Mar 2008 - Compact Hot Swap Solution Simplifies Advanced Mezzanine Card Design

DESIGN FEATURES L
Compact Hot Swap Solution Simplifies
Advanced Mezzanine Card Design
by Chew Lye Huat
Introduction
Advanced Mezzanine Cards (AdvancedMC) are 80W add-on modules
that are central to the extensibility
of MicroTCA and AdvancedTCA high
availability systems. AdvancedTCA targets high capacity, high performance
applications whereas MicroTCA serves
smaller, cost-sensitive applications
with less demanding requirements.
Unlike other mezzanine modules,
which are bolted on, AdvancedMC
modules can be inserted into a live
backplane improving serviceability
and flexibility.
The LTC4223 offers a compact and
comprehensive Hot Swap solution for
Advanced Mezzanine Cards, providing
inrush control, overcurrent protection
and supply monitoring. It detects
board insertion and extraction, allowing the 12V and 3.3V auxiliary power
supply to be delivered in a controlled
manner without damaging the connector. The LTC4223 provides a current
monitor output for the 12V supply,
allowing real-time current monitoring.
Short-circuit faults on the 12V and
3.3V output are rapidly isolated with
The LTC4223 offers a
compact and comprehensive
Hot Swap solution for
Advanced Mezzanine Cards,
providing inrush control,
overcurrent protection and
supply monitoring. It also
detects board insertion and
extraction, thus protecting
the connector.
RS
6mΩ
12V
BULK SUPPLY
BYPASS CAPACITOR
2
5
3.3V
R2
51Ω
BULK SUPPLY
BYPASS CAPACITOR
6
C2
330nF
MP ENABLE
7
PWR ENABLE
4
3.3V
3.3V
R6*
10k
MP GOOD
3.3V
R5*
10k
R4*
10k
PWR GOOD
FAULT
1
PWR
12V
7.4A
CG
RG 15nF
47Ω
R3
10Ω
12VIN
CARRIER AMC MODULE AMC
CONNECTOR CONNECTOR
Q1
Si7336ADP
16
12VSENSE 12VGATE
AUXIN
12VOUT
AUXOUT
15
12
MP
10
PS1
3.3V
150mA
VCC
AUXON
12ON
LTC4223-1
11
14
13
AUXPGOOD
12PGOOD
FAULT
3.3V
INTELLIGENT
PLATFORM
MANAGEMENT
CONTROLLER
1µF
3
7
6
1
3.3V
CLK
5
8
VREF
VCC
2
3
EN
12IMON
PS0
DOUT LTC1197L
CS
GND
4
2.2k
+IN
–IN
3
GND
8
TIMER
9
CT
0.1µF
422312 F01
3.3V
PRESENCE
ENABLE
RESET
10k
*OPTIONAL
Figure 1. Typical Advanced Mezzanine Card application for MicroTCA systems
Linear Technology Magazine • March 2008
27
L DESIGN FEATURES
Card Presence Detect
Ignores Contact Bounces
EN
5V/DIV
TIMER
2V/DIV
AUXOUT
5V/DIV
12VOUT
5V/DIV
EN
2V/DIV
TIMER
1V/DIV
AUXPGOOD
5V/DIV
12PGOOD
5V/DIV
5ms/DIV
a fast acting current limit to prevent
the input supply from collapsing when
the output is shorted or overloaded.
The LTC4223-1 features a latch-off
circuit breaker, while the LTC4223-2
provides automatic retry after a fault.
Both options are available in 16-pin
SSOP and space-saving 5mm × 4mm
DFN packages.
Typical AdvancedMC
Hot Swap Application
In a typical AdvancedMC application,
the LTC4223 resides on the carrier
board, delivering 12V and 3.3V auxiliary power to the modules, as shown
in Figure 1. It controls the 12V main
supply with an external N-channel
MOSFET and the 3.3V auxiliary supply
with an integrated 0.3Ω switch. The
current for the 12V supply is monitored
via sense resistor RS. The monitored
current is reproduced as a relative
voltage signal at the 12IMON pin. This
signal can be fed to a control system
using an LTC1197L ADC.
Resistor R3 prevents high frequency
MOSFET self-oscillation in Q1, and
RG/CG compensates the active current
limit loop. R2/C2 filters the input power supply, VCC, from supply transients.
Several timers are configured by the
capacitor, CT, including the debounce
cycle delay (CT • 741[ms/µF]), aux
current limit time-out during startup (CT • 123[ms/µF]) and 12V supply
overcurrent response (CT • 6[ms/µF]).
The two supplies can be independently
controlled by their respective ON pins,
and their power-good and fault status
are indicated using open-drain outputs with internal pull-ups.
28
Figure 3. Normal power-up sequence with CL1
= 2200µF and CL2 = 150µF after a debounce
timing cycle
In a typical AdvancedMC
application, the LTC4223
resides on the carrier board.
It controls the 12V main
supply with an external
N-channel MOSFET and
the 3.3V auxiliary supply
with an integrated 0.3Ω
switch. The current for the
12V supply is monitored
via sense resistor and is
reproduced at the 12IMON
pin as a relative voltage
signal, which can be fed to
a control system using an
LTC1197L ADC.
ILOAD
Power-Up Sequence
Figure 3 shows the 3.3V auxiliary
and 12V supplies powering up in
sequence after EN transitions low.
The pre-conditions for start-up are:
VCC and the input supplies exceed
VSENSE
–
+
Q1
12V
12VSENSE
12VIN
RIN
5k
LOAD
12VGATE
–
Figure 2. TIMER blanking time prevents false
fault reset from EN pin contact bounces.
20ms/DIV
+
FAULT
2V/DIV
Contact bounces as connector pins are
mated can trigger unwanted system
resets or can cause supplies to turn
on unintentionally. To prevent this
behavior, the LTC4223 ignores these
contact bounces for one TIMER cycle
before turning on the supplies.
When the connector pin PS1 is
engaged low upon card insertion,
EN goes low and initiates a start-up
debounce cycle if the ON pin is high.
Any contact bounces on the EN pin
reset the TIMER and restart the ramp
up until it reaches 1.235V, at which
time the fault latches are cleared. If EN
remains low at the end of the debounce
cycle, the switches are allowed to turn
on. If EN toggles high indicating card
removal, all switches are turned off in
20µs, disconnecting the supplies to
the modules. Latched faults are not
cleared. However, because removing
the card could cause the EN pin voltage to bounce, the clearing of latched
faults is blanked internally by a TIMER
ramp-up time given by CT • 123[ms/
µF], as shown in Figure 2.
1µF
12IMON
ROUT
165k
LTC4223
VOUT
VREF
+IN
VCC
LTC1197L
–IN
GND
3.3V
CLK
DOUT
TO SYSTEM
CONTROLLER
CS
422312 F10
VOUT =
ROUT
RIN
• VSENSE = 33 • VSENSE
Figure 4. High side current sense monitor with the LTC1197L ADC
Linear Technology Magazine • March 2008
DESIGN FEATURES L
their undervoltage lockout thresholds,
TIMER is less than 0.2V and EN is
pulling low. If all of these conditions
are met, a debounce timing cycle is
initiated when the ON pin pulls high.
By default, the internal Aux switch
turns on first if both ON pins are high
at the end of the debounce cycle. This
satisfies the requirement to power up
the controller first on the AdvancedMC
module before turning on the 12V
supply.
The charge current applied to the
output capacitor CL2 is limited to
240mA by an internal ACL (Active
Current Limit) amplifier, well below
the maximum 500mA allowed for AdvancedMC modules. When the current
limit is active, the TIMER pin ramps
up with a 10µA pull-up. AUXPGOOD
pulls low when AUXOUT exceeds its
power-good threshold of 2.901V unless the TIMER pin reaches 1.235V and
times out. When the TIMER pin falls
below 0.2V with a 2µA pull-down, the
12V supply external MOSFET turns
on by charging the GATE with a 10µA
current source. The GATE voltage rises
with a slope equal to 10µA/CG and the
inrush current flowing into the load
capacitor CL1 is limited to (CL1/CG) •
10µA. If the sense resistor voltage drop
becomes too large, the inrush current
is limited at 60mV/RS by the internal
current limit circuitry. 12PGOOD pulls
low when 12VOUT exceeds 10.36V.
Power Monitoring with
High Side Current Sense
The LTC4223 features a high side
current sense amplifier for the 12V
supply that translates the sense resistor voltage drop from the positive
rail to the negative rail. The voltage
at the 12IMON pin is equal to 33 •
VSENSE. This can drive the input of an
LTC1197L ADC, as shown in Figure
4 for data conversion, and allows
the system controller to monitor the
power consumed by the AdvancedMC
module. Full scale input to the current
sense amplifier is 82.5mV corresponding to an output of about 2.7V. If the
input exceeds 100mV, the 12IMON
output clamps at 3.2V.
FAULT
5V/DIV
∆VSENSE
200mV/DIV
12VOUT
5V/DIV
ILOAD
1A/DIV
12VGATE
5V/DIV
AUXOUT
5V/DIV
5µs/DIV
Figure 5. Fast acting current limit isolates
severe short-circuit fault on 12V output
Figure 6. Fast acting current limit isolates
short-circuit fault on 3.3V auxiliary output
Thermal Shutdown Protection
enters into active current limiting that
maintains 60mV across the sense resistor. When the sense voltage exceeds
the circuit breaker threshold (50mV
with 5% accuracy), the TIMER capacitor is pulled high with a 200µA current
until the TIMER reaches 1.235V, after
which it pulls down with 2µA. When
this occurs, FAULT pulls low and the
GATE is pulled down to ground with
1mA, turning off the MOSFET but not
the internal Aux switch. Similarly, an
internal ACL amplifier protects the
3.3V auxiliary supply from overcurrent
by pulling down the gate of the internal
pass transistor rapidly. Thereafter, the
gate recovers and servos the output
current to about 240mA for 25µs
before pulling down to ground gently,
turning the transistor off, as shown
in Figure 6. At this time, FAULT pulls
low and the 12V supply switch also
shuts off.
The internal 3.3V auxiliary supply
switch is protected by a thermal
shutdown circuit. If the switch’s
temperature reaches 150°C, the
Aux switch shuts off immediately
and FAULT pulls low. The external
12V supply switch also turns off.
The switches are allowed to turn on
again only after both the ON pins are
cycled low and then high after the
internal switch’s temperature falls
below 120°C.
Fast Acting Current Limit
Isolates Fault
The LTC4223 features an adjustable
current limit with circuit breaker
function that protects the external
MOSFET against excessive load current on the 12V supply. In the event of
a severe short-circuit fault as shown
in Figure 5, the LTC4223 brings the
surge current under control within
1µs by pulling the MOSFET’s GATE
down to the SOURCE pin. Thereafter,
the GATE recovers rapidly due to the
RG/CG compensation network and
Auto-Retry after a Fault
The LTC4223-1 latches off after an
overcurrent fault while the LTC4223-2
automatically restarts. Following an
TIMER
1V/DIV
TIMER
1V/DIV
FAULT
5V/DIV
FAULT
5V/DIV
12VGATE
5V/DIV
AUXOUT
5V/DIV
12IMON
2V/DIV
ILOAD
0.5A/DIV
20ms/DIV
Figure 7. Auto-retry with 0.5% duty
cycle during 12V output short
Linear Technology Magazine • March 2008
5µs/DIV
50ms/DIV
Figure 8. Auto-retry with 6.5% duty cycle
during 3.3V auxiliary output short
29
L DESIGN FEATURES
BACKPLANE
CARD
CONNECTOR CONNECTOR
RS
2.5m7
12V
Z1
SMAJ13A
15V
R1
107
Q1
HAT2160H
R3
107
C1
100nF
12VIN
12V
18A
+
CG
RG 15nF
477
CL1
1000MF
12VSENSE 12VGATE
12VOUT
3.3V
AUXIN
Z2
SMAJ5.0A
7V
R7
2.77
C3
100nF
R2
517
+
CL2
150MF
VCC
C2
330nF
R9
10k
R8
10k
BD_SEL
3.3VAUX
150mA
AUXOUT
3.3V
AUXON
LTC4223-1
AUXPGOOD
12PGOOD
FAULT
12ON
EN
R4
10k
R5
10k
R6
10k
3.3V
1MF
12IMON
VCC
+IN
VREF
LTC1197L
TIMER
GND
–IN
GND
CLK
DOUT
TO
CONTROLLER
CS
CT
0.1MF
Figure 9. A 12V at 18A card-resident application
overcurrent fault, the LTC4223-1 does
not power up again until the fault is
cleared by either pulling the ON or
EN pin from high to low or by VCC
falling below its UVLO threshold. The
LTC4223-2 automatically clears faults
after a cool-off cycle and powers up
again, as shown in Figure 7 for a 12V
fault and Figure 8 for a 3.3V fault.
The latched fault is cleared during
the start-up cycle and FAULT pulls
high. If the output-short persists, the
device powers up into an output-short
with active current limiting until the
TIMER times out and FAULT pulls
low again. The device restarts after a
cool-off cycle and the process repeats
until the output-short is removed.
The cool-off cycle time is given by
CT • 1358[ms/µF] after a 12V supply
fault and CT • 1482 [ms/µF] after an
auxiliary supply fault. If the TIMER
capacitor CT = 0.1µF, the auto-retry
duty cycle is 0.5% for the 12V supply
and 6.5% for the 3.3V auxiliary.
30
12V at 18A
Card-Resident Application
In addition to the AdvancedMC application where the LTC4223 is on
the carrier board, it can also reside on
the plug-in card side of the connector.
Figure 9 shows a typical 12V at 18A
application. The 3.3V auxiliary supply
may be used to power up on-board logic
drawing not more than 150mA. The
12V supply inrush current is limited
to 0.7A by RG/CG compensation network when powering up into a large
load capacitor of 1000µF. When no
bulk capacitor is present on the card
supply, transient voltage suppressors
(Z1, Z2) are required to clamp supply
transients and the snubber (R1/C1,
R7/C3) eliminates ringing during an
output-short. For the LTC4223 to work
with a different load at 12V output,
choosing the correct sense resistor
and external MOSFET is crucial.
This ensures that the circuit breaker
threshold is not exceeded under the
maximum load condition, and that
the power dissipated in the MOSFET
is well within its safe operating area
(SOA) while in active current limit
during an output-short.
Conclusion
The LTC4223 provides Hot Swap
control for a 3.3V auxiliary and a
12V supply. It features board insertion and extraction detection, active
current limit into large load capacitors and sequenced supply turn-on
with power-good status, all critical
in Advanced Mezzanine Card applications. Its tight 5% circuit breaker
threshold accuracy and fast acting
current limit protect the supplies
against overcurrent faults. The current
monitor output allows measurement of
the 12V supply’s power consumption.
With these features, the LTC4223 offers a compact Hot Swap solution that
simplifies the Advanced Mezzanine
Card design. L
Linear Technology Magazine • March 2008