Feb 2001 New No Rsense Controllers Deliver Very Low Output Voltages

DESIGN FEATURES
New No RSENSE Controllers Deliver Very
Low Output Voltages by Christopher B. Umminger
Valley Current Control
Digital system voltages are dropping of very high efficiency DC/DC step- Enables tON(MIN) < 100ns
Introduction
ever lower, yet battery voltages are
not. This forces DC/DC step-down
converters in portable products to
operate at lower duty cycles. Unfortunately, low duty cycle operation
decreases efficiency due to both
increased switching losses and the
increased importance of I2R losses at
low output voltages. Furthermore,
conventional control architectures
often have difficulty operating with
very short switch on-times. The
LTC1778 and LTC3711 with VID
address these problems with a new
architecture for buck regulators that
delivers the low output voltages and
high efficiencies that modern portable supplies require.
The LTC1778 is a step-down controller that provides synchronous
drive for two external N-channel
MOSFET switches. It comes with a
variety of features to ease the design
ION
down converters. The true current
mode control architecture has an
adjustable current limit, can be easily compensated, is stable with
ceramic output capacitors and does
not require a power-wasting sense
resistor. An optional discontinuous
mode of operation increases efficiency
at light loads. The LTC1778 operates
over a wide range of input voltages
from 4V to 36V and output voltages
from 0.8V up to 90% of VIN. Switching
frequencies up to nearly 2MHz can be
chosen, allowing wide latitude in trading off efficiency for component size.
Fault protection features include a
power-good output, current limit foldback, optional short-circuit shutdown
timer and an overvoltage soft latch.
The LTC3711 is essentially the same
as the LTC1778 but includes a 5-bit
VID interface.
VON
Power supplies for modern portable
computers require that voltages as
high as 24V from a battery pack or
wall adapter be converted down to
levels from 2.5V to as low as 0.8V.
Such a large ratio of input to output
voltage means that a buck regulator
must operate with duty cycles down
to 3%. At 300kHz operation, this
implies a main switch on-time of only
110ns. Conventional current mode
regulators have difficulty achieving
on-times this short, forcing lower frequency operation and the use of larger
components.
To overcome this limitation, the
LTC1778 family uses a valley current
control architecture that is illustrated
in Figure 1. Current is sensed by the
voltage drop between the SW (or
SENSE+) and PGND (or SENSE–) pins
while the bottom switch, M2, is turned
on. During this time the negative
VIN
TG
TOP
S
Q
M1
L1
VVON
D=
• CT
IION
R
Q
BG
COUT
ONE SHOT DELAY
VOUT
+
M2
–
ICMP
–133mV TO 267mV
+
–
+
20k
–7µA TO 13µA
VRNG
PGND/SENSE–
SW/SENSE+
×
0.8V
0.5 – 2
EA
0µA TO 10µA
1
240k
+
1.7mS
R2
VFB
–
3.3µA
ITH
0V TO 2.4V
R1
CC
Figure 1. LTC1778 main control loop
16
Linear Technology Magazine • February 2001
DESIGN FEATURES
DROPOUT
REGION
1.0
0.5
0
0
0.25
0.50
0.75
DUTY CYCLE (VOUT/VIN)
1.0
Figure 2. Maximum switching
frequency vs duty cycle
Flexible One-Shot Timer
Keeps Frequency Constant
voltage across inductor L1 causes the
current flowing through it to decay.
When it reaches the level set by the
current-control threshold (ITH) voltage, the current comparator (ICMP)
trips. This sets the latch, turning off
the bottom switch and turning on the
top (or main) switch, M1. After a controlled delay determined by a one-shot
timer, the top switch turns off again
and the cycle repeats. The currentcontrol threshold is set by an error
amplifier (EA) that compares the
divided output voltage with a 0.8V
reference in order to keep the threshold at a level that matches the load
current.
This control loop has several
advantages compared to peak-curCSS
0.1µF
1
R3
11k
R4
39k
RPG
100k 2
3
CC1
510pF
4
RC
20k
5
CC2
100pF
6
7
R1
14.0k
R2
30.1k
8
Although the LTC1778 does not contain an internal oscillator, switching
frequency is kept approximately constant through the use of a flexible
one-shot timer that controls the top
switch on-time. A current entering
the ION pin (IION) charges an internal
timing capacitor (CT) to the voltage
applied at the VON pin (VVON) to determine the on-time: tON = CT • VVON/IION.
For a buck regulator running at a
constant frequency, the on-time is
proportional to VOUT/VIN. By connecting a resistor (RON) from VIN to the ION
pin and connecting VOUT to the VON
pin (if available), the one-shot duration can be made proportional to VOUT
and inversely proportional to VIN. The
converter will then operate at an ap-
LTC1778
RUN/SS BOOST
PGOOD
TG
VRNG
SW
FCB
ITH
SGND
16
15
VIN = 5V
90
EFFICIENCY (%)
1.5
100
rent controllers that use an internal
oscillator. Because only a one-shot
timer determines the top switch
on-time, it can be made very short for
low duty cycle applications. Another
advantage is that slope compensation is not required. Furthermore,
response to a load step increase can
be very fast since the loop does not
have to wait for an oscillator pulse
before the top switch is turned on and
current begins increasing.
70
VOUT = 2.5V
EXTVCC = 5V
f = 250kHz
60
0.01
BG
INTVCC
ION
VIN
VFB
EXTVCC
0.1
1
LOAD CURRENT (A)
10
Figure 4. Efficiency vs load current
for Figure 3’s circuit
proximately constant frequency equal
to (RON • CT)–1. In most applications,
the output voltage is not intended to
change. Thus, some versions of the
LTC1778 do not make the VON pin
available and it defaults internally to
0.7V. By adjusting the value of RON, a
wide range of operating frequencies
can be selected. However, an important limit is set by the 500ns minimum
off-time of the top switch. This is the
minimum time required by the
LTC1778 to turn on the bottom switch,
sense the current and then shut it off.
At a given switching frequency, it
places a limit on the maximum duty
cycle as illustrated in Figure 2. For
example, at 200kHz operation, the
LTC1778 can accommodate duty
cycles up to 90%. Attempting to
M1
14
VIN
5V TO 28V
CIN
10µF
50V
×3
CB
0.22µF
L1, 1.8µH
+
PGND
VIN = 25V
80
DB
CMDSH-3
13
M2
D1
COUT1-2
180µF
4V
×2
COUT3
22µF
6.3V
X7R
VOUT
2.5V
10A
12
11
+
SWITCHING FREQUENCY (MHz)
2.0
CVCC
4.7µF
10
RF
1Ω
9
CF
0.1µF
RON
1.40M
CIN: UNITED CHEMICON THCR70E1H26ZT
COUT1-2: CORNELL DUBILIER ESRE181E04B
L1: SUMIDA CEP125-IR8MC-H
M1: SILICONIX Si4884
M2: SILICONIX Si4874
D1: DIODES, INC. B340A
(847) 696-2000
(508) 996-8561
(847) 956-0667
(800) 554-5565
(805) 446-4800
Figure 3. 2.5V/10A converter switches at 250kHz
Linear Technology Magazine • February 2001
17
DESIGN FEATURES
operate at duty cycles above this limit
will cause the output voltage to drop
out of regulation, down to a value that
satisfies the duty cycle limit.
Thus, the LTC1778 can be used in
exceptionally high frequency buck
converters, provided that the duty
cycle is low enough. For example, a
10V to 2.5V converter can be run at
frequencies as high as 1.5MHz.
No RSENSE Operation Raises
Efficiency at Low VOUT
The LTC1778 offers true current mode
control without the need for a sense
resistor, an expensive component that
is sometimes difficult to procure. The
current comparator monitors the voltage drop between the SW and PGND
pins, determining inductor current
using the on-resistance of the bottom
MOSFET. In addition to eliminating
the sense resistor, this technique also
simplifies the board layout and
improves efficiency. The efficiency gain
is especially noticeable in low output
voltage applications where the resistor sense voltage is a significant
fraction of the output voltage. For
example, a 50mV sense voltage
reduces efficiency by 5% in a 1V output converter.
The LTC1778 allows the current
sense range to be adjusted using the
VRNG pin to accommodate a variety of
MOSFET on-resistances. The power
supply designer can easily trade off
efficiency and cost in the choice of
VOUT
50mV/DIV
IL
5A/DIV
MOSFET on-resistance. The voltage
presented at the VRNG pin should be
ten times the nominal sense voltage
at maximum load current, for
example, VRNG = 1V corresponds to a
nominal sense voltage of 100mV. Connecting this pin to INTVCC or ground
defaults the nominal sense voltage to
140mV or 70mV, respectively. Current is limited at 150% and –50% of
the nominal level set by the VRNG pin.
For those applications that require
more accurate current measurement,
the LTC3711 and some versions of
the LTC1778 make available one or
both of the current comparator inputs
as separate SENSE+ and SENSE– pins.
Connecting the inputs to a precise
sense resistor placed in series with
the source of the bottom MOSFET
switch determines current more accurately. This is especially beneficial
for applications that need a more
accurate current limit or seek to actively position the output voltage as
the load current varies.
will be turned off and the bottom
switch turned on until the output is
pulled back below the power-good
threshold. In an undervoltage condition, if the output falls by 25%, a
short-circuit latch-off timer will be
started. If the output has not recovered within this time, both switches
will be shut off, stopping the converter. Undervoltage/short-circuit
latch-off can be overridden. In this
case, if the output voltage continues
to fall below 50% of the regulation
point, the current limit will be reduced,
or folded back, to about one fourth of
its maximum value.
Popular Features from
Other Controllers Remain
Continuous synchronous operation
at light loads reduces efficiency due to
the large amount of current consumed
by switching losses. Efficiency is
improved by operating the converter
in discontinuous mode. In this mode,
the bottom switch is turned off at the
instant that inductor current starts
Output is Protected
to reverse, even though the current
from a Variety of Faults
control threshold (ITH) is below that
The LTC1778 comes with a number of level. The top switch, however, is not
fault protection features. The output turned on until the ITH level rises back
voltage is continuously monitored for to the point corresponding to zero
out-of-range conditions. If it deviates inductor current. During the time both
by more than ±7.5% from the regula- switches are off, the output current is
tion point, an open drain power-good provided solely by the output capacioutput will pull low to indicate the tor and switching losses are avoided.
out-of-regulation condition. In an The switching frequency becomes proovervoltage situation, the top switch portional to the load current in this
mode of operation.
The LTC1778 contains its own
internal low dropout regulator that
provides the 5V gate drive required for
logic-level MOSFETs. However, it is
also able to accept an external 5V to
7V supply if one is available. Connecting such a supply to the EXTVCC pin
disables the internal regulator; all
controller and gate drive power is
LOAD STEP = 1A TO 10A
VIN = 15V
then drawn from the external supply.
VOUT = 2.5V
If the external drive comes from a high
FCB = INTVCC
efficiency source, overall efficiency can
be improved. Furthermore, connecting the VIN and EXTVCC pins together
to an external 5V supply allows the
controller to convert low input volt20µs/DIV
ages such as 3.3V and 2.5V.
Figure 5. Transient response of Figure 3’s circuit
18
Linear Technology Magazine • February 2001
DESIGN FEATURES
RPG
100k 2
3
CC1
470pF
4
RC
33k
5
CC2
100pF
6
7
R1
11.5k
R2
24.9k
8
C2
2200pF
LTC1778
RUN/SS BOOST
PGOOD
VRNG
FCB
ITH
SGND
TG
SW
16
15
DB
CMDSH-3
CB
0.22µF
M1
14
BG
INTVCC
ION
VIN
VFB
EXTVCC
VOUT
2.5V
3A
L1, 1µH
+
PGND
VIN
9V TO 18V
CIN
10µF
25V
13
COUT
120µF
4V
M2
12
11
CVCC
4.7µF
10
RF
1Ω
9
CF
0.1µF
RON
220k
CIN: TAIYO YUDEN TMK432BJ106MM
COUT: CORNELL DUBILIER ESRD121M04B
L1: TOKO D63LCB
M1, M2: 1/2 SILICONIX Si9802
LTC3711 Adds VID Interface
for 0.9V – 2.0V
Microprocessor Core Supplies
(408) 573-4150
(508) 996-8561
(847) 699-3430
(800) 554-5565
Figure 6. 2.5V/3A converter switches at 1.4MHz
Design Examples
Figure 3 shows a typical application
circuit using the LTC1778EGN. This
16-pin SSOP version of the part does
not make all of the pin functions
available. The VON input is internally
set to 0.7V and the SENSE+ and
SENSE– pins are cobonded with the
SW and PGND pins, respectively. The
circuit delivers a regulated 2.5V output at up to 10A from input voltages
between 5V and 28V. The power MOSFETs from Siliconix are optimized for
low duty cycle applications. The 1.4MΩ
RON sets the 250kHz switching frequency. This switching frequency
yields good efficiency with reasonable
component sizes. Figure 4 shows that
the efficiency of this circuit ranges
from 90% to 95%, depending upon
output current and input voltage. At
light loads, below about 2A, the circuit enters discontinuous mode to
keep the efficiency high. The response
to a 1A to 10A load step is shown in
Figure 5. Note the discontinuous mode
operation with the 1A load and the
rapid increase in inductor current
after the load step.
Figure 6 shows a very high switching frequency buck regulator that
allows the use of small power components. This circuit delivers a 2.5V
output at up to 3A while switching at
Linear Technology Magazine • February 2001
Unlike many other current mode
controllers, the LTC1778 can also be
used in applications with a high output voltage, nearly up to the full input
voltage. Figure 7 illustrates this with
a 12V output circuit that can deliver
up to 5A. This circuit uses the
LTC1778EGN-1, which replaces the
PGOOD pin with the VON pin. Tying
this pin high sets the internal VON
level to 2.4V, reducing the required
value of the RON resistor for 300kHz
operation. This circuit has excellent
efficiency, reaching 97% at 5A with a
24V VIN.
1.4MHz. The minimum off-time constraint limits the duty cycle in this
circuit to below 30%, as illustrated in
Figure 2. Thus, the minimum permissible VIN to avoid dropout is 9V. A
pair of low-gate-charge MOSFETs in
a single SO-8 package was chosen to
minimize the significant switching
losses at this high frequency. Efficiency runs about 80% to 85% with a
12V input.
CSS
0.1µF
1
2
3
CC1
2.2nF
4
RC
20k
5
CC2
100pF
6
7
R1
10k
R2
140k
8
C2
2200pF
LTC1778-1
RUN/SS
VON
VRNG
FCB
ITH
SGND
BOOST
TG
SW
16
15
Many low voltage microprocessors
now require digital control of the output voltage and active voltage
positioning to improve load transient
response. The LTC3711 specifically
addresses these needs. It uses the
LTC1778 control architecture for
handling the low duty cycles while
adding a 5-bit VID interface. The VID
code selects an output voltage in the
range of 0.9V to 2.0V, compatible
with Intel mobile Pentium® processors. The LTC1778 and LTC3711 both
include a trimmed error amplifier
Pentium is a registered trademark of Intel Corp.
DB
CMDSH-3
CB
0.22µF
14
CIN
22µF
50V
M1
L1, 10µH
+
PGND
BG
INTVCC
ION
VIN
VFB
EXTVCC
13
M2
D1
VIN
14V TO 28V
VOUT
12V
5A
COUT
220µF
16V
12
11
+
1
+
CSS
0.1µF
CVCC
4.7µF
10
RF
1Ω
9
CF
0.1µF
RON
1.6M
CIN: UNITED CHEMICON THCR70E1H226ZT
COUT: SANYO 16SV220M
L1: SUMIDA CDRH127-100
M1, M2: FAIRCHILD FDS7760A
D1: DIODES, INC. B340A
(847) 696-2000
(619) 661-6835
(847) 956-0667
(408) 822-2126
(805) 446-4800
Figure 7. 12V/5A converter switches at 300kHz
19
DESIGN FEATURES
1
CSS
0.1µF
2
3
RRNG1 RRNG2
4.99k 45.3k
RPG
100k
4
5
VID2
VID1
RUN/SS
VID0
BOOST
VON
TG
PGOOD
SW
VRNG
24
23
DB
CMDSH-3
22
CB
0.33µF
21
M1
M2
×2
7
RVP1
12.4k
CC1
180pF 8
9
CFB 100pF
10
11
RON
330k
12
FCB
ITH
SENSE+
PGND
SGND
ION
BG
INTVCC
VFB
VOSENSE
VIN
EXTVCC
VID3
VID4
D1
+
19
VIN
7V TO 24V
VOUT
1.5V
15A
COUT
270µF
2V
×3
RSENSE
0.003Ω
18
17
16
+
6
L1
1µH
20
LTC3711
RVP2
40.2k
CIN
22µF
50V
×3
CVCC
4.7µF
RF
1Ω
15
14
CF
0.1µF
13
CIN: UNITED CHEMICON THCR70E1H26ZT (847) 696-2000
COUT: CORNELL DUBILIER ESRE271M02B (508) 996-8561
L1: SUMIDA CEP125-IR0MC-H
(847) 956-0667
M1: INTERNATIONAL RECTIFIER IRF7811A (310) 332-3331
D1: MICROSEMI UPS840
(617) 926-0404
Figure 8. 1.5V/15A CPU core voltage regulator with active voltage positioning
Conclusion
transconductance that is constant
over temperature. This feature allows
more aggressive compensation of the
control loop for faster transient
response as well as enabling accurate
active voltage positioning. Active voltage positioning lowers the output
voltage in a controlled manner as the
load current increases. This is useful
in microprocessor power supplies
where large load current transients
are the main cause of output voltage
error.
An example of a VID controlled
LTC3711 application with active voltage positioning is shown in Figure 8.
To facilitate the voltage positioning,
the SENSE+ pin is used with a current
sense resistor at the source of M2.
The voltage positioning gain is accurately set using resistors RVP1 and
RVP2 along with the trimmed transconductance of the error amplifier.
This circuit positions the output voltage about 65mV above a 1.5V nominal
output at no load, drooping to 65mV
below the nominal output at full load.
Voltage positioning allows the number of output capacitors to be reduced
from five to three and still maintain a
±100mV specification on the output
voltage.
The LTC1778/LTC3711 step-down
DC/DC controllers are designed for
power supplies operating over a wide
input and output range. The valley
current control architecture enables
very low voltage outputs to be obtained
from high input voltage sources such
as battery packs and wall adapters.
Eliminating the sense resistor
improves efficiency and saves both
board space and component cost.
The LTC1778 and LTC3711 are excellent choices for delivering the low
output voltages and high efficiencies
required by modern portable power
supplies.
for
the latest information
on LTC products,
visit
www.linear-tech.com
20
Linear Technology Magazine • February 2001