MAXIM MAX1638

19-1313; Rev 0; 11/97
KIT
ATION
EVALU
E
L
B
AVAILA
High-Speed Step-Down Controller with
Synchronous Rectification for CPU Power
____________________________Features
The MAX1638 is an ultra-high-performance, step-down
DC-DC controller for CPU power in high-end computer
systems. Designed for demanding applications in which
output voltage precision and good transient response are
critical for proper operation, it delivers over 35A from 1.3V
to 3.5V with ±1% total accuracy from a +5V ±10% supply.
Excellent dynamic response corrects output transients
caused by the latest dynamically clocked CPUs. This
controller achieves over 90% efficiency by using synchronous rectification. Flying-capacitor bootstrap circuitry
drives inexpensive, external N-channel MOSFETs.
♦ Better than ±1% Output Accuracy Over
Line and Load
♦ Greater than 90% Efficiency Using N-Channel
MOSFETs
♦ Pin-Selected High Switching Frequency (300kHz,
600kHz, or 1MHz)
♦ Over 35A Output Current
♦ Digitally Programmable Output from 1.3V to 3.5V
♦ Current-Mode Control for Fast Transient
Response and Cycle-by-Cycle Current-Limit
Protection
♦ Short-Circuit Protection with Foldback Current
Limiting
♦ Glitch-Catcher Circuit for Fast Load-Transient
Response
♦ Crowbar Overvoltage Protection
♦ Power-Good (PWROK) Output
♦ Digital Soft-Start
♦ High-Current (2A) Drive Outputs
♦ Complies with Intel VRM 8.2 Specification
The switching frequency is pin-selectable for 300kHz,
600kHz, or 1MHz. High switching frequencies allow the
use of a small surface-mount inductor and decrease output filter capacitor requirements, reducing board area
and system cost.
The MAX1638 is available in 24-pin SSOP and QSOP
(future package) packages, and offers additional features such as a digitally programmable output;
adjustable transient response; and selectable 0.5%, 1%,
or 2% AC load regulation. Fast recovery from load transients is ensured by a GlitchCatcher™ current-boost circuit that eliminates delays caused by the buck inductor.
Output overvoltage protection is enforced by a crowbar
circuit that turns on the low-side MOSFET with 100%
duty factor when the output is 200mV above the normal
regulation point. Other features include internal digital
soft-start, a power-good output, and a 3.5V ±1% reference output.
__________Typical Operating Circuit
INPUT
+5V
________________________Applications
Pentium Pro™, Pentium II™, PowerPC™, Alpha™,
and K6™ Systems
Workstations
Desktop Computers
LAN Servers
GTL Bus Termination
______________Ordering Information
PART
MAX1638EAG
MAX1638EEG*
TEMP. RANGE
PIN-PACKAGE
-40°C to +85°C
24 SSOP
-40°C to +85°C
24 QSOP
Pin Configuration appears at end of data sheet.
*Future product—contact factory for package availability.
TO VDD
VCC
VDD
AGND
BST
MAX1638 DH
LX
OUTPUT
1.3V TO 4.5V
PWROK
D0
D1
D2
D3
D4
DL
PGND
REF
CSH
LG
CSL
FREQ
CC1
FB
CC2
Pentium Pro and Pentium II are trademarks of Intel Corp.
PowerPC is a trademark of IBM Corp.
Alpha is a trademark of Digital Equipment Corp.
K6 is a trademark of Advanced Micro Devices.
GlitchCatcher is a trademark of Maxim Integrated Products.
________________________________________________________________ Maxim Integrated Products
1
For free samples & the latest literature: http://www.maxim-ic.com, or phone 1-800-998-8800.
For small orders, phone 408-737-7600 ext. 3468.
MAX1638
_______________General Description
MAX1638
High-Speed Step-Down Controller with
Synchronous Rectification for CPU Power
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
VDD, VCC, PWROK to AGND ......................................-0.3V to 6V
PGND to AGND ..................................................................±0.3V
CSH, CSL to AGND ....................................-0.3V to (VCC + 0.3V)
NDRV, PDRV, DL to PGND.........................-0.3V to (VDD + 0.3V)
REF, CC1, CC2, LG, D0–D4, FREQ,
FB to AGND.............................................-0.3V to (VCC + 0.3V)
BST to PGND ............................................................-0.3V to 12V
BST to LX ....................................................................-0.3V to 6V
DH to LX.............................................(LX - 0.3V) to (BST + 0.3V)
Continuous Power Dissipation (TA = +70°C)
QSOP (derate 8.70mW/°C above +70°C) .....................696mW
QSOP θJC ..................................................................40°C/W
SSOP (derate 8.00mW/°C above +70°C) .....................640mW
SSOP θJC ..................................................................45°C/W
Operating Temperature Range ...........................-40°C to +85°C
Storage Temperature Range .............................-65°C to +160°C
Lead Temperature (soldering, 10sec) .............................+300°C
Stresses beyond those listed under “Absolute Maximum Ratings” may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only, and functional
operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond those indicated in the operational sections of the specifications is not implied. Exposure to
absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability.
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
(VDD = VCC = D4 = +5V, PGND = AGND = D0–D3 = 0V, FREQ = REF, TA = 0°C to +85°C, unless otherwise noted.)
PARAMETER
CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
TA = +25°C to +85°C
MAX
±1
UNITS
Output Voltage (FB) Accuracy
Over line and load
(Note 1)
Input Voltage Range
VCC = VDD
4.5
5.5
V
Input Undervoltage Lockout
VCC rising edge, 1% hysteresis
4.0
4.2
V
VCC Supply Current
VCC = VDD
= 5.5V
VDD Supply Current
VCC = VDD = 5.5V, FB forced 200mV above
regulation point, operating or standby mode
Reference Voltage
No load
Reference Load Regulation
0µA < IREF < 100µA
Reference Undervoltage Lockout
Rising edge, 1% hysteresis
Reference Short-Circuit Current
VREF = 0V
AC Load Regulation
(Note 2)
DC Load Regulation
(Note 2)
TA = 0°C to +85°C
Operating
mode
FB overdrive = 200mV
Shutdown
mode
DAC code = 11111
CSH - CSL =
0mV to 80mV
CSH - CSL =
0mV to 80mV
±1.5
2.5
FB overdrive = 0V
5
0.3
VREF = 0V
3.6
3.465
2.7
0.5
LG = GND
0.5
LG = REF
1
LG = VCC
2
LG = GND
0.05
LG = REF
0.1
mV
3.0
V
4.0
mA
%
%
0.2
-6
-4.5
Falling FB, 1% hysteresis with respect to VREF
6.5
8
9.5
ISINK = 2mA, VCC = 4.5V
PWROK = 5.5V
2
V
10
-7.5
PWROK Output Current High
mA
3.535
Rising FB, 1% hysteresis with respect to VREF
PWROK Output Voltage Low
Switching Frequency
3.5
mA
10
0.1
LG = VCC
PWROK Trip Level
%
0.4
V
1
µA
FREQ = VCC
850
1000
1150
FREQ = REF
540
600
660
FREQ = AGND
255
300
345
_______________________________________________________________________________________
%
kHz
High-Speed Step-Down Controller with
Synchronous Rectification for CPU Power
MAX1638
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
(VDD = VCC = D4 = +5V, PGND = AGND = D0–D3 = 0V, FREQ = REF, TA = 0°C to +85°C, unless otherwise noted.)
PARAMETER
Maximum Duty Cycle
CONDITIONS
FREQ = VCC
MIN
TYP
85
90
GND (low)
LG, FREQ Input Voltage
3.3
VCC (high)
VCC - 0.1
D0–D4, VCC = 4.5V
Logic Input Voltage High
D0–D4, VCC = 5.5V
D0–D4 Source Current
D0–D4 = 0V
%
3.7
V
0.8
V
10
µA
4
µA
50
µA
2.0
2
V
5
LG, FREQ Input Current
CSH, CSL Input Current
CSH = CSL = 1.3V, D0–D3 = 5V, D4 = 0V
FB Input Current
±0.1
CC1 Output Resistance
10
CC2 Transconductance
CC2 Clamp Voltage
UNITS
0.2
REF (mid)
Logic Input Voltage Low
MAX
µA
kΩ
1
mmho
Minimum
2.4
3.0
Maximum
4
VCC
V
CC2 Source/Sink Current
100mV overdrive
100
DH On-Resistance
BST - LX = 4.5V
0.7
2
Ω
DL On-Resistance
VDD = 4.5V
0.7
2
Ω
DH, DL Source/Sink Current
DH = DL = 2.5V
DH, DL Dead Time
2
A
0
30
ns
-2.75
-2
PDRV Trip Level
With respect to VREF,
FB going low
TA = +25°C
NDRV Trip Level
With respect to VREF,
FB going high
TA = +25°C
PDRV, NDRV Response Time
FB overdrive = 5%
75
PDRV, NDRV On-Resistance
VDD = 4.5V
2
PDRV, NDRV Source/Sink Current
PDRV = NDRV = 2.5V
TA = 0°C to +85°C
TA = 0°C to +85°C
-3
1.25
-1.25
-1
2
1
2.75
3
100
100
115
FB = 0V (Foldback)
15
38
70
To full current limit
BST = 12V, LX = 7V, REF = GND
Ω
ns
85
BST Leakage Current
%
A
FB = 3.5V
Soft-Start Time
%
ns
5
0.5
PDRV, NDRV Minimum On-Time
Current-Limit Trip Voltage
µA
1536
mV
1 / fOSC
50
µA
_______________________________________________________________________________________
3
MAX1638
High-Speed Step-Down Controller with
Synchronous Rectification for CPU Power
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
(VDD = VCC = D4 = +5V, PGND = AGND = D0–D3= 0V, FREQ = REF, TA = -40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise noted.) (Note 3)
MAX
UNITS
Input Voltage Range
PARAMETER
VCC = VDD
CONDITIONS
MIN
4.5
TYP
5.5
V
Input Undervoltage Lockout
VCC rising edge, 1% hysteresis
3.9
4.3
V
VCC Supply Current
VCC = VDD = 5.5V,
FB overdrive =
200mV
Operating mode
3
DAC code = 11111
0.4
VREF = 0V
12
VDD Supply Current
VCC = VDD = 5.5V, FB forced 200mV above
regulation point, operating or shutdown mode
0.2
Reference Voltage
No load
Output Voltage (FB) Accuracy
Over line and load (Note 1)
PWROK Trip Level
Switching Frequency
Shutdown
mode
3.448
3.5
V
mA
mA
3.553
V
±2.5
%
Rising FB, 1% hysteresis with respect to VREF
-8
-6
-4
Falling FB, 1% hysteresis with respect to VREF
6
8
10
FREQ = VCC
800
1000
1200
FREQ = REF
510
600
690
360
%
kHz
FREQ = AGND
240
300
Maximum Duty Cycle
FREQ = VCC
84
90
DH On-Resistance
BST - LX = 4.5V
0.7
2
Ω
DL On-Resistance
VDD = 4.5V
0.7
2
Ω
Current-Limit Trip Voltage
FB = 3.5V
100
130
mV
70
%
Note 1: FB accuracy is 100% tested at FB = 3.5V (code 10000) with VCC = VDD = 4.5V to 5.5V and CSH - CSL = 0mV to 80mV. The
other DAC codes are tested with VCC = VDD = 5V and CSH - CSL = 0.
Note 2: AC load regulation sets the AC loop gain, to make tradeoffs between output filter capacitor size and transient response,
and has only a slight effect on DC accuracy or DC load-regulation error.
Note 3: Specifications from 0°C to -40°C are guaranteed by design, not production tested.
4
_______________________________________________________________________________________
High-Speed Step-Down Controller with
Synchronous Rectification for CPU Power
(TA = +25°C, using the MAX1638 evaluation kit, unless otherwise noted.)
LOAD-TRANSIENT RESPONSE
WITHOUT GLITCHCATCHER (COUT = 880µF)
LOAD-TRANSIENT RESPONSE
WITH GLITCHCATCHER
MAX1638-03
MAX1638-02
MAX1638-01
LOAD-TRANSIENT RESPONSE
WITHOUT GLITCHCATCHER (COUT = 440µF)
A
A
A
B
C
B
D
B
10µs/div
10µs/div
10µs/div
VIN = 5V, VOUT = 2.0V, LOAD = 14A, 3A/µs
A: VOUT, 50mV/div, AC COUPLED
B: INDUCTOR CURRENT, 10A/div
COUT = 440µF, VIN = 5V, VOUT = 2.0V, LOAD = 14A, 30A/µs
C: NDRV, 5V/div
A: VOUT, 100mV/div,
AC COUPLED
D: INDUCTOR CURRENT,
B: PDRV, 5V/div
10A/div
VIN = 5V, VOUT = 2.0V, LOAD = 14A, 3A/µs
A: VOUT, 100mV/div, AC COUPLED
B: INDUCTOR CURRENT, 10A/div
FOLDBACK CURRENT LIMIT
SWITCHING WAVEFORMS
MAX1638-06
MAX1638-05
MAX1638-04
START-UP WAVEFORMS
A
A
B
A
C
B
B
0
10µs/div
400µs/div
VO = 2.0V NOMINAL
A: VOUT = 0.5V/div
B: INDUCTOR CURRENT, 5A/div
VOUT = 1.3V
VOUT = 2.0V
60
50
3.094
2.594
30
1.094
0.001
10
OUTPUT CURRENT (A)
100
SOURCING
CURRENT
2.094
MAX1638-09
100
MAX1638-08
3.594
1.594
1
SINKING
CURRENT
4.094
40
0.1
MAXIMUM DUTY CYCLE
vs. SWITCHING FREQUENCY
95
MAXIMUM DUTY CYCLE (%)
EFFICIENCY (%)
80
70
4.594
REFERENCE VOLTAGE (V)
90
5.094
MAX1638-07
VOUT = 3.5V
VIN = 5V, VOUT = 2.5V, LOAD = 5A
A: LX, 5V/div
C: INDUCTOR CURRENT,
5A/div
B: VOUT, 20mV/div, AC COUPLED
REFERENCE VOLTAGE
vs. OUTPUT CURRENT
EFFICIENCY vs. OUTPUT CURRENT
100
1µs/div
A: VOUT = 0.5V/div
B: INDUCTOR CURRENT, 5A/div
90
85
80
75
70
65
60
55
50
0.01
0.1
1
OUTPUT CURRENT (mA)
10
0
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
SWITCHING FREQUENCY (kHz)
_______________________________________________________________________________________
5
MAX1638
__________________________________________Typical Operating Characteristics
MAX1638
High-Speed Step-Down Controller with
Synchronous Rectification for CPU Power
______________________________________________________________Pin Description
6
PIN
NAME
FUNCTION
1
BST
Boost-Capacitor Bypass for High-Side MOSFET Gate Drive. Connect a 0.1µF capacitor and low-leakage Schottky diode as a bootstrapped charge-pump circuit to derive a 5V gate drive from VDD for DH.
2
PWROK
3
CSL
Current-Sense Amplifier’s Inverting Input. Place the current-sense resistor very close to the controller IC,
and use a Kelvin connection.
4
CSH
Current-Sense Amplifier’s Noninverting Input
5, 6, 7
D2, D1,
D0
Digital Inputs for Programming the Output Voltage. D0–D4 are logic inputs that set the output to a voltage between 1.3V and 3.5V (Table 2). D0–D4 are internally pulled up to VCC with 5µA current sources.
8
LG
Loop Gain-Control Input. LG is a three-level input that is used to trade off loop gain vs. AC load-regulation and load-transient response. Connect LG to VCC, REF, or AGND for 2%, 1%, or 0.5% AC load-regulation errors, respectively.
9
VCC
Analog Supply Input, 5V. Use an RC filter network, as shown in Figure 1.
10
REF
Reference Output, 3.5V. Bypass REF to AGND with 0.1µF (min). Sources up to 100µA for external
loads. Force REF below 2V to turn off the controller.
11
AGND
12
FB
13
CC1
Fast-Loop Compensation Capacitor Input. Connect a ceramic capacitor and resistor in series from
CC1 to AGND. See the section Compensating the Feedback Loop.
14
CC2
Slow-Loop Compensation Capacitor Input. Connect a ceramic capacitor from CC2 to AGND. See the
section Compensating the Feedback Loop.
15
FREQ
Frequency-Select Input. FREQ = VCC: 1MHz
FREQ = REF: 600kHz
FREQ = AGND: 300kHz
16, 17
D4, D3
Digital Inputs for Programming the Output Voltage
18
NDRV
GlitchCatcher N-Channel MOSFET Driver Output. NDRV swings between VDD and PGND.
19
PDRV
GlitchCatcher P-Channel MOSFET Driver Output. PDRV swings between VDD and PGND.
20
VDD
5V Power Input for MOSFET Drivers. Bypass VDD to PGND within 0.2 in. (5mm) of the VDD pin using a
0.1µF capacitor and 4.7µF capacitor connected in parallel.
21
DL
Low-Side Synchronous Rectifier Gate-Drive Output. DL swings between PGND and VDD. See the
section BST High-Side Gate-Driver Supply and MOSFET Drivers.
22
PGND
23
LX
Switching Node. Connect LX to the high-side MOSFET source and inductor.
24
DH
High-Side Main MOSFET Switch Gate-Drive Output. DH is a floating driver output that swings from LX
to BST, riding on the LX switching-node voltage. See the section BST High-Side Gate-Driver Supply
and MOSFET Drivers.
Open-Drain Logic Output. PWROK is high when the voltage on FB is within +8% and -6% of its setpoint.
Analog Ground
Voltage-Feedback Input. Connect FB to the CPU’s remote voltage-sense point. The voltage at this input
is regulated to a value determined by D0–D4.
Power Ground
_______________________________________________________________________________________
High-Speed Step-Down Controller with
Synchronous Rectification for CPU Power
C5
0.1µF
VIN = 5V
C7
0.1µF
C6
10µF
C1
D2
CMPSH-3
VDD
VCC
TO VDD
MAX1638
R5
10Ω
R6
100k
BST
PWROK
D0
R4
(OPTIONAL)
D2
P1
LX
D3
D4
N1
DH
D1
C8
1µF
C3
0.1µF
VOUT = 1.3V
TO 3.5V
R1
MAX1638
R3
(OPTIONAL)
LG
DL
N2
D1
(OPTIONAL)
C2
FREQ
N3
REF
C4, 1.0µF
CERAMIC
LOCAL
BYPASSING
LOAD
PGND
CSH
CC2
TO
AGND
R2
L1
CC2
RC1 0.056µF
1k
CSL
NDRV
PDRV
CC1
CC1
1000pF
FB
AGND
Figure 1. Standard Application Circuit
_____Standard Application Circuits
The predesigned MAX1638 circuit shown in Figure 1
meets a wide range of applications with output currents
up to 19A and higher. Use Table 1 to select components appropriate for the desired output current range,
and adapt the evaluation kit PC board layout as necessary. This circuit represent a good set of trade-offs
between cost, size, and efficiency while staying within
the worst-case specification limits for stress-related
parameters, such as capacitor ripple current.
The MAX1638 circuit was designed for the specified
frequency. Do not change the switching frequency
without first recalculating component values—particularly the inductance, output filter capacitance, and RC1
resistance values. Table 2 lists the voltage adjustment
DAC codes.
_______________Detailed Description
The MAX1638 is a BiCMOS power-supply controller
designed for use in switch-mode, step-down (buck)
topology DC-DC converters. Synchronous rectification
provides high efficiency. It is intended to provide the
high precision, low noise, excellent transient response,
and high efficiency required in today’s most demanding applications.
_______________________________________________________________________________________
7
MAX1638
High-Speed Step-Down Controller with
Synchronous Rectification for CPU Power
REF
REF1
REF4
REF3
REF2
+
-
AGND
MAX1638
VCC
CSL
CSH
LG
SLOPE
COMPENSATION
BST
DH
RESET
OSCILLATOR
FREQ
Q
LX
CONTROL AND
DRIVE LOGIC
REF
Q
SET
VDD
DL
CC1
40k
PGND
CC2
10k
+
-
gm
WINDOW
REF3
REF2
REF4
REF
REF1
5
N
FB
D0–D4
PWROK
PDRV
NDRV
Figure 2. Simplified Block Diagram
8
_______________________________________________________________________________________
High-Speed Step-Down Controller with
Synchronous Rectification for CPU Power
MAX1638
Table 1. Component List for Standard Applications
LOAD REQUIREMENT
COMPONENT
2.0V, 14A
2.0V, 19A
1.3V, 19A
C1
(x3) Sanyo OS-CON 10SA220M
(220µF)
(x4) Sanyo/OS-CON 10SA220M
(220µF)
(x4) Sanyo/OS-CON 10SA220M
(220µF)
C2
(x4) Sanyo OS-CON 4SP220M
(220µF)
(x6) Sanyo OS-CON 4SP220M
(220µF)
(x7) Sanyo OS-CON 4SP220M
(220µF)
D1
(optional)
Nihon NSQ03A02 Schottky
diode or Motorola MBRS340
Nihon NSQ03A02 Schottky
diode or Motorola MBRS340
Nihon NSQ03A02 Schottky
diode or Motorola MBRS340
D2
Central Semiconductor CMPSH-3
Central Semiconductor CMPSH-3
Central Semiconductor CMPSH-3
L1
Coiltronics UP4-R47
(0.47µH, 19A, SMD) or
Panasonic ETQP1F0R7H
(0.70µH, 19A, 1.6mΩ, SMD)
Panasonic ETQP2F1R0S
(0.70µH, 23A, 0.94mΩ, SMD)
Panasonic ETQP2F1R0S
(0.70µH, 23A, 0.94mΩ, SMD)
N1
Fairchild FDB7030L (10mΩ) or
Int’l Rectifier IRL3803S (9mΩ)
(x2) Fairchild FDB7030L (10mΩ) or
(x2) Int’l Rectifier IRL3803S (9mΩ)
(x2) Fairchild FDB7030L (10mΩ) or
(x2) Int’l Rectifier IRL3803S (9mΩ)
N2
Fairchild FDB7030L (10mΩ) or
Int’l Rectifier IRL3803S (9mΩ)
(x2) Fairchild FDB7030L (10mΩ) or
(x2) Int’l Rectifier IRL3803S (9mΩ)
(x2) Fairchild FDB7030L (10mΩ) or
(x2) Int’l Rectifier IRL3803S (9mΩ)
P1/N3
(optional)
Int’l Rectifier IRF7105 (0.4Ω/0.16Ω)
R1
(x2) Dale WSL-2512-R009-F (10mΩ)
(x2) Dale WSR-20.007 ±1% (7mΩ)
(x2) Dale WSR-20.007 ±1% (7mΩ)
R2 (optional)
Dale WSL-2512-R120-J (120mΩ)
—
—
Int’l Rectifier IRF7307 (0.09Ω/0.05Ω) Int’l Rectifier IRF7307 (0.09Ω/0.05Ω)
Note: Parts used in evaluation board are shown in bold.
PWM Controller Block and Integrator
The heart of the current-mode PWM controller is a
multi-input open-loop comparator that sums three signals (Figure 2): the buffered feedback signal, the current-sense signal, and the slope-compensation ramp.
This direct-summing configuration approaches ideal
cycle-by-cycle control over the output voltage. The output voltage error signal is generated by an error amplifier that compares the amplified feedback voltage to an
internal reference.
Each pulse from the oscillator sets the main PWM latch
that turns on the high-side switch for a period determined by the duty factor (approximately VOUT / VIN).
The current-mode feedback system regulates the peak
inductor current as a function of the output voltage
error signal. Since average inductor current is nearly
the same as peak current (assuming the inductor value
is set relatively high to minimize ripple current), the circuit acts as a switch-mode transconductance amplifier.
It pushes the second output LC filter pole, normally
found in a duty-factor-controlled (voltage-mode) PWM,
to a higher frequency. To preserve inner-loop stability
and eliminate regenerative inductor current staircasing,
a slope-compensation ramp is summed into the main
PWM comparator. Under fault conditions where the
inductor current exceeds the maximum current-limit
threshold, the high-side latch resets, and the high-side
switch turns off.
Internal Reference
The internal 3.5V reference (REF) is accurate to ±1%
from 0°C to +85°C, making REF useful as a system reference. Bypass REF to AGND with a 0.1µF (min)
ceramic capacitor. A larger value (such as 2.2µF) is
recommended for high-current applications. Load regulation is 10mV for loads up to 100µA. Reference
undervoltage lockout is between 2.7V and 3V. Shortcircuit current is less than 4mA.
_______________________________________________________________________________________
9
MAX1638
High-Speed Step-Down Controller with
Synchronous Rectification for CPU Power
Synchronous-Rectifier Driver
Synchronous rectification reduces conduction losses in
the rectifier by shunting the normal Schottky diode or
MOSFET body diode with a low-on-resistance MOSFET
switch. The synchronous rectifier also ensures proper
start-up by precharging the boost-charge pump used
for the high-side switch gate-drive circuit. Thus, if you
must omit the synchronous power MOSFET for cost or
other reasons, replace it with a small-signal MOSFET,
such as a 2N7002.
The DL drive waveform is simply the complement of
the DH high-side drive waveform (with typical controlled dead time of 30ns to prevent cross-conduction
or shoot-through). The DL output’s on-resistance is
0.7Ω (typ) and 2Ω (max).
VIN = 5V
D2
LEVEL
TRANSLATOR
GlitchCatcher
Current-Boost Driver
Drivers for an optional GlitchCatcher current-boost circuit are included in the MAX1638 to improve transient
response in applications where several amperes of
load current are required in a matter of a few tens of
nanoseconds. The GlitchCatcher can be used to offset
the fast drop in output voltage due to the ESR of the
output capacitance. The current-boost circuit improves
transient response by providing a direct path from the
input to the output that circumvents the buck inductor’s
filtering action. When the output drops out of regulation
by more than 2%, the P-channel or N-channel switch
turns on and injects current directly into the output from
VIN or ground, forcing the output back into regulation.
The driver’s response time is typically 75ns, and minimum on-time is typically 100ns. GlitchCatcher provides
the greatest benefit when the output voltage is less
than 2V, and in applications using minimum output
capacitance.
10
DH
N1
CONTROL AND
DRIVE LOGIC
C3
R4
LX
VDD
L1
DL
N2
R3
PGND
BST High-Side Gate-Driver Supply
and MOSFET Drivers
Gate-drive voltage for the high-side N-channel switch
is generated using a flying-capacitor boost circuit
(Figure 3). The capacitor is alternately charged from
the +5V supply and placed in parallel with the highside MOSFET’s gate and source terminals.
Gate-drive resistors (R3 and R4) can often be useful to
reduce jitter in the switching waveforms by slowing
down the fast-slewing LX node and reducing ground
bounce at the controller IC. However, switching loss
may increase. Low-value resistors from around 1Ω to
5Ω are sufficient for many applications.
C1
BST
MAX1638
R3 AND R4
ARE OPTIONAL
Figure 3. Boost Supply for Gate Drivers
Current Sense and Overload
Current Limiting
The current-sense circuit resets the main PWM latch
and turns off the high-side MOSFET switch whenever
the voltage difference between CSH and CSL from current through the sense resistor (R1) exceeds the peak
current limit (100mV typical).
Current-mode control provides cycle-by-cycle currentlimit capability for maximum overload protection.
During normal operation, the peak current limit set by
the current-sense resistor determines the maximum
output current. When the output is shorted, the peak
current may be higher than the set current limit due to
delays in the current-sense comparator. Thus, foldback
current limiting is employed where the set current-limit
point is reduced from 100mV to 38mV as the output
(feedback) voltage falls (Figure 4). When the short-circuit condition is removed, the feedback voltage will
rise and the current-limit voltage will revert to 100mV.
The foldback current-limit circuit is designed to ensure
startup into a resistive load.
______________________________________________________________________________________
High-Speed Step-Down Controller with
Synchronous Rectification for CPU Power
100
90
80
ILIM (%)
70
60
50
Internal Soft-Start
40
Soft-start allows a gradual increase of the internal current limit at start-up to reduce input surge currents. An
internal DAC raises the current-limit threshold from 0V
to 100mV in four steps (25mV, 50mV, 75mV, and
100mV) over the span of 1536 oscillator cycles.
30
20
10
0
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
VFB (%)
Figure 4. Foldback Current Limit
High-Side Current Sensing
The common-mode input range of the current-sense
inputs (CSH and CSL) extends to VCC, so it is possible
to configure the circuit with the current-sense resistor
on the input side rather than on the load side (Figure 5).
This configuration improves efficiency by reducing the
power dissipation in the sense resistor according to the
duty ratio.
In the high-side configuration, if the output is shorted
directly to GND through a low-resistance path, the current-sense comparator may be unable to enforce a current limit. Under such conditions, circuit parasitics such
as MOSFET RDS(ON) typically limit the short-circuit current to a value around the peak-current-limit setting.
Attach a lowpass-filter network between the currentsense pins and resistor to reduce high-frequency common-mode noise. The filter should be designed with a
time constant of around one-fifth of the on-time (130ns
at 600kHz, for example). Resistors in the 20Ω to 100Ω
range are recommended for R7 and R8. Connect the
filter capacitors C11 and C12 from V CC to CSH and
CSL, respectively.
Values of 39Ω and 3.3nF are suitable for many designs.
Place the current-sense filter network close to the IC,
within 0.1 in (2.5mm) of the CSH and CSL pins.
Overvoltage Protection
When the output exceeds the set voltage, the synchronous rectifier (N2) is driven high (and N1 is driven low).
This causes the inductor to quickly dissipate any stored
energy and force the fault current to flow to ground.
__________________Design Procedure
Setting the Output Voltage
Select the output voltage using the D0–D4 pins. The
MAX1638 uses an internal 5-bit DAC as a feedbackresistor voltage divider. The output voltage can be digitally set from 1.3V to 3.5V using the D0–D4 inputs
(Table 2).
D0–D4 are logic inputs and accept both TTL and
CMOS voltage levels. The MAX1638 has both FB and
AGND inputs, allowing a Kelvin connection for remote
voltage and ground sensing to eliminate the effects of
trace resistance on the feedback voltage. (See PC
Board Layout Considerations for further details.) FB
input current is 0.1µA (max).
The MAX1638 DAC codes (D0–D4) were designed for
compatibility with the Intel VRM 8.2 specification for
output voltages between 1.8V (code 00101) and 3.5V
(code 10000). Codes 00110 to 01111 have also been
designed for 50mV increments, allowing set voltages
down to 1.300V. Code 11111 turns off the buck controller,
placing the IC in a shutdown mode (0.2mA typical).
Choosing the
Error-Amplifier Gain
Set the error-amplifier gain to match the voltage-precision requirements of the CPU used. The MAX1638’s
loop-gain control input (LG) allows trade-offs in DC/AC
voltage accuracy versus output filter capacitor requirements. AC load regulation can be set to 0.5%, 1%,
or 2% by connecting LG as shown in Table 3.
DC load regulation is typically 10 times better than AC
load regulation, and is determined by the gain set by
the LG pin.
______________________________________________________________________________________
11
MAX1638
Current is limited by the source impedance and parasitic resistance of the current path, so a fuse is required
in series with the +5V input to protect against lowimpedance faults, such as a shorted high-side MOSFET. Otherwise, the low-side MOSFET will eventually
fail. DL will go low if the input voltage drops below the
undervoltage lockout point.
MAX1638
High-Speed Step-Down Controller with
Synchronous Rectification for CPU Power
R6
10Ω
C9
0.1µF
VIN = 5V
C5
0.1µF
C7
10µF
C8
4.7µF
C1
C11
3.3nF
TO VDD
D2
CMPSH-3
VDD
VCC
CSH
R7
C12 39Ω
3.3nF
R5
100k
PWROK
R1
CSL
R8
39Ω
D0
BST
D1
D2
REF
MAX1638
P1
L1
VOUT = 1.3V
TO 3.5V
LX
LG
R9
(OPTIONAL)
DL
NO
CONNECTION
C4
0.1µF
R11
R10
(OPTIONAL)
D3
D4
N1
DH
N2
D1
(OPTIONAL)
LOCAL
BYPASSING
C2
N3
FREQ
PGND
CC2
CC2
NDRV
RC1
CC1
PDRV
CC1
FB
TO
AGND
REF
C6, 1.0µF
CERAMIC
AGND
Figure 5. Buck Regulator with High-Side Current Sensing
12
______________________________________________________________________________________
LOAD
High-Speed Step-Down Controller with
Synchronous Rectification for CPU Power
D4
D3
D2
0
0
0
D1 D0
0
0
OUTPUT
VOLTAGE
(V)
COMPATIBILITY
Table 3. LG Pin Adjustment Settings
AC LOADLG
REGULATION
CONNECTED
ERROR
TO:
(%)
DC LOADREGULATION
ERROR
(%)
TYPICAL
AE
(VGAIN/
IGAIN)
2.050
VCC
2
0.2
2
REF
1
0.1
4
GND
0.5
0.05
8
0
0
0
0
1
2.000
0
0
0
1
0
1.950
0
0
0
1
1
1.900
0
0
1
0
0
1.850
0
0
1
0
1
1.800
0
0
1
1
0
1.750
0
0
1
1
1
1.700
0
1
0
0
0
1.650
0
1
0
0
1
1.600
0
1
0
1
0
1.550
0
1
0
1
1
1.500
0
1
1
0
0
1.450
0
1
1
0
1
1.400
0
1
1
1
0
1.350
0
1
1
1
1
1.300
1
0
0
0
0
3.500
1
0
0
0
1
3.400
1
0
0
1
0
3.300
1
0
0
1
1
3.200
1
0
1
0
0
3.100
1
0
1
0
1
3.000
1
0
1
1
0
2.900
1
0
1
1
1
2.800
1
1
0
0
0
2.700
1
1
0
0
1
2.600
1
1
0
1
0
2.500
1
1
0
1
1
2.400
1
1
1
0
0
2.300
1
1
1
0
1
2.200
1
1
1
1
0
2.100
1
1
1
1
1
N/A
Intel-compatible
DAC codes
be between 0.1 to 0.5. A higher LIR value allows for
smaller inductors and better transient response, but
results in higher losses and output ripple. A good compromise between size and loss is a 30% ripple current
to load current ratio (LIR = 0.30), which corresponds to
a peak inductor current 1.15 times higher than the DC
load current.
Continuation of
50mV increment
to 1.3V
Intel-compatible
DAC codes
L =
(
VOUT VIN(MAX) − VOUT
where f is the switching frequency, between 300kHz and
1MHz; IOUT is the maximum DC load current; and LIR is
the ratio of AC to DC inductor current (typically 0.3). The
exact inductor value is not critical and can be adjusted to
make trade-offs among size, transient response, cost,
and efficiency. Although lower inductor values minimize
size and cost, they also reduce efficiency due to higher
peak currents. In general, higher inductor values
increase efficiency, but at some point resistive losses
due to extra turns of wire exceed the benefit gained from
lower AC current levels. Load-transient response can be
adversely affected by high inductor values, especially at
low (VIN - VOUT) differentials.
The peak inductor current at full load is 1.15 x IOUT if the
previous equation is used; otherwise, the peak current
can be calculated using the following equation:
IPEAK = IOUT +
Shutdown
Specifying the Inductor
Three key inductor parameters must be specified:
inductance value (L), peak current (IPEAK), and DC
resistance (RDC). The following equation includes a
constant LIR, which is the ratio of inductor peak-topeak AC current to DC load current. Typically LIR can
)
VIN(MAX) x fOSC x IOUT x LIR
(
VOUT VIN(MAX) − VOUT
)
2fOSC x L x VIN(MAX)
The inductor’s DC resistance is a key parameter for efficient performance, and should be less than the currentsense resistor value.
Calculating the Current-Sense
Resistor Value
Calculate the current-sense resistor value according to
the worst-case minimum current-limit threshold voltage
(from the Electrical Characteristics ) and the peak
inductor current required to service the maximum load.
______________________________________________________________________________________
13
MAX1638
Table 2. Output Voltage Adjustment
Settings
MAX1638
High-Speed Step-Down Controller with
Synchronous Rectification for CPU Power
Use IPEAK from the equation in the section Specifying
the Inductor.
RSENSE =
85mV
IPEAK
The high inductance of standard wire-wound resistors
can degrade performance. Low-inductance resistors,
such as surface-mount power metal-strip resistors, are
preferred. The current-sense resistor’s power rating
should be higher than the following:
PSENSE ≥
(115mV)2
RSENSE
In high-current applications, connect several resistors
in parallel as necessary to obtain the desired resistance and power rating.
Selecting the Output Filter Capacitor
Output filter capacitor values are generally determined
by effective series resistance (ESR) and voltagerating requirements, rather than by the actual capacitance value required for loop stability. Due to the high
switching currents and demanding regulation requirements in a typical MAX1638 application, use only specialized low-ESR capacitors intended for switchingregulator applications, such as Kemet T510, AVX TPS,
Sprague 595D, Sanyo OS-CON, or Sanyo GX series. Do
not use standard aluminum-electrolytic capacitors,
which can cause high output ripple and instability due
to high ESR. The output voltage ripple is usually dominated by the filter capacitor’s ESR, and can be
approximated as IRIPPLE x RESR. To ensure stability, the
capacitor must meet both minimum capacitance and
maximum ESR values as given in the following equations:
COUT >

VOUT 
VREF 1 +

VIN(MIN) 

VOUT x RSENSE x fOSC
RESR < RSENSE
Compensating the Feedback Loop
The feedback loop needs proper compensation to prevent excessive output ripple and poor efficiency
caused by instability. Compensation cancels unwanted
poles and zeros in the DC-DC converter’s transfer function that are due to the power-switching and filter elements with corresponding zeros and poles in the
feedback network. These compensation zeros and
poles are set by the compensation components CC1,
14
CC2, and RC1. The objective of compensation is to
ensure stability by ensuring that the DC-DC converter’s
phase shift is less than 180° by a safe margin, at the
frequency where the loop gain falls below unity.
Canceling the Sampling Pole
and Output Filter ESR Zero
Compensate the fast-voltage feedback loop by connecting a resistor and a capacitor in series from the
CC1 pin to AGND. The pole from CC1 can be set to
cancel the zero from the filter-capacitor ESR. Thus the
capacitor at CC1 should be as follows:
CC1 =
COUT x RESR
10kΩ
Resistor RC1 sets a zero that can be used to compensate for the sampling pole generated by the switching
frequency. Set RC1 to the following:
RC1 =

VOUT 
1 + V 

IN 
2fOSC x CC1
The CC1 pin’s output resistance is 10kΩ.
Setting the Dominant Pole
and Canceling the Load and Output Filter Pole
Compensate the slow-voltage feedback loop by adding
a ceramic capacitor from the CC2 pin to AGND. This is
an integrator loop used to cancel out the DC loadregulation error. Selection of capacitor CC2 sets the
dominant pole and a compensation zero. The zero is
typically used to cancel the unwanted pole generated
by the load and output filter capacitor at the maximum
load current. Select CC2 to place the zero close to or
slightly lower than the frequency of the unwanted pole,
as follows:
CC2 =
1mmho x COUT
4
x
VOUT
IOUT(MAX)
The transconductance of the integrator amplifier at CC2
is 1mmho. The voltage swing at CC2 is internally
clamped around 2.4V to 3V minimum and 4V to VCC
maximum to improve transient response times. CC2
can source and sink up to 100µA.
Choosing the MOSFET Switches
The two high-current N-channel MOSFETs must be
logic-level types with guaranteed on-resistance specifications at VGS = 4.5V. Lower gate-threshold specs are
better (i.e., 2V max rather than 3V max). Gate charge
______________________________________________________________________________________
High-Speed Step-Down Controller with
Synchronous Rectification for CPU Power
2
PD (high side) = ILOAD
2
PD (low side) = ILOAD
x RDS(ON) x
VOUT
VIN


V
x RDS(ON) x 1 − OUT 
VIN 

Gate-charge losses are dissipated in the IC, and do not
heat the MOSFETs. Ensure that both MOSFETs are at a
safe junction temperature by calculating the temperature
rise according to package thermal-resistance specifications. The high-side MOSFET’s worst-case dissipation
occurs at the maximum output voltage and minimum
input voltage. For the low-side MOSFET, the worst case is
at the maximum input voltage when the output is shortcircuited (consider the duty factor to be 100%).
Calculating IC Power Dissipation
Power dissipation in the IC is dominated by average
gate-charge current into both MOSFETs. Average current is approximately:
IDD = (QG1 + QG2) x fOSC
where I DD is the drive current, Q G is the total gate
charge for each MOSFET, and fOSC is the switching
frequency.
Power dissipation of the IC is:
PD = ICC x VCC + IDD x VDD
where ICC is the quiescent supply current of the IC.
Junction temperature for the IC is primarily a function of
the PC board layout, since most of the heat is removed
through the traces connected to the pins and the
ground and power planes. A 24-pin SSOP on a typical
four-layer board with ground and power planes show
equivalent thermal impedance of about 60°C/W.
Junction temperature of the die is approximately:
TJ = PD x θJA + TA
where TA is the ambient temperature and θJA is the
equivalent junction-to-ambient thermal impedance.
Selecting the Rectifier Diode
The rectifier diode D1 is a clamp that catches the negative inductor swing during the 30ns typical dead time
between turning off the high-side MOSFET and turning on
the low-side MOSFET synchronous rectifier. D1 must be a
Schottky diode, to prevent the MOSFET body diode from
conducting. It is acceptable to omit D1 and let the body
diode clamp the negative inductor swing, but efficiency
will drop about 1%. Use a 1N5819 diode for loads up to
3A, or a 1N5822 for loads up to 10A.
Adding the BST Supply Diode
and Capacitor
A signal diode, such as a 1N4148, works well for D2 in
most applications, although a low-leakage Schottky diode
provides slightly improved efficiency. Do not use large
power diodes, such as the 1N4001 or 1N5817. Exercise
caution in the selection of Schottky diodes, since some
types exhibit high reverse leakage at high operating temperatures. Bypass BST to LX using a 0.1µF capacitor.
Selecting the Input Capacitors
Place a 0.1µF ceramic capacitor and 10µF capacitor
between VCC and AGND, as well as between VDD and
PGND, within 0.2 in. (5mm) of the VCC and VDD pins.
Select low-ESR input filter capacitors with a ripplecurrent rating exceeding the RMS input ripple current,
connecting several capacitors in parallel if necessary.
RMS input ripple current is determined by the input
voltage and load current, with the worst-possible case
occurring at VIN = 2 x VOUT:
IRMS = ILOAD (MAX)
VOUT (VIN − VOUT )
VIN
IRMS = IOUT / 2 when VIN = 2VOUT
Choosing the GlitchCatcher MOSFETs
P-channel and N-channel switches and a series resistor
are required for the current-boost circuit (Figure 6).
Current through the MOSFETs and current-limiting
resistors must be sufficient to supply the load current,
with enough extra for prompt output regulation without
excessive overshoot. Design for boost-current values
1.5 times the maximum load current, and choose
MOSFETs and current-limiting resistors such that:
RDSON,P(MAX) + RLIMIT ≈
VIN − VOUT
1.5 IOUT(MAX)
and
RDSON,N(MAX)
+ RLIMIT ≈
VOUT
1.5 IOUT(MAX)
Gate resistors may be required to slow the transition
edges.
______________________________________________________________________________________
15
MAX1638
should be less than 200nC to minimize switching losses
and reduce power dissipation.
I2R losses are the greatest heat contributor to MOSFET
power dissipation and are distributed between the
high- and low-side MOSFETs according to duty factor,
as follows:
MAX1638
High-Speed Step-Down Controller with
Synchronous Rectification for CPU Power
__________Applications Information
INPUT 5V
Efficiency Considerations
Refer to the MAX796–MAX799 data sheet for information on calculating losses and improving efficiency.
C8
(OPTIONAL)
P1
PC Board Layout Considerations
Good PC board layout and routing are required in highcurrent, high-frequency switching power supplies to
achieve good regulation, high efficiency, and stability.
The PC board layout artist must be provided with
explicit instructions concerning the placement of
power-switching components and high-current routing.
It is strongly recommended that the evaluation kit PC
board layouts be followed as closely as possible.
Contact Maxim’s Applications Department concerning
the availability of PC board examples for higher-current
circuits.
In most applications, the circuit is on a multilayer
board, and full use of the four or more copper layers is
recommended. Use the top layer for high-current
power and ground connections. Leave the extra copper on the board as a pseudo-ground plane. Use the
bottom layer for quiet connections (REF, FB, AGND),
and the inner layers for an uninterrupted ground plane.
A ground plane and pseudo-ground plane are essential
for reducing ground bounce and switching noise.
Place the high-power components (C1, R1, N1, D1, N2,
L1, and C2 in Figure 1) as close together as possible.
Minimize ground-trace lengths in high-current paths.
The surface-mount power components should be
butted up to one another with their ground terminals
almost touching. Connect their ground terminals using
a wide, filled zone of top-layer copper (the pseudoground plane), rather than through the internal ground
plane. At the output terminal, use vias to connect the
top-layer pseudo-ground plane to the normal innerlayer ground plane at the output filter capacitor ground
terminals. This minimizes interference from IR drops
and ground noise, and ensures that the IC’s AGND is
sensing at the supply’s output terminals.
Minimize high-current path trace lengths. Use very
short and wide traces. From C1 to N1: 0.4 in. (10mm)
max length; D1 anode to N2: 0.2 in. (5mm) max length;
LX node (N1 source, N2 drain, D1 cathode, inductor
L1): 0.6 in. (15mm) max length.
R2
(OPTIONAL)
OUTPUT
1.3V TO 3.5V
C2
(OPTIONAL)
NDRV
LOAD
N3
MAX1638
PDRV
Figure 6. GlitchCatcher Circuit
__________________Pin Configuration
TOP VIEW
BST 1
24 DH
PWROK 2
23 LX
CSL 3
22 PGND
CSH 4
21 DL
D2 5
MAX1638
20 VDD
D1 6
19 PDRV
D0 7
18 NDRV
LG 8
17 D3
VCC 9
16 D4
REF 10
15 FREQ
AGND 11
14 CC2
FB 12
13 CC1
SSOP/QSOP*
*Future package
___________________Chip Information
TRANSISTOR COUNT: 3135
SUBSTRATE CONNECTED TO AGND
16
______________________________________________________________________________________