Turn on a microcontroller using a high-side Mosfet switch












2














I am using a P-Channel Mosfet to control the power of an STM32F103VETE ARM microcontroller (MCU1). The source of the Mosfet is connected to 3.3 V and the drain goes to the MCU1 Vdd pins. The gate of the Mosfet is controlled by another microcontroller (STM32F030RET (MCU2)) which is directly connected to 3.3 V net.



Now the problem is that I can't turn off MCU1:




  • When I put a Logic 1 on the gate of the Mosfet, that makes its Vgs = 0 but I still get 2.4 V at the drain of the Mosfet which is enough to turn on MCU1.

  • When I put a Logic 0 on the gate of the Mosfet, its Vgs = -3.3 V, it turns on properly and I can read 3.3 V at the drain.


Can anyone please help me to solve this? What can cause such a problem?



Here is the schematic of the circuit I have used:



The "power_on" is the signal from MCU2. The Mosfet is STS3DPF20V



"POWER_ON" is the signal from MCU2. The Mosfet is STS3DPF20V.










share|improve this question
























  • I can't find an online reference for this, but there's a story that when the first ARM1 chip was tested, it was found to be already running before the power was connected; the engineers then realized the power requirement of the chip was so low that the power on some of the data inputs was enough to drive it. Could something like that be happening here?
    – John Sturdy
    Dec 12 at 15:34










  • @JohnSturdy I'm not sure if this is the same thing but it might be.However the chip has a power supply supervisor that keeps the chip in reset mode when the vdd voltage level is below 2v. I am going to make a test and connect all the pulled up inputs to the vdd of the chip which can be switched. I will notify you about the results.
    – MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
    Dec 13 at 9:27
















2














I am using a P-Channel Mosfet to control the power of an STM32F103VETE ARM microcontroller (MCU1). The source of the Mosfet is connected to 3.3 V and the drain goes to the MCU1 Vdd pins. The gate of the Mosfet is controlled by another microcontroller (STM32F030RET (MCU2)) which is directly connected to 3.3 V net.



Now the problem is that I can't turn off MCU1:




  • When I put a Logic 1 on the gate of the Mosfet, that makes its Vgs = 0 but I still get 2.4 V at the drain of the Mosfet which is enough to turn on MCU1.

  • When I put a Logic 0 on the gate of the Mosfet, its Vgs = -3.3 V, it turns on properly and I can read 3.3 V at the drain.


Can anyone please help me to solve this? What can cause such a problem?



Here is the schematic of the circuit I have used:



The "power_on" is the signal from MCU2. The Mosfet is STS3DPF20V



"POWER_ON" is the signal from MCU2. The Mosfet is STS3DPF20V.










share|improve this question
























  • I can't find an online reference for this, but there's a story that when the first ARM1 chip was tested, it was found to be already running before the power was connected; the engineers then realized the power requirement of the chip was so low that the power on some of the data inputs was enough to drive it. Could something like that be happening here?
    – John Sturdy
    Dec 12 at 15:34










  • @JohnSturdy I'm not sure if this is the same thing but it might be.However the chip has a power supply supervisor that keeps the chip in reset mode when the vdd voltage level is below 2v. I am going to make a test and connect all the pulled up inputs to the vdd of the chip which can be switched. I will notify you about the results.
    – MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
    Dec 13 at 9:27














2












2








2







I am using a P-Channel Mosfet to control the power of an STM32F103VETE ARM microcontroller (MCU1). The source of the Mosfet is connected to 3.3 V and the drain goes to the MCU1 Vdd pins. The gate of the Mosfet is controlled by another microcontroller (STM32F030RET (MCU2)) which is directly connected to 3.3 V net.



Now the problem is that I can't turn off MCU1:




  • When I put a Logic 1 on the gate of the Mosfet, that makes its Vgs = 0 but I still get 2.4 V at the drain of the Mosfet which is enough to turn on MCU1.

  • When I put a Logic 0 on the gate of the Mosfet, its Vgs = -3.3 V, it turns on properly and I can read 3.3 V at the drain.


Can anyone please help me to solve this? What can cause such a problem?



Here is the schematic of the circuit I have used:



The "power_on" is the signal from MCU2. The Mosfet is STS3DPF20V



"POWER_ON" is the signal from MCU2. The Mosfet is STS3DPF20V.










share|improve this question















I am using a P-Channel Mosfet to control the power of an STM32F103VETE ARM microcontroller (MCU1). The source of the Mosfet is connected to 3.3 V and the drain goes to the MCU1 Vdd pins. The gate of the Mosfet is controlled by another microcontroller (STM32F030RET (MCU2)) which is directly connected to 3.3 V net.



Now the problem is that I can't turn off MCU1:




  • When I put a Logic 1 on the gate of the Mosfet, that makes its Vgs = 0 but I still get 2.4 V at the drain of the Mosfet which is enough to turn on MCU1.

  • When I put a Logic 0 on the gate of the Mosfet, its Vgs = -3.3 V, it turns on properly and I can read 3.3 V at the drain.


Can anyone please help me to solve this? What can cause such a problem?



Here is the schematic of the circuit I have used:



The "power_on" is the signal from MCU2. The Mosfet is STS3DPF20V



"POWER_ON" is the signal from MCU2. The Mosfet is STS3DPF20V.







microcontroller high-side stm32f1






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 12 at 12:27









SamGibson

10.8k41537




10.8k41537










asked Dec 12 at 8:26









MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC

214




214












  • I can't find an online reference for this, but there's a story that when the first ARM1 chip was tested, it was found to be already running before the power was connected; the engineers then realized the power requirement of the chip was so low that the power on some of the data inputs was enough to drive it. Could something like that be happening here?
    – John Sturdy
    Dec 12 at 15:34










  • @JohnSturdy I'm not sure if this is the same thing but it might be.However the chip has a power supply supervisor that keeps the chip in reset mode when the vdd voltage level is below 2v. I am going to make a test and connect all the pulled up inputs to the vdd of the chip which can be switched. I will notify you about the results.
    – MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
    Dec 13 at 9:27


















  • I can't find an online reference for this, but there's a story that when the first ARM1 chip was tested, it was found to be already running before the power was connected; the engineers then realized the power requirement of the chip was so low that the power on some of the data inputs was enough to drive it. Could something like that be happening here?
    – John Sturdy
    Dec 12 at 15:34










  • @JohnSturdy I'm not sure if this is the same thing but it might be.However the chip has a power supply supervisor that keeps the chip in reset mode when the vdd voltage level is below 2v. I am going to make a test and connect all the pulled up inputs to the vdd of the chip which can be switched. I will notify you about the results.
    – MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
    Dec 13 at 9:27
















I can't find an online reference for this, but there's a story that when the first ARM1 chip was tested, it was found to be already running before the power was connected; the engineers then realized the power requirement of the chip was so low that the power on some of the data inputs was enough to drive it. Could something like that be happening here?
– John Sturdy
Dec 12 at 15:34




I can't find an online reference for this, but there's a story that when the first ARM1 chip was tested, it was found to be already running before the power was connected; the engineers then realized the power requirement of the chip was so low that the power on some of the data inputs was enough to drive it. Could something like that be happening here?
– John Sturdy
Dec 12 at 15:34












@JohnSturdy I'm not sure if this is the same thing but it might be.However the chip has a power supply supervisor that keeps the chip in reset mode when the vdd voltage level is below 2v. I am going to make a test and connect all the pulled up inputs to the vdd of the chip which can be switched. I will notify you about the results.
– MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
Dec 13 at 9:27




@JohnSturdy I'm not sure if this is the same thing but it might be.However the chip has a power supply supervisor that keeps the chip in reset mode when the vdd voltage level is below 2v. I am going to make a test and connect all the pulled up inputs to the vdd of the chip which can be switched. I will notify you about the results.
– MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
Dec 13 at 9:27










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















5














You have the MOSFET connected correctly.



Most likely something else is driving a pin on the MCU high, which is partially powering it through the protection diodes (hence the 0.7V difference). This is not a good situation and can damage the chip.



You have to make sure that all inputs are low before removing power from the MCU, and similarly wait for the Vdd to rise before driving any one of them high.



This can be bit messsy, and often it’s better to just put the MCU in the lowest power sleep mode and keep power on it.



Note that your switch only opens the supply, and it may take some time for Vdd to fall if there is a lot of capacitance on the switched Vdd. A brief interruption my not reset the MCU, for example.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    Thank you very much for your response. I have several pins of the mcu1 pulled up to 3.3v (not to the mcu1 vdd itself) with a 10k resistor. Can it be the problem?
    – MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
    Dec 12 at 8:58






  • 1




    Yes, that could do it. It's unlikely to damage the MCU with 10K, but it will draw power and (perhaps) prevent it from resetting, depending on the brownout reset (BOR) circuit and its tolerances/settings.
    – Spehro Pefhany
    Dec 12 at 9:00








  • 1




    @MoHaMaDInSoMnIaC Why don't you have those 10k pull-ups on the switched side? Also the MOSFET leakage current could be contributing so having a push-pull load switch would clear that up (or maybe just a pull-down resistor AND if that pull-down resistor is too low in value for normal operation and gives too much current draw then use the switched MCU to switch it out of circuit when it begins to operate).
    – Andy aka
    Dec 12 at 11:04








  • 1




    @Andyaka well I didn't assume that it would make a problem since the absolute maximum rating for the stm32f103 gpio is vdd-0.3 and vdd+4.0 volts. About the leakage current I checked the datasheet of the Mosfet and it's value is very low and needs a resistor in order of giga ohms to produce such a voltage. The pull down resistor however seems to work in a way that it brings down the off time voltage to about 1.5 volts and stm32 will turn off but is it OK to have 1.5v on vdd when the MCU is off?
    – MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
    Dec 12 at 11:15








  • 1




    The exact circuits used in protection networks are seldom well described in the datasheets, unfortunately. We something similar in the analog world where maximum differential voltage of an op-amp is something reasonable such as 30V however the inputs draw a lot current for differential voltage of more than a diode drop.
    – Spehro Pefhany
    Dec 12 at 11:16











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1 Answer
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oldest

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









5














You have the MOSFET connected correctly.



Most likely something else is driving a pin on the MCU high, which is partially powering it through the protection diodes (hence the 0.7V difference). This is not a good situation and can damage the chip.



You have to make sure that all inputs are low before removing power from the MCU, and similarly wait for the Vdd to rise before driving any one of them high.



This can be bit messsy, and often it’s better to just put the MCU in the lowest power sleep mode and keep power on it.



Note that your switch only opens the supply, and it may take some time for Vdd to fall if there is a lot of capacitance on the switched Vdd. A brief interruption my not reset the MCU, for example.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    Thank you very much for your response. I have several pins of the mcu1 pulled up to 3.3v (not to the mcu1 vdd itself) with a 10k resistor. Can it be the problem?
    – MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
    Dec 12 at 8:58






  • 1




    Yes, that could do it. It's unlikely to damage the MCU with 10K, but it will draw power and (perhaps) prevent it from resetting, depending on the brownout reset (BOR) circuit and its tolerances/settings.
    – Spehro Pefhany
    Dec 12 at 9:00








  • 1




    @MoHaMaDInSoMnIaC Why don't you have those 10k pull-ups on the switched side? Also the MOSFET leakage current could be contributing so having a push-pull load switch would clear that up (or maybe just a pull-down resistor AND if that pull-down resistor is too low in value for normal operation and gives too much current draw then use the switched MCU to switch it out of circuit when it begins to operate).
    – Andy aka
    Dec 12 at 11:04








  • 1




    @Andyaka well I didn't assume that it would make a problem since the absolute maximum rating for the stm32f103 gpio is vdd-0.3 and vdd+4.0 volts. About the leakage current I checked the datasheet of the Mosfet and it's value is very low and needs a resistor in order of giga ohms to produce such a voltage. The pull down resistor however seems to work in a way that it brings down the off time voltage to about 1.5 volts and stm32 will turn off but is it OK to have 1.5v on vdd when the MCU is off?
    – MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
    Dec 12 at 11:15








  • 1




    The exact circuits used in protection networks are seldom well described in the datasheets, unfortunately. We something similar in the analog world where maximum differential voltage of an op-amp is something reasonable such as 30V however the inputs draw a lot current for differential voltage of more than a diode drop.
    – Spehro Pefhany
    Dec 12 at 11:16
















5














You have the MOSFET connected correctly.



Most likely something else is driving a pin on the MCU high, which is partially powering it through the protection diodes (hence the 0.7V difference). This is not a good situation and can damage the chip.



You have to make sure that all inputs are low before removing power from the MCU, and similarly wait for the Vdd to rise before driving any one of them high.



This can be bit messsy, and often it’s better to just put the MCU in the lowest power sleep mode and keep power on it.



Note that your switch only opens the supply, and it may take some time for Vdd to fall if there is a lot of capacitance on the switched Vdd. A brief interruption my not reset the MCU, for example.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    Thank you very much for your response. I have several pins of the mcu1 pulled up to 3.3v (not to the mcu1 vdd itself) with a 10k resistor. Can it be the problem?
    – MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
    Dec 12 at 8:58






  • 1




    Yes, that could do it. It's unlikely to damage the MCU with 10K, but it will draw power and (perhaps) prevent it from resetting, depending on the brownout reset (BOR) circuit and its tolerances/settings.
    – Spehro Pefhany
    Dec 12 at 9:00








  • 1




    @MoHaMaDInSoMnIaC Why don't you have those 10k pull-ups on the switched side? Also the MOSFET leakage current could be contributing so having a push-pull load switch would clear that up (or maybe just a pull-down resistor AND if that pull-down resistor is too low in value for normal operation and gives too much current draw then use the switched MCU to switch it out of circuit when it begins to operate).
    – Andy aka
    Dec 12 at 11:04








  • 1




    @Andyaka well I didn't assume that it would make a problem since the absolute maximum rating for the stm32f103 gpio is vdd-0.3 and vdd+4.0 volts. About the leakage current I checked the datasheet of the Mosfet and it's value is very low and needs a resistor in order of giga ohms to produce such a voltage. The pull down resistor however seems to work in a way that it brings down the off time voltage to about 1.5 volts and stm32 will turn off but is it OK to have 1.5v on vdd when the MCU is off?
    – MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
    Dec 12 at 11:15








  • 1




    The exact circuits used in protection networks are seldom well described in the datasheets, unfortunately. We something similar in the analog world where maximum differential voltage of an op-amp is something reasonable such as 30V however the inputs draw a lot current for differential voltage of more than a diode drop.
    – Spehro Pefhany
    Dec 12 at 11:16














5












5








5






You have the MOSFET connected correctly.



Most likely something else is driving a pin on the MCU high, which is partially powering it through the protection diodes (hence the 0.7V difference). This is not a good situation and can damage the chip.



You have to make sure that all inputs are low before removing power from the MCU, and similarly wait for the Vdd to rise before driving any one of them high.



This can be bit messsy, and often it’s better to just put the MCU in the lowest power sleep mode and keep power on it.



Note that your switch only opens the supply, and it may take some time for Vdd to fall if there is a lot of capacitance on the switched Vdd. A brief interruption my not reset the MCU, for example.






share|improve this answer














You have the MOSFET connected correctly.



Most likely something else is driving a pin on the MCU high, which is partially powering it through the protection diodes (hence the 0.7V difference). This is not a good situation and can damage the chip.



You have to make sure that all inputs are low before removing power from the MCU, and similarly wait for the Vdd to rise before driving any one of them high.



This can be bit messsy, and often it’s better to just put the MCU in the lowest power sleep mode and keep power on it.



Note that your switch only opens the supply, and it may take some time for Vdd to fall if there is a lot of capacitance on the switched Vdd. A brief interruption my not reset the MCU, for example.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Dec 12 at 8:58

























answered Dec 12 at 8:51









Spehro Pefhany

202k4148404




202k4148404








  • 1




    Thank you very much for your response. I have several pins of the mcu1 pulled up to 3.3v (not to the mcu1 vdd itself) with a 10k resistor. Can it be the problem?
    – MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
    Dec 12 at 8:58






  • 1




    Yes, that could do it. It's unlikely to damage the MCU with 10K, but it will draw power and (perhaps) prevent it from resetting, depending on the brownout reset (BOR) circuit and its tolerances/settings.
    – Spehro Pefhany
    Dec 12 at 9:00








  • 1




    @MoHaMaDInSoMnIaC Why don't you have those 10k pull-ups on the switched side? Also the MOSFET leakage current could be contributing so having a push-pull load switch would clear that up (or maybe just a pull-down resistor AND if that pull-down resistor is too low in value for normal operation and gives too much current draw then use the switched MCU to switch it out of circuit when it begins to operate).
    – Andy aka
    Dec 12 at 11:04








  • 1




    @Andyaka well I didn't assume that it would make a problem since the absolute maximum rating for the stm32f103 gpio is vdd-0.3 and vdd+4.0 volts. About the leakage current I checked the datasheet of the Mosfet and it's value is very low and needs a resistor in order of giga ohms to produce such a voltage. The pull down resistor however seems to work in a way that it brings down the off time voltage to about 1.5 volts and stm32 will turn off but is it OK to have 1.5v on vdd when the MCU is off?
    – MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
    Dec 12 at 11:15








  • 1




    The exact circuits used in protection networks are seldom well described in the datasheets, unfortunately. We something similar in the analog world where maximum differential voltage of an op-amp is something reasonable such as 30V however the inputs draw a lot current for differential voltage of more than a diode drop.
    – Spehro Pefhany
    Dec 12 at 11:16














  • 1




    Thank you very much for your response. I have several pins of the mcu1 pulled up to 3.3v (not to the mcu1 vdd itself) with a 10k resistor. Can it be the problem?
    – MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
    Dec 12 at 8:58






  • 1




    Yes, that could do it. It's unlikely to damage the MCU with 10K, but it will draw power and (perhaps) prevent it from resetting, depending on the brownout reset (BOR) circuit and its tolerances/settings.
    – Spehro Pefhany
    Dec 12 at 9:00








  • 1




    @MoHaMaDInSoMnIaC Why don't you have those 10k pull-ups on the switched side? Also the MOSFET leakage current could be contributing so having a push-pull load switch would clear that up (or maybe just a pull-down resistor AND if that pull-down resistor is too low in value for normal operation and gives too much current draw then use the switched MCU to switch it out of circuit when it begins to operate).
    – Andy aka
    Dec 12 at 11:04








  • 1




    @Andyaka well I didn't assume that it would make a problem since the absolute maximum rating for the stm32f103 gpio is vdd-0.3 and vdd+4.0 volts. About the leakage current I checked the datasheet of the Mosfet and it's value is very low and needs a resistor in order of giga ohms to produce such a voltage. The pull down resistor however seems to work in a way that it brings down the off time voltage to about 1.5 volts and stm32 will turn off but is it OK to have 1.5v on vdd when the MCU is off?
    – MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
    Dec 12 at 11:15








  • 1




    The exact circuits used in protection networks are seldom well described in the datasheets, unfortunately. We something similar in the analog world where maximum differential voltage of an op-amp is something reasonable such as 30V however the inputs draw a lot current for differential voltage of more than a diode drop.
    – Spehro Pefhany
    Dec 12 at 11:16








1




1




Thank you very much for your response. I have several pins of the mcu1 pulled up to 3.3v (not to the mcu1 vdd itself) with a 10k resistor. Can it be the problem?
– MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
Dec 12 at 8:58




Thank you very much for your response. I have several pins of the mcu1 pulled up to 3.3v (not to the mcu1 vdd itself) with a 10k resistor. Can it be the problem?
– MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
Dec 12 at 8:58




1




1




Yes, that could do it. It's unlikely to damage the MCU with 10K, but it will draw power and (perhaps) prevent it from resetting, depending on the brownout reset (BOR) circuit and its tolerances/settings.
– Spehro Pefhany
Dec 12 at 9:00






Yes, that could do it. It's unlikely to damage the MCU with 10K, but it will draw power and (perhaps) prevent it from resetting, depending on the brownout reset (BOR) circuit and its tolerances/settings.
– Spehro Pefhany
Dec 12 at 9:00






1




1




@MoHaMaDInSoMnIaC Why don't you have those 10k pull-ups on the switched side? Also the MOSFET leakage current could be contributing so having a push-pull load switch would clear that up (or maybe just a pull-down resistor AND if that pull-down resistor is too low in value for normal operation and gives too much current draw then use the switched MCU to switch it out of circuit when it begins to operate).
– Andy aka
Dec 12 at 11:04






@MoHaMaDInSoMnIaC Why don't you have those 10k pull-ups on the switched side? Also the MOSFET leakage current could be contributing so having a push-pull load switch would clear that up (or maybe just a pull-down resistor AND if that pull-down resistor is too low in value for normal operation and gives too much current draw then use the switched MCU to switch it out of circuit when it begins to operate).
– Andy aka
Dec 12 at 11:04






1




1




@Andyaka well I didn't assume that it would make a problem since the absolute maximum rating for the stm32f103 gpio is vdd-0.3 and vdd+4.0 volts. About the leakage current I checked the datasheet of the Mosfet and it's value is very low and needs a resistor in order of giga ohms to produce such a voltage. The pull down resistor however seems to work in a way that it brings down the off time voltage to about 1.5 volts and stm32 will turn off but is it OK to have 1.5v on vdd when the MCU is off?
– MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
Dec 12 at 11:15






@Andyaka well I didn't assume that it would make a problem since the absolute maximum rating for the stm32f103 gpio is vdd-0.3 and vdd+4.0 volts. About the leakage current I checked the datasheet of the Mosfet and it's value is very low and needs a resistor in order of giga ohms to produce such a voltage. The pull down resistor however seems to work in a way that it brings down the off time voltage to about 1.5 volts and stm32 will turn off but is it OK to have 1.5v on vdd when the MCU is off?
– MoHaMaD InSoMnIaC
Dec 12 at 11:15






1




1




The exact circuits used in protection networks are seldom well described in the datasheets, unfortunately. We something similar in the analog world where maximum differential voltage of an op-amp is something reasonable such as 30V however the inputs draw a lot current for differential voltage of more than a diode drop.
– Spehro Pefhany
Dec 12 at 11:16




The exact circuits used in protection networks are seldom well described in the datasheets, unfortunately. We something similar in the analog world where maximum differential voltage of an op-amp is something reasonable such as 30V however the inputs draw a lot current for differential voltage of more than a diode drop.
– Spehro Pefhany
Dec 12 at 11:16


















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