TI1 LM5046MH Lm5046 phase-shifted full-bridge pwm controller with integrated mosfet driver Datasheet

LM5046
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SNVS703G – FEBRUARY 2011 – REVISED MARCH 2013
LM5046 Phase-Shifted Full-Bridge PWM Controller with Integrated MOSFET Drivers
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FEATURES
PACKAGES
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Highest Integration Controller for Small Form
Factor, High Density Power Converters
High Voltage Start-up Regulator
Intelligent Sync Rectifier Start-up Allows
Linear Turn-on into Pre-biased Loads
Synchronous Rectifiers Disabled in UVLO
mode and Hiccup Mode
Two Independent, Programmable Dead-Time
Adjustments to Enable Zero-Volt Switching.
Four High Current 2A Bridge Gate Drivers
Wide-Bandwidth Opto-coupler Interface
Configurable for either Current Mode or
Voltage Mode Control
Dual-mode Over-Current Protection
Resistor Programmed 2MHz Oscillator
Programmable Line UVLO and OVP
TSSOP-28
WQFN-28 (5mm x 5mm)
DESCRIPTION
The LM5046 PWM controller contains all of the
features necessary to implement a Phase-Shifted
Full-Bridge topology power converter using either
current mode or voltage mode control. This device is
intended to operate on the primary side of an isolated
dc-dc converter with input voltage up to 100V. This
highly integrated controller-driver provides dual 2A
high and low side gate drivers for the four external
bridge MOSFETs, plus control signals for the
secondary side synchronous rectifier MOSFETs.
External resistors program the dead-time to enable
zero-volt switching of the primary FETs. Intelligent
startup of the synchronous rectifiers allows monotonic
turn-on of the power converter even with pre-bias
load conditions. Additional features include cycle-bycycle current limiting, hiccup mode restart,
programmable soft-start, synchronous rectifier softstart and a 2 MHz capable oscillator with
synchronization capability and thermal shutdown.
Simplified Phase-Shifted Full-Bridge Power Converter
Vin
Vout
Q1
T1
Q3
T1
VCC
VCC
Q2
BST1 HS1 LO1
HO1
VIN
Q4
SLOPE RAMP CS
LO2
HS2 BST2 HO2
GATE
DRIVE
ISOLATION
SR1
UVLO
LM5046 PHASE-SHIFTED
FULL-BRIDGE CONTROLLER
WITH INTEGRATED GATE DRIVERS
OVP
VCC
COMP
SSOFF
RT
SR2
RES
SS SSSR RD1
RD2
ISOLATED
FEEDBACK
REF PGND AGND
ISOLATION
BOUNDARY
1
2
Please be aware that an important notice concerning availability, standard warranty, and use in critical applications of
Texas Instruments semiconductor products and disclaimers thereto appears at the end of this data sheet.
All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
PRODUCTION DATA information is current as of publication date.
Products conform to specifications per the terms of the Texas
Instruments standard warranty. Production processing does not
necessarily include testing of all parameters.
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LM5046
SNVS703G – FEBRUARY 2011 – REVISED MARCH 2013
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Connection Diagram
BST1
SR1
SLOPE
COMP
REF
PGND
HO2
SS
HS2
SSSR
RD1
LO2
RD2
SR2
BST2
RES
VCC
HO2
BST2
AGND
HS2
RD2
PGND
WQFN 28
SS OFF
RD1
SR2
LO1
5 mm x 5 mm
SSSR
LO2
SR1
SS
AGND
COMP
RES
VCC
BST1
RT
TSSOP28
RT
SLOPE
REF
LO1
HO1
CS
HS1
HO1
VIN
RAMP
UVLO
HS1
OVP
OVP
RAMP
VIN
CS
UVLO
SS OFF
Figure 1. TSSOP28 Top View
Figure 2. WQFN-28 Package Top View
PIN DESCRIPTIONS
2
TSSOP
Pin
WQFN
Pin
Name
1
25
UVLO
2
26
OVP/OTP
3
27
RAMP
4
28
CS
5
1
6
2
Description
Application Information
Line Under-Voltage Lockout
An external voltage divider from the power source sets the
shutdown and standby comparator levels. When UVLO reaches the
0.4V threshold the VCC and REF regulators are enabled. At the
1.25V threshold, the SS pin is released and the controller enters the
active mode. Hysteresis is set by an internal current sink that pulls
20µA from the external resistor divider.
Over Voltage Protection
An external voltage divider from the input power supply sets the
shutdown level during an over-voltage condition. Alternatively, an
external NTC thermistor voltage divider can be used to set the
shutdown temperature. The threshold is 1.25V. Hysteresis is set by
an internal current that sources 20 µA of current into the external
resistor divider.
Input to PWM Comparator
Modulation ramp for the PWM comparator. This ramp can be a
signal representative of the primary current (current mode) or
proportional to the input voltage (feed-forward voltage mode). This
pin is reset to GND at the end of every cycle.
Current Sense Input
If CS exceeds 750mV the PWM output pulse will be terminated,
entering cycle-by-cycle current limit. An internal switch holds CS low
for 40nS after either output switches high to blank leading edge
transients.
SLOPE
Slope Compensation Current
A ramping current source from 0 to 100µA is provided for slope
compensation in current mode control. This pin can be connected
through an appropriate resistor to the CS pin to provide slope
compensation. If slope compensation is not required, SLOPE must
be tied to ground.
COMP
Input to the Pulse Width Modulator
An external opto-coupler connected to the COMP pin sources
current into an internal NPN current mirror. The PWM duty cycle is
at maximum with zero input current, while 1mA reduces the duty
cycle to zero. The current mirror improves the frequency response
by reducing the AC voltage across the opto-coupler.
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PIN DESCRIPTIONS (continued)
TSSOP
Pin
WQFN
Pin
Name
7
3
REF
8
4
RT/SYNC
9
5
AGND
10
6
11
Description
Application Information
Output of a 5V reference
Maximum output current is 15mA. Locally decouple with a 0.1µF
capacitor.
Oscillator Frequency Control and
Frequency Synchronization
The resistance connected between RT and AGND sets the
oscillator frequency. Synchronization is achieved by AC coupling a
pulse to the RT/SYNC pin that raises the voltage at least 1.5V
above the 2V nominal bias level.
Analog Ground
Connect directly to the Power Ground.
RD1
Passive to Active Delay
The resistance connected between RD1 and AGND sets the delay
from the falling edge of HO1/SR1 or LO1/SR2 and the rising edge
of LO1 or HO1 respectively.
7
RD2
Active to Passive Delay
The resistance connected between RD2 and AGND sets the delay
from the falling edge of LO2 or HO2 and the rising edge of HO2 or
LO2 respectively.
12
8
RES
Restart Timer
Whenever the CS pin exceeds the 750mV cycle-by-cycle current
limit threshold, 30µA current is sourced into the RES capacitor for
the remainder of the PWM cycle. If the RES capacitor voltage
reaches 1.0V, the SS capacitor is discharged to disable the HO1,
HO2, LO1, LO2 and SR1, SR2 outputs. The SS pin is held low until
the voltage on the RES capacitor has been ramped between 2V and
4V eight times by 10µA charge and 5µA discharge currents. After
the delay sequence, the SS capacitor is released to initiate a normal
start-up sequence.
13
9
SS
Soft-Start Input
An internal 20µA current source charges the SS pin during start-up.
The input to the PWM comparator gradually rises as the SS
capacitor charges to steadily increase the PWM duty cycle. Pulling
the SS pin to a voltage below 200mV stops PWM pulses at HO1,2
and LO1,2 and turns off the synchronous rectifier FETs to a low
state.
14
10
SSSR
Secondary Side Soft-Start
An external capacitor and an internal 20µA current source set the
soft-start ramp for the synchronous rectifiers. The SSSR capacitor
charge-up is enabled after the first output pulse and SS>2V and
Icomp <800µA
15
11
SSOFF
Soft-Stop Disable
When SS OFF pin is connected to the AGND, the LM5046 softstops in the event of a VIN UVLO and Hiccup mode current limit
condition. If the SSOFF pin is connected to REF pin, the controller
hard-stops on any fault condition. Refer to Table 2 for more details.
19
15
SR2
Synchronous Rectifier Driver
Control output for synchronous rectifier gate. Capable of peak
sourcing 100mA and sinking 400mA.
21
17
VCC
Output of Start-Up Regulator
The output voltage of the start-up regulator is initially regulated to
9.5V. Once the secondary side soft-start (SSSR pin) reaches 1V,
the VCC output is reduced to 7.7V. If an auxiliary winding raises the
voltage on this pin above the regulation set-point, the internal startup regulator will shutdown, thus reducing the IC power dissipation.
Power Ground
Connect directly to Analog Ground
Low Side Output Driver
Alternating output of the PWM gate driver. Capable of 1.5A peak
source and 2A peak sink current.
Synchronous Rectifier Driver
Control output for synchronous rectifier gate. Capable of peak
sourcing 100mA and sinking 400mA.
22
18
PGND
23, 20
19, 16
LO1, LO2
24
20
SR1
25, 18
21, 14
BST1,2
Gate Drive Bootstrap
Bootstrap capacitors connected between BST1,2 and SW1,2
provide bias supply for the high side HO1,2 gate drivers. External
diodes are required between VCC and BST1,2 to charge the
bootstrap capacitors when SW1,2 are low.
26, 17
22, 13
HO1,2
High Side Output Driver
High side PWM outputs capable of driving the upper MOSFET of
the bridge with 1.5A peak source and 2A peak sink current.
27, 16
23, 12
HS1,2
Switch Node
Common connection of the high side FET source, low side FET
drain and transformer primary winding.
28
24
VIN
Input Power Source
Input to the Start-up Regulator. Operating input range is 14V to
100V. For power sources outside of this range, the LM5046 can be
biased directly at VCC by an external regulator.
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These devices have limited built-in ESD protection. The leads should be shorted together or the device placed in conductive foam
during storage or handling to prevent electrostatic damage to the MOS gates.
Absolute Maximum Ratings
(1)
VIN to GND
HS to GND
-0.3V to 105V
(2)
-5V to 105V
BST1/BST2 to GND
-0.3V to 116V
BST1/BST2 to HS1/HS2
HO1/HO2 to HS1/HS2
-0.3V to 16V
(3)
-0.3V to BST1/BST2+0.3V
(3)
LO1/LO2/SR1/SR2
-0.3V to VCC+0.3V
VCC to GND
-0.3V to 16V
REF,SSOFF,RT,OVP,UVLO to GND
-0.3V to 7V
RAMP
-0.3V to 7V
COMP
-0.3V
COMP Input Current
All other inputs to GND
ESD Rating HBM
+10mA
(3)
-0.3 to REF+0.3V
(4)
2 kV
Storage Temperature Range
-55°C to 150°C
Junction Temperature
150°C
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
Absolute Maximum Ratings are limits beyond which damage to the device may occur. Operating Ratings are conditions under which
operation of the device is intended to be functional. For specifications and test conditions, see Electrical Characteristics.
The negative HS voltage must never be more negative than VCC-16V. For example, if VCC=12V, the negative transients at HS must
not exceed -4V.
These pins are output pins and as such should not be connected to an external voltage source. The voltage range listed is the limits the
internal circuitry is designed to reliably tolerate in the application circuit.
The human body model is a 100pF capacitor discharged through a 1.5kΩ resistor into each pin.
WHITE SPACE
Table 1. Operating Ratings
VIN Voltage
14V to 100V
External Voltage Applied to VCC
10V to 14V
Junction Temperature
-40°C to +125°C
SLOPE
(1)
4
(1)
-0.3V to 2V
Absolute Maximum Ratings are limits beyond which damage to the device may occur. Operating Ratings are conditions under which
operation of the device is intended to be functional. For specifications and test conditions, see Electrical Characteristics.
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Electrical Characteristics
Limits in standard typeface are for TJ = 25°C only; limits in boldface type apply the junction temperature range of -40°C to
+125°C. Unless otherwise specified, the following conditions apply: VIN = 48V, RT = 25kΩ, RD1=RD2=20kΩ. No load on
HO1, HO2, LO1, LO2, SR1, SR2, COMP=0V, UVLO=2.5V, OVP=0V, SSOFF=0V.
Symbol
Parameter
Conditions
Min
Typ
Max
Units
V
Startup Regulator (VCC pin)
VCC1
VCC voltage
ICC= 10mA (SSSR<1V)
9.3
9.6
9.9
VCC2
8.1
VCC voltage
ICC= 10mA (SSSR>1V)
7.5
7.8
ICC(Lim)
VCC current limit
VCC= 6V
60
80
mA
ICC(ext)
VCC supply current
Supply current into VCC from an externally
applied source. VCC = 10V
4.6
mA
VCC load regulation
ICC from 0 to 50 mA
35
mV
VCC under-voltage threshold
Positive going VCC
VCC under-voltage threshold
Negative going VCC
VCC(UV)
IIN
VCC1–0.2 VCC1–0.1
5.9
VIN operating current
VIN shutdown current
VIN start-up regulator leakage
6.3
V
V
6.7
4
V
mA
VIN=20V, VUVLO=0V
300
520
µA
VVIN=100V, VUVLO=0V
350
550
µA
VCC=10V
160
µA
Voltage Reference Regulator (REF pin)
VREF
REF Voltage
IREF = 0mA
REF voltage regulation
IREF = 0 to 10mA
4.85
IREF(Lim)
REF current limit
VREF = 4.5V
15
20
VREFUV
VREF under-voltage threshold
Positive going VREF
4.3
4.5
Hysteresis
5
5.15
V
25
50
mV
mA
4.7
0.25
V
V
Under-Voltage Lock Out and shutdown (UVLO pin)
VUVLO
Under-voltage threshold
IUVLO
Hysteresis current
UVLO pin sinking current when
VUVLO<1.25V
Under-voltage standby enable
threshold
UVLO voltage rising
1.18
1.25
1.32
V
16
20
24
µA
0.32
0.4
0.48
V
Hysteresis
VOVP
0.05
OVP shutdown threshold
OVP rising
OVP hysteresis current
OVP sources current when OVP>1.25V
V
1.18
1.25
1.32
V
16
20
24
µA
Soft-Start (SS Pin)
ISS
SS charge current
VSS = 0V
SS threshold for SSSR charge
current enable
ICOMP<800µA
SS output low voltage
Sinking 100µA
16
20
24
µA
1.93
2.0
2.20
V
40
SS threshold to disable switching
ISSSR
mV
200
mV
SSSR charge current
VSS>2V, ICOMP<800µA
16
20
24
µA
ISSSR-DIS1
SSSR discharge current 1
VUVLO<1.25V
54
65
75
µA
ISSSR-DIS2
SSSR discharge current 2
VRES>1V
109
125
147
SSSR output low voltage
Sinking 100µA
SSSR threshold to enable SR1/SR2
µA
50
mV
1.2
V
Current Sense Input (CS Pin)
VCS
RCS
Current limit threshold
0.710
0.750
0.785
V
CS delay to output
65
ns
CS leading edge blanking
50
ns
CS sink impedance (clocked)
Internal FET sink impedance
18
45
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Electrical Characteristics (continued)
Limits in standard typeface are for TJ = 25°C only; limits in boldface type apply the junction temperature range of -40°C to
+125°C. Unless otherwise specified, the following conditions apply: VIN = 48V, RT = 25kΩ, RD1=RD2=20kΩ. No load on
HO1, HO2, LO1, LO2, SR1, SR2, COMP=0V, UVLO=2.5V, OVP=0V, SSOFF=0V.
Symbol
Parameter
Conditions
Min
Typ
Max
Units
Soft-Stop Disable (SS OFF Pin)
VIH(min)
SSOFF Input Threshold
2.8
V
SSOFF pull down resistance
200
kΩ
37
Ω
Current Limit Restart (RES Pin)
RRES
RES pull-down resistance
Termination of hiccup timer
VRES
RES hiccup threshold
1
V
RES upper counter threshold
4
V
RES lower counter threshold
2
V
IRES-SRC1
Charge current source 1
VRES<1V,VCS>750mV
30
µA
IRES-SRC2
Charge current source 2
1V<VRES<4V
10
µA
IRES-DIS2
Discharge current source 1
VCS<750mV
5
µA
IRES-DIS2
Discharge current source 2
2V<VRES<4V
5
µA
Ratio of time in hiccup mode to time VRES>1V, Hiccup counter
in current limit
147
Voltage Feed-Forward (RAMP Pin)
RAMP sink impedance (Clocked)
5.5
20
Ω
Oscillator (RT Pin)
FSW1
Frequency (LO1, half oscillator
frequency)
RT = 25 kΩ
185
200
215
kHz
FSW2
Frequency (LO1, half oscillator
frequency)
RT = 10 kΩ
420
480
540
kHz
DC level
2.0
RT sync threshold
V
2.8
3
3.3
V
RD1=20 kΩ
39
65
89
ns
RD1=100 kΩ
230
300
391
ns
RD2=20 kΩ
27
55
78
ns
RD2=100 kΩ
214
300
378
ns
ZVS Timing Control (RD1 & RD2 Pins)
TPA
HO1/SR1 turn-off to LO1 turn-on
LO1/SR2 turn-off to HO1 turn-on
TAP
LO2 turn-off to HO2 turn-on
HO2 turn-off to LO2 turn-on
Comp Pin
VPWM-OS
COMP current to RAMP offset
VRAMP=0V
680
800
940
µA
VSS-OS
SS to RAMP offset
VRAMP=0V
0.78
1.0
1.22
V
COMP current to RAMP gain
ΔRAMP/ΔICOMP
SS to RAMP gain
ΔSS/ΔRAMP
COMP current for SSSR charge
current enable
VSS > 2V
0.5
690
COMP to output delay
Minimum duty cycle
Ω
2400
800
915
120
ICOMP = 1mA
µA
ns
0
%
Slope Compensation (SLOPE Pin)
ISLOPE
Slope compensation current ramp
Peak of RAMP current
100
µA
BOOST (BST Pin)
VBst
uv
BST under-voltage threshold
VBST-VHS rising
Hysteresis
6
3.8
4.7
0.5
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5.6
V
V
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Electrical Characteristics (continued)
Limits in standard typeface are for TJ = 25°C only; limits in boldface type apply the junction temperature range of -40°C to
+125°C. Unless otherwise specified, the following conditions apply: VIN = 48V, RT = 25kΩ, RD1=RD2=20kΩ. No load on
HO1, HO2, LO1, LO2, SR1, SR2, COMP=0V, UVLO=2.5V, OVP=0V, SSOFF=0V.
Symbol
Parameter
Conditions
Min
Typ
Max
Units
HO1, HO2, LO1, LO2 Gate Drivers
VOL
Low-state output voltage
IHO/LO = 100mA
0.16
0.32
V
VOH
High-state output voltage
IHO/LO = 100mA
VOHL = VCC-VLO
VOHH = VBST-VHO
0.27
0.495
V
Rise Time
C-load = 1000pF
16
ns
Fall Time
C-load = 1000pF
11
IOHL
Peak Source Current
VHO/LO = 0V
1.5
-
ns
A
IOLL
Peak Sink Current
VHO/LO = VCC
2
-
A
SR1, SR2 Gate Drivers
VOL
Low-state output voltage
ISR1/SR2 = 10mA
0.05
0.10
V
VOH
High-state output voltage
ISR1/SR2 = 10mA,
VOH = VREF-VSR
0.17
0.28
V
Rise Time
C-load = 1000pF
60
Fall Time
C-load = 1000pF
20
IOHL
Peak Source Current
VSR = 0V
0.1
-
A
IOLL
Peak Sink Current
VSR = VREF
0.4
-
A
ns
ns
Thermal
TSD
Thermal Shutdown Temp
160
Thermal Shutdown Hysteresis
(1)
RJA
Junction to Ambient
RJC
Junction to Case
(1)
TSSOP - 28/WQFN-28
°C
25
°C
40
°C/W
4
°C/W
4 layer standard thermal test board. Cu thickness of layers (2oz, 1oz, 1oz, 2oz).
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Typical Performance Characteristics
Application Board Efficiency
VCC vs ICC
100
36V
EFFICIENCY (%)
90
48V
80
72V
VOUT= 3.3V
70
60
50
5
10
15
20
25
LOAD CURRENT (A)
30
Figure 3.
Figure 4.
VVCC and VREF vs. VVIN
IIN vs. VIN
6
5
VUVLO=3V
IIN(V)
4
3
VUVLO=1V
2
1
VUVLO=0V
0
0
8
20
40
60
VIN(V)
80
Figure 5.
Figure 6.
VREF vs. IREF
Oscillator Frequency vs. RT
Figure 7.
Figure 8.
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Typical Performance Characteristics (continued)
Dead-Time TPA, TAP vs. Temperature
Dead-Time TPA, TAP vs. RD1, RD2
Figure 9.
Figure 10.
CS Threshold vs. Temperature
Figure 11.
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BLOCK DIAGRAM
VOLTAGE
REGULATOR
VIN
VCC
1.25V
+
OVP
0.4V
-
20 éA
5V
+
HYSTERESIS
VCC
UVLO
SHUTDOWN
UVLO
+
-
HO1
THERMAL
LIMIT
(160°C)
STANDBY
REF
BST1
LOGIC
1.25V
5V
REFERENCE
HS1
VCC
UVLO
HYSTERESIS
LO1
20 éA
BST2
HO1
CLK
RT
DELAY
Q
T
OSCILLATOR
HO2
TIMERS
Q
HS2
AND
VCC
DRIVER
LO1
100 éA
S
LO2
LOGIC
Q
REF
0 éA
R
SR1
HO2
SLOPE
LO2
REF
SLOPECOMP
RAMP GENERATOR
SR2
RD1
RD2
RAMP
SSOFF
20 éA
SSSR
5V
5k
COMP
1V
R
+
PWM
-
DRIVER
LOGIC
SS
20 éA
SS
R
1:1
SS
SS
Buffer
0.75V
CS
10 éA
CS
+
HICCUP
MODE
TIMER and
LOGIC
CLK + LEB
PGND
30 éA
RES
5 éA
+
AGND
-
1.0V
Figure 12.
10
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FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
The LM5046 PWM controller contains all of the features necessary to implement a Phase-Shifted Full-Bridge
(PSFB) topology power converter using either current mode or voltage mode control. This device is intended to
operate on the primary side of an isolated dc-dc converter with input voltage up to 100V. This highly integrated
controller-driver provides dual 2A high and low side gate drivers for the four external bridge MOSFETs plus
control signals for secondary side synchronous rectifiers. External resistors program the dead-time to enable
Zero-Volt Switching (ZVS) of the primary FETs. Please refer to the APPLICATION INFORMATION section for
details on the operation of the PSFB topology. Intelligent startup of synchronous rectifier allows turn-on of the
power converter into the pre-bias loads. Cycle-by-cycle current limit protects the power components from load
transients while hiccup mode protection limits average power dissipation during extended overload conditions.
Additional features include programmable soft-start, soft-start of the synchronous rectifiers, and a 2 MHz capable
oscillator with synchronization capability and thermal shutdown.
High-Voltage Start-Up Regulator
The LM5046 contains an internal high voltage start-up regulator that allows the input pin (VIN) to be connected
directly to the supply voltage over a wide range from 14V to 100V. The input can withstand transients up to
105V. When the UVLO pin potential is greater than 0.4V, the VCC regulator is enabled to charge an external
capacitor connected to the VCC pin. The VCC regulator provides power to the voltage reference (REF) and the
gate drivers (HO1/HO2 and LO1/LO2). When the voltage on the VCC pin exceeds its Under Voltage (UV)
threshold, the internal voltage reference (REF) reaches its regulation set point of 5V and the UVLO voltage is
greater than 1.25V, the soft-start capacitor is released and normal operation begins. The regulator output at VCC
is internally current limited. The value of the VCC capacitor depends on the total system design, and its start-up
characteristics. The recommended range of values for the VCC capacitor is 0.47μF to 10µF.
The internal power dissipation of the LM5046 can be reduced by powering VCC from an external supply. The
output voltage of the VCC regulator is initially regulated to 9.5V. After the synchronous rectifiers are engaged
(which is approximately when the output voltage in within regulation), the VCC voltage is reduced to 7.7V. In
typical applications, an auxiliary transformer winding is connected through a diode to the VCC pin. This winding
must raise the VCC voltage above 8V to shut off the internal start-up regulator. Powering VCC from an auxiliary
winding improves efficiency while reducing the controller’s power dissipation. The VCC UV circuit will still function
in this mode, requiring that VCC never falls below its UV threshold during the start-up sequence. The VCC
regulator series pass transistor includes a diode between VCC and VIN that should not be forward biased in
normal operation. Therefore, the auxiliary VCC voltage should never exceed the VIN voltage.
An external DC bias voltage can be used instead of the internal regulator by connecting the external bias voltage
to both the VCC and the VIN pins. This implementation is shown in the APPLICATION INFORMATION section.
The external bias must be greater than 10V and less than the VCC maximum voltage rating of 14V.
Line Under-Voltage Detector
The LM5046 contains a dual level Under-Voltage Lockout (UVLO) circuit. When the UVLO pin voltage is below
0.4V, the controller is in a low current shutdown mode. When the UVLO pin voltage is greater than 0.4V but less
than 1.25V, the controller is in standby mode. In standby mode the VCC and REF bias regulators are active
while the controller outputs are disabled. When the VCC and REF outputs exceed their respective under-voltage
thresholds and the UVLO pin voltage is greater than 1.25V, the soft-start capacitor is released and the normal
operation begins. An external set-point voltage divider from VIN to GND can be used to set the minimum
operating voltage of the converter. The divider must be designed such that the voltage at the UVLO pin will be
greater than 1.25V when VIN enters the desired operating range. UVLO hysteresis is accomplished with an
internal 20μA current sink that is switched on or off into the impedance of the set-point divider. When the UVLO
threshold is exceeded, the current sink is deactivated to quickly raise the voltage at the UVLO pin. When the
UVLO pin voltage falls below the 1.25V threshold, the current sink is enabled causing the voltage at the UVLO
pin to quickly fall. The hysteresis of the 0.4V shutdown comparator is internally fixed at 50mV.
The UVLO pin can also be used to implement various remote enable / disable functions. Turning off the
converter by forcing the UVLO pin to standby condition (0.4V < UVLO < 1.25V) provides a controlled soft-stop.
Refer to the Soft-Stop section for more details.
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Over Voltage Protection
An external voltage divider can be used to set either an over voltage or an over temperature protection. During
an OVP condition, the SS and SSSR capacitors are discharged and all the outputs are disabled. The divider
must be designed such that the voltage at the OVP pin is greater than 1.25V when over voltage/temperature
condition exists. Hysteresis is accomplished with an internal 20μA current source. When the OVP pin voltage
exceeds 1.25V, the 20μA current source is activated to quickly raise the voltage at the OVP pin. When the OVP
pin voltage falls below the 1.25V threshold, the current source is deactivated causing the voltage at the OVP to
quickly fall. Refer to the APPLICATION INFORMATION section for more details.
Reference
The REF pin is the output of a 5V linear regulator that can be used to bias an opto-coupler transistor and
external housekeeping circuits. The regulator output is internally current limited to 15mA. The REF pin needs to
be locally decoupled with a ceramic capacitor, the recommended range of values are from 0.1μF to 10μF
Oscillator, Sync Input
The LM5046 oscillator frequency is set by a resistor connected between the RT pin and AGND. The RT resistor
should be located very close to the device. To set a desired oscillator frequency (FOSC), the necessary value of
RT resistor can be calculated from the following equation:
RT =
1
FOSC x 1 x 10-10
(1)
For example, if the desired oscillator frequency is 400 kHz i.e. each phase (LO1 or LO2) at 200 kHz, the value of
RT will be 25kΩ. If the LM5046 is to be synchronized to an external clock, that signal must be coupled into the
RT pin through a 100pF capacitor. The RT pin voltage is nominally regulated at 2.0V and the external pulse
amplitude should lift the pin to between 3.5V and 5.0V on the low-to-high transition. The synchronization pulse
width should be between 15 and 200ns. The RT resistor is always required, whether the oscillator is free running
or externally synchronized and the SYNC frequency must be equal to, or greater than the frequency set by the
RT resistor. When syncing to an external clock, it is recommended to add slope compensation by connecting an
appropriate resistor from the VCC pin to the CS pin. Also disable the SLOPE pin by grounding it.
Cycle-by-Cycle Current Limit
The CS pin is to be driven by a signal representative of the transformer’s primary current. If the voltage on the
CS pin exceeds 0.75V, the current sense comparator immediately terminates the PWM cycle. A small RC filter
connected to the CS pin and located near the controller is recommended to suppress noise. An internal 18Ω
MOSFET discharges the external current sense filter capacitor at the conclusion of every cycle. The discharge
MOSFET remains on for an additional 40ns after the start of a new PWM cycle to blank leading edge spikes. The
current sense comparator is very fast and may respond to short duration noise pulses. Layout is critical for the
current sense filter and the sense resistor. The capacitor associated with CS filter must be placed very close to
the device and connected directly to the CS and AGND pins. If a current sense transformer is used, both the
leads of the transformer secondary should be routed to the filter network, which should be located close to the
IC. When designing with a current sense resistor, all of the noise sensitive low power ground connections should
be connected together near the AGND pin, and a single connection should be made to the power ground (sense
resistor ground point).
Hiccup Mode
The LM5046 provides a current limit restart timer to disable the controller outputs and force a delayed restart (i.e.
Hiccup mode) if a current limit condition is repeatedly sensed. The number of cycle-by-cycle current limit events
required to trigger the restart is programmed by the external capacitor at the RES pin. During each PWM cycle,
the LM5046 either sources or sinks current from the RES capacitor. If current limit is detected, the 5μA current
sink is disabled and a 30μA current source is enabled. If the RES voltage reaches the 1.0V threshold, the
following restart sequence occurs, as shown in Figure 13:
• The SS and SSSR capacitors are fully discharged
• The 30μA current source is turned-off and the 10μA current source is turned-on.
• Once the voltage at the RES pin reaches 4.0V the 10μA current source is turned-off and a 5μA current sink is
turned-on, ramping the voltage on the RES capacitor down to 2.0V.
• Once RES capacitor reaches 2.0V, threshold, the 10μA current source is turned-on again. The RES capacitor
12
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•
•
•
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voltage is ramped between 4.0V and 2.0V eight times.
When the counter reaches eight, the RES pin voltage is pulled low and the soft-start capacitor is released to
begin a soft-start sequence. The SS capacitor voltage slowly increases. When the SS voltage reaches 1.0V,
the PWM comparator will produce the first narrow pulse.
If the overload condition persists after restart, cycle-by-cycle current limiting will begin to increase the voltage
on the RES capacitor again, repeating the hiccup mode sequence.
If the overload condition no longer exists after restart, the RES pin will be held at ground by the 5μA current
sink and the normal operation resumes.
The hiccup mode function can be completely disabled by connecting the RES pin to the AGND pin. In this
configuration the cycle-by-cycle protection will limit the maximum output current indefinitely, no hiccup restart
sequences will occur.
4V
2V
1V
Count to Eight
Restart delay
Soft-Start
1V
Hiccup Mode off-time
Figure 13. Hiccup Mode Delay and Soft-Start Timing Diagram
PWM Comparator
The LM5046 pulse width modulator (PWM) comparator is a three input device, it compares the signal at the
RAMP pin to the loop error signal or the soft-start, whichever is lower, to control the duty cycle. This comparator
is optimized for speed in order to achieve minimum controllable duty cycles. The loop error signal is received
from the external feedback and isolation circuit in the form of a control current into the COMP pin. The COMP pin
current is internally mirrored by a matching pair of NPN transistors which sink current through a 5kΩ resistor
connected to the 5V reference. The resulting control voltage passes through a 1V offset, followed by a 2:1
resistor divider before being applied to the PWM comparator.
An opto-coupler detector can be connected between the REF pin and the COMP pin. Because the COMP pin is
controlled by a current input, the potential difference across the opto-coupler detector is nearly constant. The
bandwidth limiting phase delay which is normally introduced by the significant capacitance of the opto-coupler is
thereby greatly reduced. Higher loop bandwidths can be realized since the bandwidth limiting pole associated
with the opto-coupler is now at a much higher frequency. The PWM comparator polarity is configured such that
with no current flowing into the COMP pin, the controller produces maximum duty cycle.
RAMP Pin
The voltage at the RAMP pin provides the modulation ramp for the PWM comparator. The PWM comparator
compares the modulation ramp signal at the RAMP pin to the loop error signal to control the duty cycle. The
modulation ramp signal can be implemented either as a ramp proportional to the input voltage, known as feedforward voltage mode control, or as a ramp proportional to the primary current, known as current mode control.
The RAMP pin is reset by an internal MOSFET with an RDS(ON) of 5.5Ω at the conclusion of each PWM cycle.
The ability to configure the RAMP pin for either voltage mode or current mode allows the controller to be
implemented for the optimum control method depending upon the design constraints. Refer to the APPLICATION
INFORMATION section for more details on configuring the RAMP pin for feed-forward voltage mode control and
peak current mode control.
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Slope Pin
For duty cycles greater than 50% (25% for each phase), peak current mode control is subject to sub-harmonic
oscillation. Sub-harmonic oscillation is normally characterized by observing alternating wide and narrow duty
cycles. This can be eliminated by adding an artificial ramp, known as slope compensation, to the modulating
signal at the RAMP pin. The SLOPE pin provides a current source ramping from 0 to 100μA, at the frequency set
by the RT resistor, for slope compensation. The ramping current source at the SLOPE pin can be utilized in a
couple of different ways to add slope compensation to the RAMP signal:
1) As shown in Figure 14(a), the SLOPE and RAMP pins can be connected together through an appropriate
resistor to the CS pin. This configuration will inject current sense signal plus slope compensation to the RAMP
pin but CS pin will not see any slope compensation. Therefore, in this scheme slope compensation will not affect
the current limit.
2) In a second configuration, as shown in Figure 14(b), the SLOPE, RAMP and CS pins can be tied together. In
this configuration the ramping current source from the SLOPE pin will flow through the filter resistor and filter
capacitor, therefore both the CS pin and the RAMP pin will see the current sense signal plus the slope
compensation ramp. In this scheme, the current limit is compensated by the slope compensation and the current
limit onset point will vary.
If slope compensation is not required, for example in feed-forward voltage mode control, the SLOPE pin must be
connected to the AGND pin. When the RT pin is synched to an external clock, it is recommended to disable the
SLOPE pin and add slope compensation externally by connecting an appropriate resistor from the VCC pin to the
CS pin. Please refer to the APPLICATION INFORMATION section for more details.
LM5046
LM5046
100 PA
SLOPE
100 PA
0
SLOPE
RAMP
RAMP
CLK
Current
Sense
RSLOPE
RFILTER
CLK
Current
Sense
RFILTER
CS
CS
CLK + LEB
RCS
0
CFILTER
CLK + LEB
CFILTER
RCS
(a)
(b)
(a) Slope Compensation Configured for PWM Only (No Current Limit Slope)
(b) Slope Compensation Configured for PWM and Current Limit
Figure 14. Slope Compensation Configuration
Soft-Start
The soft-start circuit allows the power converter to gradually reach a steady state operating point, thereby
reducing the start-up stresses and current surges. When bias is supplied to the LM5046, the SS capacitor is
discharged by an internal MOSFET. When the UVLO, VCC and REF pins reach their operating thresholds, the
SS capacitor is released and is charged with a 20µA current source. Once the SS pin voltage crosses the 1V
offset, SS controls the duty cycle. The PWM comparator is a three input device; it compares the RAMP signal
against the lower of the signals between the soft-start and the loop error signal. In a typical isolated application,
as the secondary bias is established, the error amplifier on the secondary side soft-starts and establishes closedloop control, steering the control away from the SS pin.
One method to shutdown the regulator is to ground the SS pin. This forces the internal PWM control signal to
ground, reducing the output duty cycle quickly to zero. Releasing the SS pin begins a soft-start cycle and normal
operation resumes. A second shutdown method is presented in the UVLO section.
14
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Gate Driver Outputs
The LM5046 provides four gate drivers: two floating high side gate drivers HO1 and HO2 and two ground
referenced low side gate drivers LO1 and LO2. Each internal driver is capable of sourcing 1.5A peak and sinking
2A peak. The low-side gate drivers are powered directly by the VCC regulator. The HO1 and HO2 gate drivers
are powered from a bootstrap capacitor connected between BST1/BST2 and HS1/HS2 respectively. An external
diode connected between VCC (anode pin) and BST (cathode pin) provides the high side gate driver power by
charging the bootstrap capacitor from VCC when the corresponding switch node (HS1/HS2 pin) is low. When the
high side MOSFET is turned on, BST1 rises to a peak voltage equal to VCC + VHS1 where VHS1 is the switch
node voltage.
The BST and VCC capacitors should be placed close to the pins of the LM5046 to minimize voltage transients
due to parasitic inductances since the peak current sourced to the MOSFET gates can exceed 1.5A. The
recommended value of the BST capacitor is 0.1μF or greater. A low ESR / ESL capacitor, such as a surface
mount ceramic, should be used to prevent voltage droop during the HO transitions.
Figure 15 illustrates the sequence of the LM5046 gate-drive outputs. Initially, the diagonal HO1 and LO2 are
turned-on together during the power transfer cycle, followed by the freewheel cycle, where HO1 and HO2 are
kept on. In the subsequent phase, the diagonal HO2 and LO1 are turned-on together during the power transfer
cycle, followed by a freewheel cycle, where LO1 and LO2 are kept on. The power transfer mode is often called
the active mode and the freewheel mode is often called as the passive mode. The dead-time between the
passive mode and the active mode, TPA, is set by the RD1 resistor and the dead-time between the active mode
and the passive mode, TAP, is set by the RD2 resistor. Refer to the APPLICATION INFORMATION section for
more details on the operation of the phase-shifted full-bridge topology.
If the COMP pin is open circuit, the outputs will operate at maximum duty cycle. The maximum duty cycle for
each phase is limited by the dead-time set by the RD1 resistor. If the RD1 resistor is set to zero then the
maximum duty cycle is slightly less than 50% due to the internally fixed dead-time. The internally fixed dead-time
is 30ns which does not vary with the operating frequency. The maximum duty cycle for each output can be
calculated from the following equation:
(
DMAX =
1
) - (TPA)
FOSC
(
2
)
FOSC
(2)
Where, TPA is the time set by the RD1 resistor and FOSC is the frequency of the oscillator. For example, if the
oscillator frequency is set at 400 kHz and the TPA time set by the RD1 resistor is 60ns, the resulting DMAX will be
equal to 0.488.
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Figure 15. Timing Diagram Illustrating the Sequence of Gate-Driver Outputs in the PSFB Topology
Synchronous Rectifier Control Outputs (SR1 & SR2)
Synchronous rectification (SR) of the transformer secondary provides higher efficiency, especially for low output
voltage converters, compared to the diode rectification. The reduction of rectifier forward voltage drop (0.5V 1.5V) to 10mV - 200mV VDS voltage for a MOSFET significantly reduces rectification losses. In a typical
application, the transformer secondary winding is center tapped, with the output power inductor in series with the
center tap. The SR MOSFETs provide the ground path for the energized secondary winding and the inductor
current. From Figure 16 it can be seen that when the HO1/LO2 diagonal is turned ON, power transfer is enabled
from the primary. During this period, the SR1 MOSFET is enabled and the SR2 MOSFET is turned-off. The
secondary winding connected to the SR2 MOSFET drain is twice the voltage of the center tap at this time. At the
conclusion of the HO1/LO2 pulse, the inductor current continues to flow through the SR2 MOSFET body diode.
Since the body diode causes more loss than the SR MOSFET, efficiency can be improved by minimizing the
TSRON period. In the LM5046, the time TSRON is internally fixed to be 30ns. The 30ns internally fixed dead-time,
along with inherent system delays due to galvanic isolation, plus the gate drive ICs, will provide sufficient margin
to prevent the shoot-through current.
During the freewheeling period, the inductor current flows in both the SR1 and SR2 MOSFETs, which effectively
shorts the transformer secondary. The SR MOSFETs are disabled at the rising edge of the CLK, which also
disables HO1 or LO1. As shown in Figure 16, SR1 is disabled at the same instant as HO1 is disabled, and SR2
is disabled at the same instant as LO1 is disabled. The dead-times, TSROFF and TPA achieve two different things
but are set by single resistor, RD1. Therefore, RD1 value should be selected such that the SR1/SR2 turns-off
before the next power transfer cycle is initiated by TPA.
The SR drivers are powered by the REF regulator and each SR output is capable of sourcing 0.1A and sinking
0.4A peak. The amplitude of the SR drivers is limited to 5V. The 5V SR signals enable the LM5046 to transfer
SR control across the isolation barrier either through a solid-state isolator or a pulse transformer. The actual gate
sourcing and sinking currents for the synchronous MOSFETs are provided by the secondary-side bias and gate
drivers.
TPA and TAP can be programmed by connecting a resistor between RD1 and RD2 pins and AGND. It should be
noted that while RD1 effects the maximum duty cycle, RD2 does not. The RD1 and RD2 resistors should be
located very close to the device. The formula for RD1 and RD2 resistors are given below:
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RD(1,2) =
SNVS703G – FEBRUARY 2011 – REVISED MARCH 2013
TPA, TAP
3 pF
; For 20k < (1,2) < 100k
(3)
If the desired dead-time for TPA is 60ns, then the RD1 will be 20 kΩ.
Figure 16. Synchronous Rectifier Timing Diagram
Soft-Start of the Synchronous Rectifiers
In addition to the basic soft-start already described, the LM5046 contains a second soft-start function that
gradually turns on the synchronous rectifiers to their steady-state duty cycle. This function keeps the
synchronous rectifiers off during the basic soft-start allowing a linear start-up of the output voltage even into prebiased loads. Then the SR output duty cycle is gradually increased to prevent output voltage disturbances due to
the difference in the voltage drop between the body diode and the channel resistance of the synchronous
MOSFETs. Initially, when bias is supplied to the LM5046, the SSSR capacitor is discharged by an internal
MOSFET. When the SS capacitor reaches a 2V threshold and once it is established that COMP is in control of
the duty cycle i.e. ICOMP < 800µA, the SSSR discharge is released and SSSR capacitor begins charging with a
20µA current source. Once the SSSR cap crosses the internal 1V threshold, the LM5046 begins the soft-start of
the synchronous FETs. The SR soft-start follows a leading edge modulation technique, that is, the leading edge
of the SR pulse is soft-started as opposed trailing edge modulation of the primary FETs. As shown in
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Figure 17(a), SR1 and SR2 are turned-on simultaneously with a narrow pulse-width during the freewheeling
cycle. At the end of the freewheel cycle i.e. at the rising edge of the internal CLK, the SR FET in-phase with the
next power transfer cycle is kept on while the SR FET out of phase with it is turned-off. The in-phase SR FET is
kept on throughout the power transfer cycle and at the end of it, both the primary FETs and the in-phase SR
FETs are turned-off together. The synchronous rectifier outputs can be disabled by grounding the SSSR pin.
Figure 17. (a) Waveforms during Soft-Start (b) Waveforms after Soft-Start
Pre-Bias Startup
A common requirement for power converters is to have a monotonic output voltage start-up into a pre-biased
load i.e. a pre-charged output capacitor. In a pre-biased load condition, if the synchronous rectifiers are engaged
prematurely they will sink current from the pre-charged output capacitors resulting in an undesired output voltage
dip. This condition is undesirable and could potentially damage the power converter. The LM5046 utilizes unique
control circuitry to ensure intelligent turn-on of the synchronous rectifiers such that the output has a monotonic
startup. Initially, the SSSR capacitor is held at ground to disable the synchronous MOSFETs allowing the body
diode to conduct. The synchronous rectifier soft-start is initiated once it is established the duty cycle is controlled
by the COMP instead of the soft-start capacitor i.e. ICOMP < 800µA and the voltage at the SS pin>2V. The SSSR
capacitor is then released and is charged by a 20µA current source. Further, as shown in Figure 18, a 1V offset
on the SSSR pin is used to provide additional delay. This delay ensures the output voltage is in regulation
avoiding any reverse current when the synchronous MOSFETs are engaged.
Soft-Stop
As shown in Figure 19, if the UVLO pin voltage falls below the 1.25V standby threshold, but above the 0.4V
shutdown threshold, the SSSR capacitor is soft-stopped with a 60µA current source (3 times the charging
current). Once the SSSR pin reaches the 1.0V threshold, both the SS and SSSR pins are immediately
discharged to GND. Soft-stopping the power converter gradually winds down the energy in the output capacitors
and results in a monotonic decay of the output voltage. During the hiccup mode, the same sequence is executed
except that the SSSR is discharged with a 120µA current source (6 times the charging current). In case of an
OVP, VCC UV, thermal limit or a VREF UV condition, the power converter hard-stops, whereby all of the control
outputs are driven to a low state immediately.
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2.0V
SS
1.0V
Primary
Secondary
Bias
COMP
1.0V
SSSR
SR1, SR2
VOUT
Prebiased Load
Figure 18. Pre-Bias Voltage Startup Waveforms
1.25V
VIN UVLO
1.25V
0.45V
SS
SSSR
1.0V
Figure 19. Stop-Stop Waveforms during a UVLO Event
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Soft-Stop Off
The Soft-Start Off (SSOFF) pin gives additional flexibility by allowing the power converter to be configured for
hard-stop during line UVLO and hiccup mode condition. If the SS OFF pin is pulled up to the 5V REF pin, the
power converter hard-stops in any fault condition. Hard-stop drives each control output to a low state
immediately. Refer to Table 2 for more details.
Table 2. Soft-Stop in Fault Conditions
Fault Condition
SSSR
UVLO
(UVLO<1.25V)
Soft-Stop
3x the charging rate
OVP
(OVP>1.25V)
Hard-Stop
Hiccup
(CS>0.75 and RES>1V)
Soft-Stop
6x the charging rate
VCC/VREF UV
Hard-Stop
Internal Thermal Limit
Hard-Stop
Note: All the above conditions are valid with SSOFF pin tied to GND. If SSOFF=5V, the LM5046 hard-stops in all
the conditions. The SS pin remains high in all the conditions until the SSSR pin reaches 1V.
Thermal Protection
Internal thermal shutdown circuitry is provided to protect the integrated circuit in the event the maximum rated
junction temperature is exceeded. When activated, typically at 160°C, the controller is forced into a shutdown
state with the output drivers, the bias regulators (VCC and REF) disabled. This helps to prevent catastrophic
failures from accidental device overheating. During thermal shutdown, the SS and SSSR capacitors are fully
discharged and the controller follows a normal start-up sequence after the junction temperature falls to the
operating level (140 °C).
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APPLICATION INFORMATION
VIN
VOUT
HO1
VIN
HO1
HO2
SW2
SW1
LMag
SW2
SR2
LO2
IO + Imag
LO1
LO2
Active to Passive
Transition
Power Transfer/Active Mode
VOUT
VIN
HO1
HO2
SW1
SW2
LMag
VIN
HO1
LLeakage
LMag
SW1
SR1
LO1
HO2
LMag
SW1
SR1
LO1
LLeak
HO2
SW2
SR2
GND LO1
LO2
CParasitic
LO2
Passive to Active
Transition
Freewheel/Passive Mode
Figure 20. Operating States of the PSFB Topology
PHASE-SHIFTED FULL-BRIDGE OPERATION
The phase shifted full-bridge topology is a derivative of the conventional full-bridge topology. When tuned
appropriately the PSFB topology achieves zero voltage switching (ZVS) of the primary FETs while maintaining
constant switching frequency. The ZVS feature is highly desirable as it reduces both the switching losses and the
EMI emissions. The realization of the PSFB topology using the LM5046 is explained as follows:
Operating State 1 (Power Transfer/Active Mode)
The power transfer mode of the PSFB topology is similar to the hard switching full-bridge i.e. When the FETs in
the diagonal of the bridge are turned-on (HO1 & LO2 or HO2 & LO1), a power transfer cycle from the primary to
the secondary is initiated. Figure 20 depicts the case where the diagonal switches HO1 and LO2 are activated. In
this state, full VIN is applied to the primary of the power transformer, which is typically stepped down on the
secondary winding.
Operating State 2 (Active to Passive Transition)
At the end of the power transfer cycle, PWM turns off switch LO2. In the primary side, the reflected load current
plus the magnetizing current propels the SW2 node towards VIN. The active to passive transition is finished
when either the body diode of HO2 is forward-biased or HO2 is turned-on, whichever happens earlier. A delay
can be introduced by setting RD2 to an appropriate value, such that HO2 is turned-on only after the body-diode
is forward biased. In this mode, the Imag+ILpeak act as a current source charging the parasitic capacitor located at
the node SW2. At light load conditions, it takes a longer time to propel SW node towards VIN.
The active to passive transition time can be approximated by using the following formula:
TAP =
Cparasitic x VIN
I
(Im + Lpeak )
NTR
(4)
Where, Im is the magnetizing current, NTR is the power transformer’s turns ratio, ILpeak is the peak output filter
inductor current and Cparasitic is the parasitic capacitance at the node SW2.
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Operating State 3 (Freewheel/Passive Mode)
In the freewheel mode, unlike the conventional full-bridge topology where all the four primary FETs are off, in the
PSFB topology the primary of the power transformer is shorted by activating either both the top FETs (HO1 and
HO2) or both of the bottom FETs (LO1 and LO2) alternatively. In the current CLK cycle, the top FETs HO1 and
HO2 are kept on together. Further in this mode, on the secondary side, similar to the classic full-bridge topology
the synchronous FETs are both activated. During this state there is no energy transfer from the primary and the
filter inductor current in the secondary freewheels through both the synchronous FETs.
Operating State 4 (Passive to Active Transition)
At the end of the switching cycle i.e. after the oscillator times out the current CLK cycle, the primary switch HO1
and the secondary FET SR1 are turned-off simultaneously. The voltage at the node SW1 begins to fall towards
the GND. This is due to the resonance between leakage inductance of the power transformer plus any additional
commutation inductor and the parasitic capacitances at SW1. The magnetizing inductor is shorted in the
freewheel mode and therefore it does not play any role in this transition. The LC resonance results in a half-wave
sinusoid whose period is determined by the leakage inductor and parasitic capacitor. The peak of the half-wave
sinusoid is a function of the load current. The passive to active transition time can be approximated by using the
following formula:
TPA =
'
2 (Lleakage + Lcommutation) x Cparasitic
(5)
When tuned appropriately either by deliberately increasing the leakage inductance or by adding an extra
commutating inductor, the sinusoidal resonant waveform peaks such that it is clamped by the body-diode of the
LO1 switch. At this instant, ZVS can be realized by turning on the LO1 switch.
The switching sequence in this CLK cycle is as follows: activation of the switch LO1 turns the diagonal LO1 and
HO2 on, resulting in power transfer. The power transfer cycle ends when PWM turns off HO2, which is followed
by an active to passive transition where LO2 is turned on. In the freewheel mode, LO1 and LO2 are both
activated. From this sequence, it can be inferred that the FETs on the right side of the bridge (HO2 and LO2) are
always terminated by the PWM ending a power transfer cycle and the SW2 node always sees an active to
passive transition. Further, the FETs on the left side of the bridge (HO1 and LO1) are always turned-off by the
CLK ending a freewheel cycle and the SW1 node always sees a passive to active transition.
Turn-off
controlled by
CLK
Turn-off
controlled by
PWM
Vin
Vout
T1
HO1
SW1
LO1
T1
HO2
SW2
SR2
LO2
SR1
Passive to Active
Transition at SW1
Active to Passive
Transition at SW2
Figure 21. Simplified PSFB Topology Showing the Turn-Off Mechanism
CONTROL METHOD SELECTION
The LM5046 is a versatile PWM control IC that can be configured for either current mode control or voltage
mode control. The choice of the control method usually depends upon the designer preference. The following
must be taken into consideration while selecting the control method. Current mode control can inherently balance
flux in both phases of the PSFB topology. The PSFB topology, like other double ended topologies, is susceptible
to the transformer core saturation. Any asymmetry in the volt-second product applied between the two alternating
22
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phases results in flux imbalance that causes a dc buildup in the transformer. This continual dc buildup may
eventually push the transformer into saturation. The volt-second asymmetry can be corrected by employing
current mode control. In current mode control, a signal representative of the primary current is compared against
an error signal to control the duty cycle. In steady-state, this results in each phase being terminated at the same
peak current by adjusting the pulse-width and thus applying equal volt-seconds to both the phases.
Current mode control can be susceptible to noise and sub-harmonic oscillation, while voltage mode control
employs a larger ramp for PWM and is usually less susceptible. Voltage-mode control with input line feedforward also has excellent line transient response. When configuring for voltage mode control, a dc blocking
capacitor can be placed in series with the primary winding of the power transformer to avoid any flux imbalance
that may cause transformer core saturation.
VOLTAGE MODE CONTROL USING THE LM5046
To configure the LM5046 for voltage mode control, an external resistor (RFF) and capacitor (CFF) connected to
VIN, AGND, and the RAMP pins is required to create a saw-tooth modulation ramp signal shown in Figure 22.
The slope of the signal at RAMP will vary in proportion to the input line voltage. The varying slope provides line
feed-forward information necessary to improve line transient response with voltage mode control. With a constant
error signal, the on-time (TON) varies inversely with the input voltage (VIN) to stabilize the Volt- Second product
of the transformer primary. Using a line feed-forward ramp for PWM control requires very little change in the
voltage regulation loop to compensate for changes in input voltage, as compared to a fixed slope oscillator ramp.
Furthermore, voltage mode control is less susceptible to noise and does not require leading edge filtering.
Therefore, it is a good choice for wide input range power converters. Voltage mode control requires a Type-III
compensation network, due to the complex-conjugate poles of the L-C output filter.
SLOPE
PROPORTIONAL
TO VIN
VIN
5V
COMP
RFF
VIN
5k
R
R
1V
Gate Drive
1:1
RAMP
CLK
CFF
LM5046
Figure 22. Feed-Forward Voltage Mode Configuration
The recommended capacitor value range for CFF is from 100pF to 1800pF. Referring to Figure 22, it can be seen
that CFF value must be small enough to be discharged with in the clock pulse-width which is typically within 50ns.
The RDS(ON) of the internal discharge FET is 5.5Ω.
The value of RFF required can be calculated from
RFF =
-1
FOSC x CFF x In (1-
VRAMP
)
VINMIN
(6)
For example, assuming a VRAMP of 1.5V (a good compromise of signal range and noise immunity), at VINMIN of
36V (oscillator frequency of 400 kHz and CFF = 470pF results in a value for RFF of 125 kΩ.
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CURRENT MODE CONTROL USING THE LM5046
The LM5046 can be configured for current mode control by applying a signal proportional to the primary current
to the RAMP pin. One way to achieve this is shown in Figure 23. The primary current can be sensed using a
current transformer or sense resistor, the resulting signal is filtered and applied to the RAMP pin through a
resistor used for slope compensation. It can be seen that the signal applied to the RAMP pin consists of the
primary current information from the CS pin plus an additional ramp for slope compensation, added by the
resistor RSLOPE.
The current sense resistor is selected such that during over current condition, the voltage across the current
sense resistor is above the minimum CS threshold of 728mV.
In general, the amount of slope compensation required to avoid sub-harmonic oscillation is equal to at least onehalf the down-slope of the output inductor current, transformed to the primary. To mitigate sub-harmonic
oscillation after one switching period, the slope compensation has to be equal to one times the down slope of the
filter inductor current transposed to primary. This is known as deadbeat control. The slope compensation resistor
required to implement dead-beat control can be calculated as follows:
RSLOPE =
VOUT ´ RCS
LFILTER ´ FOSC ´ ISLOPE ´ NTR
(7)
Where NTR is the turns-ratio with respect to the secondary. For example, for a 3.3V output converter with a turnsratio between primary and secondary of 9:1, an output filter inductance (LFILTER) of 800nH and a current sense
resistor (RSENSE) of 150mΩ, RSLOPE of 1.67kΩ will suffice.
LM5046
100 PA
SLOPE
0
RAMP
CLK
Current
Sense
RSLOPE
RFILTER
CS
CLK + LEB
RCS
CFILTER
Figure 23. Current Mode Configuration
VIN and VCC
The voltage applied to the VIN pin, which may be the same as the system voltage applied to the power
transformer’s primary (VPWR), can vary in the range of the 14 to 100V. It is recommended that the filter shown in
Figure 24 be used to suppress the transients that may occur at the input supply. This is particularly important
when VIN is operated close to the maximum operating rating of the LM5046. The current into VIN depends
primarily on the LM5046’s operating current, the switching frequency, and any external loads on the VCC pin,
that typically include the gate capacitances of the power MOSFETs. In typical applications, an auxiliary
transformer winding is connected through a diode to the VCC pin. This pin must raise VCC voltage above 8V to
shut off the internal start-up regulator.
After the outputs are enabled and the external VCC supply voltage has begun supplying power to the IC, the
current into the VIN pin drops below 1mA. VIN should remain at a voltage equal to or above the VCC voltage to
avoid reverse current through the internal body diode of the internal VCC regulator.
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VPWR
50
VIN
LM5046
0.1 PF
Figure 24. Input Transient Protection
FOR APPLICATIONS WITH > 100V INPUT
For applications where the system input voltage exceeds 100V, VIN can be powered from an external start-up
regulator as shown in Figure 25. In this configuration, the VIN and VCC pins should be connected together. The
voltage at the VCC and VIN pins must be greater than 10V (>Max VCC reference voltage) yet not exceed 16V.
To enable operation the VCC voltage must be raised above 10V. The voltage at the VCC pin must not exceed
16V. The voltage source at the right side of Figure 25 is typically derived from the power stage, and becomes
active once the LM5046’s outputs are active.
10V - 16V
(from aux winding)
VPWR
11V
VIN
VCC
LM5046
Figure 25. Start-Up Regulator for VPWR>100V
UVLO AND OVP VOLTAGE DIVIDER SELECTION
Two dedicated comparators connected to the UVLO and OVP pins are used to detect under voltage and over
voltage conditions. The threshold values of both these comparators are set at 1.25V. The two functions can be
programmed independently with two separate voltage dividers from VIN to AGND as shown in Figure 26 and
Figure 27, or with a three-resistor divider as shown in Figure 28. Independent UVLO and OVP pins provide
greater flexibility for the user to select the operational voltage range of the system. When the UVLO pin voltage is
below 0.4V, the controller is in a low current shutdown mode. For a UVLO pin voltage greater than 0.4V but less
than 1.25V the controller is in standby mode. Once the UVLO pin voltage is greater than 1.25V, the controller is
fully enabled. Two external resistors can be used to program the minimum operational voltage for the power
converter as shown in Figure 26. When the UVLO pin voltage falls below the 1.25V threshold, an internal 20µA
current sink is enabled to lower the voltage at the UVLO pin, thus providing threshold hysteresis. Resistance
values for R1 and R2 can be determined from the following equations:
R1 =
R2 =
VHYS
20 PA
1.25V x R1
VPWR-OFF -1.25V - (20 PA x R1)
(8)
Where VPWR is the desired turn-on voltage and VHYS is the desired UVLO hysteresis at VPWR.
For example, if the LM5046 is to be enabled when VPWR reaches 33V, and disabled when VPWR is decreased to
31V, R1 should be 100kΩ, and R2 should be 4.2kΩ. The voltage at the UVLO pin should not exceed 7V at any
time.
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Two external resistors can be used to program the maximum operational voltage for the power converter as
shown in Figure 27. When the OVP pin voltage rises above the 1.25V threshold, an internal 20µA current source
is enabled to raise the voltage at the OVP pin, thus providing threshold hysteresis. Resistance values for R1 and
R2 can be determined from the following equations:
R1 =
R2 =
VHYS
20 PA
1.25V x R1
VPWR -1.25V + (20 PA x R1)
(9)
If the LM5046 is to be disabled when VPWR-OFF reaches 80V and enabled when it is decreased to 78V. R1 should
be 100kΩ, and R2 should be 1.5 kΩ. The voltage at the OVP pin should not exceed 7V at any time.
VPWR
LM5046
R1
1.25V
UVLO
STANDBY
20 PA
R2
0.4V
SHUTDOWN
Figure 26. Basic UVLO Configuration
LM5046
5V
VPWR
20 PA
R1
OVP
R2
1.25V
STANDBY
Figure 27. Basic OVP Configuration
The UVLO and OVP can also be set together using a 3 resistor divider ladder as shown in Figure 28. R1 is
calculated as explained in the basic UVLO divider selection. Using the same values, as in the above two
examples, for the UVLO and OVP set points, R1 and R3 remain the same at 100kΩ and 1.5kΩ. The R2 is 2.7kΩ
obtained by subtracting R3 from 4.2kΩ.
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VPWR
R1
UVLO
1.25V
STANDBY
LM5046
20 PA
0.4V
R2
SHUTDOWN
5V
20 PA
OVP
STANDBY
1.25V
R3
Figure 28. UVLO/OVP Divider
Remote configuration of the controller’s operational modes can be accomplished with open drain device(s)
connected to the UVLO pin as shown in Figure 29.
Figure 30 shows an application of the OVP comparator for Remote Thermal Protection using a thermistor (or
multiple thermistors) which may be located near the main heat sources of the power converter. The negative
temperature coefficient (NTC) thermistor is nearly logarithmic, and in this example a 100kΩ thermistor with the β
material constant of 4500 Kelvin changes to approximately 2kΩ at 130ºC. Setting R1 to one-third of this
resistance (665Ω) establishes 130ºC as the desired trip point (for VREF = 5V). In a temperature band from 20ºC
below to 20ºC above the OVP threshold, the voltage divider is nearly linear with 25mV per ºC sensitivity.
R2 provides temperature hysteresis by raising the OVP comparator input by R2 x 20µA. For example, if a 22kΩ
resistor is selected for R2, then the OVP pin voltage will increase by 22k x 20µA = 506mV. The NTC temperature
must therefore fall by 506mV / 25mV per ºC = 20ºC before the LM5046 switches from standby mode to the
normal mode.
VPWR
LM5046
R1
1.25V
UVLO
STANDBY
SHUTDOWN
R2
STANDBY
20 PA
0.4V
SHUTDOWN
Figure 29. Remote Standby and Disable Control
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LM5046
5V
VPWR
20 PA
NTC
THERMISTOR
T
R1
OVP
STANDBY
1.25V
R2
Figure 30. Remote Thermal Protection
CURRENT SENSE
The CS pin receives an input signal representative of its transformer’s primary current, either from a current
sense transformer or from a resistor located at the junction of source pin of the primary switches, as shown in
Figure 31 and Figure 32, respectively. In both the cases, the filter components RF and CF should be located as
close to the IC as possible, and the ground connection from the current sense transformer, or RSENSE should be
a dedicated trace to the appropriate GND pin. Please refer to the layout section for more layout tips.
The current sense components must provide a signal > 710mV at the CS pin during an over-load event. Once
the voltage on the CS pin crosses the current limit threshold, the current sense comparator terminates the PWM
pulse and starts to charge the RES pin. Depending on the configuration of the RES pin, the LM5046 will
eventually initiate a hiccup mode restart or be in continuous current limit.
VPWR
Q3
Q1
VIN
NS1
RF
CS
NP
LM5046
RCS
CF
NS2
AGND
Q2
Q4
Figure 31. Transformer Current Sense
Q3
Q1
NP
Q4
Q2
VIN
CS
LM5046
RF
CF
RCS
AGND
Figure 32. Resistor Current Sense
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HICCUP MODE CURRENT LIMIT RESTART
The operation of the hiccup mode restart circuit is explained in the FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION section. During
a continuous current limit condition, the RES pin is charged with 30µA current source. The restart delay time
required to reach the 1.0V threshold is given by:
TCS =
CRES x 1.0V
30 PA
(10)
This establishes the number of current limit events allowed before the IC initiates a hiccup restart sequence. For
example, if the CRES=0.01µF, the time TCS as noted in Figure 33 is 334µs. Once the RES pin reaches 1.0V, the
30µA current source is turned-off and a 10µA current source is turned-on during the ramp up to 4V and a 5µA is
turned on during the ramp down to 2V. The hiccup mode off-time is given by:
THICCUP =
CRES x (2.0Vx8) CRES x ((2.0Vx8) + 1.0V)
+
10 µA
5 µA
(11)
With a CRES=0.01µF, the hiccup time is 49ms. Once the hiccup time is finished, the RES pin is pulled-low and the
SS pin is released allowing a soft-start sequence to commence. Once the SS pin reaches 1V, the PWM pulses
will commence. The hiccup mode provides a cool-down period for the power converter in the event of a
sustained overload condition thereby lowering the average input current and temperature of the power
components during such an event.
4V
2V
1V
Count to Eight
Restart delay
Soft-Start
1V
Hiccup Mode off-time
Figure 33. Hiccup Mode Delay and Soft-Start Timing Diagram
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AUGMENTING THE GATE DRIVE STRENGTH
The LM5046 includes powerful 2A integrated gate drivers. However, in certain high power applications (>500W),
it might be necessary to augment the strength of the internal gate driver to achieve higher efficiency and better
thermal performance. In high power applications, typically, the I2xR loss in the primary MOSFETs is significantly
higher than the switching loss. In order to minimize the I2xR loss, either the primary MOSFETs are paralleled or
MOSFETs with low RDS (on) are employed. Both these scenarios increase the total gate charge to be driven by
the controller IC. An increase in the gate charge increases the FET transition time and hence increases the
switching losses. Therefore, to keep the total losses within a manageable limit the transition time needs to be
reduced.
Generally, during the miller capacitance charge/discharge the total available driver current is lower during the
turn-off process than during the turn-on process and often it is enough to speed-up the turn-off time to achieve
the efficiency and thermal goals. This can be achieved simply by employing a PNP device, as shown in
Figure 34, from gate to source of the power FET. During the turn-on process, when the LO1 goes high, the
current is sourced through the diode D1 and the BJT Q1 provides the path for the turn-off current. Q1 should be
located as close to the power FET as possible so that the turn-off current has the shortest possible path to the
ground and does not have to pass through the controller.
VIN
LM5046
BST1
D1
HO1
Q1
HS1
VCC
LO1
PGND
Figure 34. Circuit to Speed-up the Turn-off Process
Depending on the gate charge characteristics of the primary FET, if it is required to speed up both the turn-on
and the turn-off time, a bipolar totem pole structure as shown in Figure 35 can be used. When LO1 goes high,
the gate to source current is sourced through the NPN transistor Q1 and similar to the circuit shown in Figure 34
when LO1 goes low the PNP transistor Q2 expedites the turn-off process.
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VIN
LM5046
BST1
Q1
HO1
Q2
HS1
VCC
LO1
PGND
Figure 35. Bipolar Totem Pole Arrangement
Alternatively, a low side gate driver such as LM5112 can be utilized instead of the discrete totem pole. The
LM5112 comes in a small package with a 3A source and a 7A sink capability. While driving the high-side FET,
the HS1 acts as a local ground and the boot capacitor between the BST and HS pins acts as VCC.
VIN
LM5046
BST1
HO1
LM5112
HS1
VCC
LO1
LM5112
PGND
Figure 36. Using a Low Side Gate Driver to Augment Gate Drive Strength
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PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD LAYOUT
The LM5046 current sense and PWM comparators are very fast and respond to short duration noise pulses. The
components at the CS, COMP, SLOPE, RAMP, SS, SSSR, RES, UVLO, OVP, RD1, RD2, and RT pins should
be physically close as possible to the IC, thereby minimizing noise pickup on the PC board trace inductance.
Eliminating or minimizing via’s in these critical connections are essential. Layout consideration is critical for the
current sense filter. If a current sense transformer is used, both leads of the transformer secondary should be
routed to the sense filter components and to the IC pins. The ground side of the transformer should be
connected via a dedicated PC board trace to the AGND pin, rather than through the ground plane. If the current
sense circuit employs a sense resistor in the drive transistor source, low inductance resistors should be used. In
this case, all the noise sensitive, low-current ground trace should be connected in common near the IC, and then
a single connection made to the power ground (sense resistor ground point).
The gate drive outputs of the LM5046 should have short, direct paths to the power MOSFETs in order to
minimize inductance in the PC board. The boot-strap capacitors required for the high side gate drivers should be
located very close to the IC and connected directly to the BST and HS pins. The VCC and REF capacitors
should also be placed close to their respective pins with short trace inductance. Low ESR and ESL ceramic
capacitors are recommended for the boot-strap, VCC and the REF capacitors. The two ground pins (AGND,
PGND) must be connected together directly underneath the IC with a short, direct connection, to avoid jitter due
to relative ground bounce.
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APPLICATION CIRCUIT EXAMPLE
The following schematic shows an example of a 100W phase-shifted full-bridge converter controlled by LM5046.
The operating input voltage range is 36V to 75V, and the output voltage is 3.3V. The output current capability is
30 Amps. The converter is configured for current mode control with external slope compensation. An auxiliary
winding is used to raise the VCC voltage to reduce the controller power dissipation.
Evaluation Board Schematic
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REVISION HISTORY
Changes from Revision F (March 2013) to Revision G
•
34
Page
Changed layout of National Data Sheet to TI format .......................................................................................................... 33
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PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM
www.ti.com
11-Apr-2013
PACKAGING INFORMATION
Orderable Device
Status
(1)
Package Type Package Pins Package
Drawing
Qty
Eco Plan
Lead/Ball Finish
(2)
MSL Peak Temp
Op Temp (°C)
Top-Side Markings
(3)
(4)
LM5046MH/NOPB
ACTIVE
HTSSOP
PWP
28
48
Green (RoHS
& no Sb/Br)
CU SN
Level-1-260C-UNLIM
-40 to 125
LM5046
MH
LM5046MHX/NOPB
ACTIVE
HTSSOP
PWP
28
2500
Green (RoHS
& no Sb/Br)
CU SN
Level-1-260C-UNLIM
-40 to 125
LM5046
MH
LM5046SQ/NOPB
ACTIVE
WQFN
RSG
28
1000
Green (RoHS
& no Sb/Br)
CU SN
Level-1-260C-UNLIM
-40 to 125
L5046
LM5046SQX/NOPB
ACTIVE
WQFN
RSG
28
4500
Green (RoHS
& no Sb/Br)
CU SN
Level-1-260C-UNLIM
-40 to 125
L5046
(1)
The marketing status values are defined as follows:
ACTIVE: Product device recommended for new designs.
LIFEBUY: TI has announced that the device will be discontinued, and a lifetime-buy period is in effect.
NRND: Not recommended for new designs. Device is in production to support existing customers, but TI does not recommend using this part in a new design.
PREVIEW: Device has been announced but is not in production. Samples may or may not be available.
OBSOLETE: TI has discontinued the production of the device.
(2)
Eco Plan - The planned eco-friendly classification: Pb-Free (RoHS), Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt), or Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) - please check http://www.ti.com/productcontent for the latest availability
information and additional product content details.
TBD: The Pb-Free/Green conversion plan has not been defined.
Pb-Free (RoHS): TI's terms "Lead-Free" or "Pb-Free" mean semiconductor products that are compatible with the current RoHS requirements for all 6 substances, including the requirement that
lead not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous materials. Where designed to be soldered at high temperatures, TI Pb-Free products are suitable for use in specified lead-free processes.
Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt): This component has a RoHS exemption for either 1) lead-based flip-chip solder bumps used between the die and package, or 2) lead-based die adhesive used between
the die and leadframe. The component is otherwise considered Pb-Free (RoHS compatible) as defined above.
Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br): TI defines "Green" to mean Pb-Free (RoHS compatible), and free of Bromine (Br) and Antimony (Sb) based flame retardants (Br or Sb do not exceed 0.1% by weight
in homogeneous material)
(3)
MSL, Peak Temp. -- The Moisture Sensitivity Level rating according to the JEDEC industry standard classifications, and peak solder temperature.
(4)
Multiple Top-Side Markings will be inside parentheses. Only one Top-Side Marking contained in parentheses and separated by a "~" will appear on a device. If a line is indented then it is a
continuation of the previous line and the two combined represent the entire Top-Side Marking for that device.
Important Information and Disclaimer:The information provided on this page represents TI's knowledge and belief as of the date that it is provided. TI bases its knowledge and belief on information
provided by third parties, and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of such information. Efforts are underway to better integrate information from third parties. TI has taken and
continues to take reasonable steps to provide representative and accurate information but may not have conducted destructive testing or chemical analysis on incoming materials and chemicals.
TI and TI suppliers consider certain information to be proprietary, and thus CAS numbers and other limited information may not be available for release.
In no event shall TI's liability arising out of such information exceed the total purchase price of the TI part(s) at issue in this document sold by TI to Customer on an annual basis.
Addendum-Page 1
Samples
PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM
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11-Apr-2013
Addendum-Page 2
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com
11-Oct-2013
TAPE AND REEL INFORMATION
*All dimensions are nominal
Device
Package Package Pins
Type Drawing
SPQ
Reel
Reel
A0
Diameter Width (mm)
(mm) W1 (mm)
B0
(mm)
K0
(mm)
P1
(mm)
LM5046MHX/NOPB
HTSSOP
PWP
28
2500
330.0
16.4
LM5046SQ/NOPB
WQFN
RSG
28
1000
178.0
LM5046SQX/NOPB
WQFN
RSG
28
4500
330.0
6.8
10.2
1.6
8.0
16.0
Q1
12.4
5.3
5.3
1.3
8.0
12.0
Q1
12.4
5.3
5.3
1.3
8.0
12.0
Q1
Pack Materials-Page 1
W
Pin1
(mm) Quadrant
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com
11-Oct-2013
*All dimensions are nominal
Device
Package Type
Package Drawing
Pins
SPQ
Length (mm)
Width (mm)
Height (mm)
LM5046MHX/NOPB
HTSSOP
PWP
28
2500
367.0
367.0
35.0
LM5046SQ/NOPB
WQFN
RSG
28
1000
210.0
185.0
35.0
LM5046SQX/NOPB
WQFN
RSG
28
4500
367.0
367.0
35.0
Pack Materials-Page 2
MECHANICAL DATA
PWP0028A
MXA28A (Rev D)
www.ti.com
MECHANICAL DATA
RSG0028A
SQA28A (Rev B)
www.ti.com
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