NSC LM2611BMFX

LM2611
1.4MHz Cuk Converter
General Description
Features
The LM2611 is a current mode, PWM inverting switching
regulator. Operating from a 2.7 - 14V supply, it is capable of
producing a regulated negative output voltage of up to −(36VIN(MAX)). The LM2611 utilizes an input and output inductor,
which enables low voltage ripple and RMS current on both
the input and the output. With a switching frequency of
1.4MHz, the inductors and output capacitor can be physically small and low cost. High efficiency is achieved through
the use of a low RDS(ON) FET.
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The LM2611 features a shutdown pin, which can be activated when the part is not needed to lower the Iq and save
battery life. A negative feedback (NFB) pin provides a simple
method of setting the output voltage, using just two resistors.
Cycle-by-cycle current limiting and internal compensation
further simplify the use of the LM2611.
The LM2611 is available is a small SOT23-5 package. It
comes in two grades:
Grade A
1.4MHz switching frequency
Low RDS(ON) DMOS FET
1mVp-p output ripple
−5V at 300mA from 5V input
Better regulation than a charge pump
Uses tiny capacitors and inductors
Wide input range: 2.7V to 14V
Low shutdown current: < 1uA
5-lead SOT-23 package
Applications
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MR Head Bias
Digital camera CCD bias
LCD bias
GaAs FET bias
Positive to negative conversion
Grade B
Current Limit
1.2A
0.9A
RDS(ON)
0.5Ω
0.7Ω
Typical Application Circuit
20018117
© 2005 National Semiconductor Corporation
DS200181
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LM2611 1.4MHz Cuk Converter
January 2005
LM2611
Connection Diagram
Top View
20018115
5-lead SOT-23 Package
NS Package Number MF05A
Ordering Information
Order Number
Package Type
NSC Package
Drawing
Supplied As
Package ID
LM2611AMF
1K Tape and Reel
S40A
LM2611AMFX
3K Tape and Reel
S40A
1K Tape and Reel
S40B
3K Tape and Reel
S40B
SOT23-5
LM2611BMF
MF05A
LM2611BMFX
Pin Description
Pin
Name
1
SW
Function
2
GND
Analog and power ground.
3
NFB
Negative feedback. Connect to output via external resistor divider to set output voltage.
4
SHDN
5
VIN
Drain of internal switch. Connect at the node of the input inductor and Cuk capacitor.
Shutdown control input. VIN = Device on. Ground = Device in shutdown.
Analog and power input. Filter out high frequency noise with a 0.1 µF ceramic capacitor
placed close to the pin.
Block Diagram
20018101
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ESD Susceptibility (Note 3)
Human Body Model
If Military/Aerospace specified devices are required,
please contact the National Semiconductor Sales Office/
Distributors for availability and specifications.
14.5V
VIN
SW Voltage
−0. 4V to 36V
NFB Voltage
+0. 4V to −6V
SHDN Voltage
200V
Operating Conditions
−0. 4V to 14.5V
Maximum Junction
Temperature
2kV
Machine Model
125˚C
Operating Junction
Temperature Range
−40˚C to +125˚C
Storage Temperature
−65˚C to +150˚C
Supply Voltage
Power Dissipation (Note 2)
Internally Limited
Lead Temperature
2.7V to 14V
θJA
256˚C/W
300˚C
Electrical Characteristics
Specifications in standard type face are for TJ = 25˚C and those with boldface type apply over the Temperature Range TJ =
−40˚C to +85˚C, unless otherwise specified. VIN = 5.0V and IL = 0A, unless otherwise specified.
Symbol
Parameter
VIN
Input Voltage
ISW
Switch Current Limit
RDSON
SHDNTH
Switch ON Resistance
Shutdown Threshold
Conditions
Min
(Note 4)
Typ
(Note 5)
2.7
Grade A
1
1.2
Grade B
0.7
0.9
Shutdown Pin Bias Current
Units
14
V
2
A
Grade A
0.5
0.65
Grade B
0.7
0.9
Device enabled
1.5
Ω
V
Device disabled
ISHDN
Max
(Note 4)
0.50
VSHDN = 0V
0.0
VSHDN = 5V
0.0
1.0
µA
−1.205
−1.23
−1.255
V
−2.7
−4.7
−6.7
µA
NFB
Negative Feedback
Reference
VIN = 3V
INFB
NFB Pin Bias Current
VNFB =−1.23V
Iq
Quiescent Current
VSHDN = 5V, Switching
1.8
3.5
mA
VSHDN = 5V, Not Switching
270
500
µA
VSHDN = 0V
0.024
1
µA
2.7V ≤ VIN ≤ 14V
0.02
%VOUT/
∆VIN
Reference Line Regulation
fS
Switching Frequency
1.0
1.4
DMAX
Maximum Duty Cycle
82
88
IL
Switch Leakage
Not Switching
VSW = 5V
%/V
1.8
MHz
1
µA
%
Note 1: Absolute maximum ratings are limits beyond which damage to the device may occur. Operating Ratings are conditions for which the device is intended to
be functional, but device parameter specifications may not be guaranteed. For guaranteed specifications and test conditions, see the Electrical Characteristics.
Note 2: The maximum allowable power dissipation is a function of the maximum junction temperature, TJ(MAX), the junction-to-ambient thermal resistance, θJA,
and the ambient temperature, TA. See the Electrical Characteristics table for the thermal resistance of various layouts. The maximum allowable power dissipation
at any ambient temperature is calculated using: PD (MAX) = (TJ(MAX) − TA)/θJA. Exceeding the maximum allowable power dissipation will cause excessive die
temperature, and the regulator will go into thermal shutdown.
Note 3: The human body model is a 100 pF capacitor discharged through a 1.5kΩ resistor into each pin. The machine model is a 200pF capacitor discharged
directly into each pin.
Note 4: All limits guaranteed at room temperature (standard typeface) and at temperature extremes (bold typeface). All room temperature limits are 100% tested
or guaranteed through statistical analysis. All limits at temperature extremes are guaranteed via correlation using standard Statistical Quality Control (SQC) methods.
All limits are used to calculate Average Outgoing Quality Level (AOQL).
Note 5: Typical numbers are at 25˚C and represent the expected value of the parameter.
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LM2611
Absolute Maximum Ratings (Note 1)
LM2611
Typical Performance Characteristics
RDS(ON) Vs. Ambient Temperature
VIN = 5V
RDS(ON) vs VIN
20018112
20018145
Switch Current Limit vs Ambient Temperature
VIN = 5V
Switch Current Limit vs. VIN
20018111
20018143
Oscillator Frequency vs Ambient Temperature
VIN = 5V
Oscillator Frequency vs VIN
20018116
20018119
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LM2611
Typical Performance Characteristics
(Continued)
VNFB vs VIN
TA = 25˚C, VOUT = −5V
VNFB vs Ambient Temperature
VIN = 5V
20018107
20018124
INFB vs Ambient Temperature
VIN = 3.5V, VOUT = −5V
INFB vs VIN
TA = 25˚C, VOUT = −5V
20018108
20018109
VSHUTDOWN vs Ambient Temperature
VIN = 5V
Iq vs Ambient Temperature (No Load)
20018144
20018110
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LM2611
Operation
Cuk Converter
20018105
FIGURE 1. Operating Cycles of a Cuk Converter
The LM2611 is a current mode, fixed frequency PWM
switching regulator with a −1.23V reference that makes it
ideal for use in a Cuk converter. The Cuk converter inverts
the input and can step up or step down the absolute value.
Using inductors on both the input and output, the Cuk converter produces very little input and output current ripple.
This is a significant advantage over other inverting topologies such as the buck-boost and flyback.
The operating states of the Cuk converter are shown in
Figure 1. During the first cycle, the transistor switch is closed
and the diode is open. L1 is charged by the source and L2 is
charged by CCUK, while the output current is provided by L2.
In the second cycle, L1 charges CCUK and L2 discharges
through the load. By applying the volt-second balance to
either of the inductors, the relationship of VOUT to the duty
cycle (D) is found to be:
20018103
FIGURE 2. Voltage and Current Waveforms in Inductor
L1 of a Cuk Converter
The following sections review the steady-state design of the
LM2611 Cuk converter.
The voltage and current waveforms of inductor L2 are shown
in Figure 3. During the first cycle of operation, when the
switch is closed, VIN is applied across L2. When the switch
opens, VOUT is applied across L2.
Output and Input Inductor
Figure 2 and Figure 3 show the steady-state voltage and
current waveforms for L1 and L2, respectively. Referring to
Figure 1 (a), when the switch is closed, VIN is applied across
L1. In the next cycle, the switch opens and the diode becomes forward biased, and VOUT is applied across L1 (the
voltage across CCUK is VIN − VOUT.
20018104
FIGURE 3. Voltage and Current Waveforms in Inductor
L2 of a Cuk Converter
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Input Capacitor
(Continued)
The input current waveform to a Cuk converter is continuous
and triangular, as shown in Figure 2. The input inductor
insures that the input capacitor sees fairly low ripple currents. However, as the input inductor gets smaller, the input
ripple goes up. The RMS current in the input capacitor is
given by:
The following equations define values given in Figure 2 and
Figure 3:
IL2 = IOUT
The input capacitor should be capable of handling the RMS
current. Although the input capacitor is not so critical in a Cuk
converter, a 10µF or higher value good quality capacitor
prevents any impedance interactions with the input supply. A
0.1µF or 1µF ceramic bypass capacitor is also recommended on the VIN pin (pin 5) of the IC. This capacitor must
be connected very close to pin 5 (within 0.2 inches).
Use these equations to choose correct core sizes for the
inductors. The design of the LM2611’s internal compensation assumes L1 and L2 are equal to 10 - 22 µH, thus it is
recommended to stay within this range.
Output Capacitor
Like the input current, the output current is also continuous,
triangular, and has low ripple (see IL2 in Figure 3). The output
capacitor must be rated to handle its RMS current:
Switch Current Limit
The LM2611 incorporates a separate current limit comparator, making current limit independent of any other variables.
The current limit comparator measures the switch current
versus a reference that represents current limit. If at any time
the switch current surpasses the current limit, the switch
opens until the next switching period. To determine the maximum load for a given set of conditions, both the input and
output inductor currents must be considered. The switch
current is equal to iL1 + iL2, and is drawn in Figure 4. In
summary:
For example, ICOUT(RMS) can range from 30mA to 180mA
with 10µH ≤ L1,2 ≤ 22µH, −10V ≤ VOUT ≤ −3.3V, and 2.7V ≤
VIN ≤ 30V (VIN may be 30V if using separate power and
analog supplies, see Split Supply Operation in the APPLICATIONS section). The worst case conditions are with L1,2,
VOUT(MAX), and VIN(MAX). Many capacitor technologies will
provide this level of RMS current, but ceramic capacitors are
ideally suited for the LM2611. Ceramic capacitors provide a
good combination of capacitance and equivalent series resistance (ESR) to keep the zero formed by the capacitance
and ESR at high frequencies. The ESR zero is calculated as:
ISW(PEAK) must be less than the current limit (1.2A typical),
but will also be limited by the thermal resistivity of the
LM2611’s SOT23-5 package (θJA = 265˚C/W).
A general rule of thumb is to keep fESR > 80kHz for LM2611
Cuk designs. Low ESR tantalum capacitors will usually be
rated for at least 180mA in a voltage rating of 10V or above.
However the ESR in a tantalum capacitor (even in a low ESR
tantalum capacitor) is much higher than in a ceramic capacitor and could place fESR low enough to cause the LM2611 to
run unstable.
20018102
Improving Transient Response/Compensation
The compensator in the LM2611 is internal. However, a
zero-pole pair can be added to the open loop frequency
response by inserting a feed forward capacitor, CFF, in parallel to the top feedback resistor (RFB1). Phase margin and
bandwidth can be improved with the added zero-pole pair.
This inturn will improve the transient response to a step load
change (see Figure 5 and Figure 6). The position of the
zero-pole pair is a function of the feedback resistors and the
capacitor value:
FIGURE 4. Switch Current Waveform in a Cuk
Converter. The peak value is equal to the sum of the
average currents through L1 and L2 and the
average-to-peak current ripples through L1 and L2.
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LM2611
Operation
LM2611
Operation
(Continued)
(1)
(2)
The optimal position for this zero-pole pair will vary with
circuit parameters such as D, IOUT, COUT, L1, L2, and CCUK.
For most cases, the value for the zero frequency is between
5 kHz to 20 kHz. Notice how the pole position, ωp, is dependant on the feedback resistors RFB1 and RFB2, and therefore
also dependant on the output voltage. As the output voltage
becomes closer to −1.26V, the pole moves towards the zero,
tending to cancel it out. If the absolute magnitude of the
output voltage is less than 3.3V, adding the zero-pole pair
will not have much effect on the response.
20018122
) LEVEL 3
FIGURE 6. 130mA to 400mA Transient Response
of the circuit in Figure 9 with CFF disconnected
Hysteretic Mode
As the output current decreases, there will come a point
when the energy stored in the Cuk capacitor is more than the
energy required by the load. The excess energy is absorbed
by the output capacitor, causing the output voltage to increase out of regulation. The LM2611 detects when this
happens and enters a pulse skipping, or hysteretic mode. In
hysteretic mode, the output voltage ripple will increase, as
illustrated in Figure 7 and Figure 8.
20018120
) LEVEL 3
FIGURE 5. 130mA to 400mA Transient Response
of the circuit in Figure 9 with CFF = 1nF
20018121
FIGURE 7. The LM2611 in PWM mode has very low
ripple
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LM2611
Operation
(Continued)
20018123
FIGURE 8. At low loads, the LM2611 enters a
pulse-skipping mode. The output ripple
slightly increases in this mode.
Thermal Shutdown
remains off until the junction temperature drops to 155˚C, at
which point the part begins switching again. It will typically
take 10ms for the junction temperature to drop from 163˚C to
155˚C with the switch off.
If the junction temperature of the LM2611 exceeds 163˚C, it
will enter thermal shutdown. In thermal shutdown, the part
deactivates the driver and the switch turns off. The switch
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LM2611
Application Circuits
5V to -5V Inverting Converter
20018117
Efficiency vs Load Current
20018160
20018158
FIGURE 9. The Maximum Output Current vs Output Voltage (Adjust RFB2 to Set a Different Output Voltage) When The
Input Voltage is 5V
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LM2611
Application Circuits
(Continued)
12V to -5V Inverting Converter
9V to -5V Inverting Converter
20018163
20018164
20018162
FIGURE 11. The Maximum Output Current vs Output
Voltage (Adjust RFB2 to Set a Different Output Voltage)
When The Input Voltage is 12V
20018161
FIGURE 10. The Maximum Output Current vs Output
Voltage (Adjust RFB2 to Set a Different Output Voltage)
When The Input Voltage is 9V
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LM2611
Application Circuits
(Continued)
20018114
FIGURE 12. LM2611 Operating with Separate Power and Biasing Supplies
Shutdown/Soft Start
A soft start circuit is used in switching power supplies to limit
the input inrush current upon start-up. Without a soft-start
circuit, the inrush current can be several times the steadystate load current, and thus apply unnecessary stress to the
input source. The LM2611 does not have soft-start circuitry,
but implementing the circuit in Figure 13 will lower the peak
inrush current. The SHDN pin is coupled to the output
through CSS. The LM2611 is toggled between shutdown and
run states while the output slowly decreases to its steadystate value. The energy required to reach steady-state is
spread over a longer time and the input current spikes
decrease (see Figure 14 and Figure 15).
Split Supply Operation
The LM2611 may be operated with separate power and bias
supplies. In the circuit shown in Figure 12. VIN is the power
supply that the regulated voltage is derived from, and VDD is
a low current supply used to bias the LM2611. Conditions for
the supplies are:
2.7V ≤ VDD ≤ 14V
0V ≤ VIN ≤ (36 - IVOUTI) V
As the input voltage increases, the maximum output current
capacbility increases. Using a separate, higher voltage supply for power conversion enables the LM2611 to provide
higher output currents than it would with a single supply that
is limited in voltage by VIN(MAX).
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LM2611
Application Circuits
(Continued)
20018125
FIGURE 13. LM2611 Soft Start Circuit
20018142
FIGURE 14. Start-Up Waveforms with Soft Start Circuit
20018141
FIGURE 15. Start-Up Waveforms without Soft Start Circuit
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LM2611
Application Circuits
magnitude of the output voltage. RFB3 and CFF2 are added to
the feedback network to introduce a low frequency lag compensation (pole-zero pair) necessary to stabilize the circuit
under the combination of high duty cycle and high load
currents.
(Continued)
High Duty Cycle/Load Current Operation
The circuit in Figure 16 is used for high duty cycles (D > 0.5)
and high load currents. The duty cycle will begin to increase
beyond 50% as the input voltage drops below the absolute
20018129
FIGURE 16. LM2611 High Current Schematic
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LM2611 1.4MHz Cuk Converter
Physical Dimensions
inches (millimeters)
unless otherwise noted
5-lead SOT-23 Package
NS Package Number MF05A
National does not assume any responsibility for use of any circuitry described, no circuit patent licenses are implied and National reserves
the right at any time without notice to change said circuitry and specifications.
For the most current product information visit us at www.national.com.
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