LM3914 Dot/Bar Display Driver General Description The LM3914 is a monolithic integrated circuit that senses analog voltage levels and drives 10 LEDs, providing a linear analog display. A single pin changes the display from a moving dot to a bar graph. Current drive to the LEDs is regulated and programmable, eliminating the need for resistors. This feature is one that allows operation of the whole system from less than 3V. The circuit contains its own adjustable reference and accurate 10-step voltage divider. The low-bias-current input buffer accepts signals down to ground, or V-, yet needs no protection against inputs of 35V above or below ground. The buffer drives 10 individual comparators referenced to the precision divider. Indication non-linearity can thus be held typically to 12%, even over a wide temperature range. Versatility was designed into the LM3914 so that controller, visual alarm, and expanded scale functions are easily added on to the display system. The circuit can drive LEDs of many colors, or low-current incandescent lamps. Many LM3914s can be "chained" to form displays of 20 to over 100 segments. Both ends of the voltage divider are externally available so that 2 drivers can be made into a zero-center meter. The LM3914 is very easy to apply as an analog meter circuit. A 1.2V full-scale meter requires only 1 resistor and a single 3V to 15V supply in addition to the 10 display LEDs. If the 1 resistor is a pot, it becomes the LED brightness control. The simplified block diagram illustrates this extremely simple external circuitry. When in the dot mode, there is a small amount of overlap or "fade" (about 1 mV) between segments. This assures that at no time will all LEDs be "OFF", and thus any ambiguous display is avoided. Various novel displays are possible. (c) 2000 National Semiconductor Corporation DS007970 Much of the display flexibility derives from the fact that all outputs are individual, DC regulated currents. Various effects can be achieved by modulating these currents. The individual outputs can drive a transistor as well as a LED at the same time, so controller functions including "staging" control can be performed. The LM3914 can also act as a programmer, or sequencer. The LM3914 is rated for operation from 0C to +70C. The LM3914N-1 is available in an 18-lead molded (N) package. The following typical application illustrates adjusting of the reference to a desired value, and proper grounding for accurate operation, and avoiding oscillations. Features Drives LEDs, LCDs or vacuum fluorescents Bar or dot display mode externally selectable by user Expandable to displays of 100 steps Internal voltage reference from 1.2V to 12V Operates with single supply of less than 3V Inputs operate down to ground Output current programmable from 2 mA to 30 mA No multiplex switching or interaction between outputs Input withstands 35V without damage or false outputs LED driver outputs are current regulated, open-collectors n Outputs can interface with TTL or CMOS logic n The internal 10-step divider is floating and can be referenced to a wide range of voltages n n n n n n n n n n www.national.com LM3914 Dot/Bar Display Driver January 2000 LM3914 Typical Applications 0V to 5V Bar Graph Meter DS007970-1 Note: Grounding method is typical of all uses. The 2.2 F tantalum or 10 F aluminum electrolytic capacitor is needed if leads to the LED supply are 6" or longer. www.national.com 2 Reference Load Current 10 mA Storage Temperature Range -55C to +150C Soldering Information Dual-In-Line Package Soldering (10 seconds) 260C Plastic Chip Carrier Package Vapor Phase (60 seconds) 215C Infrared (15 seconds) 220C See AN-450 "Surface Mounting Methods and Their Effect on Product Reliability" for other methods of soldering surface mount devices. If Military/Aerospace specified devices are required, please contact the National Semiconductor Sales Office/ Distributors for availability and specifications. Power Dissipation (Note 6) Molded DIP (N) Supply Voltage Voltage on Output Drivers Input Signal Overvoltage (Note 4) Divider Voltage 1365 mW 25V 25V 35V -100 mV to V+ Electrical Characteristics (Notes 2, 4) Parameter Conditions (Note 2) Min Typ Max Units 3 10 mV 3 15 mV COMPARATOR Gain (ILED/VIN) 0V VRLO = VRHI 12V, ILED = 1 mA 0V VRLO = VRHI 12V, ILED = 1 mA IL(REF) = 2 mA, ILED = 10 mA Input Bias Current (at Pin 5) 0V VIN V+ - 1.5V Input Signal Overvoltage No Change in Display Offset Voltage, Buffer and First Comparator Offset Voltage, Buffer and Any Other Comparator 3 8 25 -35 mA/mV 100 nA 35 V VOLTAGE-DIVIDER Divider Resistance Total, Pin 6 to 4 Accuracy (Note 3) 8 12 17 k 0.5 2 % 1.28 1.34 V VOLTAGE REFERENCE Output Voltage 0.1 mA IL(REF) 4 mA, V+ = VLED = 5V Line Regulation 3V V+ 18V 0.01 0.03 %/V Load Regulation 0.1 mA IL(REF) 4 mA, V+ = VLED = 5V 0.4 2 % Output Voltage Change with Temperature 0C TA +70C, IL(REF) = 1 mA, V+ = 5V 1.2 % 1 Adjust Pin Current 75 120 A mA OUTPUT DRIVERS LED Current LED Current Difference (Between Largest and Smallest LED Currents) LED Current Regulation Dropout Voltage Saturation Voltage V+ = VLED = 5V, IL(REF) = 1 mA ILED = 2 mA VLED = 5V 7 ILED = 20 mA ILED = 2 mA ILED = 20 mA 2V VLED 17V ILED(ON) = 20 mA, VLED = 5V, ILED = 2 mA ILED = 2.0 mA, IL(REF) = 0.4 mA Output Leakage, Each Collector (Bar Mode) (Note 5) Output Leakage (Dot Mode) (Note 5) 13 0.4 1.2 3 0.1 0.25 1 3 0.15 Pins 10-18 Pin 1 10 0.12 60 mA mA 1.5 V 0.4 V 0.1 10 A 0.1 10 A 150 450 A 2.4 4.2 mA 6.1 9.2 mA SUPPLY CURRENT Standby Supply Current (All Outputs Off) V+ = 5V, IL(REF) = 0.2 mA V+ = 20V, IL(REF) = 1.0 mA Note 1: Absolute Maximum Ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to the device may occur. Operating Ratings indicate conditions for which the device is functional, but do not guarantee specific performance limits. Electrical Characteristics state DC and AC electrical specifications under particular test conditions which guarantee specific performance limits. This assumes that the device is within the Operating Ratings. Specifications are not guaranteed for parameters where no limit is given, however, the typical value is a good indication of device performance. 3 www.national.com LM3914 Absolute Maximum Ratings (Note 1) LM3914 Electrical Characteristics (Notes 2, 4) (Continued) Note 2: Unless otherwise stated, all specifications apply with the following conditions: 3 VDC V+ 20 VDC VREF, VRHI, VRLO (V+ - 1.5V) 3 VDC VLED V+ 0V VIN V+ - 1.5V -0.015V VRLO 12 VDC TA = +25C, IL(REF) = 0.2 mA, VLED = 3.0V, pin 9 connected to pin 3 (Bar Mode). -0.015V VRHI 12 VDC For higher power dissipations, pulse testing is used. Note 3: Accuracy is measured referred to +10.000 VDC at pin 6, with 0.000 VDC at pin 4. At lower full-scale voltages, buffer and comparator offset voltage may add significant error. Note 4: Pin 5 input current must be limited to 3 mA. The addition of a 39k resistor in series with pin 5 allows 100V signals without damage. Note 5: Bar mode results when pin 9 is within 20 mV of V+. Dot mode results when pin 9 is pulled at least 200 mV below V+ or left open circuit. LED No. 10 (pin 10 output current) is disabled if pin 9 is pulled 0.9V or more below VLED. Note 6: The maximum junction temperature of the LM3914 is 100C. Devices must be derated for operation at elevated temperatures. Junction to ambient thermal resistance is 55C/W for the molded DIP (N package). LED Current Regulation: The change in output current over the specified range of LED supply voltage (VLED) as measured at the current source outputs. As the forward voltage of an LED does not change significantly with a small change in forward current, this is equivalent to changing the voltage at the LED anodes by the same amount. Line Regulation: The average change in reference output voltage over the specified range of supply voltage (V+). Load Regulation: The change in reference output voltage (VREF) over the specified range of load current (IL(REF)). Offset Voltage: The differential input voltage which must be applied to each comparator to bias the output in the linear region. Most significant error when the voltage across the internal voltage divider is small. Specified and tested with pin 6 voltage (VRHI) equal to pin 4 voltage (VRLO). Definition of Terms Accuracy: The difference between the observed threshold voltage and the ideal threshold voltage for each comparator. Specified and tested with 10V across the internal voltage divider so that resistor ratio matching error predominates over comparator offset voltage. Adjust Pin Current: Current flowing out of the reference adjust pin when the reference amplifier is in the linear region. Comparator Gain: The ratio of the change in output current (ILED) to the change in input voltage (VIN) required to produce it for a comparator in the linear region. Dropout Voltage: The voltage measured at the current source outputs required to make the output current fall by 10%. Input Bias Current: Current flowing out of the signal input when the input buffer is in the linear region. Typical Performance Characteristics Supply Current vs Temperature Operating Input Bias Current vs Temperature DS007970-2 www.national.com Reference Voltage vs Temperature DS007970-20 4 DS007970-21 Reference Adjust Pin Current vs Temperature LM3914 Typical Performance Characteristics (Continued) LED Current-Regulation Dropout DS007970-22 LED Driver Saturation Voltage DS007970-23 DS007970-24 Input Current Beyond Signal Range (Pin 5) LED Current vs Reference Loading LED Driver Current Regulation DS007970-25 DS007970-26 Total Divider Resistance vs Temperature Common-Mode Limits DS007970-27 Output Characteristics DS007970-29 DS007970-30 DS007970-28 5 www.national.com LM3914 Block Diagram (Showing Simplest Application) DS007970-3 www.national.com 6 MODE PIN USE The simplifed LM3914 block diagram is to give the general idea of the circuit's operation. A high input impedance buffer operates with signals from ground to 12V, and is protected against reverse and overvoltage signals. The signal is then applied to a series of 10 comparators; each of which is biased to a different comparison level by the resistor string. In the example illustrated, the resistor string is connected to the internal 1.25V reference voltage. In this case, for each 125 mV that the input signal increases, a comparator will switch on another indicating LED. This resistor divider can be connected between any 2 voltages, providing that they are 1.5V below V+ and no less than V-. If an expanded scale meter display is desired, the total divider voltage can be as little as 200 mV. Expanded-scale meter displays are more accurate and the segments light uniformly only if bar mode is used. At 50 mV or more per step, dot mode is usable. Pin 9, the Mode Select input controls chaining of multiple LM3914s, and controls bar or dot mode operation. The following tabulation shows the basic ways of using this input. Other more complex uses will be illustrated in the applications. Bar Graph Display: Wire Mode Select (pin 9) directly to pin 3 (V+ pin). Dot Display, Single LM3914 Driver: Leave the Mode Select pin open circuit. Dot Display, 20 or More LEDs: Connect pin 9 of the first driver in the series (i.e., the one with the lowest input voltage comparison points) to pin 1 of the next higher LM3914 driver. Continue connecting pin 9 of lower input drivers to pin 1 of higher input drivers for 30, 40, or more LED displays. The last LM3914 driver in the chain will have pin 9 wired to pin 11. All previous drivers should have a 20k resistor in parallel with LED No. 9 (pin 11 to VLED). INTERNAL VOLTAGE REFERENCE The reference is designed to be adjustable and develops a nominal 1.25V between the REF OUT (pin 7) and REF ADJ (pin 8) terminals. The reference voltage is impressed across program resistor R1 and, since the voltage is constant, a constant current I1 then flows through the output set resistor R2 giving an output voltage of: Mode Pin Functional Description This pin actually performs two functions. Refer to the simplified block diagram below. Block Diagram of Mode Pin Description DS007970-4 Since the 120 A current (max) from the adjust terminal represents an error term, the reference was designed to minimize changes of this current with V+ and load changes. DS007970-5 *High for bar DOT OR BAR MODE SELECTION The voltage at pin 9 is sensed by comparator C1, nominally referenced to (V+ - 100 mV). The chip is in bar mode when pin 9 is above this level; otherwise it's in dot mode. The comparator is designed so that pin 9 can be left open circuit for dot mode. Taking into account comparator gain and variation in the 100 mV reference level, pin 9 should be no more than 20 mV below V+ for bar mode and more than 200 mV below V+ (or open circuit) for dot mode. In most applications, pin 9 is either open (dot mode) or tied to V+ (bar mode). In bar mode, pin 9 should be connected directly to pin 3. Large currents drawn from the power supply (LED current, for example) should not share this path so that large IR drops are avoided. CURRENT PROGRAMMING A feature not completely illustrated by the block diagram is the LED brightness control. The current drawn out of the reference voltage pin (pin 7) determines LED current. Approximately 10 times this current will be drawn through each lighted LED, and this current will be relatively constant despite supply voltage and temperature changes. Current drawn by the internal 10-resistor divider, as well as by the external current and voltage-setting divider should be included in calculating LED drive current. The ability to modulate LED brightness with time, or in proportion to input voltage and other signals can lead to a number of novel displays or ways of indicating input overvoltages, alarms, etc. DOT MODE CARRY In order for the display to make sense when multiple LM3914s are cascaded in dot mode, special circuitry has been included to shut off LED No. 10 of the first device when 7 www.national.com LM3914 Functional Description LM3914 Mode Pin Functional Description LEDs OFF) is 1.6 mA (2.5 mA max). However, any reference loading adds 4 times that current drain to the V+ (pin 3) supply input. For example, an LM3914 with a 1 mA reference pin load (1.3k), would supply almost 10 mA to every LED while drawing only 10 mA from its V+ pin supply. At full-scale, the IC is typically drawing less than 10% of the current supplied to the display. (Continued) LED No. 1 of the second device comes on. The connection for cascading in dot mode has already been described and is depicted below. As long as the input signal voltage is below the threshold of the second LM3914, LED No. 11 is off. Pin 9 of LM3914 No. 1 thus sees effectively an open circuit so the chip is in dot mode. As soon as the input voltage reaches the threshold of LED No. 11, pin 9 of LM3914 No. 1 is pulled an LED drop (1.5V or more) below VLED. This condition is sensed by comparator C2, referenced 600 mV below VLED. This forces the output of C2 low, which shuts off output transistor Q2, extinguishing LED No. 10. VLED is sensed via the 20k resistor connected to pin 11. The very small current (less than 100 A) that is diverted from LED No. 9 does not noticeably affect its intensity. An auxiliary current source at pin 1 keeps at least 100 A flowing through LED No. 11 even if the input voltage rises high enough to extinguish the LED. This ensures that pin 9 of LM3914 No. 1 is held low enough to force LED No. 10 off when any higher LED is illuminated. While 100 A does not normally produce significant LED illumination, it may be noticeable when using high-efficiency LEDs in a dark environment. If this is bothersome, the simple cure is to shunt LED No. 11 with a 10k resistor. The 1V IR drop is more than the 900 mV worst case required to hold off LED No. 10 yet small enough that LED No. 11 does not conduct significantly. The display driver does not have built-in hysteresis so that the display does not jump instantly from one LED to the next. Under rapidly changing signal conditions, this cuts down high frequency noise and often an annoying flicker. An "overlap" is built in so that at no time between segments are all LEDs completely OFF in the dot mode. Generally 1 LED fades in while the other fades out over a mV or more of range (Note 3). The change may be much more rapid between LED No. 10 of one device and LED No. 1 of a second device "chained" to the first. The LM3914 features individually current regulated LED driver transistors. Further internal circuitry detects when any driver transistor goes into saturation, and prevents other circuitry from drawing excess current. This results in the ability of the LM3914 to drive and regulate LEDs powered from a pulsating DC power source, i.e., largely unfiltered. (Due to possible oscillations at low voltages a nominal bypass capacitor consisting of a 2.2 F solid tantalum connected from the pulsating LED supply to pin 2 of the LM3914 is recommended.) This ability to operate with low or fluctuating voltages also allows the display driver to interface with logic circuitry, opto-coupled solid-state relays, and low-current incandescent lamps. OTHER DEVICE CHARACTERISTICS The LM3914 is relatively low-powered itself, and since any number of LEDs can be powered from about 3V, it is a very efficient display driver. Typical standby supply current (all Cascading LM3914s in Dot Mode DS007970-6 www.national.com 8 LM3914 Typical Applications Zero-Center Meter, 20-Segment DS007970-7 9 www.national.com LM3914 Typical Applications (Continued) Expanded Scale Meter, Dot or Bar DS007970-8 *This application illustrates that the LED supply needs practically no filtering Calibration: With a precision meter between pins 4 and 6 adjust R1 for voltage VD of 1.20V. Apply 4.94V to pin 5, and adjust R4 until LED No. 5 just lights. The adjustments are non-interacting. Application Example: Grading 5V Regulators Highest No. LED on Color VOUT(MIN) 10 Red 5.54 9 Red 5.42 8 Yellow 5.30 7 Green 5.18 6 Green 5.06 5V 5 Green 4.94 4 Green 4.82 3 Yellow 4.7 2 Red 4.58 1 Red 4.46 www.national.com 10 LM3914 Typical Applications (Continued) "Exclamation Point" Display DS007970-9 LEDs light up as illustrated with the upper lit LED indicating the actual input voltage. The display appears to increase resolution and provides an analog indication of overrange. Indicator and Alarm, Full-Scale Changes Display from Dot to Bar DS007970-10 *The input to the Dot-Bar Switch may be taken from cathodes of other LEDs. Display will change to bar as soon as the LED so selected begins to light. 11 www.national.com LM3914 Typical Applications (Continued) Bar Display with Alarm Flasher DS007970-11 Full-scale causes the full bar display to flash. If the junction of R1 and C1 is connected to a different LED cathode, the display will flash when that LED lights, and at any higher input signal. Adding Hysteresis (Single Supply, Bar Mode Only) DS007970-12 Hysteresis is 0.5 mV to 1 mV www.national.com 12 LM3914 Typical Applications (Continued) Operating with a High Voltage Supply (Dot Mode Only) DS007970-13 The LED currents are approximately 10 mA, and the LM3914 outputs operate in saturation for minimum dissipation. *This point is partially regulated and decreases in voltage with temperature. Voltage requirements of the LM3914 also decrease with temperature. 13 www.national.com LM3914 Typical Applications (Continued) 20-Segment Meter with Mode Switch DS007970-14 *The exact wiring arrangement of this schematic shows the need for Mode Select (pin 9) to sense the V+ voltage exactly as it appears on pin 3. Programs LEDs to 10 mA tively high value resistors. These high-impedance ends should be bypassed to pin 2 with at least a 0.001 F capacitor, or up to 0.1 F in noisy environments. Power dissipation, especially in bar mode should be given consideration. For example, with a 5V supply and all LEDs programmed to 20 mA the driver will dissipate over 600 mW. In this case a 7.5 resistor in series with the LED supply will cut device heating in half. The negative end of the resistor should be bypassed with a 2.2 F solid tantalum capacitor to pin 2 of the LM3914. Turning OFF of most of the internal current sources is accomplished by pulling positive on the reference with a current source or resistance supplying 100 A or so. Alternately, the input signal can be gated OFF with a transistor switch. Other special features and applications characteristics will be illustrated in the following applications schematics. Notes have been added in many cases, attempting to cover any special procedures or unusual characteristics of these applications. A special section called "Application Tips for the LM3914 Adjustable Reference" has been included with these schematics. Application Hints Three of the most commonly needed precautions for using the LM3914 are shown in the first typical application drawing showing a 0V-5V bar graph meter. The most difficult problem occurs when large LED currents are being drawn, especially in bar graph mode. These currents flowing out of the ground pin cause voltage drops in external wiring, and thus errors and oscillations. Bringing the return wires from signal sources, reference ground and bottom of the resistor string (as illustrated) to a single point very near pin 2 is the best solution. Long wires from VLED to LED anode common can cause oscillations. Depending on the severity of the problem 0.05 F to 2.2 F decoupling capacitors from LED anode common to pin 2 will damp the circuit. If LED anode line wiring is inaccessible, often similar decoupling from pin 1 to pin 2 will be sufficient. If LED turn ON seems slow (bar mode) or several LEDs light (dot mode), oscillation or excessive noise is usually the problem. In cases where proper wiring and bypassing fail to stop oscillations, V+ voltage at pin 3 is usually below suggested limits. Expanded scale meter applications may have one or both ends of the internal voltage divider terminated at rela- www.national.com 14 (Continued) Greatly Expanded Scale (Bar Mode Only) APPLICATION TIPS FOR THE LM3914 ADJUSTABLE REFERENCE GREATLY EXPANDED SCALE (BAR MODE ONLY) Placing the LM3914 internal resistor divider in parallel with a section ( 230) of a stable, low resistance divider greatly reduces voltage changes due to IC resistor value changes with temperature. Voltage V1 should be trimmed to 1.1V first by use of R2. Then the voltage V2 across the IC divider string can be adjusted to 200 mV, using R5 without affecting V1. LED current will be approximately 10 mA. NON-INTERACTING ADJUSTMENTS FOR EXPANDED SCALE METER (4.5V to 5V, Bar or Dot Mode) This arrangement allows independent adjustment of LED brightness regardless of meter span and zero adjustments. First, V1 is adjusted to 5V, using R2. Then the span (voltage across R4) can be adjusted to exactly 0.5V using R6 without affecting the previous adjustment. R9 programs LED currents within a range of 2.2 mA to 20 mA after the above settings are made. DS007970-15 ADJUSTING LINEARITY OF SEVERAL STACKED DIVIDERS Three internal voltage dividers are shown connected in series to provide a 30-step display. If the resulting analog meter is to be accurate and linear the voltage on each divider must be adjusted, preferably without affecting any other adjustments. To do this, adjust R2 first, so that the voltage across R5 is exactly 1V. Then the voltages across R3 and R4 can be independently adjusted by shunting each with selected resistors of 6 k or higher resistance. This is possible because the reference of LM3914 No. 3 is acting as a constant current source. The references associated with LM3914s No. 1 and No. 2 should have their Ref Adj pins (pin 8) wired to ground, and their Ref Outputs loaded by a 620 resistor to ground. This makes available similar 20 mA current outputs to all the LEDs in the system. If an independent LED brightness control is desired (as in the previous application), a unity gain buffer, such as the LM310, should be placed between pin 7 and R1, similar to the previous application. 15 www.national.com LM3914 Application Hints LM3914 Application Hints (Continued) Non-Interacting Adjustments for Expanded Scale Meter (4.5V to 5V, Bar or Dot Mode) DS007970-16 Other Applications Adjusting Linearity of Several Stacked Dividers DS007970-17 www.national.com 16 * * * * * * * * "Slow" -- fade bar or dot display (doubles resolution) * Electronic "meter-relay" -- display could be circle or semi-circle * Moving "hole" display -- indicator LED is dark, rest of bar lit * Drives vacuum-fluorescent and LCDs using added passive parts 20-step meter with single pot brightness control 10-step (or multiples) programmer Multi-step or "staging" controller Combined controller and process deviation meter Direction and rate indicator (to add to DVMs) Exclamation point display for power saving Graduations can be added to dot displays. Dimly light every other LED using a resistor to ground LM3914 Connection Diagrams Plastic Chip Carrier Package Dual-in-Line Package DS007970-18 Top View Order Number LM3914V See NS Package Number V20A DS007970-19 Top View Order Number LM3914N-1 See NS Package Number NA18A Order Number LM3914N * See NS Package Number N18A * Discontinued, Life Time Buy date 12/20/99 17 www.national.com LM3914 Physical Dimensions inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted Note: Unless otherwise specified. 1. Standard Lead Finish: 200 microinches /5.08 micrometer minimum lead/tin 37/63 or 15/85 on alloy 42 or equivalent or copper 2. Reference JEDEC registration MS-001, Variation AC, dated May 1993. Dual-In-Line Package (N) Order Number LM3914N-1 NS Package Number NA18A Plastic Chip Carrier Package (V) Order Number LM3914V NS Package Number V20A www.national.com 18 LM3914 Dot/Bar Display Driver Physical Dimensions inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted (Continued) Dual-In-Line Package (N) Order Number LM3914N * NS Package Number N18A * Discontinued, Life Time Buy date 12/20/99 LIFE SUPPORT POLICY NATIONAL'S PRODUCTS ARE NOT AUTHORIZED FOR USE AS CRITICAL COMPONENTS IN LIFE SUPPORT DEVICES OR SYSTEMS WITHOUT THE EXPRESS WRITTEN APPROVAL OF THE PRESIDENT AND GENERAL COUNSEL OF NATIONAL SEMICONDUCTOR CORPORATION. As used herein: 1. Life support devices or systems are devices or systems which, (a) are intended for surgical implant into the body, or (b) support or sustain life, and whose failure to perform when properly used in accordance with instructions for use provided in the labeling, can be reasonably expected to result in a significant injury to the user. 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