STMicroelectronics A6986F 38 v 1.5 a synchronous step-down switching regulator Datasheet

A6986F
38 V 1.5 A synchronous step-down switching regulator with 30 µA
quiescent current
Datasheet - production data
Description
HTSSOP16 (RTH = 40 °C/W)
Features
 AECQ100 qualification
 1.5 A DC output current
 4 V to 38 V operating input voltage
 Low consumption mode or low noise mode
 30 µA IQ at light-load (LCM VOUT = 3.3 V)
 8 µA IQ-SHTDWN
 Adjustable fSW (250 kHz - 2 MHz)
 Fixed output voltage (3.3 V and 5 V) or
adjustable from 0.85 V to VIN
 Embedded output voltage supervisor
 Synchronization
 Adjustable soft-start time
The A6986F automotive grade device is a stepdown monolithic switching regulator able to
deliver up to 1.5 A DC. The output voltage
adjustability ranges from 0.85 V to VIN. The 100%
duty cycle capability and the wide input voltage
range meet the cold crank and load dump
specifications for automotive systems. The “Low
Consumption Mode” (LCM) is designed for
applications active during car parking, so it
maximizes the efficiency at light-load with
controlled output voltage ripple. The “Low Noise
Mode” (LNM) makes the switching frequency
constant and minimizes the output voltage ripple
overload current range, meeting the low noise
application specification like car audio. The output
voltage supervisor manages the reset phase for
any digital load (µC, FPGA.). The RST open
collector output can also implement output
voltage sequencing during the power-up phase.
The synchronous rectification, designed for high
efficiency at medium - heavy load, and the high
switching frequency capability make the size of
the application compact. Pulse by pulse current
sensing on both power elements implements an
effective constant current protection.
 Internal current limiting
 Overvoltage protection
 Output voltage sequencing
 Peak current mode architecture
 RDSON HS = 180 m, RDSON LS = 150 m
 Thermal shutdown
Applications
 Designed for automotive systems
 Battery powered applications
 Car body applications (LCM)
 Car audio and low noise applications (LNM)
April 2015
This is information on a product in full production.
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Contents
A6986F
Contents
1
Application schematic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2
Pin settings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2.1
Pin connection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2.2
Pin description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2.3
Maximum ratings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.4
Thermal data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
2.5
ESD protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3
Electrical characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
4
Datasheet parameters over the temperature range . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
5
Functional description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
5.1
Power supply and voltage reference . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Switchover feature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
5.2
Voltages monitor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
5.3
Soft-start and inhibit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
5.3.1
Ratiometric startup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
5.3.2
Output voltage sequencing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
5.4
Error amplifier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
5.5
Light-load operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
5.6
5.7
5.5.1
Low noise mode (LNM) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
5.5.2
Low consumption mode (LCM) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Switchover feature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
5.6.1
LCM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
5.6.2
LNM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Overcurrent protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
OCP and switchover feature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
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5.8
Overvoltage protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
5.9
Thermal shutdown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
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7
Contents
Closing the loop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
6.1
GCO(s) control to output transfer function . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
6.2
Error amplifier compensation network . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
6.3
Voltage divider . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
6.4
Total loop gain . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
6.5
Compensation network design . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
Application notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
7.1
Output voltage adjustment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
7.2
Switching frequency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
7.3
MLF pin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
7.4
Voltage supervisor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
7.5
Synchronization (LNM) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
7.6
Design of the power components . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
7.6.1
Input capacitor selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
7.6.2
Inductor selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
7.6.3
Output capacitor selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
8
Application board . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
9
Efficiency curves . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60
10
EMC testing results . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
11
Package information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
HTSSOP16 package information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
12
Order codes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
13
Revision history . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
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Application schematic
1
A6986F
Application schematic
Figure 1. Application schematic
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4/72
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(/%
A6986F
Pin settings
2
Pin settings
2.1
Pin connection
Figure 2. Pin connection (top view)
2.2
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Pin description
Table 1. Pin description
No.
Pin
Description
1
RST
The RST open collector output is driven low when the output voltage is out of regulation. The RST
is released after an adjustable time DELAY once the output voltage is over the active delay
threshold.
2
VCC
Connect a ceramic capacitor (≥ 470 nF) to filter internal voltage reference. This pin supplies the
embedded analog circuitry.
3
SS/INH
An open collector stage can disable the device clamping this pin to GND (INH mode). An internal
current generator (2 A typ.) charges the external capacitor to implement the soft-start.
4
SYNCH/
ISKP
The pin features Master / Slave synchronization in LNM (see Section 5.5.1 on page 25) and skip
current level selection in LCM (see Section 5.5.2 on page 25).
5
FSW
A pull up resistor (E24 series only) to VCC or pull down to GND selects the switching frequency.
Pinstrapping is active only before the soft-start phase to minimize the IC consumption.
6
MLF
A pull up resistor (E24 series only) to VCC or pull down to GND selects the low noise mode/low
consumption mode and the active RST threshold. Pinstrapping is active only before the soft-start
phase to minimize the IC consumption.
7
COMP
Output of the error amplifier. The designed compensation network is connected at this pin.
8
DELAY
An external capacitor connected at this pin sets the time DELAY to assert the rising edge of the
RST o.c. after the output voltage is over the reset threshold. If this pin is left floating, RST is like
a Power Good.
9
VOUT
Output voltage sensing
10
SGND
Signal GND
11
PGND
Power GND
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Pin settings
A6986F
Table 1. Pin description (continued)
No.
Pin
12
PGND
13
LX
Switching node
14
LX
Switching node
15
VIN
DC input voltage
16
VBIAS
Typically connected to the regulated output voltage. An external voltage reference can be used to
supply part of the analog circuitry to increase the efficiency at light-load. Connect to GND if not
used.
-
E. p.
Exposed pad must be connected to SGND, PGND
2.3
Description
Power GND
Maximum ratings
Stressing the device above the rating listed in Table 2: Absolute maximum ratings may
cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only and operation of the
device at these or any other conditions above those indicated in the operating sections of
this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions may affect
device reliability.
Table 2. Absolute maximum ratings
Symbol
Description
Min.
Max.
Unit
VIN
-0.3
40
V
DELAY
-0.3
VCC + 0.3
V
PGND
SGND - 0.3
SGND + 0.3
V
SGND
V
VCC
-0.3
(VIN + 0.3) or (max. 4)
V
SS / INH
-0.3
VIN + 0.3
V
-0.3
VCC + 0.3
V
-0.3
VCC + 0.3
V
VOUT
-0.3
10
V
FSW
-0.3
VCC + 0.3
V
SYNCH
-0.3
VIN + 0.3
V
VBIAS
-0.3
(VIN + 0.3) or (max. 6)
V
RST
-0.3
VIN + 0.3
V
LX
-0.3
VIN + 0.3
V
-40
150
°C
MLF
COMP
See Table 1
TJ
Operating temperature range
TSTG
Storage temperature range
-65 to 150
°C
TLEAD
Lead temperature (soldering 10 sec.)
260
°C
IHS, ILS
High-side / low-side switch current
2
A
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A6986F
2.4
Pin settings
Thermal data
Table 3. Thermal data
Symbol
Rth JA
2.5
Parameter
Value
Unit
40
C/W
Value
Unit
HBM
2
KV
MM
200
V
CDM
500
V
Thermal resistance junction ambient (device soldered on the
STMicroelectronics® demonstration board)
ESD protection
Table 4. ESD protection
Symbol
ESD
Test condition
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Electrical characteristics
3
A6986F
Electrical characteristics
TJ = -40 to 135 °C, VIN = 12 V unless otherwise specified.
Table 5. Electrical characteristics
Symbol
Parameter
VIN
Operating input voltage range
VINH
VINL
IPK
IVY
ISKIPH
ISKIPL
IVY_SNK
Test condition
Note Min. Typ. Max. Unit
4
38
VCC UVLO rising threshold
2.7
3.5
VCC UVLO falling threshold
2.4
3.5
Peak current limit
Duty cycle < 20%
2.3
Duty cycle = 100%
closed loop operation
1.8
Valley current limit
A
2.4
Programmable skip current
limit
LCM, VSYNCH = GND
(1)
LCM, VSYNCH = VCC
(2)
Reverse current limit
LNM or VOUT overvoltage
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.2
0.5
1
2
RDSON HS High-side RDSON
ISW = 1 A
0.18 0.360
RDSON LS Low-side RDSON
ISW = 1 A
0.15 0.300
fSW
Selected switching frequency FSW pinstrapping before SS
IFSW
FSW biasing current
Low noise mode /
LCM/LNM Low consumption mode
selection
IMLF
D
TON MIN
MLF biasing current
V
See Table 6: fSW
selection
SS ended
0
500
nA
See Table 7 on page 11,
Table 8 on page 12,
Table 9 on page 12
MLF pinstrapping before SS
SS ended
0
(2)
Duty cycle

0
Minimum On time
500
nA
100
%
80
ns
VCC regulator
VCC
SWO
LDO output voltage
VBIAS threshold
(3 V< VBIAS < 5.5 V)
VBIAS = GND (no switchover)
2.9
3.3
3.6
VBIAS = 5 V (switchover)
2.9
3.3
3.6
Switch internal supply from VIN to
VBIAS
2.85
3.2
Switch internal supply from VBIAS to
VIN
2.78
3.15
V
Power consumption
ISHTDWN
8/72
Shutdown current from VIN
VSS/INH = GND
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8
15
A
A6986F
Electrical characteristics
Table 5. Electrical characteristics (continued)
Symbol
Parameter
Test condition
LCM - SWO
VREF < VFB < VOVP (SLEEP)
VBIAS = 3.3 V
IQ OPVIN
IQ
OPVBIAS
Quiescent current from VIN
Quiescent current from VBIAS
LCM - NO SWO
VREF < VFB < VOVP (SLEEP)
VBIAS = GND
Note Min. Typ. Max. Unit
(3)
4
10
15
A
(3)
35
70
120
LNM - SWO
VFB = GND (NO SLEEP)
VBIAS = 3.3 V
0.5
1.5
5
LNM - NO SWO
VFB = GND (NO SLEEP)
VBIAS = GND
2
2.8
6
25
50
115
A
LNM - SWO
VFB = GND (NO SLEEP)
VBIAS = 3.3 V
0.5
1.2
5
mA
SS rising
200
460
700
100
140
LCM - SWO
VREF < VFB < VOVP (SLEEP)
VBIAS = 3.3 V
mA
(3)
Soft-start
VINH
VSS threshold
VINH HYST VSS hysteresis
ISS CH
CSS charging current
VSS < VINH OR
t < TSS SETUP OR
VEA+ > VFB
t > TSS SETUP AND
VEA+ < VFB
VSS START
SSGAIN
(2)
mV
1
A
(2)
Start of internal error amplifier
ramp
4
0.995
SS/INH to internal error
amplifier gain
1.1
1.150
V
3
Error amplifier
VOUT
Voltage feedback
IVOUT
VOUT biasing current
AV
ICOMP
3.3 V (A69863V3)
3.25
3.3
3.35
5 V (A69865V)
4.925 5.0.
5.075
3.3 V (A69863V3)
5 V (A69865V)
4
6
8.5
7.5
10
13.5
(2)
Error amplifier gain
100
±6
EA output current capability
(4)
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±12
V
A
dB
±25
A
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Electrical characteristics
A6986F
Table 5. Electrical characteristics (continued)
Symbol
Parameter
Test condition
Note Min. Typ. Max. Unit
Inner current loop
gCS
Current sense
transconductance (VCOMP to
inductor current gain)
Ipk = 1 A
(2)
(5)
V PP  g CS Slope compensation
2.5
A/V
0.45
0.75
1
A
Overvoltage protection
VOVP
Overvoltage trip (VOVP/VREF)
1.15
1.2
1.25
VOVP
Overvoltage hysteresis
0.5
2
5
HYST
%
Synchronization (fan out: 6 slave devices typ.)
fSYN MIN
Synchronization frequency
LNM; fSW = VCC
266.5
SYNCH input threshold
LNM, SYNCH rising
0.70
SYNCH pull-down current
LNM, VSYN = 1.2 V
High level output
LNM, 5 mA sinking load
Low level output
LNM, 0.7 mA sourcing load
VTHR
Selected RST threshold
MLF pinstrapping before SS
VTHR
RST hysteresis
VSYN TH
ISYN
VSYN OUT
kHz
1.2
0.7
V
mA
1.40
0.6
V
Reset
HYST
VRST
RST open collector output
see Table 7, Table 8,
Table 9
(2)
2
%
VIN > VINH AND
VFB < VTH
4 mA sinking load
0.4
2 < VIN < VINH
4 mA sinking load
0.8
V
Delay
VTHD
RST open collector released
as soon as VDELAY > VTHD
VFB > VTHR
1.19
ID CH
CDELAY charging current
VFB > VTHR
1
1.23
1.258
4
2
3
V
A
Thermal shutdown
TSHDWN
Thermal shutdown
temperature
(2)
165
THYS
Thermal shutdown hysteresis
(2)
30
°C
1. Parameter tested in static condition during testing phase. Parameter value may change over dynamic application condition.
2. Not tested in production.
3. LCM enables SLEEP mode at light-load.
4. TJ = -40 °C.
5. Measured at fsw = 250 kHz.
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Electrical characteristics
TJ = -40 to 135 °C, VIN = 12 V unless otherwise specified.
Table 6. fSW selection
Symbol
fSW
RVCC (E24 series)
RGND (E24 series)
Tj
fSW min.
fSW typ.
fSW max.
0
NC
225
250
275
1.8 k
NC
3.3 k
NC
5.6 k
NC
380
10 k
NC
435
NC
0
18 k
NC
33 k
NC
56 k
NC
755
NC
1.8 k
870
NC
3.3 k
NC
5.6 k
NC
10 k
NC
18 k
NC
33 k
1575
1750
1925
NC
56 k
1800
2000
2200
Unit
285
330
(1)
450
500
550
575
660
(1)
900
kHz
1000
1100
1150
(1)
1310
1500
1. Not tested in production.
TJ = -40 to 135 °C, VIN = 12 V unless otherwise specified.
Table 7. LNM / LCM selection (A6986F3V3)
Symbol
VRST
RVCC
RGND
(E24 1%)
(E24 1%)
0
NC
8.2 k
NC
18 k
NC
39 k
Operating VRST/VOUT
mode
(tgt. value)
VRST
VRST
VRST
min.
typ.
max.
93%
3.008
3.069
3.130
80%
2.587
2.640
2.693
87%
2.814
2.871
2.928
NC
96%
3.105
3.168
3.231
NC
0
93%
3.008
3.069
3.130
NC
8.2 k
80%
2.587
2.640
2.693
NC
18 k
87%
2.814
2.871
2.928
NC
39 k
96%
3.105
3.168
3.231
LCM
LNM
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Electrical characteristics
A6986F
TJ = -40 to 135 °C, VIN = 12 V unless otherwise specified.
Table 8. LNM / LCM selection (A6986F5V)
Symbol
VRST
RVCC
RGND
(E24 1%)
(E24 1%)
0
NC
8.2 k
NC
18 k
NC
39 k
Operating VRST/VOUT
mode
(tgt. value)
VRST
VRST
VRST
min.
typ.
max.
93%
4.557
4.650
4.743
80%
3.920
4.000
4.080
87%
4.263
4.350
4.437
NC
96%
4.704
4.800
4.896
NC
0
93%
4.557
4.650
4.743
NC
8.2 k
80%
3.920
4.000
4.080
NC
18 k
87%
4.263
4.350
4.437
NC
39 k
96%
4.704
4.800
4.896
LCM
LNM
Unit
V
TJ = -40 to 135 °C, VIN = 12 V unless otherwise specified.
Table 9. LNM / LCM selection (A6986F)
Symbol
VRST
12/72
VRST/VOUT
VRST
VRST
VRST
(tgt value)
min.
typ.
max.
93%
0.779
0.791
0.802
80%
0.670
0.680
0.690
87%
0.728
0.740
0.751
NC
96%
0.804
0.816
0.828
NC
0
93%
0.779
0.791
0.802
NC
8.2 k± 1%
80%
0.670
0.680
0.690
NC
18 k ± 1%
87%
0.728
0.740
0.751
NC
39 k ± 1%
96%
0.804
0.816
0.828
RVCC
RGND
(E24 1%)
(E24 1%)
0
NC
8.2 k ± 1%
NC
18 k ± 1%
NC
39 k ± 1%
Operating
mode
LCM
LNM
DocID027739 Rev 1
Unit
V
A6986F
4
Datasheet parameters over the temperature range
Datasheet parameters over the temperature range
The 100% of the population in the production flow is tested at three different ambient
temperatures (-40 °C, +25 °C, +135 °C) to guarantee the datasheet parameters inside the
junction temperature range (-40 °C, +135 °C).
The device operation is guaranteed when the junction temperature is inside the (-40 °C,
+150 °C) temperature range. The designer can estimate the silicon temperature increase
respect to the ambient temperature evaluating the internal power losses generated during
the device operation.
However the embedded thermal protection disables the switching activity to protect the
device in case the junction temperature reaches the TSHTDWN (+165 °C typ.) temperature.
All the datasheet parameters can be guaranteed to a maximum junction temperature of
+135 °C to avoid triggering the thermal shutdown protection during the testing phase
because of self-heating.
DocID027739 Rev 1
13/72
72
Functional description
5
A6986F
Functional description
The A6986F device is based on a “peak current mode”, constant frequency control. As
a consequence, the intersection between the error amplifier output and the sensed inductor
current generates the PWM control signal to drive the power switch.
The device features LNM (low noise mode) that is forced PWM control, or LCM (low
consumption mode) to increase the efficiency at light-load.
The main internal blocks shown in the block diagram in Figure 3 are:
14/72

Embedded power elements. Thanks to the P-channel MOSFET as high-side switch the
device features low dropout operation

A fully integrated sawtooth oscillator with adjustable frequency

A transconductance error amplifier

An internal feedback divider GDIV INT

The high-side current sense amplifier to sense the inductor current

A “Pulse Width Modulator” (PWM) comparator and the driving circuitry of the
embedded power elements

The soft-start blocks to ramp the error amplifier reference voltage and so decreases the
inrush current at power-up. The SS/INH pin inhibits the device when driven low.

The switchover capability of the internal regulator to supply a portion of the quiescent
current when the VBIAS pin is connected to an external output voltage

The synchronization circuitry to manage master / slave operation and the
synchronization to an external clock

The current limitation circuit to implement the constant current protection, sensing
pulse by pulse high-side / low-side switch current. In case of heavy short-circuit the
current protection is fold back to decrease the stress of the external components

A circuit to implement the thermal protection function

The OVP circuitry to discharge the output capacitor in case of overvoltage event

MLF pin strapping sets the LNM/LCM mode and the thresholds of the RST comparator

FSW pinstrapping sets the switching frequency

The RST open collector output
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
Functional description
Figure 3. Internal block diagram
COMP
SYNC FSW
VIN
SS/INH
SS/INH
VOUT
0
TSS
PEAK
CL
E/A
GDIV INT
OVP
POWER
PMOS
SENSE
PMOS
OSCILLATOR
VREF
LOOP
LOOP
CONTROL
CONTROL
SLOPE
+
-
GND
LX
DRIVER
DRIVER
+
DELAY
L.N. / L.C.
RST TH.
SENSE Vcc
NMOS
ZERO
CROSSING
RST
POWER
NMOS
GND
VALLEY
CL
DELAY
5.1
MLF
GND
Power supply and voltage reference
The internal regulator block consists of a start-up circuit, the voltage pre-regulator that
provides current to all the blocks and the bandgap voltage reference. The starter supplies
the startup current when the input voltage goes high and the device is enabled (SS/INH pin
over the inhibits threshold).
The pre-regulator block supplies the bandgap cell and the rest of the circuitry with
a regulated voltage that has a very low supply voltage noise sensitivity.
Switchover feature
The switchover scheme of the pre-regulator block features to derive the main contribution of
the supply current for the internal circuitry from an external voltage (3 V < VBIAS < 5.5 V is
typically connected to the regulated output voltage). This helps to decrease the equivalent
quiescent current seen at VIN. (Please refer to Section 5.6: Switchover feature on page 31).
5.2
Voltages monitor
An internal block continuously senses the VCC, VBIAS and VBG. If the monitored voltages are
good, the regulator starts operating. There is also a hysteresis on the VCC (UVLO).
DocID027739 Rev 1
15/72
72
Functional description
A6986F
Figure 4. Internal circuit
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5.3
Soft-start and inhibit
The soft-start and inhibit features are multiplexed on the same pin. An internal current
source charges the external soft-start capacitor to implement a voltage ramp on the SS/INH
pin. The device is inhibited as long as the SS/INH pin voltage is lower than the VINH
threshold and the soft-start takes place when SS/INH pin crosses VSS START. (see Figure 5:
Soft-start phase).
The internal current generator sources 1 A typ. current when the voltage of the VCC pin
crosses the UVLO threshold. The current increases to 4 A typ. as soon as the SS/INH
voltage is higher than the VINH threshold. This feature helps to decrease the current
consumption in inhibit mode. An external open collector can be used to set the inhibit
operation clamping the SS/INH voltage below VINH threshold.
The startup feature minimizes the inrush current and decreases the stress of the power
components during the power-up phase. The ramp implemented on the reference of the
error amplifier has a gain three times higher (SSGAIN) than the external ramp present at
SS/INH pin.
16/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
Functional description
Figure 5. Soft-start phase
VREF
VSSEND
EAreference
VSS START
SS/INHpin
tSS
VSSINH
Internalsoftstartsignal
VCC
VCCH
VCC pin
t
The CSS is dimensioned accordingly with Equation 1:
Equation 1
I SSCH  T SS
4A  T SS
C SS = SS GAIN  -------------------------------- = 3  --------------------------V FB
0.85V
where TSS is the soft-start time, ISS CH the charging current and VFB the reference of the
error amplifier.
The soft-start block supports the precharged output capacitor.
DocID027739 Rev 1
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72
Functional description
A6986F
Figure 6. Soft-start phase with precharged COUT
During normal operation a new soft-start cycle takes place in case of:

Thermal shutdown event

UVLO event

The device is driven in INH mode
The soft-start capacitor is discharged with a 0.6 mA typ. current capability for 1 msec time
max. For complete and proper capacitor discharge in case of fault condition, a maximum
CSS = 67 nF value is suggested.
The application example in Figure 7 shows how to enable the A6986F and perform the softstart phase driven by an external voltage step, for example the signal from the ignition
switch in automotive applications.
Figure 7. Enable the device with external voltage step
ISS CH
Ignition switch
RUP
1PA typ in INHIBIT
4PA typ in SS
SS/INH
UVLO
VSTEP
18/72
RDWN
DocID027739 Rev 1
CSS
Thermal shutdown
ISS DISCH = 600PA typ
A6986F
Functional description
The maximum capacitor value has to be limited to guarantee the device can discharge it in
case of thermal shutdown and UVLO events (see Figure 9), so restart the switching activity
ramping the error amplifier reference voltage.
Equation 2
– 1 msec
C SS  ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------V SS_FINAL – 0.9 V
R SS_EQ  ln  1 – ----------------------------------------------

600 A – R SS_EQ
where:
Equation 3
R UP  R DWN
R SS_EQ = --------------------------------R UP + R DWN
R DWN
V SS_FINAL =  V STEP – V DIODE   ---------------------------------R UP + R DWN
The optional diode prevents to disable the device if the external source drops to ground.
RUP value is selected in order to make the capacitor charge at first approximation
independent from the internal current generator (4 A typ. current capability, see Table 5 on
page 8), so:
Equation 4
V STEP – V DIODE – V SS END
----------------------------------------------------------------------- » I SS CHARGE  4 A
R UP
where:
Equation 5
V FB
V SS END = V SS START + --------------------SS GAIN
represents the SS/INH voltage correspondent to the end of the ramp on the error amplifier
(see Figure 5); refer to Table 5 for VSS START, VFB and SSGAIN parameters.
As a consequence the voltage across the soft-start capacitor can be written as:
Equation 6
1
v SS  t  = V SS_FINAL  ----------------------------------------t
1–e
– --------------------------------C SS  R SS_EQ
RSS_DOWN is selected to guarantee the device stays in inhibit mode when the internal
generator sources 1 A typ. out of the SS/INH pin and VSTEP is not present:
Equation 7
R DWN  I SS INHIBIT  R DWN  1 A « V INH  200 mV
so:
Equation 8
R DWN  100 k
DocID027739 Rev 1
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72
Functional description
A6986F
RUP and RDWN are selected to guarantee:
Equation 9
V SS_FINAL  2 V  V SS_END
The time to ramp the internal voltage reference can be calculated from Equation 10:
Equation 10
V SS_FINAL – V SS START
T SS = C SS  R SS_EQ  ln  -----------------------------------------------------------
 V SS_FINAL – V SS END 
that is the equivalent soft-start time to ramp the output voltage.
Figure 8 shows the soft-start phase with the following component selection: RUP = 180 k,
RDWN = 33 k, CSS = 200 nF, the 1N4148 is a small signal diode and VSTEP = 13 V.
Figure 8. External soft-start network VSTEP driven
The circuit in Figure 7 introduces a time delay between VSTEP and the switching activity that
can be calculated as:
Equation 11
V SS_FINAL
T SS DELAY = C SS  R SS_EQ  ln  -----------------------------------------------------------
 V SS_FINAL – V SS START
Figure 9 shows how the device discharges the soft-start capacitor after an UVLO or thermal
shutdown event in order to restart the switching activity ramping the error amplifier reference
voltage.
20/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
Functional description
Figure 9. External soft-start after UVLO or thermal shutdown
DocID027739 Rev 1
21/72
72
Functional description
5.3.1
A6986F
Ratiometric startup
The ratiometric startup is implemented sharing the same soft-start capacitor for a set of the
A6986F devices.
Figure 10. Ratiometric startup
9
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As a consequence all the internal current generators charge in parallel the external
capacitor. The capacitor value is dimensioned accordingly with Equation 12:
Equation 12
I SSCH  T SS
4A  T SS
C SS = n A6986  SS GAIN  -------------------------------- = n A6986  3  --------------------------0.85V
V FB
where nA6986 represents the number of devices connected in parallel.
For better tracking of the different output voltages the synchronization of the set of
regulators is suggested.
22/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
Functional description
Figure 11. Ratiometric startup operation
DocID027739 Rev 1
23/72
72
Functional description
5.3.2
A6986F
Output voltage sequencing
The A6986F device implements sequencing connecting the RST pin of the master device to
the SS/INH of the slave. The slave is inhibited as long as the master output voltage is
outside regulation so implementing the sequencing (see Figure 12).
Figure 12. Output voltage sequencing
9
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High flexibility is achieved thanks to the programmable RST thresholds (Table 7 on page 11
and Table 8 on page 12) and programmable delay time. To minimize the component count
the DELAY pin capacitor can be also omitted so the pin works as a normal Power Good.
5.4
Error amplifier
The voltage error amplifier is the core of the loop regulation. It is a transconductance
operational amplifier whose non inverting input is connected to the internal voltage
reference (0.85 V), while the inverting input (FB) is connected to the external divider or
directly to the output voltage.
Table 10. Uncompensated error amplifier characteristics
Description
Values
Transconductance
155 µS
Low frequency gain
100 dB
The error amplifier output is compared with the inductor current sense information to
perform PWM control. The error amplifier also determines the burst operation at light-load
when the LCM is active.
24/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
5.5
Functional description
Light-load operation
The MLF pinstrapping during the power-up phase determines the light-load operation (refer
to Table 7 on page 11 and Table 8 on page 12).
5.5.1
Low noise mode (LNM)
The low noise mode implements a forced PWM operation over the different loading
conditions. The LNM features a constant switching frequency to minimize the noise in the
final application and a constant voltage ripple at fixed VIN. The regulator in steady loading
condition never skip pulses and it operates in continuous conduction mode (CCM) over the
different loading conditions.
Figure 13. Low noise mode operation
Typical applications for the LNM operation are car audio and sensors.
5.5.2
Low consumption mode (LCM)
The low consumption mode maximizes the efficiency at light-load. The regulator prevents
the switching activity whenever the switch peak current request is lower than the ISKIP
threshold. As a consequence the A6986F device works in bursts and it minimizes the
quiescent current request in the meantime between the switching operation.
In LCM operation, the pin SYNCH/ISKIP level dynamically defines the ISKIP current
threshold (see Table 5 on page 8) as shown in Table 11.
DocID027739 Rev 1
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72
Functional description
A6986F
Table 11. ISKIP programmable current threshold
SYNCH / ISKIP (pin 4)
ISKIP current threshold
LOW
ISKIPH = 0.4 A typical
HIGH
ISKIPL = 0.2 A typical
The ISKIP programmability helps to optimize the performance in terms of the output voltage
ripple or efficiency at the light-load, that are parameters which disagree each other by
definition.
A lower skip current level minimizes the voltage ripple but increases the switching activity
(time between bursts gets closer) since less energy per burst is transfered to the output
voltage at the given load. On the other side, a higher skip level reduces the switching activity
and improves the efficiency at the light-load but worsen the voltage ripple.
No difference in terms of the voltage ripple and conversion efficiency for the medium and
high load current level, that is when the device operates in the discontinuous or continuous
mode (DCM vs. CCM).
Figure 14 and Figure 15 report the efficiency measurements to highlight the ISKIPH and
ISKIPL efficiency gap at the light-load also in comparison with the LNM operation (also
called NOSKIP). The same efficiency at the medium / high load is confirmed at different
ISKIP levels.
Figure 14. Light-load efficiency comparison at different ISKIP - linear scale
95
90
85
80
LNM
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V VBIAS ISKIPL
75
LCM ISKIPH =200mA
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V NOVBIAS ISKIPL
LCM ISKIPH =400mA
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V NOVBIAS ISKIPH
70
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V VBIAS ISKIPH
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V NOVBIAS NOSKIP
65
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V VBIAS NOSKIP
60
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
1.2
1.4
Figure 15. Light-load efficiency comparison at different ISKIP - log scale
90
LCM IKIPH =400mA
80
70
LCM IKIPH =200mA
60
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V VBIAS ISKIPL
50
LNM
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V NOVBIAS ISKIPL
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V NOVBIAS ISKIPH
40
30
0.001
26/72
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V VBIAS ISKIPH
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V NOVBIAS NOSKIP
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V VBIAS NOSKIP
0.01
DocID027739 Rev 1
0.1
1.6
A6986F
Functional description
Figure 16 and Figure 17show the LCM operation at the different ISKIP level.
Figure 16 shows the ISKIPH = 400 mA typ. and so 20 mV output voltage ripple.
Figure 17 shows the ISKIPL = 200 mA typ. and so 10 mV output voltage ripple.
Figure 16. LCM operation with ISKIPH = 400 mA typ. at zero load
Figure 17. LCM operation with ISKIPH = 200 mA typ. at zero load
DocID027739 Rev 1
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72
Functional description
A6986F
The LCM operation satisfies the requirements of the unswitched car body applications
(KL30). These applications are directly connected to the battery and are operating when the
engine is disabled. The typical load when the car is parked is represented by a CAN
transceiver and a microcontroller in sleep mode (total load is around 20 - 30 µA). As soon as
the transceiver recognizes a valid word in the bus, it awakes the µC and the rest of the
application.
The typical input current request of the module when the car is parked is 100 µA typ. to
prevent the battery discharge over the parking time. In order to minimize the regulator
quiescent current request from the input voltage, the VBIAS pin can be connected to an
external voltage source in the range 3 V < VBIAS < 5.5 V (see Section 5.1: Power supply and
voltage reference on page 15).
In case the VBIAS pin is connected to the regulated output voltage (VOUT), the total current
drawn from the input voltage can be calculated as Equation 14.
Given the energy stored in the inductor during a burst, the voltage ripple depends on the
capacitor value:
Equation 13
T
V OUT RIPPLE
BURST
Q IL
0  iL  t   dt 
= -------------- = -------------------------------------------C OUT
C OUT
Figure 18. LCM operation over loading condition (part 1)
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DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
Functional description
Figure 19. LCM operation over loading condition (part 2 - DCM)
Figure 20. LCM operation over loading condition (part 3 - DCM)
DocID027739 Rev 1
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Functional description
A6986F
Figure 21. LCM operation over loading condition (part 4 - DCM)
Figure 22. LCM operation over loading condition (part 5 - CCM)
30/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
5.6
Functional description
Switchover feature
The switchover maximizes the efficiency at the light-load that is crucial for LCM applications.
5.6.1
LCM
The LCM operation satisfies the high efficiency requirements of the battery powered
applications. In order to minimize the regulator quiescent current request from the input
voltage, the VBIAS pin can be connected to an external voltage source in the range
3 V < VBIAS < 5.5 V (see Section 5.1: Power supply and voltage reference on page 15).
In case the VBIAS pin is connected to the regulated output voltage (VOUT), the total current
drawn from the input voltage can be calculated as:
Equation 14
V BIAS
1
I QVIN = I QOPVIN + -----------------  ---------------  I QOPVBIAS
V IN
 A6986
where IQ OP VIN, IQ OP VBIAS are defined in Table 5: Electrical characteristics on page 8
and A6986 is the efficiency of the conversion in the working point.
5.6.2
LNM
Equation 14 is also valid when the device works in LNM and it can increase the efficiency at
the medium load since the regulator always operates in the continuous conduction mode.
5.7
Overcurrent protection
The current protection circuitry features a constant current protection, so the device limits
the maximum peak current (see Table 5) in overcurrent condition.
The A6986F device implements a pulse by pulse current sensing on both power elements
(high-side and low-side switches) for effective current protection over the duty cycle range.
The high-side current sensing is called “peak” the low-side sensing “valley”.
The internal noise generated during the switching activity makes the current sensing
circuitry ineffective for a minimum conduction time of the power element. This time is called
“masking time” because the information from the analog circuitry is masked by the logic to
prevent an erroneous detection of the overcurrent event. As a consequence, the peak
current protection is disabled for a masking time after the high-side switch is turned on, the
valley for a masking time after the low-side switch is turned on. In other words, the peak
current protection can be ineffective at extremely low duty cycles, the valley current
protection at extremely high duty cycles.
The A6986F device assures an effective overcurrent protection sensing the current flowing
in both power elements. In case one of the two current sensing circuitry is ineffective
because of the masking time, the device is protected sensing the current on the opposite
switch. Thus, the combination of the “peak” and “valley” current limits assure the
effectiveness of the overcurrent protection even in extreme duty cycle conditions.
The valley current threshold is designed higher than the peak to guarantee a proper
operation. In case the current diverges because of the high-side masking time, the low-side
power element is turned on until the switch current level drops below the valley current
DocID027739 Rev 1
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72
Functional description
A6986F
sense threshold. The low-side operation is able to prevent the high-side turn on, so the
device can skip pulses decreasing the swathing frequency.
Figure 23. Valley current sense operation in overcurrent condition
Figure 23 shows the switching frequency reduction during the valley current sense
operation in case of extremely low duty cycle (VIN 38 V, fSW = 500 kHz short-circuit
condition).
In a worst case scenario (like Figure 23) of the overcurrent protection the switch current is
limited to:
Equation 15
V IN – V OUT
I MAX = I VALLEYTH + ------------------------------  T MASKHS
L
where IVALLEY_TH is the current threshold of the valley sensing circuitry (see Table 5:
Electrical characteristics on page 8) and TMASK_HS is the masking time of the high-side
switch 100 nsec. typ.).
In most of the overcurrent conditions the conduction time of the high-side switch is higher
than the masking time and so the peak current protection limits the switch current.
Equation 16
IMAX = IPEAK_TH
32/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
Functional description
Figure 24. Peak current sense operation in overcurrent condition
The DC current flowing in the load in overcurrent condition is:
Equation 17
I RIPPLE  V OUT 
V IN – V OUT
I DCOC  V OUT  = I MAX – ---------------------------------------- = I MAX –  ------------------------------  T ON
2
2L
OCP and switchover feature
Output capacitor discharging the current flowing to ground during heavy short-circuit events
is only limited by parasitic elements like the output capacitor ESR and short-circuit
impedance.
Due to parasitic inductance of the short-circuit impedance, negative output voltage
oscillations can be generated with huge discharging current levels (see Figure 25).
DocID027739 Rev 1
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Functional description
A6986F
Figure 25. Output voltage oscillations during heavy short-circuit
regulated output voltage
inductor current
short-circuit current
inductor current
short-circuit current
switching
node node
switching
regulated output voltage
Figure 26. Zoomed waveform
inductor current
regulated output voltage
short-circuit current
inductor current
short-circuit current
switching node
switching node
regulated output voltage
The VBIAS pin absolute maximum ratings (see Table 2: Absolute maximum ratings on
page 6) must be satisfied over the different dynamic conditions.
If the VBIAS is connected to GND there are no issues (see Figure 25 and Figure 26).
34/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
Functional description
A small resistor value (few ohms) in series with the VBIAS can help to limit the pin negative
voltage (see Figure 27) during heavy short-circuit events if it is connected to the regulated
output voltage.
Figure 27. VBIAS in heavy short-circuit event
short-circuit current
inductor
current
VBIAS
pin
regulated output voltage
switching node
VBIAS pin voltage
(cyan)
switching node
regulated output voltage
(purple)
5.8
Overvoltage protection
The overvoltage protection monitors the FB pin and enables the low-side MOSFET to
discharge the output capacitor if the output voltage is 20% over the nominal value.
This is a second level protection and should never be triggered in normal operating
conditions if the system is properly dimensioned. In other words, the selection of the
external power components and the dynamic performance determined by the compensation
network should guarantee an output voltage regulation within the overvoltage threshold
even during the worst case scenario in term of load transitions.
The protection is reliable and also able to operate even during normal load transitions for
a system whose dynamic performance is not in line with the load dynamic request. As
a consequence the output voltage regulation would be affected.
Figure 28 shows the overvoltage operation during a negative steep load transient for
a system designed with huge inductor value and small output capacitor. The inductor value
limits the switch current slew rate and the extra charge flowing into the small capacitor value
generates an overvoltage event. This can be considered as an example for a system with
dynamic performance not in line with the load request.
The A6986F device implements a 1 A typ. negative current limitation to limit the maximum
reversed switch current during the overvoltage operation.
DocID027739 Rev 1
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Functional description
A6986F
Figure 28. Overvoltage operation
5.9
Thermal shutdown
The shutdown block disables the switching activity if the junction temperature is higher than
a fixed internal threshold (165 °C typical). The thermal sensing element is close to the
power elements, ensuring fast and accurate temperature detection. A hysteresis of
approximately 30 °C prevents the device from turning ON and OFF continuously. When the
thermal protection runs away a new soft-start cycle will take place.
36/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
6
Closing the loop
Closing the loop
Figure 29. Block diagram of the loop
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6.1
GCO(s) control to output transfer function
The accurate control to output transfer function for a buck peak current mode converter can
be written as:
Equation 18
G CO  s 
s
 1 + ----


1
z
= R LOAD  g CS  --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------  ----------------------  F H  s 
R LOAD  T SW
s


1 + -----------------------------------   m C   1 – D  – 0.5   1 + ----- p
L
where RLOAD represents the load resistance, Ri the equivalent sensing resistor of the
current sense circuitry,p the single pole introduced by the the power stage and z the zero
given by the ESR of the output capacitor.
FH(s) accounts the sampling effect performed by the PWM comparator on the output of the
error amplifier that introduces a double pole at one half of the switching frequency.
DocID027739 Rev 1
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72
Closing the loop
A6986F
Equation 19
1
 z = --------------------------------ESR  C OUT
Equation 20
m c   1 – D  – 0.5
1
 p = --------------------------------------- + ---------------------------------------------L  C OUT  f SW
R LOAD  C OUT
where:
Equation 21
Se

 m C = 1 + -----Sn

S = V  g  f
PP
CS SW
 e

IN – V OUT
S = V
---------------------------- n
L
Sn represents the on time slope of the sensed inductor current, Se the on time slope of the
external ramp (VPP peak-to-peak amplitude) that implements the slope compensation to
avoid sub-harmonic oscillations at duty cycle over 50%.
Se can be calculated from the parameter VPP gCS given in Table 5 on page 8.
The sampling effect contribution FH(s) is:
Equation 22
1
F H  s  = --------------------------------------------2
s
s
1 + -------------------- + --------2n  Qp 
n
where:
Equation 23
1
Q p = -----------------------------------------------------------   m c   1 – D  – 0.5 
38/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
6.2
Closing the loop
Error amplifier compensation network
The typical compensation network required to stabilize the system is shown in Figure 30.
Figure 30. Transconductance embedded error amplifier
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RC and CC introduce a pole and a zero in the open loop gain. CP does not significantly affect
system stability but it is useful to reduce the noise at the output of the error amplifier.
The transfer function of the error amplifier and its compensation network is:
Equation 24
A V0   1 + s  R c  C c 
A 0  s  = --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------2
s  R0   C0 + Cp   Rc  Cc + s   R0  Cc + R0   C0 + Cp  + Rc  Cc  + 1
Where Avo = Gm · Ro
The poles of this transfer function are (if Cc >> C0 + CP):
Equation 25
1
f PLF = ------------------------------------2    R0  Cc
DocID027739 Rev 1
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72
Closing the loop
A6986F
Equation 26
whereas the zero is defined as:
1
f PHF = -------------------------------------------------------2    R0   C0 + Cp 
Equation 27
1
f Z = ------------------------------------2    Rc  Cc
6.3
Voltage divider
The contribution of the internal voltage divider for fixed output voltage devices is:
Equation 28
0.85
----------- = 0.2575
R2
V FB
3.3
G DIV  s  = -------------------- = -------------- =
R1 + R2
V OUT
0.85
----------- = 0.17
5
A6986F3V
A6986F5V
while adjustable output part number is:
Equation 29
R2
G DIV  s  = -------------------R1 + R2
A small signal capacitor in parallel to the upper resistor (see Figure 31) of the voltage divider
implements a leading network (fzero < fpole), sometimes necessary to improve the system
phase margin:
Figure 31. Leading network example
9,1
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A6986F
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40/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
Closing the loop
Laplace transformer of the leading network:
where:
 1 + s + R 1  C R1 
R2
G DIV  s  = --------------------  ------------------------------------------------------------R1 + R2 
R1  R2
1 + s  --------------------  C R1


R1 + R2
Equation 30
1
f Z = ----------------------------------------2    R 1  C R1
1
f p = ------------------------------------------------------R1  R2
2    --------------------  C R1
R1 + R2
fZ  fp
6.4
Total loop gain
In summary, the open loop gain can be expressed as:
Equation 31
G  s  = G DIV  s   G CO  s   A 0  s 
Example 1
VIN = 12 V, VOUT = 3.3 V, ROUT = 2.2 
Selecting fSW = 500kHz, L = 6.8 µH, COUT = 20µF and ESR = 1 m, RC= 75 k,
CC= 220 pF, CP = 2.2 pF (please refer to Table 17 on page 56), the gain and phase bode
diagrams are plotted respectively in Figure 32 and Figure 33.
DocID027739 Rev 1
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72
Closing the loop
A6986F
Figure 32. Module plot
&95&3/"--001.0%6-&
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X
X
X
X
X
'SFRVFODZ<)[>
Equation 32
BW = 60kHz
phase margin = 70
0
Figure 33. Phase plot
EXTERNAL LOOP GAIN PHASE
180
157.5
135
Phase
112.5
90
67.5
45
22.5
0
0.1
1
10
100
3
1u 10
4
1u 10
5
1u 10
6
1u 10
7
1u 10
Frequency [Hz]
The blue solid trace represents the transfer function including the sampling effect term (see
Equation 22 on page 38), the dotted blue trace neglects the contribution.
42/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
6.5
Closing the loop
Compensation network design
The maximum bandwidth of the system can be designed up to fSW/6 up to 150 kHz
maximum to guarantee a valid small signal model.
Equation 33
f SW
BW = --------6
Equation 34
2    BW  C OUT  V OUT
R C = ---------------------------------------------------------------0.85V  g CS  g m TYP
where:
Equation 35
p
f POLE = ----------2
p is defined by Equation 20 on page 38, gCS represents the current sense
transconductance (see Table 5: Electrical characteristics on page 8) and gm TYP the error
amplifier transconductance.
Equation 36
5
C C = -------------------------------------2    R C  BW
Example 2
Considering VIN = 12 V, VOUT = 3.3 V, L = H, COUT = 15F, fSW = 500 kHz, IOUT = 1 A.
The maximum system bandwidth is 80 kHz. Assuming to design the compensation network
to achieve a system bandwidth of 70 kHz:
Equation 37
f POLE = 3.5kHz
Equation 38
V OUT
R LOAD = -------------- = 3.3
I OUT
so accordingly with Equation 34 and Equation 36:
Equation 39
R C = 68k
Equation 40
C C = 165pF  180pF
The gain and phase bode diagrams are plotted respectively in Figure 32 and Figure 33.
DocID027739 Rev 1
43/72
72
Closing the loop
A6986F
Figure 34. Magnitude plot for Example 2
EXTERNAL LOOP MODULE
100
87
74
Module [dB]
61
48
35
22
9
4
17
30
0.1
1
10
3
1u 10
100
4
1u 10
5
1u 10
6
1u 10
7
1u 10
Frequency [Hz]
Figure 35. Phase plot for Example 2
EXTERNAL LOOP GAIN PHASE
180
157.5
135
Phase
112.5
90
67.5
45
22.5
0
0.1
1
10
100
3
1u 10
Frequency [Hz]
44/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
4
1u 10
5
1u 10
6
1u 10
7
1u 10
A6986F
Application notes
7
Application notes
7.1
Output voltage adjustment
The error amplifier reference voltage is 0.85 V typical.
The output voltage is adjusted accordingly with Equation 41 (see Figure 36):
Equation 41
R1
V OUT = 0.85   1 + -------
R2
Cr1 capacitor is sometimes useful to increase the small signal phase margin (please refer to
Section 6.5: Compensation network design).
Figure 36. A6986F application circuit
uC RST
1M
VIN
VIN
RST
VBIAS
10uF
1uF
PGND
LX
PGND
LX
VOUT
6.8uH
PWR gnd
GND
MLF
A6986F
VCC
20uF
SS/INH
FB
Rc
DELAY
68nF
470nF
FSW
COMP
SGND EP
SYNCH
10nF
Cc
GND
PWR gnd
signal GND
7.2
Switching frequency
A resistor connected to the FSW pin features the selection of the switching frequency. The
pinstrapping is performed at power-up, before the soft-start takes place. The FSW pin is
pinstrapped and then driven floating in order to minimize the quiescent current from VIN.
Please refer toTable 6: fSW selection on page 11 to identify the pull-up / pull-down resistor
value. fSW = 250 kHz / fSW = 500 kHz preferred codifications don't require any external
resistor.
7.3
MLF pin
A resistor connected to the MLF pin features the selection of the between low noise mode /
low consumption mode and the different RST thresholds. The pinstrapping is performed at
power-up, before the soft-start takes place. The FSW pin is pinstrapped and then driven
floating in order to minimize the quiescent current from VIN.
Please refer to Table 7 on page 11, Table 8 on page 12, and Table 9 on page 12 to identify
the pull-up / pull-down resistor value. (LNM, RST threshold 93%) / (LCM, RST threshold
93%) preferred codifications don't require any external resistor.
DocID027739 Rev 1
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72
Application notes
7.4
A6986F
Voltage supervisor
The embedded voltage supervisor (composed of the RST and the DELAY pins) monitors the
regulated output voltage and keeps the RST open collector output in low impedance as long
as the VOUT is out of regulation. In order to ensure a proper reset of digital devices with
a valid power supply, the device can delay the RST assertion with a programmable time.
Figure 37. Voltage supervisor operation
The comparator monitoring the FB voltage has four different programmable thresholds
(80%, 87%, 93%, 96% nominal output voltage) for high flexibility (see Section 7.3: MLF pin
on page 45, Table 7 on page 11, Table 8 on page 12, and Table 9 on page 12).
When the RST comparator detects the output voltage is in regulation, a 2 A internal current
source starts to charge an external capacitor to implement a voltage ramp on the DELAY
pin. The RST open collector is then released as soon as VDELAY = 1.234 V (see Figure 37).
The CDELAY is dimensioned accordingly with Equation 42:
Equation 42
I SSCH  T DELAY
2A  T DELAY
C DELAY = ------------------------------------------ = ------------------------------------V DELAY
1.234V
The maximum suggested capacitor value is 270 nF.
46/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
Synchronization (LNM)
Beating frequency noise is an issue when multiple switching regulators populate the same
application board. The A6986F synchronization circuitry features the same switching
frequency for a set of regulators simply connecting their SYNCH pin together, so preventing
beating noise. The master device provides the synchronization signal to the others since the
SYNCH pin is I/O able to deliver or recognize a frequency signal.
For proper synchronization of multiple regulators, all of them have to be configured with the
same switching frequency (see Table 6 on page 11), so the same resistor connected at the
FSW pin.
In order to minimize the RMS current flowing through the input filter, the A6986F device
provides a phase shift of 180° between the master and the SLAVES. If more than two
devices are synchronized, all slaves will have a common 180° phase shift with respect to
the master.
Considering two synchronized A6986F which regulates the same output voltage
(i.e.: operating with the same duty cycle), the input filter RMS current is optimized and is
calculated as:
Equation 43
I RMS
I
OUT
 -----------  2D   1 – 2D 
 2
= 
 I OUT
-   2D – 1    2 – 2D 
 ---------- 2
if D < 0.5
if D > 0.5
The graphical representation of the input RMS current of the input filter in the case of two
devices with 0° phase shift (synchronized to an external signal) or 180° phase shift
(synchronized connecting their SYNCH pins) regulating the same output voltage is provided
in Figure 38. To dimension the proper input capacitor please refer to Section 7.6.1: Input
capacitor selection on page 51.
Figure 38. Input RMS current
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7.5
Application notes
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DocID027739 Rev 1
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72
Application notes
A6986F
Figure 39 shows two regulators not synchronized.
Figure 39. Two regulators not synchronized
Figure 40 shows the same regulators working synchronized. The MASTER regulator (LX2
trace) delivers the synchronization signal (SYNCH1, SYNCH2 pins are connected together)
to the SLAVE device (LX1). The SLAVE regulator works in phase with the synchronization
signal which is out of phase with the MASTER switching operation.
Figure 40. Two regulators synchronized
48/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
Application notes
Multiple A6986F can be synchronized to an external frequency signal fed to the SYNCH pin.
In this case the regulator set is phased to the reference and all the devices will work with 0°
phase shift.
The frequency range of the synchronization signal is 275 kHz - 2 MHz and the minimum
pulse width is 100 nsec (see Figure 41).
Figure 41. Synchronization pulse definition
275kHz < fSYNCHRO < 2MHz
fSYNCHRO
fSYNCHRO
100nsec min.
100nsec min.
Since the slope compensation contribution that is required to prevent subharmonic
oscillations in peak current mode architecture depends on the switching frequency, it is
important to select the same oscillator frequency for all regulators (all of them operate as
SLAVE) as close as possible to the frequency of the reference signal (please refer to
Table 6: fSW selection on page 11). As a consequence all the regulators have the same
resistor value connected to the FSW pin, so the slope compensation is optimized
accordingly with the frequency of the synchronization signal. The slope compensation
contribution is latched at power-up and so fixed during the device operation.
The A6986 normally operates in MASTER mode, driving the SYNCH line at the selected
oscillator frequency as shown in Figure 42 and Figure 39.
In SLAVE mode the A6986 sets the internal oscillator at 250 kHz typ. (see Table 6 on
page 11 - first row) and drives the line accordingly.
Figure 42. A6986 synchronization driving capability
VCC INT
5 mA
fOSC
150nsec typ.
HIGH LEVEL
LOW LEVEL
0.7 mA
In order to safely guarantee that each regulator recognizes itself in SLAVE mode during the
normal operation, the external master must drive the SYNCH pin with a clock signal
DocID027739 Rev 1
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72
Application notes
A6986F
frequency higher than the maximum oscillator spread (refer to Table 6 on page 11) for at
least 10 internal clock cycles.
For example: selecting RFSW = 0 to GND
Table 12. Example of oscillator frequency selection from Table 6
Symbol
RVCC (E24 series)
RGND (E24 series)
fSW min.
fSW typ.
fSW max.
fSW
NC
0
450
500
550
the device enters in slave mode after 10 pulses at frequency higher than 550 kHz and so it
is able to synchronize to a clock signal in the range 275 kHz - 2 MHz (see Figure 41).
Anyway it is suggested to limit the frequency range within ± 20% FSW resistor nominal
frequency (see details in text below). If not spread spectrum is required, all the regulators
synchronize to a frequency higher to the maximum oscillator spread (550 kHz in the
example).
The device keeps operating in slave mode as far as the master is able to drive the SYNCH
pin faster than 275 kHz (maximum oscillator spread for 250 kHz oscillator), otherwise it goes
back into MASTER mode at the nominal oscillator frequency after successfully driving one
pulse at 250 kHz (see Figure 43) in the SYNCH line.
Figure 43. Slave to master mode transition
switching node
SLAVE mode
250kHz typ. stand alone operation at nominal fsw
SYNCH signal
The external master can force a latched SLAVE mode driving the SYNCH pin low at powerup, before the soft-start starts the switching activity. So the oscillator frequency is 250 kHz
typ. fixed until a new UVLO event is triggered regardless FSW resistor value, that otherwise
counts to design the slope compensation. The same considerations above are also valid.
50/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
Application notes
The master driving capability must be able to provide the proper signal levels at the SYNCH
pin (see Table 5 on page 8 - Synchronization section):
 Low level < VSYN THL= 0.7 V sinking 5 mA
 High level > VSYN THH = 1.2 V sourcing 0.7 mA
Figure 44. Master driving capability to synchronize the A6986
VCCM
5 mA
VSYN_TH_H
0.7 mA
VSYN_TH_L
RH
RL
As anticipated above, in SLAVE mode the internal oscillator operates at 250 kHz typ. but the
slope compensation is dimensioned accordingly with FSW resistors so, even if the A6986F
supports synchronization over the 275 kHz - 2 MHz frequency range, it is important to limit
the switching operation around a working point close to the selected frequency (FSW
resistor).
As a consequence, to guarantee the full output current capability and to prevent the
subharmonic oscillations the master must limit the driving frequency range within ± 20% of
the selected frequency.
A wider frequency range may generate subharmonic oscillation for duty > 50% or limit the
peak current capability (see IPK parameter in Table 5) since the internal slope compensation
signal may be saturated.
7.6
Design of the power components
7.6.1
Input capacitor selection
The input capacitor voltage rating must be higher than the maximum input operating voltage
of the application. During the switching activity a pulsed current flows into the input capacitor
and so its RMS current capability must be selected accordingly with the application
conditions. Internal losses of the input filter depends on the ESR value so usually low ESR
capacitors (like multilayer ceramic capacitors) have higher RMS current capability. On the
other hand, given the RMS current value, lower ESR input filter has lower losses and so
contributes to higher conversion efficiency.
The maximum RMS input current flowing through the capacitor can be calculated as:
DocID027739 Rev 1
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72
Application notes
A6986F
Equation 44
D D
I RMS = I OUT   1 – ----  ---
 
Where IOUT is the maximum DC output current, D is the duty cycles,  is the efficiency. This
function has a maximum at D = 0.5 and, considering  = 1, it is equal to Io/2.
In a specific application the range of possible duty cycles has to be considered in order to
find out the maximum RMS input current. The maximum and minimum duty cycles can be
calculated as:
Equation 45
V OUT + V LOWSIDE
D MAX = -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------V INMIN + V LOWSIDE – V HIGHSIDE
Equation 46
V OUT + V LOWSIDE
D MIN = -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------V INMAX + V LOWSIDE – V HIGHSIDE
Where VHIGH_SIDE and VLOW_SIDE are the voltage drops across the embedded switches.
The peak-to-peak voltage across the input filter can be calculated as:
Equation 47
I OUT
D D
V PP = -------------------------   1 – ----  ---- + ESR   I OUT + I L 
C IN  f SW 
 
In case of negligible ESR (MLCC capacitor) the equation of CIN as a function of the target
VPP can be written as follows:
Equation 48
I OUT
D D
C IN = --------------------------   1 – ----  ---V PP  f SW 
 
Considering this function has its maximum in D = 0.5:
Equation 49
I OUT
C INMIN = ---------------------------------------------4  V PPMAX  f SW
Typically CIN is dimensioned to keep the maximum peak-peak voltage across the input filter
in the order of 5% VIN_MAX.
Table 13. Input capacitors
Manufacturer
TDK
Taiyo Yuden
52/72
Series
Size
Cap value (F)
Rated voltage (V)
C3225X7S1H106M
1210
10
50
C3216X5R1H106M
1206
UMK325BJ106MM-T
1210
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
7.6.2
Application notes
Inductor selection
The inductor current ripple flowing into the output capacitor determines the output voltage
ripple (please refer to Section 7.6.3). Usually the inductor value is selected in order to keep
the current ripple lower than 20% - 40% of the output current over the input voltage range.
The inductance value can be calculated by Equation 50:
Equation 50
V IN – V OUT
V OUT
I L = ------------------------------  T ON = --------------  T OFF
L
L
Where TON and TOFF are the on and off time of the internal power switch. The maximum
current ripple, at fixed VOUT, is obtained at maximum TOFF that is at minimum duty cycle
(see Section 7.6.1: Input capacitor selection to calculate minimum duty). So fixing IL = 20%
to 40% of the maximum output current, the minimum inductance value can be calculated:
Equation 51
V OUT 1 – D MIN
L MIN = -------------------  ----------------------F SW
I LMAX
where fSW is the switching frequency 1/(TON + TOFF).
For example for VOUT = 3.3 V, VIN = 12 V, IO = 2 A and FSW = 500 kHz the minimum
inductance value to have IL = 30% of IO is about 8.2 µH.
The peak current through the inductor is given by:
Equation 52
I L
I L PK = I OUT + -------2
So if the inductor value decreases, the peak current (that has to be lower than the current
limit of the device) increases. The higher is the inductor value, the higher is the average
output current that can be delivered, without reaching the current limit.
In Table 14 some inductor part numbers are listed.
Table 14. Inductors
7.6.3
Manufacturer
Series
Inductor value (H)
Saturation current (A)
Coilcraft
XAL50xx
2.2 to 22
6.5 to 2.7
XAL60xx
2.2 to 22
12.5 to 4
Output capacitor selection
The triangular shape current ripple (with zero average value) flowing into the output
capacitor gives the output voltage ripple, that depends on the capacitor value and the
equivalent resistive component (ESR). As a consequence the output capacitor has to be
selected in order to have a voltage ripple compliant with the application requirements.
DocID027739 Rev 1
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72
Application notes
A6986F
The voltage ripple equation can be calculated as:
Equation 53
I LMAX
V OUT = ESR   I LMAX + --------------------------------------8  C OUT  f SW
Usually the resistive component of the ripple can be neglected if the selected output
capacitor is a multi layer ceramic capacitor (MLCC).
The output capacitor is important also for loop stability: it determines the main pole and the
zero due to its ESR. (see Section 6: Closing the loop on page 37 to consider its effect in the
system stability).
For example with VOUT = 3.3 V, VIN = 12 V, IL = 0.6 A, fSW = 500 kHz (resulting by the
inductor value) and COUT = 10 F MLCC:
Equation 54
V OUT
I LMAX
1
1
0 6
15mV
------------------  --------------  ------------------------------ =  ------  -------------------------------------------------- = ---------------- = 0.45%
 33 8  10F  500kHz
V OUT V OUT C OUT  f SW
3.3
The output capacitor value has a key role to sustain the output voltage during a steep load
transient. When the load transient slew rate exceeds the system bandwidth, the output
capacitor provides the current to the load. In case the final application specifies high slew
rate load transient, the system bandwidth must be maximized and the output capacitor has
to sustain the output voltage for time response shorter than the loop response time.
In Table 15 some capacitor series are listed.
Table 15. Output capacitors
Manufacturer
Series
Cap value (F)
Rated voltage (V)
ESR (m)
GRM32
22 to 100
6.3 to 25
<5
GRM31
10 to 47
6.3 to 25
<5
ECJ
10 to 22
6.3
<5
EEFCD
10 to 68
6.3
15 to 55
SANYO
TPA/B/C
100 to 470
4 to 16
40 to 80
TDK
C3225
22 to 100
6.3
<5
MURATA
PANASONIC
54/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
Application board
8
Application board
The reference evaluation board schematic is shown in Figure 45.
Figure 45. Evaluation board schematic
TP1
R11
10R
R10
NM
R5
NM
TP2
RST
SS/INH
U1
NM
0
6
100nF
BOM
3
8
C11
+
NM
C2
C13A
C13
+
C1
NM
BOM
50V
R1
5
C3
R2
NM
470nF
10V
VIN
VBIAS
VCC
FB
L1
13
14
DELAY
C6
68nF
10nF
17
VOUT
6.8uH
C7
9
SS/INH
C5
TP4
J2
MLF
EP
1M
J3
FSW
R4
0
J1
LX
LX
R6
1
16
COMP
SGND
10
R8
7
C4
PGND PGND
11
BOM
C8
BOM
R9
NM
R7
0R
2.2p
12
signal GND
PGND
NM
power GND
10 uF
R3
RST
C10
2
J5
SYNCH
10uF
4
15
C9
TP3
SYNCH
VIN_FLT
A6986F
TP7
GND
J4
L3
TP5
L2
4.7uH
VIN
TP8
VIN_FLT
MPZ2012S221A
4.7uF
4.7uF
C15
TP6
C14
4.7uF
C16
VIN_EMI
PGND
GND
The additional input filter (C16, L3, C15, L2, C14) limits the conducted emission on the
power supply (refer to Section 10 on page 63).
Table 16. Bill of material (communal parts)
Reference
Part number
Description
Manufacturer
C1, C9, C10
CGA5L3X5R1H106K
10 F - 1206 - 50 V - X5R - 10%
TDK
C2
C2012X7S2A105K
1 F - 0805 - 50 V - X7S - 10%
TDK
C3
470 nF - 50 V - 0603
C4, C7, C8
See Table 17 / Table 18 / Table 19
C5
68 nF - 50 V - 0603
C6
10 nF - 50 V - 0603
C14, C15, C16
C3216X7R1H475K
4.7 F - 1206 - 50 V - X7R - 10%
C11, C13, C13A
Not mounted
R1, R4
0  - 0603
R6
1 M - 1%- 0603
R7, R8, R9
See Table 17 / Table 18 / Table 19
R11
10  - 1% - 0603
R2, R3, R5, R10
Not mounted
DocID027739 Rev 1
TDK
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72
Application board
A6986F
Table 16. Bill of material (communal parts) (continued)
Reference
Part number
Description
Manufacturer
L1
XAL5050-682MEC
6.8 H
Coilcraft
L2
XAL4030-472MEC
4.7 H
Coilcraft
L3
MPZ2012S221A
EMC bead
TDK
J1
Open
J2
Open
J3
J4
see Table 17 / Table 18 / Table 19
Open
To adjust the ISKIP current level in
LCM operation. Leave open in LNM
J5
U1
A6986F 3V3
3.3 V internal divider
STM
Table 17. A6986F 3V3 demonstration board BOM
Reference
Part number
Description
R7
0 R - 0603
R9, C7
Not mounted
R8
75 k - 1% - 0603
C8
220 pF - 50 V - 0603
C4
2.2 pF - 50 V - 0603
Manufacturer
J3
Closed
Switchover enabled
L1
XAL4030-682MEC
6.8 H
Coilcraft
U1
A6986F 3V3
3.3 V internal divider
STM
Table 18. A6986F 5V demonstration board BOM
Reference
56/72
Part number
Description
R7
0 R - 0603
R9, C7
Not mounted
R7
0  - 0603
R8
110 k - 1% - 0603
C8
150 pF - 50 V - 0603
C4
2.2 pF - 50 V - 0603
Manufacturer
J3
Closed
Switchover enabled
L1
XAL4030-682MEC
6.8 H
Coilcraft
U1
A6986F 5V
5 V internal divider
STM
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
Application board
Table 19. A6986F adj. demonstration board BOM
Reference
Part number
Description
Manufacturer
R7
200 k - 1% - 0603
C7
3.3 pF - 50 V - 0603
R9
33 k - 1% - 0603
R8
180 k - 1% - 0603
C8
62 pF - 50 V - 0603
C4
2.2 pF - 50 V - 0603
J3
OPEN
Switchover enabled
L1
XAL4040-103MEC
10 H
Coilcraft
U1
A6986F
External divider
STM
For Table 17 Bode’s plot please refer to Section 6.4 on page 41.
Figure 46 and Figure 47 show the magnitude and phase margin Bode’s plots related to
Table 18.
The small signal dynamic performance in this configuration is:
Equation 55
BW = 57kHz
phase margin = 70
0
Figure 46. Magnitude Bode’s plot
EXTERNAL LOOP MODULE
100
87
74
61
Module [dB]
48
35
22
9
4
17
30
0.1
1
10
3
1u 10
100
F
4
1u 10
5
1u 10
6
1u 10
7
1u 10
[H ]
DocID027739 Rev 1
57/72
72
Application board
A6986F
Figure 47. Phase margin Bode’s plot
EXTERNAL LOOP GAIN PHASE
180
157.5
135
Phase
112.5
90
67.5
45
22.5
0
0.1
1
10
100
3
1u 10
Frequency [Hz]
58/72
DocID027739 Rev 1
4
1u 10
5
1u 10
6
1u 10
7
1u 10
A6986F
Application board
Figure 48. Top layer
Figure 49. Bottom layer
DocID027739 Rev 1
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72
Efficiency curves
9
A6986F
Efficiency curves
Figure 50. Efficiency: VIN = 13.5 V - VOUT = 3.3 V - fsw = 500 kHz
$)9,1 9287 99%,$6,6.,3/
$)9,1 9287 9129%
,$6,6.,3/
$)9,1 9287 9129%
,$6,6.,3+
$)9,1 9287 99%,$6,6.,3+
$)9,1 9287 99%,$6126.,3
$)9,1 9287 9129%
,$6126.,3
Figure 51. Efficiency curves: VIN = 13.5 V - VOUT = 3.3 V - fsw = 500 kHz (log scale)
80
70
60
50
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=3V3 VBIAS ISKIPL
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=3V3 NOVBIAS ISKIPL
40
30
20
0.001
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=3V3 NOVBIAS ISKIPH
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=3V3 VBIAS ISKIPH
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=3V3 VBIAS NOSKIP
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=3V3 NOVBIAS NOSKIP
0.01
0.1
Figure 52. Efficiency curves: VIN = 13.5 V - VOUT = 5 V - fsw = 500 kHz
95
90
85
80
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V VBIAS ISKIPL
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V NOVBIAS ISKIPL
75
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V NOVBIAS ISKIPH
70
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V VBIAS ISKIPH
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V NOVBIAS NOSKIP
65
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V VBIAS NOSKIP
60
0
60/72
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
DocID027739 Rev 1
1
1.2
1.4
1.6
A6986F
Efficiency curves
Figure 53. Efficiency curves: VIN = 13.5 V - VOUT = 5 V - fsw = 500 kHz (log scale)
90
80
70
60
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V VBIAS ISKIPL
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V NOVBIAS ISKIPL
50
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V NOVBIAS ISKIPH
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V VBIAS ISKIPH
40
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V NOVBIAS NOSKIP
A6986F VIN=13.5 VOUT=5V VBIAS NOSKIP
30
0.001
0.01
0.1
Figure 54. Efficiency curves: VIN = 24 V - VOUT = 3.3 V - fsw = 500 kHz
85
80
75
70
65
A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=3V3 VBIAS ISKIPL
60
A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=3V3 NOVBIAS ISKIPL
A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=3V3 NOVBIAS ISKIPH
55
A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=3V3 VBIAS ISKIPH
50
A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=3V3 VBIAS NOSKIP
A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=3V3 NOVBIAS NOSKIP
45
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
1.2
1.4
1.6
Figure 55. Efficiency curves: VIN = 24 V - VOUT = 3.3 V - fsw = 500 kHz (log scale)
80
70
60
50
A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=3V3 VBIAS ISKIPL
40
A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=3V3 NOVBIAS ISKIPL
A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=3V3 NOVBIAS ISKIPH
30
20
0.001
A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=3V3 VBIAS ISKIPH
A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=3V3 VBIAS NOSKIP
A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=3V3 NOVBIAS NOSKIP
0.01
0.1
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Efficiency curves
A6986F
Figure 56. Efficiency curves: VIN = 24 V - VOUT = 5 V - fsw = 500 kHz
$)9,1 9287 99%,$
6,6.,3/
$)9,1 9287 9129%,$6,6
.,3/
$)9,1 9287 9129%,$6,6
.,3+
$)9,1 9287 99%,$
6,6.,3+
$)9,19287 9129%
,$6126.,3
$)9,1 9287 99%,$
612
6.,3
Figure 57. Efficiency curves: VIN = 24 V - VOUT = 5 V - fsw = 500 kHz (log scale)
80
70
60
50
A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=5V VBIAS ISKIPL
40
30
20
0.001
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A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=5V NOVBIAS ISKIPL
A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=5V NOVBIAS ISKIPH
A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=5V VBIAS ISKIPH
A6986F VIN24 VOUT=5V NOVBIAS NOSKIP
A6986F VIN=24 VOUT=5V VBIAS NOSKIP
0.01
0.1
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
10
EMC testing results
EMC testing results
This section reports EMC testing results for the A6986F evaluation board (see Section 8 on
page 55) accordingly with the following test methods:

CE 150R for conducted emission

DP for conducted immunity
All the measurement were performed at ILOAD = 10% and 80% as defined in Table 22.
Table 20. CE 150R test method
Conducted emission, CE 150R
Frequency range
150 kHz - 30 MHz
30 MHz - 1 GHz
Bandwidth
9 kHz
120 kHz
Step size
5 kHz
60 kHz
Dwell time
2 complete software cycles minimum
Detectors
Peak + average
Table 21. DPI test method
Conducted immunity, DPI
Frequency
range
10 kHz 150 kHz
Step size
(linear)
10 kHz
Dwell time
Modulation
150 kHz - 1 MHz 1 MHz
10 MHz
100 kHz
10 MHz 100 MHz
100 MHz 200 MHz
1 MHz
2 MHz
500 kHz
200 MHz - 400 MHz 400 MHz
1 GHz
4 MHz
10 MHz
2 sec. but min. 2 software complete cycles
CW
AM 1 kHz, 80% (same peak value as CW)
DPI: 30 dBm for global pins, 12 dBm for local pins.
All the pins under DPI testing (see Table 22) satisfy class 3 limits..
Table 22. Pin testing
Pin name
Remarks
Classification
CE
DPI
VS1
Filtered VIN pin
Global
X
X
VIN
VIN pin
Global
X
X
VOUT
Regulated output voltage
Local
X
RST
RST pin
Local
X
SS/INH
SS/INH pin
Local
X
DocID027739 Rev 1
(X)
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72
EMC testing results
A6986F
Figure 58 shows the schematic of the EMC board that can be configured for CE and DPI
testing.
Figure 58. CE - 150R / DPI
A6986F - 500kHz - CE VERSION
R14 1K
TP9
VCC
0603
R5 DNM
0603
R29
DNM
RST
U1
4
SYNCH
15
VIN_PIN
2
R3 DNM
0603
R1 DNM
0603
5
6
R4
0R
3
8
Q1
2N7002
SOT23
0603
0603
C5
100nF
50V
X7R
0603
0603
JP1
DNM
470nF
16V X7R
DNM
R2
0R
C3
0603
C11
0603
C2
0805
+ C13A
220uF
50V
10X10
C1
1206
+
1uF
100V X7S
SS_INH
C13B
DNM
8X10
TP4
VOUT
R10 DNM
0603
A6986F5V
R6
SYNCH
RST
VIN
VBIAS
VCC
LX
LX
1
JP2
FB
VOUT
2A DC
JP3
FSW
MLF
1M
0603
16
13
14
L1 6.8uH
XAL50/XAL40
9
C7
DNM
0603
SS/INH
DELAY
EP
C6
10nF
50V
X7R
0603
17
COMP
SGND
7
C8
150pF
50V
COG/NP0
0603
PGND PGND
10
11
12
R11
10K
1206
PGND
0603
0603
TP7
GND
C4
2.2pF
50V
COG/NP0
0603
R9 DNM
0603
R13
DNM
C12
DNM
0603
C17
DNM
0805
R8
110K
R7 0R
0603
C9
10uF
50V
X5R
1206
C10
10uF
50V
X5R
1206
M2
1
2
power GND
R12
TP1
SS/INH
1K
0603
GND
TP11
PGND
PGND
XAL40
2A DC
C16
4.7uF
50V
X5R
1206
C15
4.7uF
50V
X5R
1206
C14
4.7uF
50V
X5R
1206
R18
51R
R16
0603
120R
RST
C19
6.8nF
100V
X7R
0603
TP2
RST
RST
TP10
GND-RF
GND-RF
J3
BNC-SMA-FEM-180-SMD
1 50ohm
2
MORS2V1P
1
2
C18
6.8nF
100V
X7R
0603
R21
51R
PGND
GND-RF
GND-RF
R19
0603
120R
VS2
C20
6.8nF
100V
X7R
0603
GND-RF
GND-RF
J4
BNC-SMA-FEM-180-SMD
1 50ohm
R22
51R
GND-RF
R20
0603
120R
0603
3A 0805
2A DC
M1
R17
51R
J2
BNC-SMA-FEM-180-SMD
1 50ohm
0603
VIN_PIN
VS1
2
4.7uH
R15
0603
120R
2
L2
VIN_EMI
0603
220R
TP8
0603
L3
TP5
JP5
VS
1
2
J1
BNC-SMA-FEM-180-SMD
1 50ohm
VS2
JP4
2
VS1
PGND
SS_INH
GND-RF
GND-RF
R28
51R
GND-RF
64/72
0603
RF Networks: Change 120R into 0R
Mount 6.8nF
Don't mount 51R
R26
51R
GND-RF
R27
0603
120R
VOUT
C24
6.8nF
100V
X7R
0603
GND-RF
DocID027739 Rev 1
0603
C22
6.8nF
100V
X7R
0603
GND-RF
J7
BNC-SMA-FEM-180-SMD
1 50ohm
2
DPI ASSEMBLY VERSION:
VIN_PIN
J6
BNC-SMA-FEM-180-SMD
1 50ohm
2
R25
51R
R23
0603
120R
0603
2
RF Networks: Mount 120R
Mount 6.8nF
Mount 51R
J5
BNC-SMA-FEM-180-SMD
1 50ohm
GND-RF
R24
0603
120R
GND
C21
6.8nF
100V
X7R
0603
SYNCH
CE 150ohm ASSEMBLY VERSION:
1
2
MORS2V1P
signal GND
GND
TP3
TP6
SYNCH
C23
6.8nF
100V
X7R
0603
PGND
SYNCH
A6986F
EMC testing results
Figure 59. CE 150R at VS1 test point (see Figure 58) at 80% ILOAD
Test results
(continue):
[dBµV]
100
CE - 150 Ohm method - Global Pins
DUT:
A6986F5V
Mode:
Iload_Vout = 1.2A
Test case: Emission VS (VS1)
Limit BISS class II global / 10-K (PK)
Limit BISS class III global / 12-M (PK)
PK - VS1
AV - VS1
90
80
Test case
CE #1 Emission VS /
Iload_VOUT =
1.2A
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
-10
-20
0,1
1
10
100
[MHz]
1000
Figure 60. CE 150R at VS1 test point (see Figure 58) at 10% ILOAD
[dBµV]
100
Limit BISS class II global / 10-K (PK)
CE - 150 Ohm method - Global Pins
DUT:
A6986F5V
Mode:
Iload_Vout = 150mA
Test case: Emission VS (VS1)
Limit BISS class III global / 12-M (PK)
PK - VS1
AV - VS1
90
80
Test case
CE #2 -
70
Emission VS /
Iload_VOUT =
150mA
50
60
40
30
20
10
0
-10
-20
0,1
1
DocID027739 Rev 1
10
100
[MHz]
1000
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EMC testing results
A6986F
Figure 61. CE 150R at VOUT test point (see Figure 58) at 80% ILOAD
Test results
(continue):
[dBµV]
100
CE - 150 Ohm method - Local Pins
DUT:
A6986F5V
Mode:
Iload_Vout = 1.2A
Test case: Emission VOUT
Limit BISS class II local / 8-H (PK)
Limit BISS class III local / 10-K (PK)
PK - VOUT
AV - VOUT
90
80
Test case
CE #5 Emission
VOUT /
Iload_VOUT =
1.2A
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
-10
-20
0,1
1
10
100
[MHz]
1000
Figure 62. CE 150R at VOUT test point (see Figure 58) at 10% ILOAD
[dBµV]
100
CE - 150 Ohm method - Local Pins
DUT:
A6986F5V
Mode:
Iload_Vout = 150mA
Test case: Emission VOUT
Limit BISS class II local / 8-H (PK)
Limit BISS class III local / 10-K (PK)
PK - VOUT
AV - VOUT
90
80
70
Test case
CE #6 Emission
VOUT /
Iload_VOUT =
150mA
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
-10
-20
0,1
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1
DocID027739 Rev 1
10
100
[MHz]
1000
A6986F
EMC testing results
Figure 63. CE 150R at RST test point (see Figure 58) at 80% ILOAD
Test results
(continue):
[dBµV]
100
CE - 150 Ohm method - Local Pins
DUT:
A6986F5V
Mode:
Iload_Vout = 1.2A
Test case: Emission RST
Limit BISS class II local / 8-H (PK)
Limit BISS class III local / 10-K (PK)
PK - RST
AV - RST
90
80
Test case
CE #7 Emission RST/
Iload_VOUT =
1.2A
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
-10
-20
0,1
1
10
100
[MHz]
1000
Figure 64. CE 150R at RST test point (see Figure 58) at 10% ILOAD
[dBµV]
100
CE - 150 Ohm method - Local Pins
DUT:
A6986F5V
Mode:
Iload_Vout = 150mA
Test case: Emission RST
Limit BISS class II local / 8-H (PK)
Limit BISS class III local / 10-K (PK)
PK - RST
AV - RST
90
80
Test case
CE #8 -
70
Emission RST/
Iload_VOUT =
150mA
50
60
40
30
20
10
0
-10
-20
0,1
1
DocID027739 Rev 1
10
100
[MHz]
1000
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EMC testing results
A6986F
Figure 65. CE 150R at SS/INH test point (see Figure 58 on page 64) at 80% ILOAD
Test results
(continue):
[dBµV]
100
CE - 150 Ohm method - Local Pins
DUT:
A6986F5V
Mode:
Iload_Vout = 1.2A
Test case: Emission SS/INH
Limit BISS class II local / 8-H (PK)
Limit BISS class III local / 10-K (PK)
PK - SS/INH
AV - SS/INH
90
80
Test case
CE #9 Emission
SS_INH /
Iload_VOUT =
1.2A
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
-10
-20
0,1
1
10
100
[MHz]
1000
Figure 66. CE 150R at SS/INH test point (see Figure 58) at 10% ILOAD
[dBµV]
100
CE - 150 Ohm method - Local Pins
DUT:
A6986F5V
Mode:
Iload_Vout = 150mA
Test case: Emission RST
Limit BISS class II local / 8-H (PK)
Limit BISS class III local / 10-K (PK)
PK - RST
AV - RST
90
80
Test case
CE #8 -
70
Emission RST/
Iload_VOUT =
150mA
50
60
40
30
20
10
0
-10
-20
0,1
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1
DocID027739 Rev 1
10
100
[MHz]
1000
A6986F
11
Package information
Package information
In order to meet environmental requirements, ST offers these devices in different grades of
ECOPACK® packages, depending on their level of environmental compliance. ECOPACK
specifications, grade definitions and product status are available at: www.st.com.
ECOPACK is an ST trademark.
HTSSOP16 package information
DocID027739 Rev 1
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Package information
A6986F
Figure 67. HTSSOP16 package outline
.
Table 23. HTSSOP16 package mechanical data
Dimensions (mm)
Symbol
Min.
Max.
A
1.20
A1
0.15
A2
0.80
b
0.19
0.30
c
0.09
0.20
D
4.90
5.00
5.10
D1
2.8
3
3.2
E
6.20
6.40
6.60
E1
4.30
4.40
4.50
E2
2.8
3
3.2
e
L
k
1.00
1.05
0.65
0.45
L1
0.60
0.75
1.00
0.00
aaa
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Typ.
8.00
0.10
DocID027739 Rev 1
A6986F
12
Order codes
Order codes
Table 24. Order codes
Part numbers
Package
A6986F3V3
Tube
A6986F3V3TR
Tape and reel
A6986F5V
Tube
HTSSOP16
A6986F5VTR
13
Packaging
Tape and reel
A6986F
Tube
A6986FTR
Tape and reel
Revision history
Table 25. Document revision history
Date
Revision
15-Apr-2015
1
Changes
Initial release.
DocID027739 Rev 1
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A6986F
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