Electronic – Output current vs Supply current

currentcurrent-limitingdc

Good morning,

I am still learning, and often I see a lot of datasheet value that I dont understand. For this case specifically, what is the difference between output current and supply current?

The data sheet is here http://assets.nexperia.com/documents/data-sheet/74HC_HCT08.pdf

1)The ratings on page 3 list the supply current as 50ma, but the supply voltage is -0.5 to 7 volts. Does this mean I must limit the current to pin 14(in this case) to 7 volts, and the current no greater than 50ma?

2)Regardless of voltage, as long as it is within the allowed range(-0.5v – 7v), the IC will out put Vcc at +- 25ma at any of the output pins?

Thank you

Best Answer

It means you give it no more than 7Volts. You don't limit the current for Vcc. You regulate the voltage.

It can deliver upto 25mA on any output, but the 50mA will be divided among all the outputs. So, sum total of all outputs should not exceed 50mA.

If you try to draw more than total of 50mA through the outputs you will very likely damage the IC. You prevent that from happening by designing the loads on the outputs so that the total cannot ever be over the limit.

Related Topic