options that were selected from research:

Decision Matrix

USB-C PD PMIC

Option 1

Option 2

Option 3

Option 4

Name

STUSB4500

TPS25730

CYPD3177

FUSB302B + RP2040

Description

USB-C PD Sink IC

USB-C PD Sink IC

USB-C PD Sink IC

USB PD IC + MCU

DigiKey $/ct

$5.22 CAD

$3.76 CAD

$3.51 CAD

$2.59 + $1.08 CAD

Configuration

NVM config editing via I2C TPs

Resistor dividers

Firmware control via I2C

Misc. Pros

Misc. Cons

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