LTC3835-1 Low IQ Synchronous Step-Down Controller FEATURES DESCRIPTION n The LTC®3835-1 is a high performance step-down switching regulator controller that drives an all N-channel synchronous power MOSFET stage. A constant-frequency current mode architecture allows a phase-lockable frequency of up to 650kHz. n n n n n n n n n n n n n Wide Output Voltage Range: 0.8V ≤ VOUT ≤ 10V Low Operating IQ: 80μA OPTI-LOOP® Compensation Minimizes COUT ±1% Output Voltage Accuracy Wide VIN Range: 4V to 36V Operation Phase-Lockable Fixed Frequency 140kHz to 650kHz Dual N-Channel MOSFET Synchronous Drive Very Low Dropout Operation: 99% Duty Cycle Adjustable Output Voltage Soft-Start or Tracking Output Current Foldback Limiting Output Overvoltage Protection Low Shutdown IQ: 10μA Selectable Continuous, Pulse-Skipping or Burst Mode® Operation at Light Loads Small 16-Lead Narrow SSOP or 3mm × 5mm DFN Package n n n The TRACK/SS pin ramps the output voltage during startup. Current foldback limits MOSFET heat dissipation during short-circuit conditions. Comparison of LTC3835 and LTC3835-1 APPLICATIONS n The 80μA no-load quiescent current extends operating life in battery powered systems. OPTI-LOOP compensation allows the transient response to be optimized over a wide range of output capacitance and ESR values. The LTC3835-1 features a precision 0.8V reference and a power good output indicator. The 4V to 36V input supply range encompasses a wide range of battery chemistries. Automotive Systems Telecom Systems Battery-Operated Digital Devices Distributed DC Power Systems PART # CLKOUT/ PHASMD EXTVCC PGOOD PACKAGES LTC3835 YES YES YES FE20/4 × 5 QFN LTC3835-1 NO NO NO GN16/3 × 5 DFN L, LT, LTC, LTM, Burst Mode, and OPTI-LOOP are registered trademarks of Linear Technology Corporation. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Protected by U.S. Patents, including 5408150, 5481178, 5705919, 5929620, 6304066, 6498466, 6580258, 6611131. TYPICAL APPLICATION High Efficiency Step-Down Converter VIN RUN TG 20k 0.012Ω SW VOUT 3.3V 5A 150μF INTVCC 4.7μF PLLIN/MODE VFB 62.5k 3.3μH 100pF SGND EFFICIENCY 10000 70 50 100 40 20 BG 1000 60 30 POWER LOSS 10 1 10 SENSE– SENSE+ 100000 VIN = 12V; VOUT = 3.3V POWER LOSS (mW) 33k LTC3835-1 90 80 BOOST ITH 100 10μF 0.22μF TRACK/SS 330pF Efficiency and Power Loss vs Load Current VIN 4V TO 36V EFFICIENCY (%) 0.01μF PLLLPF 0 0.001 0.01 PGND 0.1 0.1 1 10 100 1000 10000 LOAD CURRENT (mA) 38351 TA01b 38351 TA01 38351fc 1 LTC3835-1 ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS (Note 1) Input Supply Voltage (VIN) ......................... 36V to –0.3V Top Side Driver Voltage (BOOST) ............... 42V to –0.3V Switch Voltage (SW) ..................................... 36V to –5V INTVCC, (BOOST-SW) ............................... 8.5V to –0.3V RUN, TRACK/SS ......................................... 7V to –0.3V SENSE+, SENSE– Voltages ........................ 11V to –0.3V PLLIN/MODE, PLLLPF .........................INTVCC to –0.3V ITH, VFB Voltages ...................................... 2.7V to –0.3V Peak Output Current <10μs (TG, BG) ..........................3A INTVCC Peak Output Current ................................. 50mA Operating Temperature Range (Note 2).... –40°C to 85°C Junction Temperature (Note 3) ............................. 125°C Storage Temperature Range GN Package ....................................... –65°C to 150°C Storage Temperature Range DHC Package .................................... –65°C to 125°C Lead Temperature (GN Package, Soldering, 10 sec).... 300°C PIN CONFIGURATION TOP VIEW TOP VIEW PLLLPF 1 16 PLLIN/MODE ITH 2 15 SENSE+ PLLLPF 1 16 PLLIN/MODE TRACK/SS 3 14 SENSE– ITH 2 15 SENSE+ VFB 4 13 RUN TRACK/SS 3 14 SENSE– SGND 5 VFB 4 13 RUN PGND 6 SGND 5 12 BOOST PGND 6 11 TG BG 7 10 SW INTVCC 8 9 BG INTVCC 17 7 8 12 BOOST 11 TG 10 SW 9 VIN DHC PACKAGE 16-Pin (5mm s 3mm) PLASTIC DFN GN PACKAGE 16-LEAD PLASTIC SSOP TJMAX = 125°C, θJA = 43.5°C/W EXPOSED PAD (PIN 17) IS SGND MUST BE SOLDERED TO PCB ORDER INFORMATION VIN TJMAX = 150°C, θJA = 90°C/W (Note 2) LEAD FREE FINISH TAPE AND REEL PART MARKING* PACKAGE DESCRIPTION TEMPERATURE RANGE LTC3835EDHC-1#PBF LTC3835EDHC-1#TRPBF 38351 16-Lead (5mm × 3mm) Plastic DFN –40°C to 85°C LTC3835IDHC-1#PBF LTC3835IDHC-1#TRPBF 38351 16-Lead (5mm × 3mm) Plastic DFN –40°C to 85°C LTC3835EGN-1#PBF LTC3835EGN-1#TRPBF 38351 16-Lead Plastic SSOP –40°C to 85°C LTC3835IGN-1#PBF LTC3835IGN-1#TRPBF 38351 16-Lead Plastic SSOP –40°C to 85°C LEAD BASED FINISH TAPE AND REEL PART MARKING* PACKAGE DESCRIPTION TEMPERATURE RANGE LTC3835EDHC-1 LTC3835EDHC-1#TR 38351 16-Lead (5mm × 3mm) Plastic DFN –40°C to 85°C LTC3835IDHC-1 LTC3835IDHC-1#TR 38351 16-Lead (5mm × 3mm) Plastic DFN –40°C to 85°C LTC3835EGN-1 LTC3835EGN-1#TR 38351 16-Lead Plastic SSOP –40°C to 85°C LTC3835IGN-1 LTC3835IGN-1#TR 38351 16-Lead Plastic SSOP –40°C to 85°C Consult LTC Marketing for parts specified with wider operating temperature ranges. *The temperature grade is identified by a label on the shipping container. For more information on lead free part marking, go to: http://www.linear.com/leadfree/ For more information on tape and reel specifications, go to: http://www.linear.com/tapeandreel/ 38351fc 2 LTC3835-1 ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS The l denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. VIN = 12V, VRUN = 5V unless otherwise noted. SYMBOL PARAMETER Main Control Loop Regulated Feedback Voltage VFB Feedback Current IVFB Reference Voltage Line Regulation VREFLNREG Output Voltage Load Regulation VLOADREG CONDITIONS (Note 4); ITH Voltage = 1.2V (Note 4) VIN = 4V to 30V (Note 4) (Note 4) Measured in Servo Loop; ΔITH Voltage = 1.2V to 0.7V Measured in Servo Loop; ΔITH Voltage = 1.2V to 2V Transconductance Amplifier gm ITH = 1.2V; Sink/Source 5μA (Note 4) gm Input DC Supply Current (Note 5) IQ Sleep Mode RUN = 5V, VFB = 0.83V (No Load) Shutdown VRUN = 0V UVLO Undervoltage Lockout VIN Ramping Down Feedback Overvoltage Lockout Measured at VFB Relative to Regulated VFB VOVL Sense Pins Total Source Current VSENSE– = VSENSE+ = 0V ISENSE Maximum Duty Factor In Dropout DFMAX Soft-Start Charge Current VTRACK = 0V ITRACK/SS RUN Pin ON Threshold VRUN1, VRUN2 Rising VRUN ON VFB = 0.7V, VSENSE– = 3.3V VSENSE(MAX) Maximum Current Sense Threshold VFB = 0.7V, VSENSE– = 3.3V TG Transition Time: (Note 6) Rise Time CLOAD = 3300pF TG1, 2 tr Fall Time CLOAD = 3300pF TG1, 2 tf BG Transition Time: (Note 6) Rise Time CLOAD = 3300pF BG1, 2 tr Fall Time CLOAD = 3300pF BG1, 2 tf Top Gate Off to Bottom Gate On Delay CLOAD = 3300pF TG/BG t1D Synchronous Switch-On Delay Time Bottom Gate Off to Top Gate On Delay CLOAD = 3300pF BG/TG t2D Top Switch-On Delay Time Minimum On-Time (Note 7) tON(MIN) INTVCC Linear Regulator Internal VCC Voltage 8.5V < VIN < 30V VINTVCCVIN INTVCC Load Regulation ICC = 0mA to 20mA VLDOVIN Oscillator and Phase-Locked Loop Nominal Frequency VPLLLPF = No Connect fNOM Lowest Frequency VPLLLPF = 0V fLOW Highest Frequency VPLLLPF = INTVCC fHIGH Minimum Synchronizable Frequency PLLIN/MODE = External Clock; VPLLLPF = 0V fSYNCMIN Maximum Synchronizable Frequency PLLIN/MODE = External Clock; VPLLLPF = 2V fSYNCMAX Phase Detector Output Current IPLLLPF Sinking Capability fPLLIN/MODE < fOSC Sourcing Capability fPLLIN/MODE > fOSC Note 1: Stresses beyond those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings may cause permanent damage to the device. Exposure to any Absolute Maximum Rating condition for extended periods may affect device reliability and lifetime. l MIN TYP MAX UNITS 0.792 0.800 –5 0.002 0.808 –50 0.02 V nA %/V 0.1 –0.1 1.55 0.5 –0.5 % % mmho 80 10 3.5 10 –660 99.4 1.0 0.7 100 100 125 20 4 12 1.35 0.9 110 115 μA μA V % μA % μA V mV mV 50 50 90 90 ns ns 40 40 70 90 80 ns ns ns l l l 8 l 98 0.75 0.5 90 80 70 ns 180 ns 5.0 5.25 0.2 5.5 1.0 V % 360 220 475 400 250 530 115 800 440 280 580 140 kHz kHz kHz kHz kHz 650 –5 5 μA μA Note 2: The LTC3835E-1 is guaranteed to meet performance specifications from 0°C to 85°C. Specifications over the –40°C to 85°C operating temperature range are assured by design, characterization and correlation with statistical process controls. The LTC3835I-1 is guaranteed to meet performance specificatons over the full –40°C to 85°C operating temperature range. 38351fc 3 LTC3835-1 ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS Note 3: TJ is calculated from the ambient temperature TA and power dissipation PD according to the following formulas: Note 5: Dynamic supply current is higher due to the gate charge being delivered at the switching frequency. See Applications Information. LTC3835GN-1: TJ = TA + (PD • 90°C/W) LTC3835EDHC-1: TJ = TA + (PD • 43.5°C/W) Note 6: Rise and fall times are measured using 10% and 90% levels. Delay times are measured using 50% levels. Note 4: The LTC3835-1 is tested in a feedback loop that servos VITH to a specified voltage and measures the resultant VFB. Note 7: The minimum on-time condition is specified for an inductor peak-to-peak ripple current ≥40% of IMAX (see Minimum On-Time Considerations in the Applications Information section). TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS Efficiency and Power Loss vs Output Current 80 EFFICIENCY (%) 90 1000 VIN = 12V VOUT = 3.3V 100 60 50 10 40 30 0 0.001 0.01 VIN = 12V VIN = 5V VOUT = 3.3V VOUT = 3.3V FIGURE 10 CIRCUIT 96 80 70 60 FIGURE 10 CIRCUIT 0.1 0.1 1 10 100 1000 10000 LOAD CURRENT (mA) 92 90 88 86 1 20 10 Efficiency vs Input Voltage 98 94 POWER LOSS (mW) 70 Burst Mode OPERATION FORCED CONTINUOUS MODE PULSE SKIPPING MODE 100 EFFICIENCY (%) 90 Efficiency vs Load Current 10000 EFFICIENCY (%) 100 TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted. 50 40 0.001 0.01 84 FIGURE 10 CIRCUIT 82 0.1 1 10 100 1000 10000 LOAD CURRENT (mA) 38351 G01 0 10 15 20 25 30 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 38351 G02 Load Step (Burst Mode Operation) Load Step (Forced Continuous Mode) VOUT 100mV/DIV AC COUPLED IL 2A/DIV IL 2A/DIV IL 2A/DIV 38351 G05 20μs/DIV FIGURE 10 CIRCUIT VOUT = 3.3V 40 Load Step (Pulse-Skipping Mode) VOUT 100mV/DIV AC COUPLED 38351 G04 35 38351 G03 VOUT 100mV/DIV AC COUPLED 20μs/DIV FIGURE 10 CIRCUIT VOUT = 3.3V 5 38351 G06 20ms/DIV FIGURE 10 CIRCUIT VOUT = 3.3V 38351fc 4 LTC3835-1 TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted. Soft Start-Up Inductor Current at Light Load Tracking Start-Up VOUT2 2V/DIV FORCED CONTINUOUS MODE (MASTER) VOUT1 2V/DIV 2A/DIV Burst Mode OPERATION (SLAVE) VOUT 1V/DIV PULSESKIPPING MODE Total Input Supply Current vs Input Voltage EXTVCC Switchover and INTVCC Voltages vs Temperature SUPPLY CURRENT (μA) 300 250 300μA LOAD 200 150 NO LOAD 50 0 5 10 25 20 15 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 35 30 5.50 5.8 5.45 5.40 5.6 5.4 INTVCC 5.2 5.0 EXTVCC RISING 4.8 4.6 4.4 5.05 5.00 –25 35 15 –5 55 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 0 95 CURRENT SENSE THRESHOLD (mV) INPUT CURRENT (μA) 15 20 25 30 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 35 40 120 –100 –200 –300 –400 –500 –20 10 Maximum Current Sense Threshold vs Duty Cycle 0 0 5 38351 G12 Sense Pins Total Input Bias Current 100 20 5.15 4.0 –45 200 40 5.20 38351 G11 PULSE SKIPPING FORCED CONTINUOUS BURST MODE (RISING) BURST MODE (FALLING) 60 5.25 4.2 Maximum Current Sense Voltage vs ITH Voltage 80 5.35 5.30 5.10 EXTVCC FALLING 38351 G10 100 INTVCC Line Regulation 6.0 INTVCC VOLTAGE (V) EXTVCC AND INTVCC VOLTAGES (V) 350 CURRENT SENSE THRESHOLD (mV) 20ms/DIV FIGURE 10 CIRCUIT 20ms/DIV FIGURE 10 CIRCUIT 100 38351 G09 38351 G08 38351 G07 4μs/DIV FIGURE 10 CIRCUIT VOUT = 3.3V ILOAD = 300μA –600 100 80 60 40 20 10% DUTY CYCLE –40 0 0.2 0.8 1.0 0.4 0.6 ITH PIN VOLTAGE (V) 1.2 1.4 38351 G13 0 –700 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 VSENSE COMMON MODE VOLTAGE (V) 10 38351 G14 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 DUTY CYCLE (%) 38351 G15 38351fc 5 LTC3835-1 TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS Quiescent Current vs Temperature Foldback Current Limit 80 60 40 20 10 90 INPUT CURRENT (μA) 100 85 80 75 75 90 1.00 1.15 0.95 RUN PIN VOLTAGE (V) 0.95 0.90 0.85 0.80 0.75 0.70 0.65 0.60 0.85 0.55 75 0.50 –45 –30 –15 90 0 15 30 45 60 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 38351 G19 798 796 794 0 15 30 45 60 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 90 38351 G21 Oscillator Frequency vs Temperature 800 700 VOUT = 3.3V 20 –300 –400 –500 600 FREQUENCY (kHz) INPUT CURRENT (μA) INPUT CURRENT (μA) 800 792 –45 –30 –15 90 25 –200 15 10 0 15 30 45 60 TEMPERATURE (°C) VPLLLPF = INTVCC 500 VPLLLPF = FLOAT 400 300 VPLLLPF = GND 200 5 VOUT = 0V 100 –700 –800 –45 –30 –15 802 VOUT = 10V –100 –600 1.4 804 Shutdown Current vs Input Voltage 200 0 1.2 806 38351 G20 SENSE Pins Total Input Current vs Temperature 100 0.6 0.8 1.0 ITH VOLTAGE (V) 808 0.90 1.00 0.4 Regulated Feedback Voltage vs Temperature REGULATED FEEDBACK VOLTAGE (mV) 1.20 1.05 0.2 38351 G18 Shutdown (RUN) Threshold vs Temperature 1.10 0 38351 G17 TRACK/SS Pull-Up Current vs Temperature 0 15 30 45 60 TEMPERATURE (°C) 4 0 0 15 30 45 60 TEMPERATURE (°C) 38351 G16 0.80 –45 –30 –15 6 2 60 –45 –30 –15 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 FEEDBACK VOLTAGE (V) 8 70 65 0 VSENSE = 3.3V PLLIN/MODE = 0V 95 0 TRACK/SS CURRENT (μA) SENSE Pins Total Input Bias Current vs ITH 12 100 TRACK/SS = 1V QUIESCENT CURRENT (μA) MAXIMUM CURRENT SENSE VOLTAGE (V) 120 TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted. 0 75 90 38351 G22 5 10 25 20 15 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 30 35 38351 G23 0 –45 –25 35 15 –5 55 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 38351 G24 38351fc 6 LTC3835-1 TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted. Oscillator Frequency vs Input Voltage Undervoltage Lockout Threshold vs Temperature 4.2 Shutdown Current vs Temperature 404 12 402 10 3.9 3.8 FREQUENCY (kHz) INTVCC VOLTAGE (V) 4.0 RISING 3.7 3.6 3.5 SHUTDOWN CURRENT (μA) 4.1 400 398 396 FALLING 3.4 394 8 6 4 2 3.3 3.2 –45 –30 –15 0 15 30 45 60 TEMPERATURE (°C) 392 75 90 5 10 25 20 15 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 38351 G25 PIN FUNCTIONS 30 35 38351 G26 0 –45 –30 –15 0 15 30 45 60 TEMPERATURE (°C) 75 90 38351 G27 (DHC Package/GN Package) PLLLPF (Pin 1/Pin 1): The phase-locked loop’s lowpass filter is tied to this pin when synchronizing to an external clock. Alternatively, tie this pin to GND, INTVCC or leave floating to select 250kHz, 530kHz or 400kHz switching frequency. ITH (Pin 2/Pin 2): Error Amplifier Outputs and Switching Regulator Compensation Points. The current comparator trip point increases with this control voltage. TRACK/SS (Pin 3/Pin 3): External Tracking and Soft-Start Input. The LTC3835-1 regulates the VFB voltage to the smaller of 0.8V or the voltage on the TRACK/SS pin. A internal 1μA pull-up current source is connected to this pin. A capacitor to ground at this pin sets the ramp time to final regulated output voltage. Alternatively, a resistor divider on another voltage supply connected to this pin allows the LTC3835-1 output to track the other supply during start-up. VFB (Pin 4/Pin 4): Receives the remotely sensed feedback voltage from an external resistive divider across the output. SGND (Pin 5/Pin 5): Small-Signal Ground. Must be routed separately from high current grounds to the common (–) terminals of the input capacitor. PGND (Pin 6/Pin 6): Driver Power Ground. Connects to the source of bottom (synchronous) N-channel MOSFET, anode of the Schottky rectifier and the (–) terminal of CIN. BG (Pin 7/Pin 7): High Current Gate Drive for Bottom (Synchronous) N-Channel MOSFET. Voltage swing at this pin is from ground to INTVCC. INTVCC (Pin 8/Pin 8): Output of the Internal Linear Low Dropout Regulator. The driver and control circuits are powered from this voltage source. Must be decoupled to power ground with a minimum of 4.7μF tantalum or other low ESR capacitor. VIN (Pin 9/Pin 9): Main Supply Pin. A bypass capacitor should be tied between this pin and the signal ground pin. SW (Pin 10/Pin 10): Switch Node Connections to Inductor. Voltage swing at this pin is from a Schottky diode (external) voltage drop below ground to VIN. TG (Pin 11/Pin 11): High Current Gate Drive for Top N-Channel MOSFET. These are the outputs of floating drivers with a voltage swing equal to INTVCC – 0.5V superimposed on the switch node voltage SW. BOOST (Pin 12/Pin 12): Bootstrapped Supply to the Topside Floating Driver. A capacitor is connected between the BOOST and SW pins and a Schottky diode is tied between the BOOST and INTVCC pins. Voltage swing at the BOOST pin is from INTVCC to (VIN + INTVCC). 38351fc 7 LTC3835-1 PIN FUNCTIONS (DHC Package/GN Package) RUN (Pin 13/Pin 13): Digital Run Control Input for Controller. Forcing this pin below 0.7V shuts down all controller functions, reducing the quiescent current that the LTC3835-1 draws to approximately 10μA. Input. When an external clock is applied to this pin, the phase-locked loop will force the rising TG signal to be synchronized with the rising edge of the external clock. In this case, an R-C filter must be connected to the PLLLPF pin. When not synchronizing to an external clock, this input determines how the LTC3835-1 operates at light loads. Pulling this pin below 0.7V selects Burst Mode operation. Tying this pin to INTVCC forces continuous inductor current operation. Tying this pin to a voltage greater than 0.9V and less than INTVCC selects pulse-skipping operation. SENSE– (Pin 14/Pin 14): The (–) Input to the Differential Current Comparator. SENSE+ (Pin 15/Pin 15): The (+) Input to the Differential Current Comparator. The ITH pin voltage and controlled offsets between the SENSE– and SENSE+ pins in conjunction with RSENSE set the current trip threshold. Exposed Pad (Pin 17, DHC Package): SGND. Must be soldered to PCB. PLLIN/MODE (Pin 16/Pin 16): External Synchronization Input to Phase Detector and Forced Continuous Control FUNCTIONAL DIAGRAM INTVCC PLLIN/MODE FIN VIN PHASE DET BOOST RLP PLLLPF CB DROP OUT DET CLK OSCILLATOR CLP S Q R Q + PLLIN/MODE 0.8V SW TOP ON SWITCH LOGIC INTVCC BOT BURSTEN 0.4V BURSTEN + B + – 0.45V 2(VFB) – VOUT SHDN ++ – – L IR SENSE+ 6mV SENSE– OV LDO 5.25V 0.5μA RSENSE + – EA + VIN COUT PGND SLOPE COMP VIN BG SLEEP – ICMP CIN D FC BOT FC – + TG TOP – INTVCC–0.5V DB VFB VFB TRACK/SS 0.80V RB RA + – 0.88V ITH CC INTVCC CC2 6V + RC 1μA SGND INTERNAL SUPPLY TRACK/SS RUN SHDN CSS 3835-1 FD 38351fc 8 LTC3835-1 OPERATION (Refer to Functional Diagram) Main Control Loop Shutdown and Start-Up (RUN and TRACK/SS Pins) The LTC3835-1 uses a constant-frequency, current mode step-down architecture. During normal operation, each external top MOSFET is turned on when the clock sets the RS latch, and is turned off when the main current comparator, ICMP, resets the RS latch. The peak inductor current at which ICMP trips and resets the latch is controlled by the voltage on the ITH pin, which is the output of the error amplifier EA. The error amplifier compares the output voltage feedback signal at the VFB pin, (which is generated with an external resistor divider connected across the output voltage, VOUT , to ground) to the internal 0.800V reference voltage. When the load current increases, it causes a slight decrease in VFB relative to the reference, which cause the EA to increase the ITH voltage until the average inductor current matches the new load current. The LTC3835-1 can be shut down using the RUN pin. Pulling this pin below 0.7V shuts down the main control loop for the controller. A low disables the controller and most internal circuits, including the INTVCC regulator, at which time the LTC3835-1 draws only 10μA of quiescent current. After the top MOSFET is turned off each cycle, the bottom MOSFET is turned on until either the inductor current starts to reverse, as indicated by the current comparator IR, or the beginning of the next clock cycle. INTVCC Power Power for the top and bottom MOSFET drivers and most other internal circuitry is derived from the INTVCC pin. An internal 5.25V low dropout linear regulator supplies INTVCC power from VIN. The top MOSFET driver is biased from the floating bootstrap capacitor CB, which normally recharges during each off cycle through an external diode when the top MOSFET turns off. If the input voltage VIN decreases to a voltage close to VOUT , the loop may enter dropout and attempt to turn on the top MOSFET continuously. The dropout detector detects this and forces the top MOSFET off for about one twelfth of the clock period every tenth cycle to allow CB to recharge. Releasing the RUN pin allows an internal 0.5μA current to pull up the pin and enable that controller. Alternatively, the RUN pin may be externally pulled up or driven directly by logic. Be careful not to exceed the Absolute Maximum rating of 7V on this pin. The start-up of the output voltage VOUT is controlled by the voltage on the TRACK/SS pin. When the voltage on the TRACK/SS pin is less than the 0.8V internal reference, the LTC3835-1 regulates the VFB voltage to the TRACK/SS pin voltage instead of the 0.8V reference. This allows the TRACK/SS pin to be used to program a soft-start by connecting an external capacitor from the TRACK/SS pin to SGND. An internal 1μA pull-up current charges this capacitor creating a voltage ramp on the TRACK/SS pin. As the TRACK/SS voltage rises linearly from 0V to 0.8V (and beyond), the output voltage VOUT rises smoothly from zero to its final value. Alternatively the TRACK/SS pin can be used to cause the start-up of VOUT to “track” that of another supply. Typically, this requires connecting to the TRACK/SS pin an external resistor divider from the other supply to ground (see Applications Information section). When the RUN pin is pulled low to disable the LTC3835-1, or when VIN drops below its undervoltage lockout threshold of 3.5V, the TRACK/SS pin is pulled low by an internal MOSFET. When in undervoltage lockout, the controller is disabled and the external MOSFETs are held off. 38351fc 9 LTC3835-1 OPERATION (Refer to Functional Diagram) Light Load Current Operation (Burst Mode Operation, Pulse-Skipping, or Continuous Conduction) (PLLIN/MODE Pin) The LTC3835-1 can be enabled to enter high efficiency Burst Mode operation, constant-frequency pulse-skipping mode, or forced continuous conduction mode at low load currents. To select Burst Mode operation, tie the PLLIN/ MODE pin to a DC voltage below 0.8V (e.g., SGND). To select forced continuous operation, tie the PLLIN/MODE pin to INTVCC. To select pulse-skipping mode, tie the PLLIN/MODE pin to a DC voltage greater than 0.8V and less than INTVCC – 0.5V. When the LTC3835-1 is enabled for Burst Mode operation, the peak current in the inductor is set to approximately one-tenth of the maximum sense voltage even though the voltage on the ITH pin indicates a lower value. If the average inductor current is lower than the load current, the error amplifier EA will decrease the voltage on the ITH pin. When the ITH voltage drops below 0.4V, the internal sleep signal goes high (enabling “sleep” mode) and both external MOSFETs are turned off. The ITH pin is then disconnected from the output of the EA and “parked” at 0.425V. In sleep mode, much of the internal circuitry is turned off, reducing the quiescent current that the LTC3835-1 draws to only 80μA. In sleep mode, the load current is supplied by the output capacitor. As the output voltage decreases, the EA’s output begins to rise. When the output voltage drops enough, the ITH pin is reconnected to the output of the EA, the sleep signal goes low, and the controller resumes normal operation by turning on the top external MOSFET on the next cycle of the internal oscillator. When the LTC3835-1 is enabled for Burst Mode operation, the inductor current is not allowed to reverse. The reverse current comparator (IR) turns off the bottom external MOSFET just before the inductor current reaches zero, preventing it from reversing and going negative, thus operating in discontinuous operation. In forced continuous operation, the inductor current is allowed to reverse at light loads or under large transient conditions. The peak inductor current is determined by the voltage on the ITH pin, just as in normal operation. In this mode, the efficiency at light loads is lower than in Burst Mode operation. However, continuous operation has the advantages of lower output ripple and less interference to audio circuitry. In forced continuous mode, the output ripple is independent of load current. When the PLLIN/MODE pin is connected for pulse-skipping mode or clocked by an external clock source to use the phase-locked loop (see Frequency Selection and Phase-Locked Loop section), the LTC3835-1 operates in PWM pulse-skipping mode at light loads. In this mode, constant-frequency operation is maintained down to approximately 1% of designed maximum output current. At very light loads, the current comparator ICMP may remain tripped for several cycles and force the external top MOSFET to stay off for the same number of cycles (i.e., skipping pulses). The inductor current is not allowed to reverse (discontinuous operation). This mode, like forced continuous operation, exhibits low output ripple as well as low audio noise and reduced RF interference as compared to Burst Mode operation. It provides higher low current efficiency than forced continuous mode, but not nearly as high as Burst Mode operation. Frequency Selection and Phase-Locked Loop (PLLLPF and PLLIN/MODE Pins) The selection of switching frequency is a tradeoff between efficiency and component size. Low frequency operation increases efficiency by reducing MOSFET switching losses, but requires larger inductance and/or capacitance to maintain low output ripple voltage. The switching frequency of the LTC3835-1’s controllers can be selected using the PLLLPF pin. If the PLLIN/MODE pin is not being driven by an external clock source, the PLLLPF pin can be floated, tied to INTVCC, or tied to SGND to select 400kHz, 530kHz or 250kHz, respectively. A phase-locked loop (PLL) is available on the LTC3835-1 to synchronize the internal oscillator to an external clock source that is connected to the PLLIN/MODE pin. In this case, a series R-C should be connected between the PLLLPF pin and SGND to serve as the PLL’s loop filter. The LTC3835-1 phase detector adjusts the voltage on the PLLLPF pin to align the turn-on of the external top MOSFET to the rising edge of the synchronizing signal. 38351fc 10 LTC3835-1 OPERATION (Refer to Functional Diagram) The typical capture range of the LTC3835-1’s phaselocked loop is from approximately 115kHz to 800kHz, with a guarantee to be between 140kHz and 650kHz. In other words, the LTC3835-1’s PLL is guaranteed to lock to an external clock source whose frequency is between 140kHz and 650kHz. The typical input clock thresholds on the PLLIN/MODE pin are 1.6V (rising) and 1.2V (falling). Output Overvoltage Protection An overvoltage comparator guards against transient overshoots as well as other more serious conditions that may overvoltage the output. When the VFB pin rises to more than 10% higher than its regulation point of 0.800V, the top MOSFET is turned off and the bottom MOSFET is turned on until the overvoltage condition is cleared. APPLICATIONS INFORMATION RSENSE Selection for Output Current RSENSE is chosen based on the required output current. The current comparator has a maximum threshold of 100mV/RSENSE and an input common mode range of SGND to 10V. The current comparator threshold sets the peak of the inductor current, yielding a maximum average output current IMAX equal to the peak value less half the peak-to-peak ripple current, ΔIL. Allowing a margin for variations in the IC and external component values yields: RSENSE = 80mV IMAX When using the controller in very low dropout conditions, the maximum output current level will be reduced due to the internal compensation required to meet stability criterion for buck regulators operating at greater than 50% duty factor. A curve is provided to estimate this reduction in peak output current level depending upon the operating duty factor. Operating Frequency and Synchronization The choice of operating frequency, is a trade-off between efficiency and component size. Low frequency operation improves efficiency by reducing MOSFET switching losses, both gate charge loss and transition loss. However, lower frequency operation requires more inductance for a given amount of ripple current. The internal oscillator of the LTC3835-1 runs at a nominal 400kHz frequency when the PLLLPF pin is left floating and the PLLIN/MODE pin is a DC low or high. Pulling the PLLLPF to INTVCC selects 530kHz operation; pulling the PLLLPF to SGND selects 250kHz operation. Alternatively, the LTC3835-1 will phase-lock to a clock signal applied to the PLLIN/MODE pin with a frequency between 140kHz and 650kHz (see Phase-Locked Loop and Frequency Synchronization). Inductor Value Calculation The operating frequency and inductor selection are interrelated in that higher operating frequencies allow the use of smaller inductor and capacitor values. So why would anyone ever choose to operate at lower frequencies with larger components? The answer is efficiency. A higher frequency generally results in lower efficiency because of MOSFET gate charge losses. In addition to this basic trade-off, the effect of inductor value on ripple current and low current operation must also be considered. The inductor value has a direct effect on ripple current. The inductor ripple current ΔIL decreases with higher inductance or frequency and increases with higher VIN: ΔIL = ⎛ V ⎞ 1 VOUT ⎜ 1– OUT ⎟ VIN ⎠ f L ⎝ ( )( ) 38351fc 11 LTC3835-1 APPLICATIONS INFORMATION Accepting larger values of ΔIL allows the use of low inductances, but results in higher output voltage ripple and greater core losses. A reasonable starting point for setting ripple current is ΔIL = 0.3(IMAX). The maximum ΔIL occurs at the maximum input voltage. The inductor value also has secondary effects. The transition to Burst Mode operation begins when the average inductor current required results in a peak current below 10% of the current limit determined by RSENSE. Lower inductor values (higher ΔIL) will cause this to occur at lower load currents, which can cause a dip in efficiency in the upper range of low current operation. In Burst Mode operation, lower inductance values will cause the burst frequency to decrease. Inductor Core Selection Once the value for L is known, the type of inductor must be selected. High efficiency converters generally cannot afford the core loss found in low cost powdered iron cores, forcing the use of more expensive ferrite or molypermalloy cores. Actual core loss is independent of core size for a fixed inductor value, but it is very dependent on inductance selected. As inductance increases, core losses go down. Unfortunately, increased inductance requires more turns of wire and therefore copper losses will increase. Ferrite designs have very low core loss and are preferred at high switching frequencies, so design goals can concentrate on copper loss and preventing saturation. Ferrite core material saturates “hard,” which means that inductance collapses abruptly when the peak design current is exceeded. This results in an abrupt increase in inductor ripple current and consequent output voltage ripple. Do not allow the core to saturate! Power MOSFET and Schottky Diode (Optional) Selection Two external power MOSFETs must be selected for each controller in the LTC3835-1: One N-channel MOSFET for the top (main) switch, and one N-channel MOSFET for the bottom (synchronous) switch. The peak-to-peak drive levels are set by the INTVCC voltage. This voltage is typically 5V during start-up (see EXTVCC Pin Connection). Consequently, logic-level threshold MOSFETs must be used in most applications. The only exception is if low input voltage is expected (VIN < 5V); then, sub-logic level threshold MOSFETs (VGS(TH) < 3V) should be used. Pay close attention to the BV specification for the MOSFETs as well; most of the logic level MOSFETs are limited to 30V or less. Selection criteria for the power MOSFETs include the “ON” resistance RDS(ON), Miller capacitance CMILLER, input voltage and maximum output current. Miller capacitance, CMILLER, can be approximated from the gate charge curve usually provided on the MOSFET manufacturers’ data sheet. CMILLER is equal to the increase in gate charge along the horizontal axis while the curve is approximately flat divided by the specified change in VDS. This result is then multiplied by the ratio of the application applied VDS to the Gate charge curve specified VDS. When the IC is operating in continuous mode the duty cycles for the top and bottom MOSFETs are given by: Main Switch Duty Cycle = VOUT VIN Synchronous Switch Duty Cycle = VIN – VOUT VIN 38351fc 12 LTC3835-1 APPLICATIONS INFORMATION The MOSFET power dissipations at maximum output current are given by: PMAIN = ( VOUT I VIN MAX )2 (1+ δ )RDS(ON) + ⎛ ⎞ ( VIN)2 ⎜⎝ IMAX (R )(C )• 2 ⎟⎠ DR MILLER ⎡ 1 1 ⎤ + ⎢ ⎥ f – V V V THMIN ⎦ ⎣ INTVCC THMIN () PSYNC = ( VIN – VOUT IMAX VIN )2 (I + δ )RDS(ON) where δ is the temperature dependency of RDS(ON) and RDR (approximately 2Ω) is the effective driver resistance at the MOSFET ’s Miller threshold voltage. VTHMIN is the typical MOSFET minimum threshold voltage. Both MOSFETs have I2R losses while the topside N-channel equation includes an additional term for transition losses, which are highest at high input voltages. For VIN < 20V the high current efficiency generally improves with larger MOSFETs, while for VIN > 20V the transition losses rapidly increase to the point that the use of a higher RDS(ON) device with lower CMILLER actually provides higher efficiency. The synchronous MOSFET losses are greatest at high input voltage when the top switch duty factor is low or during a short-circuit when the synchronous switch is on close to 100% of the period. The term (1 + δ) is generally given for a MOSFET in the form of a normalized RDS(ON) vs Temperature curve, but δ = 0.005/°C can be used as an approximation for low voltage MOSFETs. The optional Schottky diode D1 shown in Figure 8 conducts during the dead-time between the conduction of the two power MOSFETs. This prevents the body diode of the bottom MOSFET from turning on, storing charge during the dead-time and requiring a reverse recovery period that could cost as much as 3% in efficiency at high VIN. A 1A to 3A Schottky is generally a good compromise for both regions of operation due to the relatively small average current. Larger diodes result in additional transition losses due to their larger junction capacitance. CIN and COUT Selection In continuous mode, the source current of the top MOSFET is a square wave of duty cycle (VOUT)/(VIN). To prevent large voltage transients, a low ESR capacitor sized for the maximum RMS current of one channel must be used. The maximum RMS capacitor current is given by: CIN Required IRMS ≈ ( )( ) 1/ 2 IMAX ⎡ VOUT VIN – VOUT ⎤ ⎦ ⎣ VIN This formula has a maximum at VIN = 2VOUT , where IRMS = IOUT/2. This simple worst-case condition is commonly used for design because even significant deviations do not offer much relief. Note that capacitor manufacturers’ ripple current ratings are often based on only 2000 hours of life. This makes it advisable to further derate the capacitor, or to choose a capacitor rated at a higher temperature than required. Several capacitors may be paralleled to meet size or height requirements in the design. Due to the high operating frequency of the LTC3835-1, ceramic capacitors can also be used for CIN. Always consult the manufacturer if there is any question. The selection of COUT is driven by the effective series resistance (ESR). Typically, once the ESR requirement is satisfied, the capacitance is adequate for filtering. The output ripple (ΔVOUT) is approximated by: ⎛ 1 ⎞ ΔVOUT ≈ IRIPPLE ⎜ ESR + 8 fCOUT ⎟⎠ ⎝ where f is the operating frequency, COUT is the output capacitance and IRIPPLE is the ripple current in the inductor. The output ripple is highest at maximum input voltage since IRIPPLE increases with input voltage. 38351fc 13 LTC3835-1 APPLICATIONS INFORMATION Setting Output Voltage 200 VOUT ⎛ R ⎞ = 0.8 V • ⎜ 1+ B ⎟ ⎝ R ⎠ 100 0 INPUT CURRENT (μA) The LTC3835-1 output voltage is set by an external feedback resistor divider carefully placed across the output, as shown in Figure 1. The regulated output voltage is determined by: –100 –200 –300 –400 –500 A –600 To improve the frequency response, a feed-forward capacitor, CFF , may be used. Great care should be taken to route the VFB line away from noise sources, such as the inductor and the SW line. VOUT LTC3835-1 RB CFF VFB RA 3835-1 F01 Figure 1. Setting Output Voltage SENSE+ and SENSE– Pins The common mode input range of the current comparator is from 0V to 10V. Continuous linear operation is provided throughout this range allowing output voltages from 0.8V to 10V. The input stage of the current comparator requires that current either be sourced or sunk from the SENSE pins depending on the output voltage, as shown in the curve in Figure 2. If the output voltage is below 1.5V, current will flow out of both SENSE pins to the main output. In these cases, the output can be easily pre-loaded by the VOUT resistor divider to compensate for the current comparator’s negative input bias current. Since VFB is servoed to the 0.8V reference voltage, RA in Figure 1 should be chosen to be less than 0.8V/ISENSE, with ISENSE determined from Figure 2 at the specified output voltage. –700 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 VSENSE COMMON MODE VOLTAGE (V) 10 38351 F02 Figure 2. SENSE Pins Input Bias Current vs Common Mode (Output) Voltage Tracking and Soft-Start (TRACK/SS Pin) The start-up of VOUT is controlled by the voltage on the TRACK/SS pin. When the voltage on the TRACK/SS pin is less than the internal 0.8V reference, the LTC3835-1 regulates the VFB pin voltage to the voltage on the TRACK/SS pin instead of 0.8V. The TRACK/SS pin can be used to program an external soft-start function or to allow VOUT to “track” another supply during start-up. LTC3835-1 TRACK/SS CSS SGND 3835-1 F03 Figure 3. Using the TRACK/SS Pin to Program Soft-Start Soft-start is enabled by simply connecting a capacitor from the TRACK/SS pin to ground, as shown in Figure 3. An internal 1μA current source charges up the capacitor, providing a linear ramping voltage at the TRACK/SS pin. The LTC3835-1 will regulate the VFB pin (and hence VOUT) according to the voltage on the TRACK/SS pin, allowing VOUT to rise smoothly from 0V to its final regulated value. The total soft-start time will be approximately: tSS = CSS • 0.8 V 1μA 38351fc 14 LTC3835-1 APPLICATIONS INFORMATION Alternatively, the TRACK/SS pin can be used to track two (or more) supplies during start-up, as shown qualitatively in Figures 4a and 4b. To do this, a resistor divider should be connected from the master supply (VX) to the TRACK/ SS pin of the slave supply (VOUT), as shown in Figure 5. During start-up VOUT will track VX according to the ratio set by the resistor divider: INTVCC Regulators The LTC3835-1 features an internal P-channel low dropout linear regulator (LDO) that supplies power at the INTVCC pin from the VIN supply pin. INTVCC powers the gate drivers and much of the LTC3835-1’s internal circuitry. The VIN LDO regulates the voltage at the INTVCC pin to 5.25V. It can supply a peak current of 50mA and must be bypassed to ground with a minimum of 4.7μF tantalum, 10μF special polymer, or low ESR electrolytic capacitor. A ceramic capacitor with a minimum value of 4.7μF can also be used if a 1Ω resistor is added in series with the capacitor. No matter what type of bulk capacitor is used, an additional 1μF ceramic capacitor placed directly adjacent to the INTVCC and PGND IC pins is highly recommended. Good bypassing is needed to supply the high transient currents required by the MOSFET gate drivers and to prevent interaction between the channels. + RTRACKB R VX RA = • TRACKA VOUT RTRACKA RA + RB For coincident tracking (VOUT = VX during start-up), RA = RTRACKA RB = RTRACKB VX (MASTER) OUTPUT VOLTAGE OUTPUT VOLTAGE VX (MASTER) VOUT (SLAVE) TIME VOUT (SLAVE) TIME 3835-1 F04A (4a) Coincident Tracking 3835-1 F04B (4b) Ratiometric Tracking Figure 4. Two Different Modes of Output Voltage Tracking Vx VOUT RB LTC3835-1 VFB RA RTRACKB TRACK/SS RTRACKA 38351 F05 Figure 5. Using the TRACK/SS Pin for Tracking 38351fc 15 LTC3835-1 APPLICATIONS INFORMATION High input voltage applications in which large MOSFETs are being driven at high frequencies may cause the maximum junction temperature rating for the LTC3835-1 to be exceeded. The INTVCC current, which is dominated by the gate charge current, is supplied by the 5.25V VIN LDO. Power dissipation for the IC in this case is equal to VIN • IINTVCC. The gate charge current is dependent on operating frequency as discussed in the Efficiency Considerations section. The junction temperature can be estimated by using the equations given in Note 2 of the Electrical Characteristics. For example, the LTC3835-1 INTVCC current is limited to less than 25mA from a 24V supply when in the GN package: TJ = 70°C + (25mA)(24V)(90°C/W) = 125°C To prevent the maximum junction temperature from being exceeded, the input supply current must be checked while operating in continuous conduction mode (PLLIN/MODE = INTVCC) at maximum VIN. Topside MOSFET Driver Supply (CB, DB) External bootstrap capacitors CB connected to the BOOST pins supply the gate drive voltages for the topside MOSFET. Capacitor CB in the Functional Diagram is charged though external diode DB from INTVCC when the SW pin is low. When one of the topside MOSFET is to be turned on, the driver places the CB voltage across the gate-source of the desired MOSFET. This enhances the MOSFET and turns on the topside switch. The switch node voltage, SW, rises to VIN and the BOOST pin follows. With the topside MOSFET on, the boost voltage is above the input supply: VBOOST = VIN + VINTVCC. The value of the boost capacitor CB needs to be 100 times that of the total input capacitance of the topside MOSFET(s). The reverse breakdown of the external Schottky diode must be greater than VIN(MAX). When adjusting the gate drive level, the final arbiter is the total input current for the regulator. If a change is made and the input current decreases, then the efficiency has improved. If there is no change in input current, then there is no change in efficiency. Fault Conditions: Current Limit and Current Foldback The LTC3835-1 includes current foldback to help limit load current when the output is shorted to ground. If the output falls below 70% of its nominal output level, then the maximum sense voltage is progressively lowered from 100mV to 30mV. Under short-circuit conditions with very low duty cycles, the LTC3835-1 will begin cycle skipping in order to limit the short-circuit current. In this situation the bottom MOSFET will be dissipating most of the power but less than in normal operation. The short-circuit ripple current is determined by the minimum on-time tON(MIN) of the LTC3835-1 (≈180ns), the input voltage and inductor value: ΔIL(SC) = tON(MIN) (VIN/L) The resulting short-circuit current is: ISC = 10mV 1 – ΔI RSENSE 2 L(SC) Fault Conditions: Overvoltage Protection (Crowbar) The overvoltage crowbar is designed to blow a system input fuse when the output voltage of the regulator rises much higher than nominal levels. The crowbar causes huge currents to flow, that blow the fuse to protect against a shorted top MOSFET if the short occurs while the controller is operating. A comparator monitors the output for overvoltage conditions. The comparator (OV) detects overvoltage faults greater than 10% above the nominal output voltage. When this condition is sensed, the top MOSFET is turned off and the bottom MOSFET is turned on until the overvoltage condition is cleared. The bottom MOSFET remains on continuously for as long as the OV condition persists; if VOUT returns to a safe level, normal operation automatically resumes. A shorted top MOSFET will result in a high current condition which will open the system fuse. The switching regulator will regulate properly with a leaky top MOSFET by altering the duty cycle to accommodate the leakage. 38351fc 16 LTC3835-1 APPLICATIONS INFORMATION Phase-Locked Loop and Frequency Synchronization The LTC3835-1 has a phase-locked loop (PLL) comprised of an internal voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) and a phase detector. This allows the turn-on of the top MOSFET to be locked to the rising edge of an external clock signal applied to the PLLIN/MODE pin. The phase detector is an edge sensitive digital type that provides zero degrees phase shift between the external and internal oscillators. This type of phase detector does not exhibit false lock to harmonics of the external clock. The output of the phase detector is a pair of complementary current sources that charge or discharge the external filter network connected to the PLLLPF pin. The relationship between the voltage on the PLLLPF pin and operating frequency, when there is a clock signal applied to PLLIN/MODE, is shown in Figure 6 and specified in the Electrical Characteristics table. Note that the LTC3835-1 can only be synchronized to an external clock whose frequency is within range of the LTC3835-1’s internal VCO, which is nominally 115kHz to 800kHz. This is guaranteed to be between 140kHz and 650kHz. A simplified block diagram is shown in Figure 7. 900 800 FREQUENCY (kHz) 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 PLLLPF PIN VOLTAGE (V) 2.5 38351 F06 Figure 6. Relationship Between Oscillator Frequency and Voltage at the PLLLPF Pin When Synchronizing to an External Clock 2.4V RLP CLP PLLIN/ MODE EXTERNAL OSCILLATOR PLLLPF DIGITAL PHASE/ FREQUENCY DETECTOR OSCILLATOR 3835-1 F07 Figure 7. Phase-Locked Loop Block Diagram 38351fc 17 LTC3835-1 APPLICATIONS INFORMATION If the external clock frequency is greater than the internal oscillator’s frequency, fOSC, then current is sourced continuously from the phase detector output, pulling up the PLLLPF pin. When the external clock frequency is less than fOSC, current is sunk continuously, pulling down the PLLLPF pin. If the external and internal frequencies are the same but exhibit a phase difference, the current sources turn on for an amount of time corresponding to the phase difference. The voltage on the PLLLPF pin is adjusted until the phase and frequency of the internal and external oscillators are identical. At the stable operating point, the phase detector output is high impedance and the filter capacitor CLP holds the voltage. The loop filter components, CLP and RLP, smooth out the current pulses from the phase detector and provide a stable input to the voltage-controlled oscillator. The filter components CLP and RLP determine how fast the loop acquires lock. Typically RLP = 10k and CLP is 2200pF to 0.01μF. Typically, the external clock (on PLLIN/MODE pin) input high threshold is 1.6V, while the input low threshold is 1.2V. Table 1 summarizes the different states in which the PLLLPF pin can be used. Minimum On-Time Considerations Minimum on-time tON(MIN) is the smallest time duration that the LTC3835-1 is capable of turning on the top MOSFET. It is determined by internal timing delays and the gate charge required to turn on the top MOSFET. Low duty cycle applications may approach this minimum on-time limit and care should be taken to ensure that: tON(MIN) < VOUT VIN( f) If the duty cycle falls below what can be accommodated by the minimum on-time, the controller will begin to skip cycles. The output voltage will continue to be regulated, but the ripple voltage and current will increase. The minimum on-time for the LTC3835-1 is approximately 180ns. However, as the peak sense voltage decreases the minimum on-time gradually increases up to about 200ns. This is of particular concern in forced continuous applications with low ripple current at light loads. If the duty cycle drops below the minimum on-time limit in this situation, a significant amount of cycle skipping can occur with correspondingly larger current and voltage ripple. Table 1 PLLLPF PIN 0V PLLIN/MODE PIN FREQUENCY DC Voltage 250kHz Floating DC Voltage 400kHz INTVCC DC Voltage 530kHz RC Loop Filter Clock Signal Phase-Locked to External Clock 38351fc 18 LTC3835-1 APPLICATIONS INFORMATION Efficiency Considerations The percent efficiency of a switching regulator is equal to the output power divided by the input power times 100%. It is often useful to analyze individual losses to determine what is limiting the efficiency and which change would produce the most improvement. Percent efficiency can be expressed as: %Efficiency = 100% – (L1 + L2 + L3 + ...) where L1, L2, etc. are the individual losses as a percentage of input power. Although all dissipative elements in the circuit produce losses, four main sources usually account for most of the losses in LTC3835-1 circuits: 1) IC VIN current, 2) INTVCC regulator current, 3) I2R losses, 4) Topside MOSFET transition losses. RSENSE, but is “chopped” between the topside MOSFET and the synchronous MOSFET. If the two MOSFETs have approximately the same RDS(ON), then the resistance of one MOSFET can simply be summed with the resistances of L, RSENSE and ESR to obtain I2R losses. For example, if each RDS(ON) = 30mΩ, RL = 50mΩ, RSENSE = 10mΩ and RESR = 40mΩ (sum of both input and output capacitance losses), then the total resistance is 130mΩ. This results in losses ranging from 3% to 13% as the output current increases from 1A to 5A for a 5V output, or a 4% to 20% loss for a 3.3V output. Efficiency varies as the inverse square of VOUT for the same external components and output power level. The combined effects of increasingly lower output voltages and higher currents required by high performance digital systems is not doubling but quadrupling the importance of loss terms in the switching regulator system! 1. The VIN current has two components: the first is the DC supply current given in the Electrical Characteristics table, which excludes MOSFET driver and control currents; the second is the current drawn from the 3.3V linear regulator output. VIN current typically results in a small (<0.1%) loss. 4. Transition losses apply only to the topside MOSFET(s), and become significant only when operating at high input voltages (typically 15V or greater). Transition losses can be estimated from: 2. INTVCC current is the sum of the MOSFET driver and control currents. The MOSFET driver current results from switching the gate capacitance of the power MOSFETs. Each time a MOSFET gate is switched from low to high to low again, a packet of charge dQ moves from INTVCC to ground. The resulting dQ/dt is a current out of INTVCC that is typically much larger than the control circuit current. In continuous mode, IGATECHG = f(QT + QB), where QT and QB are the gate charges of the topside and bottom side MOSFETs. Other “hidden” losses such as copper trace and internal battery resistances can account for an additional 5% to 10% efficiency degradation in portable systems. It is very important to include these “system” level losses during the design phase. The internal battery and fuse resistance losses can be minimized by making sure that CIN has adequate charge storage and very low ESR at the switching frequency. A 25W supply will typically require a minimum of 20μF to 40μF of capacitance having a maximum of 20mΩ to 50mΩ of ESR. Other losses including Schottky conduction losses during dead-time and inductor core losses generally account for less than 2% total additional loss. 3. I2R losses are predicted from the DC resistances of the fuse (if used), MOSFET, inductor, current sense resistor, and input and output capacitor ESR. In continuous mode the average output current flows through L and Transition Loss = (1.7) VIN2 IO(MAX) CRSS f 38351fc 19 LTC3835-1 APPLICATIONS INFORMATION Checking Transient Response The regulator loop response can be checked by looking at the load current transient response. Switching regulators take several cycles to respond to a step in DC (resistive) load current. When a load step occurs, VOUT shifts by an amount equal to ΔILOAD (ESR), where ESR is the effective series resistance of COUT. ΔILOAD also begins to charge or discharge COUT generating the feedback error signal that forces the regulator to adapt to the current change and return VOUT to its steady-state value. During this recovery time VOUT can be monitored for excessive overshoot or ringing, which would indicate a stability problem. OPTI-LOOP compensation allows the transient response to be optimized over a wide range of output capacitance and ESR values. The availability of the ITH pin not only allows optimization of control loop behavior but also provides a DC coupled and AC filtered closed-loop response test point. The DC step, rise time and settling at this test point truly reflects the closed-loop response. Assuming a predominantly second order system, phase margin and/or damping factor can be estimated using the percentage of overshoot seen at this pin. The bandwidth can also be estimated by examining the rise time at the pin. The ITH external components shown in Figure 10 circuit will provide an adequate starting point for most applications. The ITH series RC-CC filter sets the dominant pole-zero loop compensation. The values can be modified slightly (from 0.5 to 2 times their suggested values) to optimize transient response once the final PC layout is done and the particular output capacitor type and value have been determined. The output capacitors need to be selected because the various types and values determine the loop gain and phase. An output current pulse of 20% to 80% of full-load current having a rise time of 1μs to 10μs will produce output voltage and ITH pin waveforms that will give a sense of the overall loop stability without breaking the feedback loop. Placing a power MOSFET directly across the output capacitor and driving the gate with an appropriate signal generator is a practical way to produce a realistic load step condition. The initial output voltage step resulting from the step change in output current may not be within the bandwidth of the feedback loop, so this signal cannot be used to determine phase margin. This is why it is better to look at the ITH pin signal which is in the feedback loop and is the filtered and compensated control loop response. The gain of the loop will be increased by increasing RC and the bandwidth of the loop will be increased by decreasing CC. If RC is increased by the same factor that CC is decreased, the zero frequency will be kept the same, thereby keeping the phase shift the same in the most critical frequency range of the feedback loop. The output voltage settling behavior is related to the stability of the closed-loop system and will demonstrate the actual overall supply performance. A second, more severe transient is caused by switching in loads with large (>1μF) supply bypass capacitors. The discharged bypass capacitors are effectively put in parallel with COUT, causing a rapid drop in VOUT. No regulator can alter its delivery of current quickly enough to prevent this sudden step change in output voltage if the load switch resistance is low and it is driven quickly. If the ratio of CLOAD to COUT is greater than 1:50, the switch rise time should be controlled so that the load rise time is limited to approximately 25 • CLOAD. Thus a 10μF capacitor would require a 250μs rise time, limiting the charging current to about 200mA. 38351fc 20 LTC3835-1 APPLICATIONS INFORMATION Design Example As a design example, assume VIN = 12V(nominal), VIN = 22V(max), VOUT = 1.8V, IMAX = 5A and f = 250kHz. The inductance value is chosen first based on a 30% ripple current assumption. The highest value of ripple current occurs at the maximum input voltage. Tie the PLLLPF pin to GND, generating 250kHz operation. The minimum inductance for 30% ripple current is: ΔIL = VOUT f L ( )( ) ⎛ VOUT ⎞ ⎜⎝ 1– V ⎟⎠ IN tON(MIN) = VOUT VIN(MAX )f = 1.8 V = 327ns 22V 250kHz ( ) The RSENSE resistor value can be calculated by using the maximum current sense voltage specification with some accommodation for tolerances: RSENSE ≤ ( 80mV ≈ 0.012 Ω 5.84A ( )( ) ) ( ) ( )( ) ⎡ 1 1 ⎤ ⎢ 5 – 2.3 + 2.3 ⎥ 300kHz = 332mW ⎣ ⎦ ( ) A short-circuit to ground will result in a folded back current of: ISC = A 4.7μH inductor will produce 23% ripple current and a 3.3μH will result in 33%. The peak inductor current will be the maximum DC value plus one half the ripple current, or 5.84A, for the 3.3μH value. Increasing the ripple current will also help ensure that the minimum on-time of 180ns is not violated. The minimum on-time occurs at maximum VIN: () 1.8 V 2 5 ⎡⎣1+ 0.005 50°C – 25°C ⎤⎦ • 22V 2 ⎛ 5A ⎞ 0.035Ω + 22V ⎜ ⎟ 4Ω 215pF • ⎝ 2⎠ PMAIN = 25mV 1 ⎛ 120ns(22V) ⎞ – = 2.1A 0.01Ω 2 ⎜⎝ 3.3μH ⎟⎠ with a typical value of RDS(ON) and δ = (0.005/°C)(20) = 0.1. The resulting power dissipated in the bottom MOSFET is: ( 22V – 1.8 V 2.1A 22V = 100mW PSYNC = )2 (1.125)(0.022Ω) which is less than under full-load conditions. CIN is chosen for an RMS current rating of at least 3A at temperature assuming only this channel is on. COUT is chosen with an ESR of 0.02Ω for low output ripple. The output ripple in continuous mode will be highest at the maximum input voltage. The output voltage ripple due to ESR is approximately: VORIPPLE = RESR (ΔIL) = 0.02Ω(1.67A) = 33mVP-P Choosing 1% resistors: R1 = 25.5k and R2 = 32.4k yields an output voltage of 1.816V. The power dissipation on the topside MOSFET can be easily estimated. Choosing a Fairchild FDS6982S dual MOSFET results in: RDS(ON) = 0.035Ω/0.022Ω, CMILLER = 215pF. At maximum input voltage with T(estimated) = 50°C: 38351fc 21 LTC3835-1 APPLICATIONS INFORMATION PC Board Layout Checklist When laying out the printed circuit board, the following checklist should be used to ensure proper operation of the IC. These items are also illustrated graphically in the layout diagram of Figure 8. The Figure 9 illustrates the current waveforms present in the various branches of the synchronous regulator operating in the continuous mode. Check the following in your layout: 1. Is the top N-channel MOSFET M1 located within 1cm of CIN? 2. Are the signal and power grounds kept separate? The combined IC signal ground pin and the ground return of CINTVCC must return to the combined COUT (–) terminals. The path formed by the top N-channel MOSFET, Schottky diode and the CIN capacitor should have short leads and PC trace lengths. The output capacitor (–) terminals should be connected as close as possible to the (–) terminals of the input capacitor by placing the capacitors next to each other and away from the Schottky loop described above. 3. Does the LTC3835-1 VFB pin resistive divider connect to the (+) terminals of COUT? The resistive divider must be connected between the (+) terminal of COUT and signal ground. The feedback resistor connections should not be along the high current input feeds from the input capacitor(s). 4. Are the SENSE– and SENSE+ leads routed together with minimum PC trace spacing? The filter capacitor between SENSE+ and SENSE– should be as close as possible to the IC. Ensure accurate current sensing with Kelvin connections at the SENSE resistor. 5. Is the INTVCC decoupling capacitor connected close to the IC, between the INTVCC and the power ground pins? This capacitor carries the MOSFET drivers current peaks. An additional 1μF ceramic capacitor placed immediately next to the INTVCC and PGND pins can help improve noise performance substantially. 6. Keep the switching node (SW), top gate node (TG), and boost node (BOOST) away from sensitive small-signal nodes, especially from the opposites channel’s voltage and current sensing feedback pins. All of these nodes have very large and fast moving signals and therefore should be kept on the “output side” of the LTC3835-1 and occupy minimum PC trace area. 7. Use a modified “star ground” technique: a low impedance, large copper area central grounding point on the same side of the PC board as the input and output capacitors with tie-ins for the bottom of the INTVCC decoupling capacitor, the bottom of the voltage feedback resistive divider and the SGND pin of the IC. TRACK/SS L1 SW SENSE– LTC3835EGN-1 BOOST VFB fIN PLLLPF VIN PLLIN/MODE BG VOUT CB M1 RIN CVIN INTVCC PGND + SGND M2 1μF CERAMIC D1 OPTIONAL COUT + DB RUN ITH RSENSE TG CINTVCC VIN GND + SENSE+ CIN 3835-1 F08 Figure 8. LTC3835-1 Recommended Printed Circuit Layout Diagram 38351fc 22 LTC3835-1 APPLICATIONS INFORMATION SW VIN L1 RSENSE VOUT RIN CIN D1 COUT RL1 3835-1 F09 BOLD LINES INDICATE HIGH SWITCHING CURRENT. KEEP LINES TO A MINIMUM LENGTH. Figure 9. Branch Current Waveforms PC Board Layout Debugging It is helpful to use a DC-50MHz current probe to monitor the current in the inductor while testing the circuit. Monitor the output switching node (SW pin) to synchronize the oscilloscope to the internal oscillator and probe the actual output voltage as well. Check for proper performance over the operating voltage and current range expected in the application. The frequency of operation should be maintained over the input voltage range down to dropout and until the output load drops below the low current operation threshold—typically 10% of the maximum designed current level in Burst Mode operation. The duty cycle percentage should be maintained from cycle to cycle in a well-designed, low noise PCB implementation. Variation in the duty cycle at a subharmonic rate can suggest noise pickup at the current or voltage sensing inputs or inadequate loop compensation. Overcompensation of the loop can be used to tame a poor PC layout if regulator bandwidth optimization is not required. Reduce VIN from its nominal level to verify operation of the regulator in dropout. Check the operation of the undervoltage lockout circuit by further lowering VIN while monitoring the outputs to verify operation. Investigate whether any problems exist only at higher output currents or only at higher input voltages. If problems coincide with high input voltages and low output currents, look for capacitive coupling between the BOOST, SW, TG, and possibly BG connections and the sensitive voltage and current pins. The capacitor placed across the current sensing pins needs to be placed immediately adjacent to the pins of the IC. This capacitor helps to minimize the effects of differential noise injection due to high frequency capacitive coupling. If problems are encountered with high current output loading at lower input voltages, look for inductive coupling between CIN, Schottky and the top MOSFET components to the sensitive current and voltage sensing traces. In addition, investigate common ground path voltage pickup between these components and the SGND pin of the IC. An embarrassing problem, which can be missed in an otherwise properly working switching regulator, results when the current sensing leads are hooked up backwards. The output voltage under this improper hookup will still be maintained but the advantages of current mode control will not be realized. Compensation of the voltage loop will be much more sensitive to component selection. This behavior can be investigated by temporarily shorting out the current sensing resistor—don’t worry, the regulator will still maintain control of the output voltage. 38351fc 23 LTC3835-1 TYPICAL APPLICATIONS High Efficiency 9.5V, 3A Step-Down Converter PLLLPF TG RUN 0.01μF VIN TRACK/SS CB 0.22μF BOOST ITH 560pF 35k LTC3835-1 CIN 10μF M1 7.2μH 0.012Ω SW VIN 4V TO 36V VOUT 9.5V 3A 100pF SGND 39.2k COUT 150μF INTVCC 4.7μF PLLIN/MODE VFB M2 BG SENSE– 432k SENSE+ PGND 38351 TA02 High Efficiency 12V to 1.8V, 2A Step-Down Converter PLLLPF TG RUN 0.01μF VIN TRACK/SS CB 0.22μF BOOST ITH 330pF 33k LTC3835-1 0.020Ω VIN 12V VOUT 1.8V 2A COUT 100μF CERAMIC INTVCC 4.7μF PLLIN/MODE VFB 62.5k 3.3μH SW 100pF SGND 20k M1 CIN 10μF BG M2 SENSE– SENSE+ PGND 38351 TA03 M1, M2: Si4840DY L1 TOKO 053LC A915AY-3R3M 38351fc 24 LTC3835-1 TYPICAL APPLICATIONS High Efficiency 5V, 5A Step-Down Converter 0.01μF PLLLPF VIN RUN TG TRACK/SS CB 0.22μF M1 BOOST ITH 470pF LTC3835-1 3.3μH CIN 10μF 0.012Ω SW VIN 4V TO 36V VOUT 5V 5A 100pF 10k SGND 69.8k COUT 150μF INTVCC 4.7μF PLLIN/MODE VFB M2 BG SENSE– 365k SENSE+ PGND 38351 TA04 High Efficiency 1.2V, 5A Step-Down Converter GND 0.01μF PLLLPF VIN RUN TG TRACK/SS CB 0.22μF BOOST ITH 2.2nF 10k LTC3835-1 0.012Ω SW VOUT 1.2V 5A COUT 150μF INTVCC 4.7μF PLLIN/MODE VFB 59.5k 2.2μH CIN 10μF 100pF SGND 118k M1 VIN 4V TO 36V BG M2 SENSE– SENSE+ PGND 38351 TA05 38351fc 25 LTC3835-1 PACKAGE DESCRIPTION DHC Package 16-Lead Plastic DFN (5mm × 3mm) (Reference LTC DWG # 05-08-1706) 0.65 ±0.05 3.50 ±0.05 1.65 ±0.05 2.20 ±0.05 (2 SIDES) PACKAGE OUTLINE 0.25 ± 0.05 0.50 BSC 4.40 ±0.05 (2 SIDES) RECOMMENDED SOLDER PAD PITCH AND DIMENSIONS R = 0.115 TYP 5.00 ±0.10 (2 SIDES) R = 0.20 TYP 3.00 ±0.10 (2 SIDES) 9 0.40 ± 0.10 16 1.65 ± 0.10 (2 SIDES) PIN 1 TOP MARK (SEE NOTE 6) PIN 1 NOTCH (DHC16) DFN 1103 8 0.200 REF 1 0.25 ± 0.05 0.50 BSC 0.75 ±0.05 4.40 ±0.10 (2 SIDES) 0.00 – 0.05 BOTTOM VIEW—EXPOSED PAD NOTE: 1. DRAWING PROPOSED TO BE MADE VARIATION OF VERSION (WJED-1) IN JEDEC PACKAGE OUTLINE MO-229 2. DRAWING NOT TO SCALE 3. ALL DIMENSIONS ARE IN MILLIMETERS 4. DIMENSIONS OF EXPOSED PAD ON BOTTOM OF PACKAGE DO NOT INCLUDE MOLD FLASH. MOLD FLASH, IF PRESENT, SHALL NOT EXCEED 0.15mm ON ANY SIDE 5. EXPOSED PAD SHALL BE SOLDER PLATED 6. SHADED AREA IS ONLY A REFERENCE FOR PIN 1 LOCATION ON THE TOP AND BOTTOM OF PACKAGE 38351fc 26 LTC3835-1 PACKAGE DESCRIPTION GN Package 16-Lead Plastic SSOP (Narrow .150 Inch) (Reference LTC DWG # 05-08-1641) .189 – .196* (4.801 – 4.978) .045 ±.005 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 .254 MIN .009 (0.229) REF .150 – .165 .229 – .244 (5.817 – 6.198) .0165 ±.0015 .150 – .157** (3.810 – 3.988) .0250 BSC RECOMMENDED SOLDER PAD LAYOUT 1 .015 ± .004 s 45° (0.38 ± 0.10) .007 – .0098 (0.178 – 0.249) 2 3 4 5 6 7 .0532 – .0688 (1.35 – 1.75) 8 .004 – .0098 (0.102 – 0.249) 0° – 8° TYP .016 – .050 (0.406 – 1.270) NOTE: 1. CONTROLLING DIMENSION: INCHES INCHES 2. DIMENSIONS ARE IN (MILLIMETERS) .008 – .012 (0.203 – 0.305) TYP .0250 (0.635) BSC GN16 (SSOP) 0204 3. DRAWING NOT TO SCALE *DIMENSION DOES NOT INCLUDE MOLD FLASH. MOLD FLASH SHALL NOT EXCEED 0.006" (0.152mm) PER SIDE **DIMENSION DOES NOT INCLUDE INTERLEAD FLASH. INTERLEAD FLASH SHALL NOT EXCEED 0.010" (0.254mm) PER SIDE 38351fc Information furnished by Linear Technology Corporation is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed for its use. Linear Technology Corporation makes no representation that the interconnection of its circuits as described herein will not infringe on existing patent rights. 27 LTC3835-1 TYPICAL APPLICATION PLLLPF TG RUN 0.01μF VIN TRACK/SS CB 0.22μF L1 3.3μH BOOST ITH 1200pF LTC3835-1 DB CMDSH-3 SGND 68.1k 0.012Ω SW 100pF 10k CIN 10μF VOUT 3.3V 5A COUT 150μF INTVCC 4.7μF PLLIN/MODE VFB VIN 4V TO 36V BG SENSE– 215k SENSE+ PGND 39pF 38351 TA06 M1, M2: Si7848DD L1: CDEP 105-3R2M COUT: SANYO 10TPD150M Figure 10. High Efficiency 3.3V, 5A Step-Down Converter RELATED PARTS PART NUMBER DESCRIPTION LTC1628/LTC1628-PG/ 2-Phase, Dual Output Synchronous Step-Down LTC1628-SYNC DC/DC Controller COMMENTS Reduces CIN and COUT , Power Good Output Signal, Synchronizable, 3.5V ≤ VIN ≤ 36V, IOUT Up to 20A, 0.8V ≤ VOUT ≤ 5V Expandable from 2-Phase to 12-Phase, Uses All LTC1629/ 20A to 200A PolyPhase® Synchronous Controllers Surface Mount Components, No Heat Sink, VIN Up to 36V LTC1629-PG LTC1708-PG 2-Phase, Dual Synchronous Controller with Mobile VID 3.5V ≤ VIN ≤ 36V, VID Sets VOUT1, PGOOD LT1709/ High Efficiency, 2-Phase Synchronous Step-Down 1.3V ≤ VOUT ≤ 3.5V, Current Mode Ensures Accurate Current Sharing, 3.5V ≤ VIN ≤ 36V LT1709-8 Switching Regulators with 5-Bit VID LTC1735 High Efficiency Synchronous Step-Down Switching Regulator Output Fault Protection, 16-Pin SSOP LTC1736 High Efficiency Synchronous Controller with 5-Bit Mobile Output Fault Protection, 24-Pin SSOP, VID Control 3.5V ≤ VIN ≤ 36V Up to 97% Efficiency, 4V ≤ VIN ≤ 36V, 0.8V ≤ VOUT ≤ (0.9)(VIN), LTC1778/LTC1778-1 No RSENSE Current Mode Synchronous Step-Down Controllers IOUT Up to 20A LTC3708 Dual, 2-Phase, DC/DC Controller with Output Tracking Current Mode, No RSENSE, Up/Down Tracking, Synchronizable Up to 97% Efficiency, Ideal for Pentium® III Processors, LTC3711 No RSENSE Current Mode Synchronous Step-Down Controller with Digital 5-Bit Interface 0.925V ≤ VOUT ≤ 2V, 4V ≤ VIN ≤ 36V , IOUT Up to 20A LTC3728 Dual, 550kHz, 2-Phase Synchronous Step-Down Dual 180° Phased Controllers, VIN 3.5V to 35V, 99% Duty Cycle, 5 × 5 QFN Package, SSOP-28 Controller LTC3729 20A to 200A, 550kHz PolyPhase Synchronous Controller Expandable from 2-Phase to 12-Phase, Uses All Surface Mount Components, VIN Up to 36V LTC3731 3- to 12-Phase Step-Down Synchronous Controller 60A to 240A Output Current, 0.6V ≤ VOUT ≤ 6V , 4.5V ≤ VIN ≤ 32V 2-Phase Operation; 115μA Total No Load IQ, 4V ≤ VIN ≤ 36V LTC3827/ Low IQ Dual Synchronous Controllers 80μA No Load IQ with One Channel On LTC3827-1 No RSENSE is a trademark of Linear Technology Corporation. PolyPhase is a registered trademark of Linear Technology Corporation. 38351fc 28 Linear Technology Corporation LT 0208 REV C • PRINTED IN USA 1630 McCarthy Blvd., Milpitas, CA 95035-7417 (408) 432-1900 ● FAX: (408) 434-0507 ● www.linear.com © LINEAR TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION 2006