LM3914 explained

The LM3914 is an integrated circuit (IC), designed by National Semiconductor in the late 1970s, used to operate displays that visually show the magnitude of an analog signal. It can drive up to 10 LEDs, LCDs, or vacuum fluorescent displays on its outputs. The linear scaling of the output thresholds makes the device usable, for example, as a voltmeter. In the basic configuration it provides a ten step scale which is expandable to over 100 segments with other LM3914 ICs in series.

Features

The LM3914 / LM3915 / LM3916 are identical except for the ten resistor divider inside each part.

All the devices in this group operate with a range of voltages from 3-25 V, can drive LED and VFD displays.[4] They can provide a regulated output current between 2-30 mA to directly drive displays.

Internally, each device contains ten comparators and a resistor scaling network, as well as a 1.25 volt reference source. As the input voltage increases, each comparator turns on. The device can be configured for either a bar-graph mode, where all lower-output terminals switch on, or "dot" mode in which only one output goes on. [5] The device is packaged in an 18 pin dual in-line package or in a surface mount leadless chip carrier.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://archive.org/details/bitsavers_nationaldaLinearDatabookVol3_55134841/page/n795/mode/2up LM3914 Datasheet; National Semiconductors; 1988.
  2. https://archive.org/details/bitsavers_nationaldaLinearDatabookVol3_55134841/page/n809/mode/2up LM3915 Datasheet; National Semiconductors; 1988.
  3. https://archive.org/details/bitsavers_nationaldaLinearDatabookVol3_55134841/page/n827/mode/2up LM3916 Datasheet; National Semiconductors; 1988.
  4. Note that the voltage measured has to be no closer than about 1.5-2.0V to supply voltage rail.
  5. R. M. Marston Audio IC Users Handbook Newnes, 1997, pp. 177-192