MIC261203-ZA 28V, 12A, Hyper Speed Control™ Synchronous DC-to-DC Buck Regulator SuperSwitcher™ II General Description The Micrel MIC261203-ZA is a constant-frequency, synchronous buck regulator featuring a unique adaptive on-time control architecture. The MIC261203-ZA operates over an input supply range of 4.5V to 28V and provides a regulated output of up to 12A of output current. The output voltage is adjustable down to 0.6V with a guaranteed accuracy of ±1%, and the device operates at a switching frequency of 600kHz. Micrel’s Hyper Speed Control architecture allows for ultra-fast transient response while reducing the output capacitance and also makes (High VIN)/(Low VOUT) operation possible. This adaptive tON ripple control architecture combines the advantages of fixed-frequency operation and fast transient response in a single device. The MIC261203-ZA offers a full suite of features to ensure protection of the IC during fault conditions. These include undervoltage lockout to ensure proper operation under power-sag conditions, internal soft-start to reduce inrush current, foldback current limit, “hiccup mode” short-circuit protection, and thermal shutdown. An open-drain Power Good (PG) pin is provided. Datasheets and support documentation are available on Micrel’s web site at: www.micrel.com. SuperSwitcher™ II Features • Hyper Speed Control architecture enables − High Delta V operation (VIN = 28V and VOUT = 0.6V) − Small output capacitance • 4.5V to 28V voltage input • 12A output current capability and 95% peak efficiency • Adjustable output from 0.6V to 5.5V • ±1% feedback accuracy • Any Capacitor stable - zero-to-high ESR • 600kHz switching frequency • No external compensation • Power Good (PG) output • Foldback I-limit and “hiccup” short-circuit protection • Supports safe startup into a pre-biased load • –40°C to +125°C junction temperature range • 28-pin 5mm × 6mm QFN package Applications • Distributed POL and telecom/networking infrastructure • Printers, scanners, graphic and video cards • Set-top boxes, gateways and routers Typical Application Efficiency (VIN = 12V) vs. Output Current 100 95 5.0V 3.3V 2.5V 1.8V 1.5V 1.2V 1.0V 0.9V 0.8V EFFICIENCY (%) 90 85 80 75 70 65 60 55 VIN = 12V 50 0 3 6 9 12 15 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) Hyper Speed Control, SuperSwitcher, and Any Capacitor are trademarks of Micrel, Inc. Micrel Inc. • 2180 Fortune Drive • San Jose, CA 95131 • USA • tel +1 (408) 944-0800 • fax + 1 (408) 474-1000 • http://www.micrel.com July 22, 2014 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Ordering Information Voltage Switching Frequency Package Junction Temperature Range Lead Finish Adjustable 600kHz 28-Pin 5mm × 6mm QFN –40°C to +125°C Pb-Free Part Number MIC261203-ZAYJL Pin Configuration 28-Pin 5mm × 6mm QFN (JL) (Top View) Pin Description Pin Number Pin Name 1 PVDD 5V Internal Linear Regulator output: PVDD supply is the power MOSFET gate drive supply voltage created by internal LDO from VIN. When VIN < +5.5V, PVDD should be tied to the PVIN pins. A 2.2µF ceramic capacitor from the PVDD pin to PGND (pin 2) must be placed next to the IC. 2, 5, 6, 7, 8, 21 PGND Power Ground: PGND is the ground path for the MIC261203-ZA buck converter power stage. The PGND pins connect to the low-side N-Channel internal MOSFET gate drive supply ground, the sources of the MOSFETs, the negative terminals of input capacitors, and the negative terminals of output capacitors. The loop for the power ground should be as small as possible and separate from the signal ground (SGND) loop. 3 NC No Connect. 4, 9, 10, 11, 12 SW Switch Node output: Internal connection for the high-side MOSFET source and low-side MOSFET drain. Because of the high-speed switching on this pin, the SW pin should be routed away from sensitive nodes. 13,14,15,16, 17,18,19 PVIN High-Side N-Internal MOSFET Drain Connection input: The PVIN operating voltage range is from 4.5V to 28V. Input capacitors between the PVIN pins and the power ground (PGND) are required and keep the connection short. BST Boost output: Bootstrapped voltage to the high-side N-channel MOSFET driver. A Schottky diode is connected between the PVDD pin and the BST pin. A boost capacitor of 0.1μF is connected between the BST pin and the SW pin. Adding a small resistor at the BST pin can reduce the turn-on time of high-side N-Channel MOSFETs. 20 July 22, 2014 Pin Function 2 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Pin Description (Continued) Pin Number Pin Name Pin Function 22 CS Current Sense input: The CS pin senses current by monitoring the voltage across the low-side MOSFET during the OFF-time. The current sensing is necessary for short circuit protection. To sense the current accurately, connect the low-side MOSFET drain to SW using a Kelvin connection. The CS pin is also the high-side MOSFET’s output driver return. 23 SGND Signal Ground: SGND must be connected directly to the ground planes. Do not route the SGND pin to the PGND pad on the top layer (see “PCB Layout Guidelines” for details). 24 FB Feedback input: Input to the transconductance amplifier of the control loop. The FB pin is regulated to 0.6V. A resistor divider connecting the feedback to the output is used to adjust the desired output voltage. 25 PG Power Good output: Open drain output. The PG pin is externally tied with a resistor to VDD. A high output is asserted when VOUT > 92% of nominal. 26 EN Enable input: A logic level control of the output. The EN pin is CMOS-compatible. Logic high = enable, logic low = shutdown. In the off state, the supply current of the device is greatly reduced (typically 5µA). Do not leave the EN pin open. 27 VIN Power Supply Voltage input: Requires a bypass capacitor to SGND. VDD 5V Internal Linear Regulator output: VDD supply is the power MOSFET gate drive supply voltage and the supply bus for the IC. VDD is created by internal LDO from VIN. When VIN < +5.5V, VDD should be tied to PVIN pins. A 1µF ceramic capacitor from the VDD pin to SGND pins must be placed next to the IC. 28 July 22, 2014 3 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Absolute Maximum Ratings(1) Operating Ratings(2) PVIN to PGND............................................... −0.3V to +29V VIN to PGND ................................................. −0.3V to PVIN PVDD, VDD to PGND ..................................... −0.3V to +6V VSW, VCS to PGND ............................. −0.3V to (PVIN +0.3V) VBST to VSW ........................................................ −0.3V to 6V VBST to PGND .................................................. −0.3V to 35V VFB, VPG to PGND ............................. −0.3V to (VDD + 0.3V) VEN to PGND ....................................... −0.3V to (VIN +0.3V) PGND to SGND ........................................... −0.3V to +0.3V Junction Temperature .............................................. +150°C Storage Temperature (TS) ......................... −65°C to +150°C Lead Temperature (soldering, 10s) ............................ 260°C ESD Rating(4) ................................................. ESD Sensitive Supply Voltage (PVIN, VIN) .............................. 4.5V to 28V PVDD, VDD Supply Voltage ............................ 4.5V to 5.5V Enable Input (VEN) ................................................. 0V to VIN Junction Temperature (TJ) ........................ −40°C to +125°C Maximum Power Dissipation ...................................... Note 3 Package Thermal Resistance(3) 5mm x 6mm QFN (θJA) ..................................... 28°C/W Electrical Characteristics(5) PVIN = VIN = VEN = 12V, VBST – VSW = 5V; TA = 25°C, unless noted. Bold values indicate −40°C ≤ TJ ≤ +125°C. Parameter Condition Min. Typ. Max. Units 28 V 730 1500 µA 5 10 µA Power Supply Input 4.5 Input Voltage Range (VIN, PVIN) Quiescent Supply Current VFB = 1.5V (non-switching) Shutdown Supply Current VEN = 0V VDD Supply Voltage VDD Output Voltage VIN = 7V to 28V, IDD = 40mA 4.8 5 5.4 V VDD UVLO Threshold VDD Rising 3.7 4.2 4.5 V VDD UVLO Hysteresis Dropout Voltage (VIN – VDD) 400 IDD = 25mA 380 mV 600 mV 5.5 V V DC/DC Controller Output Voltage Adjust Range (VOUT) −40°C ≤ TJ ≤ 85°C 0.6 Reference Feedback Voltage 0°C ≤ TJ ≤ 85°C, ±1.0% 0.594 0.6 0.606 −40°C ≤ TJ ≤ 125°C, ±1.5% 0.591 0.6 0.609 Load Regulation IOUT = 0A to 12A 0.25 % Line Regulation VIN = 4.5V to 28V 0.25 % FB Bias Current VFB = 0.6V 50 nA Notes: 1. Exceeding the absolute maximum ratings may damage the device. 2. The device is not guaranteed to function outside its operating ratings. 3. PD(MAX) = (TJ(MAX) – TA)/ θJA, where θJA depends upon the printed circuit layout. A 5-in 4 layer, 0.62”, FR-4 PCB with 2oz finish copper weight per layer is used for the θJA. 2 4. Devices are ESD sensitive. Handling precautions are recommended. Human body model, 1.5kΩ in series with 100pF. 5. Specification for packaged product only. July 22, 2014 4 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Electrical Characteristics(5) (Continued) PVIN = VIN = VEN = 12V, VBST – VSW = 5V; TA = 25°C, unless noted. Bold values indicate −40°C ≤ TJ ≤ +125°C. Parameter Condition Min. Typ. Max. Units Enable Control 1.8 EN Logic Level High V 0.6 V 6 30 µA 600 750 kHz EN Logic Level Low EN Bias Current VEN = 12V Oscillator Switching Frequency(6) (7) 450 Maximum Duty Cycle VFB = 0V 82 % Minimum Duty Cycle VFB = 1.0V 0 % 300 ns 5 ms Minimum OFF-Time Soft-Start Soft-Start Time Short-Circuit Protection Current-Limit Threshold VFB = 0.6V, TJ = 25°C 18.75 26 33 A Current-Limit Threshold VFB = 0.6V, TJ = 125°C 17.36 26 33 A Short-Circuit Current VFB = 0V 6 A Top-MOSFET RDS (ON) ISW = 3A 13 mΩ Bottom-MOSFET RDS (ON) ISW = 3A 5.3 mΩ SW Leakage Current VEN = 0V 60 µA VIN Leakage Current VEN = 0V 25 µA 95 %VOUT Internal FETs Power Good (PG) 85 PG Threshold Voltage Sweep VFB from Low-to-High 92 PG Hysteresis Sweep VFB from High-to-Low 5.5 %VOUT PG Delay Time Sweep VFB from Low-to-High 100 µs PG Low Voltage Sweep VFB < 0.9 × VNOM, IPG = 1mA 70 TJ Rising 160 °C 15 °C 200 mV Thermal Protection Overtemperature Shutdown Overtemperature Shutdown Hysteresis Notes: 6. Measured in test mode. 7. The maximum duty-cycle is limited by the fixed mandatory OFF-time tOFF, typically 300ns. July 22, 2014 5 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Typical Characteristics VIN Shutdown Current vs. Input Voltage VIN Operating Supply Current vs. Input Voltage 10 60 25 20 15 VOUT = 1.8V IOUT = 0A SWITCHING 10 5 0 VEN = 0V REN = Open VDD VOLTAGE (V) SHUTDOWN CURRENT (µA) 45 30 16 22 28 28 4 0.604 0.600 VOUT = 1.8V VOUT = 1.8V 25 IOUT = 0A to 12A 0.5% 0.0% -0.5% 15 10 VOUT = 1.8V 0 4 10 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 16 22 4 28 10 Enable Input Current vs. Input Voltage 700 IOUT = 0A 600 550 28 100% VPG THRESHOLD/VREF (%) EN INPUT CURRENT (µA) VOUT = 1.8V 22 PG Threshold/VREF Ratio vs. Input Voltage 16 650 16 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) INPUT VOLTAGE (V) Switching Frequency vs. Input Voltage FREQUENCY (kHz) 20 5 28 28 30 -1.0% 22 22 Current Limit vs. Input Voltage IOUT = 0A 0.592 16 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 1.0% 16 10 Total Regulation vs. Input Voltage TOTAL REGULATION (%) FEEDBACK VOLTAGE (V) 22 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 0.608 10 IDD = 10mA 0 16 10 4 Feedback Voltage vs. Input Voltage 4 4 VFB = 0.9V INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 0.596 6 2 0 10 4 8 15 CURRENT LIMIT (A) SUPPLY CURRENT (mA) 30 VDD Output Voltage vs. Input Voltage VEN = VIN 12 8 4 95% 90% 85% VREF = 0.6V 500 80% 0 4 10 16 22 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) July 22, 2014 28 4 10 16 22 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 6 28 4 10 16 22 28 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Typical Characteristics (Continued) VIN Operating Supply Current vs. Temperature 40 VIN Shutdown Current vs. Temperature 10 VDD UVLO Threshold vs. Temperature 5 30 20 VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.8V IOUT = 0A SWITCHING 10 VDD THRESHOLD (V) SUPPLY CURRENT (uA) SUPPLY CURRENT (mA) Rising 8 6 4 VIN = 12V IOUT = 0A 2 4 Falling 3 2 1 Hyst VEN = 0V 0 0 -50 -25 0 25 50 75 100 125 50 75 100 125 -50 -25 0 25 50 75 TEMPERATURE (°C) TEMPERATURE (°C) TEMPERATURE (°C) Feedback Voltage vs. Temperature Load Regulation vs. Temperature Line Regulation vs. Temperature IOUT = 0A 0.600 0.596 LINE REGULATION (%) LOAD REGULATION (%) VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.8V 0.604 100 125 0.2% 0.4% 0.608 FEEBACK VOLTAGE (V) 0 25 0 -25 -50 0.2% 0.0% VIN = 12V -0.2% VOUT = 1.8V 0.1% 0.0% VIN = 4.5V to 28V VOUT = 1.8V -0.1% IOUT =0A to 12A -0.4% 0.592 -50 -25 0 25 50 75 100 -0.2% -50 125 -25 0 25 50 75 100 125 -50 Switching Frequency vs. Temperature 700 CURRENT LIMIT (A) VDD (V) FREQUENCY (kHz) 600 4 VIN = 12V 3 550 50 75 TEMPERATURE (°C) July 22, 2014 100 125 125 100 125 15 10 VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.8V 5 0 2 500 25 100 20 VOUT = 1.8V IOUT =0A 0 75 25 5 IOUT = 0A -25 50 30 VOUT = 1.8V -50 25 Current Limit vs. Temperature VDD vs. Temperature 6 0 TEMPERATURE (°C) VIN = 12V 650 -25 TEMPERATURE (°C) TEMPERATURE (°C) -50 -25 0 25 50 75 TEMPERATURE (°C) 7 100 125 -50 -25 0 25 50 75 TEMPERATURE (°C) Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Typical Characteristics (Continued) Feedback Voltage vs. Output Current Efficiency vs. Output Current 100 12VIN 80 24VIN 70 VOUT = 1.8V 60 1.819 OUTPUT VOLTAGR (V) FEEDBACK VOLTAGE (V) 0.608 90 EFFICIENCY (%) Output Voltage vs. Output Current 0.604 0.600 0.596 VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.8V 0 2 4 8 6 10 1.805 1.800 1.796 1.791 1.782 0 12 VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.8V 1.810 1.787 0.592 50 1.814 4 2 6 10 8 12 0 2 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) OUTPUT CURRENT (A) 1.0% 6 8 -0.5% -1.0% VOUT = 1.8V 650 600 550 500 2 4 6 8 10 12 VIN = 5V VFB < 0.6V OUTPUT CURRENT (A) TA 25ºC 85ºC 125ºC 3.8 3.4 2 4 6 8 10 0 12 POWER DISSIPATION (W) 3.3V 2.5V 1.8V 1.5V 1.2V 1.0V 0.9V 0.8V 85 80 75 70 65 VIN = 5V 3.0 2.5 2.0 3.3V 1.5 9 12 15 100 VIN = 5V VOUT = 0.8V, 1.0V, 1.2V, 1.5V, 1.8V, 2.5V, 3.3V 3.5 6 Die Temperature* (VIN = 5V) vs. Output Current 4.0 90 3 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) IC Power Dissipation (VIN = 5V) vs. Output Current 95 EFFICIENCY (%) 4.2 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) Efficiency (VIN = 5V) vs. Output Current 60 4.6 3.0 0 DIE TEMPERATURE (°C) 0 100 OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V) FREQUENCY (kHz) LINE REGULATION (%) VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.8V 0.0% 12 5.0 700 VIN = 4.5V to 28V 0.5% 10 Output Voltage (VIN = 5V) vs. Output Current Switching Frequency vs. Output Current Line Regulation vs. Output Current 4 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) 0.8V 1.0 80 60 40 VIN = 5V VOUT = 1.8V 20 0.5 55 0.0 50 0 3 6 9 12 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) 15 0 3 6 9 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) 12 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) 2 Die Temperature* : The temperature measurement was taken at the hottest point on the MIC261203-ZA while it was case mounted on a 5in 4-layer, 0.62”, FR-4 PCB, with 2oz finish copper weight per layer. See the “Thermal Measurements” section for more details. Actual results will depend on the size of the PCB, ambient temperature, and proximity to other heat emitting components. July 22, 2014 8 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Typical Characteristics (Continued) IC Power Dissipation (VIN = 12V) vs. Output Current Efficiency (VIN = 12V) vs. Output Current 4.5 95 4.0 EFFICIENCY (%) 85 80 75 70 POWER DISSIPATION (W) 5.0V 3.3V 2.5V 1.8V 1.5V 1.2V 1.0V 0.9V 0.8V 90 65 60 VIN = 12V 55 100 VIN = 12V VOUT = 0.8V, 1.0V, 1.2V, 1.5V, 1.8V, 2.5V, 3.3V, 5.0V DIE TEMPERATURE (°C) 100 Die Temperature* (VIN = 12V) vs. Output Current 3.5 3.0 2.5 2.0 5.0V 1.5 0.8V 1.0 3 6 9 12 40 VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.8V 20 0 0.0 15 0 3 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) 0 12 3.3V 2.5V 1.8V 1.5V 80 75 POWER DISSIPATION (W) 85 1.2V 1.0V 0.9V 0.8V 70 65 60 VIN = 24V 50 4 5.0V 0.8V 2 9 12 15 18 16 16 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) 0.8V 12 1.5V 8 6 VIN = 5V VOUT = 0.8, 1.2, 1.5V 2 9 0 0 25 50 75 60 VIN = 24V 40 VOUT = 1.8V 0 2 100 AMBIENT TEMPERATURE (°C) 125 4 6 8 10 12 100 125 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) Thermal Derating* vs. Ambient Temperature 18 16 1.8V 14 12 3.3V 10 8 6 VIN = 5V 4 VOUT = 1.8, 2.5, 3.3V 0.8V 14 12 1.8V 10 8 6 VIN = 12V 4 VOUT = 0.8, 1.2, 1.8V 2 0 -25 80 12 2 -50 100 Thermal Derating* vs. Ambient Temperature 18 4 120 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) Thermal Derating* vs. Ambient Temperature 10 6 3 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) 14 12 0 0 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) 6 10 20 1 0 3 8 140 5 3 6 Die Temperature* (VIN = 24V) vs. Output Current VIN = 24V VOUT = 0.8V, 1.0V, 1.2V, 1.5V, 1.8V, 2.5V, 3.3V, 5.0V 6 4 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) 7 90 0 2 IC Power Dissipation (VIN = 24V) vs. Output Current 5.0V 55 9 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) Efficiency (VIN = 24V) vs. Output Current 95 6 DIE TEMPERATURE (°C) 0 EFFICIENCY (%) 60 0.5 50 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) 80 0 -50 -25 0 25 50 75 100 AMBIENT TEMPERATURE (°C) 125 -50 -25 0 25 50 75 AMBIENT TEMPERATURE (°C) 2 Die Temperature* : The temperature measurement was taken at the hottest point on the MIC261203-ZA while it was case mounted on a 5in 4-layer, 0.62”, FR-4 PCB, with 2oz finish copper weight per layer. See the “Thermal Measurements” section for more details. Actual results will depend on the size of the PCB, ambient temperature, and proximity to other heat emitting components. July 22, 2014 9 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Typical Characteristics (Continued) Thermal Derating* vs. Ambient Temperature Thermal Derating* vs. Ambient Temperature 18 18 16 2.5V 14 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) OUTPUT CURRENT (A) 16 12 5V 10 8 6 VIN = 12V 4 VOUT = 2.5, 3.3, 5V 2 14 12 0.8V 10 8 2.5V 6 4 VIN = 24V 2 VOUT = 0.8, 1.2, 2.5V 0 0 -50 -25 0 25 50 75 100 AMBIENT TEMPERATURE (°C) 125 -50 -25 0 25 50 75 100 125 AMBIENT TEMPERATURE (°C) 2 Die Temperature* : The temperature measurement was taken at the hottest point on the MIC261203-ZA while it was case mounted on a 5in 4-layer, 0.62”, FR-4 PCB, with 2oz finish copper weight per layer. See the “Thermal Measurements” section for more details. Actual results will depend on the size of the PCB, ambient temperature, and proximity to other heat emitting components. July 22, 2014 10 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Functional Characteristics July 22, 2014 11 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Functional Characteristics (Continued) July 22, 2014 12 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Functional Characteristics (Continued) July 22, 2014 13 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Functional Diagram July 22, 2014 14 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA The maximum duty cycle is obtained from the 300ns tOFF(min). Functional Description The MIC261203-ZA is an adaptive ON-time synchronous step-down DC/DC regulator with an internal 5V linear regulator and a Power Good (PG) output. It is designed to operate over a wide input voltage range from 4.5V to 28V and provides a regulated output voltage at up to 7A of output current. An adaptive ON-time control scheme is used to get a constant switching frequency and to simplify the control compensation. Overcurrent protection is implemented without using an external sense resistor. The device includes an internal soft-start function that reduces the power supply input surge current at start-up by controlling the output voltage rise time. Dmax = Eq. 2 The actual ON-time and resulting switching frequency will vary with the part-to-part variation in the rise and fall times of the internal MOSFETs, the output load current, and variations in the VDD voltage. Also, the minimum tON results in a lower switching frequency in high VIN to VOUT applications, such as 24V to 1.0V. The minimum tON measured on the MIC261203-ZA evaluation board is about 100ns. During load transients, the switching frequency is changed because of the varying OFF-time. To illustrate the control loop operation, the datasheet will discuss both the steady-state and load transient scenarios. Figure 1 shows the MIC261203-ZA control loop timing during steady-state operation. During steadystate operation, the gm amplifier senses the feedback voltage ripple, which is proportional to the output voltage ripple and the inductor current ripple, to trigger the ONtime period. The ON-time is predetermined by the tON estimator. The termination of the OFF-time is controlled by the feedback voltage. At the valley of the feedback voltage ripple, which occurs when VFB falls below VREF, the OFF-time period ends and the next ON-time period is triggered through the control logic circuitry. Eq. 1 where VOUT is the output voltage and VIN is the power stage input voltage. At the end of the ON-time period, the internal high-side driver turns off the high-side MOSFET and the low-side driver turns on the low-side MOSFET. The OFF-time period length depends upon the feedback voltage in most cases. When the feedback voltage decreases and the output of the gm amplifier is below 0.6V, the ON-time period is triggered and the OFF-time period ends. If the OFF-time period determined by the feedback voltage is less than the minimum OFF-time tOFF(min), which is about 300ns, the MIC261203-ZA control logic will apply the tOFF(min) instead. tOFF(min) is required to maintain enough energy in the boost capacitor (CBST) to drive the high-side MOSFET. July 22, 2014 300ns tS Using the MIC261203-ZA with an OFF-time close to during steady-state operation is not tOFF(min) recommended. Also, as VOUT increases, the internal ripple injection increases and reduces the line regulation performance. Therefore, the maximum output voltage of the MIC261203-ZA should be limited to 5.5V and the maximum external ripple injection should be limited to 200mV. Please refer to the “Setting Output Voltage” subsection in Application Information for more details. Continuous Mode In continuous mode, the output voltage is sensed by the MIC261203-ZA feedback pin FB through the voltage divider R1 and R2. It is then compared to a 0.8V reference voltage VREF at the error comparator through a low-gain transconductance (gm) amplifier. If the feedback voltage decreases and the output of the gm amplifier is below 0.6V, then the error comparator will trigger the control logic and generate an ON-time period. The ONtime period length is predetermined by the “FIXED tON ESTIMATION” circuitry. VOUT VIN × 600kHz tS = 1− where tS = 1/600kHz = 1.66µs. Theory of Operation The MIC261203-ZA operates in a continuous mode, as shown in the Functional Diagram. t ON(estimated) = t S − t OFF(min) 15 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Unlike true current-mode control, the MIC261203-ZA uses the output voltage ripple to trigger an ON-time period. The output voltage ripple is proportional to the inductor current ripple if the ESR of the output capacitor is large enough. The MIC261203-ZA control loop has the advantage of eliminating the need for slope compensation. To meet the stability requirements, the MIC261203-ZA feedback voltage ripple should be in phase with the inductor current ripple and large enough to be sensed by the gm amplifier and the error comparator. The recommended feedback voltage ripple is 20mV~100mV. If a low-ESR output capacitor is selected, then the feedback voltage ripple may be too small to be sensed by the gm amplifier and the error comparator. Also, the output voltage ripple and the feedback voltage ripple are not necessarily in phase with the inductor current ripple if the ESR of the output capacitor is very low. In these cases, ripple injection is required to ensure proper operation. Please refer to the “Ripple Injection” subsection in Application Information for more details about the ripple injection technique. Figure 1. MIC261203-ZA Control Loop Timing Figure 2 shows the operation of the MIC261203-ZA during a load transient. The output voltage drops because of the sudden load increase, which makes the VFB less than VREF. This causes the error comparator to trigger an ON-time period. At the end of the ON-time period, a minimum OFF-time tOFF(min) is generated to charge CBST because the feedback voltage is still below VREF. Then, the next ON-time period is triggered by the low feedback voltage. Therefore, the switching frequency changes during the load transient, but returns to the nominal fixed frequency after the output has stabilized at the new load current level. With the varying duty cycle and switching frequency, the output recovery time is fast and the output voltage deviation is small in the MIC261203-ZA converter. VDD Regulator The MIC261203-ZA provides a 5V regulated output for input voltage VIN ranging from 5.5V to 28V. When VIN < 5.5V, VDD should be tied to PVIN pins to bypass the internal linear regulator Soft-Start Soft-start reduces the power supply input surge current at startup by controlling the output voltage rise time. The input surge appears while the output capacitor is charged up. A slower output rise time will draw a lower input surge current. The MIC261203-ZA implements an internal digital softstart by making the 0.6V reference voltage VREF ramp from 0 to 100% in about 5ms in 9.7mV steps. Therefore, the output voltage is controlled to increase slowly by a stair-case VFB ramp. After the soft-start cycle ends, the related circuitry is disabled to reduce current consumption. VDD must be powered up at the same time or after VIN to make the soft-start function correctly. Current Limit The MIC261203-ZA uses the RDS(ON) of the internal lowside power MOSFET to sense overcurrent conditions. This method avoids adding cost, board space and power losses taken by a discrete current sense resistor. The low-side MOSFET is used because it displays much lower parasitic oscillations during switching than the highside MOSFET. Figure 2. MIC261203-ZA Load Transient Response July 22, 2014 16 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA In each switching cycle of the MIC261203-ZA converter, the inductor current is sensed by monitoring the low-side MOSFET in the OFF-time period. If the peak inductor current is greater than 26A, then the MIC261203-ZA turns off the high-side MOSFET and a soft-start sequence is triggered. This mode of operation is called “hiccup mode” and its purpose is to protect the downstream load in case of a hard short. The load current-limit threshold has a foldback characteristic related to the feedback voltage, as shown in Figure 3. MOSFET Gate Drive The Functional Diagram shows a bootstrap circuit, consisting of D1 (a Schottky diode is recommended) and CBST. This circuit supplies energy to the high-side drive circuit. Capacitor CBST is charged, while the low-side MOSFET is on, and the voltage on the SW pin is approximately 0V. When the high-side MOSFET driver is turned on, energy from CBST is used to turn the MOSFET on. As the high-side MOSFET turns on, the voltage on the SW pin increases to approximately VIN. Diode D1 is reverse biased and CBST floats high while continuing to keep the high-side MOSFET on. The bias current of the high-side driver is less than 10mA so a 0.1μF to 1μF capacitor is enough to hold the gate voltage with minimal droop for the power stroke (high-side switching) cycle, that is, ΔBST = 10mA × 1.67μs/0.1μF = 167mV. When the low-side MOSFET is turned back on, CBST is recharged through D1. A small resistor RG, in series with CBST, can be used to slow down the turn-on time of the high-side N-channel MOSFET. Current Limit Threshold vs. Feedback Voltage CURRENT LIMIT THRESHOLD (A) 30 25 20 15 10 The drive voltage is derived from the VDD supply voltage. The nominal low-side gate drive voltage is VDD and the nominal high-side gate drive voltage is approximately VDD – VDIODE, where VDIODE is the voltage drop across D1. An approximate 30ns delay between the high-side and low-side driver transitions is used to prevent current from simultaneously flowing unimpeded through both MOSFETs. 5 0 0.0 ` 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 FEEDBACK VOLTAGE (V) Figure 3. MIC261203-ZA Current-Limit Foldback Characteristic Power Good (PG) The Power Good (PG) pin is an open-drain output that indicates logic high when the output is nominally 92% of its steady state voltage. A pull-up resistor of more than 10kΩ should be connected from PG to VDD. July 22, 2014 17 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Application Information Inductor Selection Values for inductance, peak, and RMS currents are required to select the output inductor. The input and output voltages and the inductance value determine the peak-to-peak inductor ripple current. Generally, higher inductance values are used with higher input voltages. Larger peak-to-peak ripple currents increase the power dissipation in the inductor and MOSFETs. Larger output ripple currents also require more output capacitance to smooth out the larger ripple current. Smaller peak-topeak ripple currents require a larger inductance value and therefore a larger and more expensive inductor. A good compromise between size, loss, and cost is to set the inductor ripple current equal to 20% of the maximum output current. The inductance value is calculated in Equation 3. L= VOUT × (VIN(max) − VOUT ) VIN(max) × fsw × 20% × IOUT(max) Maximizing efficiency requires the proper selection of core material and minimizing the winding resistance. The high frequency operation of the MIC261203-ZA requires the use of ferrite materials for all but the most cost sensitive applications. Lower cost iron powder cores may be used but the increase in core loss will reduce the efficiency of the power supply. This is especially noticeable at low output power. The winding resistance decreases efficiency at the higher output current levels. The winding resistance must be minimized although this usually comes at the expense of a larger inductor. The power dissipated in the inductor is equal to the sum of the core and copper losses. At higher output loads, the core losses are usually insignificant and can be ignored. At lower output currents, the core losses can be a significant contributor. Core loss information is usually available from the magnetics vendor. Copper loss in the inductor is calculated by Equation 7. Eq. 3 PINDUCTOR( CU) = IL(RMS where: fSW = switching frequency, 600kHz 20% = ratio of AC ripple current to DC output current VIN(max) = maximum power stage input voltage VOUT × (VIN(max) − VOUT ) VIN(max) × fsw × L 2 July 22, 2014 ΔIL(PP) 12 Eq. 7 PWINDING (Ht ) = R WINDING ( 20°C ) × (1 + 0.0042 × (TH − T20°C )) Eq. 8 where: TH = temperature of wire under full load T20°C = ambient temperature RWINDING(20°C) = room temperature winding resistance (usually specified by the manufacturer) Output Capacitor Selection The type of the output capacitor is usually determined by its equivalent series resistance (ESR). Voltage and RMS current capability are two other important factors. Recommended capacitor types are ceramic, low-ESR aluminum electrolytic, OS-CON and POSCAP. The output capacitor’s ESR is usually the main cause of the output ripple. The output capacitor ESR also affects the stability of the control loop. Eq. 5 The RMS inductor current is used to calculate the I2R losses in the inductor. IL(RMS) = IOUT(max) + × R WINDING Eq. 4 The peak inductor current is equal to the average output current plus one half of the peak-to-peak inductor current ripple. IL(pk) =IOUT(max) + 0.5 × ΔIL(pp) ) The resistance of the copper wire, RWINDING, increases with the temperature. The value of the winding resistance used should be at the operating temperature. The peak-to-peak inductor current ripple is: ∆IL(pp) = 2 2 Eq.6 18 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA The maximum value of ESR is calculated using Equation 9. ESR COUT ≤ ΔVOUT(pp) The power dissipated in the output capacitor is: 2 PDISS(COUT ) = ICOUT (RMS) × ESR COUT Eq. 9 ΔIL(PP) Input Capacitor Selection The input capacitor for the power stage input VIN should be selected for ripple current rating and voltage rating. Tantalum input capacitors may fail when subjected to high inrush currents which are caused by turning the input supply on. A tantalum input capacitor’s voltage rating should be at least two times the maximum input voltage to maximize reliability. Aluminum electrolytic, OSCON, and multilayer polymer film capacitors can handle the higher inrush currents without voltage derating. The input voltage ripple primarily depends on the input capacitor’s ESR. The peak input current is equal to the peak inductor current, so: where: ΔVOUT(pp) = peak-to-peak output voltage ripple ΔIL(PP) = peak-to-peak inductor current ripple The total output ripple is a combination of the ESR and output capacitance. The total ripple is calculated in Equation 10: 2 ΔVOUT(pp) ΔIL(PP) 2 + ΔIL(PP) × ESR C = OUT C OUT × f SW × 8 Eq. 10 ( ) ∆VIN = IL(PK ) × ESR CIN where: D = duty cycle COUT = output capacitance value fSW = switching frequency ICIN(RMS) ≈ IOUT(max) × D × (1 − D) July 22, 2014 Eq. 14 The power dissipated in the input capacitor is: PDISS(CIN) = ICIN(RMS)2 × ESRCIN The voltage rating of the capacitor should be twice the output voltage for tantalum and 20% greater for aluminum electrolytic or OS-CON. The output capacitor RMS current is calculated in Equation 11. ΔIL(PP) Eq. 13 The input capacitor must be rated for the input current ripple. The RMS value of input capacitor current is determined at the maximum output current. Assuming the peak-to-peak inductor current ripple is low: As described in the “Theory of Operation” subsection in Functional Description, the MIC261203-ZA requires at least 20mV peak-to-peak ripple at the FB pin to make the gm amplifier and the error comparator behave properly. Also, the output voltage ripple should be in phase with the inductor current. Therefore, the output voltage ripple caused by the output capacitors value should be much smaller than the ripple caused by the output capacitor ESR. If low-ESR capacitors, such as ceramic capacitors, are selected as the output capacitors, a ripple injection method should be applied to provide enough feedback voltage ripple. Please refer to the “Ripple Injection” subsection for more details. ICOUT (RMS) = Eq. 12 Eq. 15 Ripple Injection The VFB ripple required for proper operation of the MIC261203-ZA gm amplifier and error comparator is 20mV to 100mV. However, the output voltage ripple is generally designed as 1% to 2% of the output voltage. For a low output voltage, such as a 1V, the output voltage ripple is only 10mV to 20mV, and the feedback voltage ripple is less than 20mV. If the feedback voltage ripple is so small that the gm amplifier and error comparator can’t sense it, then the MIC261203-ZA will lose control and the output voltage is not regulated. Eq. 11 12 19 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA In order to have some amount of VFB ripple, a ripple injection method is applied for low output voltage ripple applications. The applications are divided into three situations according to the amount of the feedback voltage ripple: 1. Enough ripple at the feedback voltage caused by the large ESR of the output capacitors. As shown in Figure 4, the converter is stable without any ripple injection. The feedback voltage ripple is: ΔVFB(pp) = R2 × ESR COUT × ΔIL (pp) R1 + R2 Figure 5. Inadequate Ripple at FB Eq. 16 where ΔIL(pp) is the peak-to-peak value of the inductor current ripple. 2. Inadequate ripple at the feedback voltage caused by the small ESR of the output capacitors. Figure 6. Invisible Ripple at FB The output voltage ripple is fed into the FB pin through a feedforward capacitor Cff in this situation, as shown in Figure 5. The typical Cff value is between 1nF and 100nF. With the feedforward capacitor, the feedback voltage ripple is very close to the output voltage ripple: ΔVFB(pp) ≈ ESR × ΔIL (pp) In this situation, the output voltage ripple is less than 20mV. Therefore, additional ripple is injected into the FB pin from the switching node SW via a resistor RINJ and a capacitor CINJ, as shown in Figure 6. The injected ripple is: Eq. 17 ΔVFB(pp) = VIN × K div × D × (1 - D) × 3. Virtually no ripple at the FB pin voltage due to the very-low ESR of the output capacitors. K div = R1//R2 R INJ + R1//R2 1 fSW × τ Eq. 18 Eq. 19 where: VIN = Power stage input voltage D = duty cycle fSW = switching frequency τ = (R1//R2//RINJ) × Cff In Equations 18 and 19, it is assumed that the time constant associated with Cff must be much greater than the switching period: Figure 4. Enough Ripple at FB 1 T = << 1 fSW × τ τ July 22, 2014 20 Eq. 20 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA If the voltage divider resistors R1 and R2 are in the kΩ range, a Cff of 1nF to 100nF can easily satisfy the large time constant requirements. Also, a 100nF injection capacitor CINJ is used, which could be considered as short for a wide range of the frequencies. The process of sizing the ripple injection resistor and capacitors is: Step 1. Select Cff to feed all output ripples into the feedback pin and make sure the large time constant assumption is satisfied. Typical choice of Cff is 1nF to 100nF if R1 and R2 are in kΩ range. Step 2. Select RINJ according to the expected feedback voltage ripple using Equation 19: Figure 7. Voltage-Divider Configuration K div = ΔVFB(pp) VIN × fSW × τ D × (1 − D) Eq. 21 In addition to the external ripple injection added at the FB pin, internal ripple injection is added at the inverting input of the comparator inside the MIC261203-ZA, as shown in Figure 8. The inverting input voltage VINJ is clamped to 1.2V. As VOUT increases, the swing of VINJ is clamped. The clamped VINJ reduces the line regulation because it is reflected as a DC error on the FB terminal. Therefore, the maximum output voltage of the MIC261203-ZA should be limited to 5.5V to avoid this problem. Then the value of RINJ is obtained as: R INJ = (R1//R2) × ( 1 − 1) K div Eq. 22 Step 3. Select CINJ as 100nF, which could be considered as short for a wide range of the frequencies. Setting Output Voltage The MIC261203-ZA requires two resistors to set the output voltage, as shown in Figure 7. The output voltage is determined by Equation 23: VOUT = VFB × (1 + R1 ) R2 Eq. 23 where VFB = 0.6V. A typical value of R1 can be between 3kΩ and 10kΩ. If R1 is too large, it may allow noise to be introduced into the voltage feedback loop. If R1 is too small, it will decrease the efficiency of the power supply, especially at light loads. Once R1 is selected, R2 can be calculated using Equation 24. R2 = VFB × R1 VOUT − VFB July 22, 2014 Figure 8. Internal Ripple Injection Eq. 24 21 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Thermal Measurements Measuring the IC’s case temperature is recommended to ensure that it is within its operating limits. Although this might seem like an elementary task, it is easy to get false results. The most common mistake is to use the standard thermal couple that comes with a thermal meter. This thermal couple wire gauge is large, typically 22 gauge, and behaves like a heatsink, resulting in a lower case measurement. Two methods of temperature measurement are using a smaller thermal couple wire or an infrared thermometer. If a thermal couple wire is used, it must be constructed of 36 gauge wire or higher (smaller wire size) to minimize the wire heat-sinking effect. In addition, the thermal couple tip must be covered in either thermal grease or thermal glue to make sure that the thermal couple junction is making good contact with the case of the IC. Omega brand thermal couple (5SC-TT-K-36-36) is adequate for most applications. Wherever possible, an infrared thermometer is recommended. The measurement spot size of most infrared thermometers is too large for an accurate reading on a small form factor ICs. However, an IR thermometer from Optris has a 1mm spot size, which makes it a good choice for measuring the hottest point on the case. An optional stand makes it easy to hold the beam on the IC for long periods of time. July 22, 2014 22 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA PCB Layout Guidelines Note: To minimize EMI and output noise, follow these layout recommendations. Inductor • PCB layout is critical to achieve reliable, stable, and efficient performance. A ground plane is required to control EMI and minimize the inductance in power, signal, and return paths. Keep the inductor connection to the switch node (SW) short. • Do not route any digital lines underneath or close to the inductor. • Keep the switch node (SW) away from the feedback (FB) pin. • Connect the CS pin directly to the SW pin to accurately sense the voltage across the low-side MOSFET. • To minimize noise, place a ground plane underneath the inductor. • The inductor can be placed on the opposite side of the PCB with respect to the IC. It does not matter whether the IC or inductor is on the top or bottom as long as there is enough air flow to keep the power components within their temperature limits. The input and output capacitors must be placed on the same side of the board as the IC. Follow these guidelines to ensure proper MIC261203-ZA regulator operation: IC • A 2.2µF ceramic capacitor, which is connected to the PVDD pin, must be located right at the IC. The PVDD pin is very noise sensitive, so placement of the capacitor is critical. Use wide traces to connect to the PVDD and PGND pins. • A 1µF ceramic capacitor must be placed right between VDD and the signal ground (SGND). SGND must be connected directly to the ground planes. Do not route the SGND pin to the PGND pad on the top layer. • Place the IC close to the point-of-load (POL). • Output Capacitor Use fat traces to route the input and output power lines. • • Keep signal and power grounds separate and connected at only one location. Use a wide trace to connect the output capacitor ground terminal to the input capacitor ground terminal. • Phase margin changes as the output capacitor value and ESR changes. Contact the factory if the output capacitor is different from what is shown in the BOM. • The feedback trace should be separate from the power trace and connected as near as possible to the output capacitor. Sensing a long high current load trace can degrade the DC load regulation. Input Capacitor • Place the input capacitor next. • Place the input capacitor on the same side of the board and as close to the IC as possible. • Keep both the PVIN pin and PGND connections short. • Place several vias to the ground plane close to the input capacitor ground terminal. • Use either X7R or X5R dielectric input capacitors. Do not use Y5V or Z5U type capacitors. • Do not replace the ceramic input capacitor with any other type of capacitor. Any type of capacitor can be placed in parallel with the input capacitor. • If a Tantalum input capacitor is placed in parallel with the input capacitor, it must be recommended for switching regulator applications and the operating voltage must be derated by 50%. • In “Hot-Plug” applications, a Tantalum or Electrolytic bypass capacitor must be used to limit the overvoltage spike seen on the input supply when power is suddenly applied. July 22, 2014 Optional RC Snubber • 23 Place the RC snubber on either side of the board and as close to the SW pin as possible. Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Evaluation Board Schematic Schematic of MIC261203-ZA Evaluation Board (J11, R13, R15 are for testing purposes) Bill of Materials Item Part Number C1 Open 12105C475KAZ2A C2, C3 GRM32ER71H475KA88L C3225X7R1H475K C15 C6, C7, C10 Description Qty. AVX(8) Murata(9) 4.7µF Ceramic Capacitor, X7R, Size 1210, 50V 2 100µF Ceramic Capacitor, X5R, Size 1210, 6.3V 3 0.1µF Ceramic Capacitor, X7R, Size 0603, 50V 3 (10) TDK Open 12106D107MAT2A C4, C5, C13 Manufacturer GRM32ER60J107ME20L AVX Murata C3225X5R0J107M TDK 06035C104KAT2A AVX GRM188R71H104KA93D C1608X7R1H104K Murata TDK Notes: 8. AVX: www.avx.com. 9. Murata: www.murata.com. 10. TDK: www.tdk.com. July 22, 2014 24 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Bill of Materials (Continued) Item Part Number 0603ZC105KAT2A C8 C9 C12 GRM188R71A105KA61D Murata TDK 0603ZD225KAT2A AVX GRM188R61A225KE34D Murata C1608X5R1A225K TDK 06035C472KAZ2A AVX GRM188R71H472K Murata C1608X7R1H472K TDK B41851F7227M C11, C16 Open SD103AWS SD103AWS-7 SD103AWS Description Qty. AVX C1608X7R1A105K C14 D1 Manufacturer EPCOS(11) 1.0µF Ceramic Capacitor, X7R, Size 0603, 10V 1 2.2µF Ceramic Capacitor, X7R, Size 0603, 10V 1 4.7nF Ceramic Capacitor, X7R, Size 0603, 50V 1 220µF Aluminum Capacitor, 35V 1 40V, 350mA, Schottky Diode, SOD323 1 1.0µH Inductor, 21A Saturation Current 1 MCC(12) Diodes Inc.(13) (14) Vishay Cooper Bussmann(15) L1 HCF1305-1R0-R R1 CRCW06032R21FKEA Vishay Dale 2.21Ω Resistor, Size 0603, 1% 1 R2 CRCW06032R00FKEA Vishay Dale 2.00Ω Resistor, Size 0603, 1% 1 R3 CRCW060319K6FKEA Vishay Dale 19.6kΩ Resistor, Size 0603, 1% 1 R4 CRCW06032K49FKEA Vishay Dale 2.49kΩ Resistor, Size 0603, 1% 1 R5 CRCW06034K99FKEA Vishay Dale 4.99kΩ Resistor, Size 0603, 1% 1 R6 CRCW06033K74FKEA Vishay Dale 3.74kΩ Resistor, Size 0603, 1% 1 R7 CRCW06032K49FKEA Vishay Dale 2.49kΩ Resistor, Size 0603, 1% 1 R8 CRCW06031K65FKEA Vishay Dale 1.65kΩ Resistor, Size 0603, 1% 1 R9 CRCW06031K24FKEA Vishay Dale 1.24kΩ Resistor, Size 0603, 1% 1 R10 CRCW0603787RFKEA Vishay Dale 787Ω Resistor, Size 0603, 1% 1 R11 CRCW0603549RFKEA Vishay Dale 549Ω Resistor, Size 0603, 1% 1 R12 CRCW0603340RFKEA Vishay Dale 340Ω Resistor, Size 0603, 1% 1 R13 CRCW06030000FKEA Vishay Dale 0Ω Resistor, Size 0603, 5% 1 R14, R17 CRCW060310K0FKEA Vishay Dale 10.0kΩ Resistor, Size 0603, 1% 2 R15 CRCW060349R9FKEA Vishay Dale 49.9Ω Resistor, Size 0603, 1% 1 R16, R18 CRCW06031R21FKEA Vishay Dale 1.21Ω Resistor, Size 0603, 1% 2 R20 Open U1 MIC261203-ZAYJL 28V, 12A, Hyper Speed Control Synchronous DC-to-DC Buck Regulator − SuperSwitcher II 1 Micrel. Inc.(16) Notes: 11. EPCOS: www.epcos.com. 12. MCC: www.mccsemi.com. 13. Diodes Inc.: www.diodes.com. 14. Vishay: www.vishay.com. 15. Cooper Bussmann: www.cooperbussmann.com. 16. Micrel, Inc.: www.micrel.com. July 22, 2014 25 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA PCB Layout Recommendations MIC261203-ZA Evaluation Board Top Layer MIC261203-ZA Evaluation Board Mid-Layer 1 (Ground Plane) July 22, 2014 26 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA PCB Layout Recommendations (Continued) MIC261203-ZA Evaluation Board Mid-Layer 2 MIC261203-ZA Evaluation Board Bottom Layer July 22, 2014 27 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA Package Information and Recommended Land Pattern(17) 28-Pin 5mm x 6mm QFN (JL) Note: 17. Package information is correct as of the publication date. For updates and most current information, go to www.micrel.com. July 22, 2014 28 Revision 1.1 Micrel, Inc. MIC261203-ZA MICREL, INC. 2180 FORTUNE DRIVE SAN JOSE, CA 95131 USA TEL +1 (408) 944-0800 FAX +1 (408) 474-1000 WEB http://www.micrel.com Micrel makes no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the information furnished in this data sheet. This information is not intended as a warranty and Micrel does not assume responsibility for its use. Micrel reserves the right to change circuitry, specifications and descriptions at any time without notice. No license, whether express, implied, arising by estoppel or otherwise, to any intellectual property rights is granted by this document. Except as provided in Micrel’s terms and conditions of sale for such products, Micrel assumes no liability whatsoever, and Micrel disclaims any express or implied warranty relating to the sale and/or use of Micrel products including liability or warranties relating to fitness for a particular purpose, merchantability, or infringement of any patent, copyright or other intellectual property right. Micrel Products are not designed or authorized for use as components in life support appliances, devices or systems where malfunction of a product can reasonably be expected to result in personal injury. Life support devices or systems are devices or systems that (a) are intended for surgical implant into the body or (b) support or sustain life, and whose failure to perform can be reasonably expected to result in a significant injury to the user. A Purchaser’s use or sale of Micrel Products for use in life support appliances, devices or systems is a Purchaser’s own risk and Purchaser agrees to fully indemnify Micrel for any damages resulting from such use or sale. © 2013 Micrel, Incorporated. July 22, 2014 29 Revision 1.1