V07N1 - FEBRUARY

LINEAR TECHNOLOGY
VOLUME VII NUMBER 1
FEBRUARY 1997
IN THIS ISSUE . . .
COVER ARTICLE
The New LT®1425
Isolated Flyback Controller ........ 1
Kurk Matthews
The New LT1425
Isolated Flyback Controller
Issue Highlights ........................2
by Kurk Matthews
LTC in the News .........................2
Introduction
DESIGN FEATURES
The LT1328: a Low Cost IrDA®
Receiver Solution for Data Rates
up to 4Mbps ...............................6
Low voltage circuitry, such as local
area networks (LAN), isolation amplifiers and telephone inter faces,
frequently requires isolated power
supplies. The flyback converter is often the choice for these low power
supplies because of its simplicity, size
and low parts count. Unfortunately,
designers are forced to add optocouplers and references in order to
achieve the desired output regulation
and transient response.
The new LT1425 provides a onechip solution for these and other
applications. The LT1425 is a 275kHz
current mode controller with an integral 1.25A switch designed primarily
to provide well regulated, isolated
voltages from 3V–20V sources. The
LT1425 is available in a 16-pin SO.
Features include a new error amplifier
and load compensation circuitry that
eliminate the need for optocouplers
while maintaining output regulation
typically within a few percent.
Figure 1 shows a typical flyback
LAN supply using the LT1425. Figure
1 also includes details on an alternate transformer for a complete
PCMCIA type II height solution. The
output voltage is within 1% of –9V for
load currents of 0mA–250mA. Input
current is limited to 0.35 amps in the
event the output is short circuited.
The output voltage droops only 300mV
during a 50mA to 250mA load transient (see Figure 2). The off-the-shelf
transformers provide 500VAC of isola-
Alexander Strong
The LTC®1473 Dual PowerPath™
Switch Driver Simplifies Portable
Power Management Design ........ 8
Jaime Tseng
The LTC1560-1: a 1MHz/500kHz
Continuous-Time, Low Noise,
Elliptic Lowpass Filter ............ 11
Nello Sevastopoulos
The LTC1594 and LTC1598:
Micropower 4- and 8-Channel
12-Bit ADCs ............................. 14
Kevin R. Hoskins and Marco Pan
LTC1474 and LTC1475 High
Efficiency Switching Regulators
Draw Only 10µA Supply Current
................................................17
Greg Dittmer
DESIGN IDEAS .................. 21–32
(Complete list on page 21)
DESIGN INFORMATION
Introducing the LT2078/LT2079
and LT2178/LT2179 Single
Supply, Micropower, Precision
Amplifiers in Surface Mount
Packages
................................................33
Raj Ramchandani
LTC1387 Single 5V
RS232/RS485 Multiprotocol
Transceiver ............................. 34
Y.K. Sim
New Device Cameos .................. 37
Design Tools ............................ 39
Sales Offices ............................ 40
tion. The high switching frequency
allows the use of small case size, low
cost, high value ceramic capacitors
on the input and output of the supply.
Isolated Feedback
The heart of the LT1425 is shown in
Figure 3. During S1’s off-time, the
voltage on the VSW pin increases to VIN
+ (VOUT + VD)/n, where n is the transformer turns ratio and VD is the output
diode voltage. Q1’s collector current
becomes ICQ1 = (VOUT + VD)/(n × R1).
R2 converts ICQ1 into the input voltage for the transconductance feedback
amplifier. C1 on the VC pin then integrates the feedback amplifier’s output
current. The voltage on the VC pin
sets the current mode trip point.
Although we now have a means for
generating a feedback voltage, a few
problems remain. The feedback voltage is not present during S1’s on-time
or when the secondary current decays to zero, which is often the case
with a discontinuous flyback. To make
matters worse, T1’s leakage inductance can cause large voltage spikes
at turn-off.
These issues are taken care of by
the error amplifier enable block, which
incorporates enable-delay, collapsedetect and minimum-enable-time
circuitry. Enable delay waits approximately 200ns after the switch turns
off before enabling the feedback
amplifier, thus avoiding the leakageinductance spike. The collapse detect
continued on page 3
, LTC and LT are registered trademarks of Linear Technology Corporation. Adaptive Power, Burst Mode, C-Load,
LinearView, Micropower SwitcherCAD, PowerPath, SwitcherCAD and UltraFast are trademarks of Linear Technology
Corporation. Other product names may be trademarks of the companies that manufacture the products.
EDITOR’S PAGE
Issue Highlights
To mark the new year, we have a
collection of exciting new parts from
the design gurus at LTC. This issue’s
lead article features the new LT1425
isolated flyback converter, which provides a one-chip solution for low
voltage circuitry, such as local area
networks, isolation amplifiers and
telephone interfaces. The LT1425 is a
275kHz current mode controller with
an integral 1.25A switch, designed to
provide well regulated, isolated voltages from 3V–20V sources.
Other power products featured in
this issue include the LTC1474 and
LTC1475 ultralow quiescent current,
high efficiency step-down switching
regulators. These regulators draw only
10µA at no load and require only four
external components to make a complete, high efficiency (up to 92%)
step-down regulator. Low component
count and the parts’ tiny MSOP packages provide a minimum-area solution
to meet the limited space requirements of portable applications.
Another boon to the designers of
portable, battery-powered equipment
is the LTC1473 dual PowerPath switch
driver, which simplifies the design of
circuitry for switching between two
batteries or a battery and an AC
adapter. Presently, switching between
power sources is implemented with
discrete components—regulators,
comparators, references, glue logic,
MOSFET switches and drivers. These
solutions are expensive and occupy a
lot of printed circuit board space. The
LTC1473 drives low loss N-channel
MOSFET switches that direct power
in the main power path of a single or
dual rechargeable battery system, the
type found in most notebook computers and other portable equipment.
In the filter department, this issue
introduces the LTC1560-1, a high
frequency, continuous-time, low noise
filter. This device is a single-ended
input and output, 5th order elliptic
lowpass filter with a pin-selectable
cutoff frequency of 1MHz or 500kHz.
It requires no external components or
clocks and provides better than 60dB
2
LTC in the News…
Results of LTC’s second fiscal quarter
underscore the company’s standing as
an industry leader. Net sales for the
second fiscal quarter of 1997, ended
December 29, 1996, were $90,080,000.
Although this was a decrease of 6% over
net sales of $96,017,000 for the second
quarter of the previous year, this actually represented phenomenally good
performance, as we will see in just a
moment.
LTC reported net income for the quarter of $31,631,000 or $0.40 per share,
a decrease of 8% from the second quarter of the previous year. Sequentially,
the results for the second quarter were
essentially flat as compared to net sales
and income for the quarter ended September 29, 1996 of $90,063,000 and
$31,358,000 or $0.40 per share, respectively. A cash dividend of $0.05 will
be paid on February 12, 1997 to shareholders of record on January 24, 1997.
According to Robert H. Swanson,
president and CEO, “Although we entered the quarter with reduced backlog,
we were able to achieve flat sequential
sales and profits with our return on
sales continuing to lead the industry. In
addition, cash and short-term invest-
of stopband attenuation and 75dB
SNR, with only 0.3dB passband ripple.
In the data conversion area, we
debut the LTC1594 and LTC1598,
micropower 12-bit ADCs, which feature a 4- or 8-channel multiplexer,
respectively. These devices include
an auto shutdown feature that reduces power dissipation when the
converter is inactive. Nominal power
dissipation with the converter clocked
at 320kHz is typically 1.6mW. Each
ADC includes a simple, efficient serial
interface that reduces interconnects
and, thereby, possible noise sources.
Reduced interconnections also reduce
board size and allow the use of processors having fewer I/O pins, both of
which help reduce system costs.
For data communications, this issue introduces the low cost LT1328
IrDA data receiver. This device contains all the necessary circuitry to
convert current pulses from an exter-
ments grew by approximately $20 million in the quarter. Customers’ demand
picked up moderately throughout the
quarter and our shorter lead times enabled us to ship some of their demand
within the quarter. We believe our market is improving and we are optimistic
about the future.”
It’s becoming known around the
nation’s regional stock exchanges that
LTC is a leading pace setter and vital
indicator of the economic condition of
the electronics industry. For many
months, the Bloomberg Silicon Valley
Index and the Dean Witter Silicon Valley Stock Index have included LTC’s
business performance in their assessment of the industry.
Now, the New York-based Reuters
America News Service reports that the
Philadelphia Stock Exchange has added
two chip companies—one of which is
LTC—and an equipment maker to its
Semiconductor Index to replace three
stocks the exchange has removed. Late
last month, the exchange added Linear
Technology Corp. (LLTC), Xilinx Inc.
(XLNX.O) and Lam Research Corp.
(LRCX.O). To us at LTC, this move is
further proof that even in the realm of
high finance, “it’s a linear world.”
nal photodiode to a digital TTL output
while rejecting unwanted lower frequency interference. The LT1328 plus
six external components are all that
is required to make an IrDA-compatible receiver. Power requirements for
the LT1328 are minimal: a single 5V
supply and 2mA of quiescent current.
This issue includes a varied selection of Design Ideas, including three
power supplies, a battery charger that
doubles as the main step-down converter, a voltage controlled limiter for
video, a detector circuit for 470MHz
signals, and an evaluation of battery
life under a variety of load conditions.
Penultimately, we present Design
Information on the LT2078/LT2079
and LT2178/LT2179, improved
single-supply, precision surface
mount op amps, and the LT1387
single 5V multiprotocol transceiver.
We conclude with a selection of New
Device Cameos.
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN FEATURES
LT1425, continued from page 1
disables the feedback amplifier when
the RREF voltage falls below 80% of the
1.224V reference. This natural collapse of the feedback voltage occurs
sometime during the off-time in the
discontinuous flyback mode (see Figure 4, Trace C) or when the switch
turns on in the continuous mode (see
Trace A). Finally, a 200ns minimum
enable time, which follows the enable
delay time, ensures that the error
amplifier can pump up the VC node
during start up and other conditions
when VOUT is low.
This unique feedback system produces controlled output voltages while
maintaining fast dynamic response
not found in similar isolated flyback
schemes. 200ns of leading edge, current sense blanking is also included
to reject turn-on spikes.
age drop due to secondary winding
resistance, the output diode and capacitor ESR results in decreased
output voltage. To compensate for
this change in output voltage, a current is generated in Q2 (see Figure 3),
which is proportional to the average
primary current. Since primary current changes with output load, the
effects of nonideal components are
minimized and regulation is possible
over a wide load range. R3 determines
the amount of load compensation.
Connecting RCMPC to ground defeats
the load compensation.
Load Compensation
If the world were a perfect place, with
ideal transformers, diodes and capacitors, no additional compensation
would be required to maintain perfect
regulation. Unfortunately, as the load
current increases, the additional volt-
5V
C1
10µF
25V
C2
10µF
25V
1
0.1µF
22.1k
1%
GND
2
N/C
3
4
5
100k
1000pF
3.01k
1%
47pF
6
7
8
INPUT
COM
LT1425
GND
SD
RFB
ROCMP
VC
RCMPC
RREF
VIN
SYNC
VSW
SGND
PGND
GND
GND
16
15
14
C5
13
D2
2
1
T1
C6
C3
10µF
25V
4
11
3
OUT
COM
7
R3
12
R2
MBRS130LT3
R1
D1
1.8k
C4
10µF
25V
6
–9V
10
0.1µF
C1, C2, C3, C4 = MARCON THCS50E1E106Z CERAMIC
CAPACITOR, SIZE 1812. (847) 696-2000
9
1425_01.eps
TRANSFORMER T1
L PRI
TURNS
RATIO
ISOLATION
SIZE
(L × W × H)
IOUT
EFFICIENCY
D1
D2
R1, R2
C5, C6
R3
DALE
LPE-4841-A307
36µH
1:1:1
500VAC
10.7 × 11.5 × 6.3mm
250mA
76%
NOT USED
NOT USED
47Ω
330pF
13.3k
COILTRONICS
CTX02-13483
27µH
1:1
500VAC
14 × 14 × 2.2mm
200mA
70%
1N5248
MBR0540TL1
75Ω
220pF
5.9k
Figure 1. 5V to –9V/250mA isolated LAN supply
T1
1:N
VOUT
VSW
RFB
R1
VIN
Q1
Q2
200mV/DIV
2.6V
ENABLE
RREF
–
VC
R2
+
ERROR
AMP
RCMPC 50k
5ms/DIV
2 A/V
Figure 2. Transient response of LT1425 5V to
–9V converter
LOGIC/
DRIVER
COMP
C1
S1
ROCMP
–
1.224V
+
100mA/DIV
1425_03.eps
R3
Figure 3. LT1425 isolated feedback block diagram
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
3
DESIGN FEATURES
A: VSW = 20V/DIV
B: ISW = 1A/DIV
C: VSW = 20V/DIV
D: ISW = 0.2A/DIV
1µs/DIV
Figure 4. Switch voltage and current for
Figure 1’s circuit with outputs of –9V/250mA
and –9V/30mA
The LT1424
The LT1424, devoted to fixed output
voltage applications, is available in
an 8-pin SO package. The LT1424
retains the features of the LT1425
and incorporates the feedback, reference and load compensation resistors.
Figure 5 shows the LT1424 pinout.
Both the LT1424 and LT1425 include
shutdown and synchronization functions. Consult the factory for further
information on the LT1424.
Typical Applications
Figure 6 shows a ±15V supply with
1.5kV of isolation. Output regulation
remains within ±3% over the entire
5V to 15V input voltage and ±60mA
output current range, even with one
output fully loaded and the other
unloaded (±1.5% with input voltages
of 10V–15V). The isolation voltage is
ultimately limited only by bobbin selection and transformer construction.
The schematic shows details on building the transformer.
Figure 7 implements a 12V to
5V/1A step-down regulator with offthe-shelf magnetics. The circuit uses
an external, cascoded 100V MOSFET
to extend the LT1425’s 35V maximum switch voltage limit. D1 and Q1
ensure the LT1425 does not start
until almost 9V, guaranteeing adequate gate voltage for the MOSFET.
The MUR120 prevents the source from
rising above the gate at turn-off.
The circuit in Figure 8 achieves
even higher input voltages, this time
in the form of a –48V to 5V/2A isolated telecom supply. The input
voltage is too high to directly run Q1
or the LT1425, so a bootstrap winding is used to provide feedback and
power for the IC after start-up. The
voltage to the VIN pin is controlled by
D1, D2, Q2, Q3 and associated components, which form the necessary
start-up circuitry with hysteresis.
Nothing happens until C1 charges
through R1 to 15V. At that point, Q2
turns on Q3, pulling the shutdown
pin high. Q3, in turn, latches Q2 on,
setting the turn-off voltage to approximately 11V. Switching begins
TOP VIEW
+
1N759
1
0.1µF
18.4k
0.1%
2
3
4
3.01k
1%
GND
N/C
SD
RFB
ROCMP
16
14
1425_06.eps
VSW
SGND 4
5
PGND
Conclusion
The LT1425 offers high performance
and accuracy without the additional
circuitry traditionally associated with
isolated DC to DC converters.
330pF
+15V
+
8
2
7
3
6
15µF
35V
3k
OUT
COM
MBRS1100T3
MBR0540LT1
+
220pF
VC
4
5
15µF
35V
3k
–15V
7.32k
1%
*PHILIPS EFD-15-3F3 CORE
GAP FOR PRIMARY
L = 40µH
0.1µF
INPUT
COM
6
LT1424
and, before C1 has a chance to discharge to 11V, the bootstrap winding
begins to supply power. If the output
is shorted, R2 prevents C1 from being
charged by the transformer’s leakage
energy, causing the supply to continually attempt to restart. This limits
input and output current during a
short circuit. Feedback voltage is fed
directly through a resistor divider to
the RREF pin. The sampling error amplifier still works, but the load
compensation circuitry is bypassed.
This results in a ±5% load regulation
over line and load. A dedicated feedback winding referencing the feedback
voltage to the VIN pin could be used to
include the load compensation function and improve regulation.
75
15
13
RCMPC
12
LT1425
VIN
RREF
6
11
SYNC
VSW
7
10
PGND
SGND
9
8
GND
GND
5
1000pF
GND
VIN
SYNC 3
Figure 5. LT1424 pinout
1µF
22µF
35V
RCMPC
7
MBRS1100T3
T1*
1
8
VC 2
1425_05.eps
130
5V TO
15V
SD 1
PIN 3 TO 4, 7 TURNS BIFILAR 34AWG
PIN 7 TO 8, 28 TURNS 40AWG
PIN 5 TO 6, 28 TURNS 40AWG
3 LAYERS 2 MIL
POLYESTER FILM
PIN 1 TO 2, 7 TURNS BIFILAR 34AWG
Figure 6. Fully isolated ±15V, ±60mA supply
4
0.12 INCH MARGIN TAPE
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN FEATURES
330pF
100Ω
4
12V
22µF
35V
+
3
7
8
MBRS340T3
9
1
2.4k
1
0.1µF
D1
1N755
7.5V
25.5k
1%
2
3
4
5
6
1000pF
7
3.01k
1%
8
GND
GND
N/C
SD
RFB
ROCMP
16
+
220µF
10V
5
5V
+
220µF
10V
200Ω
15
14
2
13
RCMPC
12
RREF LT1425 VIN
11
SYNC
VSW
10
PGND
SGND
9
GND
GND
VC
6
10
11
12
OUT
COM
10
MMFT1N10E
9.3k
1%
0.1µF
INPUT
COM
COILTRONIX
VP1-0190
TURNS RATIO 1 : 1 : 1 : 1 : 1 : 1
12µH PER WINDING
407-241-7876
MUR120
1425_07.eps
1.8k
Q1
2N3906
1000pF
Figure 7. 5V/1A step-down, isolated supply
470pF
18
T1* 8
1
INPUT
COM
BAV21
R1
24k
3.3µF
5
BAV21
1
R2
18
2
0.1µF
+
30.1k
1%
C1
27µF
35V
3
4
5
6
3.16k
1%
D1
7.5V
1N755
7
8
1000pF
GND
N/C
SD
RFB
ROCMP
VC
510
16
15
5V
2
T1
GND
MBR745
150µF
6.3V
3
6
+
150µF
6.3V
50Ω
1W
150pF
14
4
7
OUT
COM
13
RCMPC
12
RREF LT1425 VIN
11
SYNC
VSW
10
PGND
SGND
9
GND
GND
+
10
Q1
IRF610
MUR120
–36V TO
–72V
*PHILIPS EFD-15-3F3 CORE
GAP FOR PRIMARY
L = 100µH
2.4k
Q2
2N3906
PIN 3 TO 4, 15 TURNS BIFILAR 31AWG
D2
7.5V
1N755
Q3
2N3904
5k
PIN 7 TO 8, 6 TURNS QUADFILAR 29AWG
PIN 5 TO 6, 15 TURNS BIFILAR 33AWG
PIN 1 TO 2, 15 TURNS BIFILAR 31AWG
100k
10k
2 LAYERS 2 MIL
POLYESTER FILM
1 LAYER 2 MIL
POLYESTER FILM
0.1µF
1425_08.eps
Figure 8. 5V/2A telecommunications supply
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
5
DESIGN FEATURES
The LT1328: a Low Cost IrDA Receiver
Solution for Data Rates up to 4Mbps
by Alexander Strong
Introduction
LT1328
The need for ever increasing data Functional Description
rates required by a vast array of devices, such as notebook computers,
printers, mobile phones, pagers, electronic cameras and modems, has been
satisfied by the technology of infrared
data transmission. The Infrared Data
Association (IrDA®) standard, which
covers data rates from 2400bps to
4Mbps, is the overwhelming choice
for infrared data transmission. The
LT1328 is a photodiode receiver that
supports IrDA data rates up to 4Mbs,
as well as other modulation methods,
such as Sharp ASK and TV remote
control.
The LT1328, in the MSOP package,
contains all the necessary circuitry to
convert current pulses from an external photodiode to a digital TTL output
while rejecting unwanted lower frequency interference. The LT1328 plus
six external components is all that is
required to make the IrDA-compatible receiver shown in Figure 1. An
IrDA- compatible transmitter can also
be implemented with only six components, as shown in Figure 2. Power
requirements for the LT1328 are minimal: a single 5V supply and 2mA of
quiescent current.
Figure 3 is a block diagram of the
LT1328. Photodiode current from D1
is transformed into a voltage by feedback resistor RFB. The DC level of the
preamp is held at VBIAS by the servo
action of the transconductance
amplifier’s gm. The servo action only
suppresses frequencies below the
Rgm/CFILT pole. This highpass filtering attenuates interfering signals,
such as sunlight or incandescent or
fluorescent lamps, and is selectable
at pin 7 for low or high data rates. For
high data rates, pin 7 should be held
low. The highpass filter breakpoint is
set by the capacitor C1 at f = 25/(2
× Rgm × C), where Rgm = 60k. The
330pF capacitor (C1) sets a 200kHz
corner frequency and is used for data
rates above 115kbps. For low data
rates (115kbps and below), the capacitance at pin 2 is increased by
taking pin 7 to a TTL high. This
switches C2 in parallel with C1,
lowering the highpass filter breakpoint. A 10nF cap (C2) produces a
6.6kHz corner. Signals processed by
the preamp/gm amplifier combination cause the comparator output to
swing low.
IrDA SIR
The LT1328 circuit in Figure 1 operates over the full 1cm to 1 meter range
of the IrDA standard at the stipulated
light levels. For IrDA data rates of
115kbs and below, a 1.6µs pulse width
is used for a zero and no pulse for a
one. Light levels are 40mW/sr (Watts
per steradian) to 500mW/sr. Figure 4
shows a scope photo for a transmitter
input (top trace) and the LT1328 output (bottom trace). Note that the input
to the transmitter is inverted; that is,
transmitted light produces a high at
the input, which results in a zero at
the output of the transmitter. The
Mode pin (pin 7) should be high for
these data rates.
IrDA FIR
The second fastest tier of the IrDA
standard addresses 576kbps and
1.152Mbs data rates, with pulse
widths of 1/4 of the bit interval for
zero and no pulse for one. The
1.152Mbs rate, for example, uses a
pulse width of 217ns; the total bit
time is 870ns. Light levels are
100mW/sr to 500mW/sr over the 1cm
to 1 meter range. A photo of a transmitted input and LT1328 output is
C3
1000pF
VBIAS
IN
FILT
LIGHT IN
D1
BPU22NF
TEMIC
C2
10nF
MODE
7
VCC (5V)
LT1328
FILT LO
VCC
VCC
8
C4
0.1µF
C5
10µF
DATA
1328_01.eps
Figure 1. LT1328 IrDA receiver—typical application
TRANSMIT
INPUT
RD1
100Ω
Q3
2N7002
Q4
2N7002
RD3
10k
DRIVER
TTL DATA OUT
6
RD2
6.8Ω
1/2W
6
C1
330pF
GND
D2
HSDL-4220
HIGH – SIR
LOW – FIR AND 4PPM
1328_02.eps
Figure 2. IrDA transmitter
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN FEATURES
shown in Figure 5. The LT1328 output
pulse width will be less than 800ns
wide over all of the above conditions
at 1.152Mbps. Pin 7 should be held
low for these data rates and above.
BIAS
RFB
PHOTODIODE
IN
1
8
D1
4ppm
VBIAS
PREAMP
C3
RIN
+
RGM
–
FILTER
C1
330pF
gm CELL
2
7
MODE
C2
10nF
FILTER LO
GND
6
3
VCC
–
4
5
DATA OUT
+
COMPARATOR
1328_03.eps
The last IrDA encoding method is for
4Mbs and uses pulse position modulation, thus its name: 4ppm. Two bits
are encoded by the location of a 125ns
wide pulse at one of the four positions
within a 500ns interval (2 bits ×
1/500ns = 4Mbps). Range and input
levels are the same as for 1.152Mbs.
Figure 6 shows the LT1328 reproduction of this modulation.
Conclusion
In summary, the LT1328 can be used
to build a low cost receiver compatible with IrDA standards. Its ease of
use and flexibility also allow it to
provide solutions to numerous other
photodiode receiver applications. The
tiny MSOP package saves on PC board
area.
Figure 3. LT1328 block diagram
IrDA is a registered trademark of the Infrared Data
Association
TRANSMITTER
INPUT
TRANSMITTER
INPUT
TRANSMITTER
INPUT
LT1328 OUTPUT
LT1328 OUTPUT
LT1328 OUTPUT
2ns/DIV
200ns/DIV
200ns/DIV
Figure 4. IrDA 115kbs modulation
Figure 5. IrDA 1.152Mbs modulation
Figure 6. IrDA 4ppm modulation
Authors can be contacted
at (408) 432-1900
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
7
DESIGN FEATURES
The LTC1473 Dual PowerPath Switch
Driver Simplifies Portable Power
Management Design
by Jaime Tseng
Introduction
The LTC1473 is the latest addition to
Linear Technology’s new family of
power management controllers, which
simplify the design of circuitry for
switching between two batteries or a
battery and an AC adapter. Presently,
switching between power sources is
implemented with discrete components—a mixture of regulators,
comparators, references, glue logic,
MOSFET switches and drivers. Invariably, these solutions are expensive
and occupy a considerable amount of
printed circuit board space. Although
these circuits are frequently designed
in a hurry, the problems associated
with power path switching are often
subtle and daunting. For example,
switching from one battery to another
can produce huge inrush currents
between the batteries when their voltages differ. In extreme cases, system
bypass capacitors can be destroyed if
tantalums are used. Slowing the
switch turn-on rate helps reduce the
inrush current, but may cause a precipitous drop in the system supply
voltage.
Solutions to these “real world” problems have been designed into our new
power path switch driver. The
LTC1473 dual PowerPath™ switch
driver drives low loss N-channel MOSFET switches that direct power in the
main power path of a single or dual
rechargeable battery system, the type
found in most notebook computers
and other portable equipment.
Overview
The power management system in
Figure 1 shows the LTC1473 driving
two sets of back-to-back N-channel
MOSFET switches connecting the two
batteries to the system DC/DC regulator. Each of the switches is controlled
by a TTL/CMOS compatible input
that interfaces directly with a power
management system microprocessor.
An internal boost regulator provides
the voltage to fully enhance the logiclevel N-channel MOSFET switches.
The LTC1473 uses a current sense
loop to limit current rushing in and
out of the batteries and the system
supply capacitor during switch-over
transitions or during a fault condition. A user programmable timer
monitors the time during which the
MOSFET switches are in current limit
and latches them off if the programmed time is exceeded. A unique
“2-diode logic mode” ensures system
start-up, regardless of which input
receives power first.
MBRD340
DCIN
Si9926
SWA1
RSENSE
SWB1
12V
BAT1
Si9926
SWA2
CIN
SWB2
+
BAT2
HIGH
EFFICIENCY
DC/DC
SWITCHING
REGULATOR
5V
3.3V
MB914LT1
C1
1µF
50V
+
L1
1mH
SW
VGG
C2
1µF
50V
V+
STEP-UP
SWITCHING
REGULATOR
GATE
DRIVER
GATE
DRIVER
LTC1473
IN1
INRUSH
CURRENT
SENSING
AND LIMITING
IN2
DIODE
POWER
MANAGEMENT
µP
+
1473_01.eps
TIMER
CTIMER
4700pF
Figure 1. Dual-battery PowerPath switch driver: VGG regulator, inrush limiting and switch-gate drivers
8
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN FEATURES
MBRD340
DCIN
Si9926
SWB1
SWA1
RSENSE
BAT1
12V
ON
Si9926
OFF
SWB2
SWA2
BAT2
CIN
+
HIGH
EFFICIENCY
DC/DC
SWITCHING
REGULATOR
5V
3.3V
ON
OFF
LTC1473
POWER
MANAGEMENT
µP
1473_02.eps
Figure 2. LTC1473 dual PowerPath switch driver in “2-diode mode”
Back-to-Back Switches
Tantalum Capacitors
The back-to-back topology eliminates
the problems associated with the inherent body diodes in power MOSFET
switches and allows each switch pair
to block current flow in either direction when the two switches are turned
off. The low loss, N-channel switch
pairs are housed in 8-pin SO and
SSOP packaging and are available
from a number of manufacturers. The
Si9926DY, for example, houses two
20V MOSFETs rated at 0.03 with
VGS = 4.5V.
Tantalum capacitors, with their high
volumetric efficiency and low ESR,
are the dielectric of choice for low
impedance applications, such as filtering the input of a switching
regulator. However, because these capacitors are exposed to uncontrolled
energy supplies, they are subject to
failures caused by high inrush currents unless current surges are
restricted. The inrush-current limiting feature of the LTC1473 makes it
feasible to use low profile tantalum
surface mount capacitors in place of
bulkier electrolytic capacitors.
Inrush Current Limiting
The back-to-back topology also allows for independent control of each
half of the switch pair, facilitating
bidirectional inrush current limiting.
The voltage across a single low value
resistor, RSENSE, is measured to determine the instantaneous current
flowing through the two main switch
pairs, SWA1/B1 and SWA2/B2. The
inrush current is then controlled by
the gate drivers until the transition
from one power source to the other
has been completed. The current flowing in and out of the two main power
sources and the DC/DC converter
input capacitor is dramatically
reduced.
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
Built-In Step-Up Regulator
The gate drive for the two low loss Nchannel switches is supplied by a
micropower step-up regulator that
continuously generates 8.5V above
V+, up to 37V maximum. The VGG
supply provides sufficient headroom
to ensure that the logic-level MOSFET switches are fully enhanced by
the gate drivers which, supply a regulated 5.7V gate-to-source voltage, VGS,
when turned on.
The power for the micropower boost
regulator is taken from external diodes connected to each power source.
The highest voltage potential is directed to V+, where L1, an inexpensive
1mH surface mount inductor, is connected. An internal diode directs the
current from L1 to the VGG output
capacitor, C2.
Programmable Fault Timer
A fault-timer capacitor, CTIMER, is used
to program the time during which the
MOSFET switches are allowed to be
in current limit continuously. In the
event of a fault condition, the MOSFET current is limited by the inrush
current-limit loop. A MOSFET switch
operating in current limit is in a high
dissipation mode and can fail catastrophically if this condition is not
promptly terminated.
The fault-time delay is programmed
with an external capacitor connected
between the TIMER pin and ground.
At the instant the MOSFET switch
enters current limit, a 5µA current
source starts charging CTIMER through
the TIMER pin. When the voltage
across CTIMER reaches 1.2V, an internal latch is set and the MOSFET
switch is turned off. To reset the
latch, the gate-drive input of the
MOSFET switch is deselected.
The “2-Diode Mode”
Under normal operating conditions,
both halves of each switch pair are
turned on and off simultaneously.
For example, when the input power
source is switched from BAT1 to BAT2,
both gates of switch pair SWA1/B1
are turned off and both gates of switch
pair SWA2/B2 are turned on. The
back-to-back body diodes in switch
pair SWA1/B1 block current flow into
or out of the BAT1 input connector.
In the “2-diode mode,” only the
first half of each power path switch
pair, for example, SWA1 and SWA2, is
turned on, and the second half, that
is, SWB1 and SWB2, is turned off.
These two switch pairs now simply
act as two diodes connected to the
two main input power sources, as
illustrated in Figure 2. The power
path diode with the highest input
voltage passes current to the input of
the DC/DC converter to ensure that
the power management microprocessor is powered, even under start-up
9
DESIGN FEATURES
MBRD340
Si9926
BAT1
MMBD2823LT1
MMBD2823LT1
DCIN
SUPPLY
MONITOR
CTIMER
4700PF
IN1
POWER
MANAGEMENT
µP
IN2
+
1µF
1mH
+
GA1
LTC1473
SAB1
DIODE
GB1
TIMER
SENSE+
V+
SENSE-
VGG
GA2
SW
SAB2
GND
GB2
RSENSE
INPUT OF SYSTEM
HIGH EFFICIENCY DC/DC
SWITCHING REGULATOR
(LTC1435,ETC)
0.04Ω
+
COUT
1µF
1473_03.eps
MMBD914LT1
BAT2
Si9926
Figure 3. Dual-battery power-management system
or abnormal operating conditions.
After “good” power is reconnected to
one of the main inputs, the LTC1473
can be instructed to drive the appropriate switch pair on fully as the other
switch is turned off, restoring normal
operation.
Typical Application
A typical dual-battery system is shown
in Figure 3. The LTC1473 accepts
commands from a power management microprocessor to select the
appropriate battery. The microprocessor monitors the presence of
batteries and the AC adapter through
a supply monitor block, or, in the case
of some battery packs, through a
thermistor sensor. This block comprises a resistor divider and a
comparator for each supply. If the AC
adapter is present, the two switches
are turned off by the microprocessor
and the power is delivered to the
input of the system DC/DC switching
regulator via a Schottky diode.
Conclusion
The LTC1473 dual PowerPath switch
driver eases the design of the front
end of the power management system. Designed to drive low cost
N-channel MOSFET switches and
packed with numerous protection features in a narrow, 16-lead SSOP
package, the LTC1473 solves the
problems of cost, space and reliability
for power management system
designers.
Authors can be contacted
at (408) 432-1900
10
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN FEATURES
The LTC1560-1: a 1MHz/500kHz
Continuous-Time, Low Noise,
Elliptic Lowpass Filter
by Nello Sevastopoulos
AC Performance
Introduction
DC Performance and
The LTC1560-1 is a high frequency, Power Shutdown
❏ Fifth order 1MHz or 500kHz
elliptic response in an SO-8
package
❏ No external components or
clocks required
❏ Better than 60dB stopband
attenuation
❏ 75dB signal-to-noise ratio (SNR)
❏ 0.3dB passband ripple
The LTC1560-1 delivers accurate
fixed cutoff frequencies of 500kHz
and 1MHz without the need for internal or external clocks. Through a
simple mask change, other frequencies from 450kHz to 1.3MHz can
be produced upon demand. The
LTC1560-1’s extremely small size
makes it suitable for compact designs
(see Figure1) and for a variety of applications, including communication
filters, antialiasing filters and smoothing or reconstruction filters.
The LTC1560-1 operates with ±5V
supplies and has a power shutdown
mode. The typical DC output swing of
the filter is from –3V to 3.5V. The
output DC offset of the filter is typically ±200mV. The operating power
supply range is ±4V to ±6V.
The LTC1560-1’s extremely
small size makes it well
suited for compact designs
and a variety of applications,
including communication
filters, antialiasing filters
and smoothing or
reconstruction filters.
Frequency Response
The LTC1560-1 offers a pin-selectable cutoff frequency of either 500kHz
(Figure 2; pin 5 tied to V+) or 1MHz
(pin 5 tied to V–). The detailed passband frequency response of the 1MHz
filter is shown in Figure 3. In the
1MHz mode, the passband is flat up
to 0.55 × fC with a typical ripple of
±0.2dB, increasing to ±0.3dB up to
0.9 × fC. The typical gain at fC is
–0.6dB. Referring to Figure 4, note
that the transition band has a gain of
–22dB at 1.44 × fC rolling off to –47dB
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
The LTC1560-1 provides a power
shutdown option that significantly
reduces current consumption when
the device is not being used. The filter
operation could be controlled by a
TTL input together with an inverter
applied to the SD pin (pin 7). A logic
high input turns the device on for
normal operation, whereas a logic low
puts the filter into its sleep mode, in
which it dissipates only 5mW of power.
(Leaving pin 7 open yields the default
mode of normal operation.)
0.2
GAIN (dB)
continuous-time, low noise filter. It is
a single-ended input, single-ended
output, 5th order elliptic lowpass filter with a pin-selectable cutoff
frequency (fC) of 1MHz or 500kHz.
Several features distinguish the
LTC1560-1 from other commercially
available high frequency, continuoustime monolithic filters:
0.1
0
–0.1
–0.2
–0.3
–0.4
–0.5
–0.6
0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0
FREQUENCY (MHz)
1560_03.eps
Figure 3. Expanded passband ripple for the
1MHz filter
10
0
–10
fC = 1MHz
–20
VIN
LTC1560-1
1
2
3
4
GND
VOUT
8
7
VIN
SD
GND
6
V+
V–
0.5FC/FC
–5V
0.1µF
8
2
7
3
6
4
5
0.01µF
VOUT
(OR 5V)
5V
GAIN (dB)
LTC1560-1
1
–30
–40
fC = 500kHz
–50
–60
–70
0.1µF
0.01µF
–80
–90
0.1
5
–5V, 1MHz
1
FREQUENCY (MHz)
10
1560_01.eps
5V, 500kHz
1560_04.eps
1560_02.eps
Figure 1. LTC1560-1 in an SO-8 package
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
Figure 2. 1MHz or 500kHz elliptic lowpass
filter with no external components
Figure 4. Gain vs frequency of the 1MHz and
500kHz filters
11
DESIGN FEATURES
15V
0.1µF
LTC1560-1
VIN
–5V
1
8
2
7
3
6
4
5
3
7
+
(OR 5V)
8
LT1360
2
5V
0.1µF
0.01µF
0.1µF
1k
–
VOUT
4
0.01µF
1560_05.eps
0.1µF
–5V, 1MHz
–15V
5V, 500kHz
Figure 5. A typical circuit for evaluating the full performance of the LTC1560-1
Figure 7. Measured frequency response of
Figure 6’s circuit
15V
0.1µF
LTC1560-1
300pF
300pF
VIN
8.1k
–5V
1
8
2
7
3
6
4
5
1k
+
(OR 5V)
2
–
Highpass-Lowpass Filter
7
LT1360
5V
0.1µF
0.1µF
3
8
VOUT
4
0.01µF
1560_06.eps
0.01µF
0.1µF
–15V
Figure 6. A highpass-lowpass filter
at 2 × fC. The stopband attenuation is
63dB starting from 2.43 × fC and
remains at least 60dB for input
frequencies up to 10MHz. When programmed for f C = 500kHz, the
frequency response remains the same,
with the exception of the gain at fC,
which is typically –1.3dB. Figure 4
compares the gain responses of the
1MHz and 500kHz filters.
Noise and
Distortion Performance
The LTC1560-1 architecture offers
not only low wide band noise but also
low total harmonic distortion (THD).
The combination of low noise and low
distortion means a wide dynamic
range. With a 1VRMS input signal, the
signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) is 69dB
and the THD + Noise is –63dB (0.07%).
The maximum SNR of 75dB is
achieved with a 2.1VRMS input signal.
This results in –46dB (0.5%) THD.
For the 500kHz device, the noise performance is even better, with 77dB
SNR at a 1VRMS input.
12
To achieve the full high frequency
performance from the filter, a small
resistor (about 200 ) should be added
at the output of the device to isolate
any capacitive load greater than 20pF.
Figure 5 shows a typical application
circuit to be used for any AC
performance measurements of the
LTC1560-1. Any high speed, high
slew-rate operational amplifier such
as the LT1360 can serve as the buffer.
To correctly evaluate the high frequency distortion performance of the
LTC1560-1 requires a very low distortion input signal, either from a
very high quality signal generator or,
if such a source is not available, from
a source that has been filtered to
control its harmonic content.
Applications and
Experimental Results
The LTC1560-1 can be used not only
as a single device (as shown in Figures 2 and 5) but also as part of a
more complete frequency-shaping
system. Two representative examples
follow.
As a typical application in communication systems, where there is a need
to reject DC and some low frequency
signals, a 2nd order RC highpass
network can be inserted in front of the
LTC1560-1 to obtain a highpass-lowpass response. Figures 6 and 7 depict
the network and its measured frequency response, respectively. Notice
that the second resistor in the highpass filter is the input resistance of
the LTC1560-1, which is about 8.1k.
Delay-Equalized Elliptic Filter
Although elliptic filters offer high Q
and a sharp transition band, they
lack a constant group delay in the
passband, which implies more ringing in the time-domain step response.
In order to minimize the delay ripple
in the passband of the LTC1560-1, an
allpass filter (delay equalizer) is cascaded with the LTC1560-1, as shown
in Figure 8. Figures 9 and 10 illustrate the eye diagrams before and
after the equalization, respectively.
An eye diagram is a qualitative
representation of the time-domain
response of a digital communication
system. It shows how susceptible the
system is to intersymbol interference
(ISI). Intersymbol interference is
caused by erroneous decisions in the
receiver due to pulse overlapping and
decaying oscillations of a previous
symbol. A pseudorandom 2-level sequence has been used as the input of
the LTC1560-1 to generate these eye
diagrams. The larger eye opening in
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN FEATURES
20k
22pF
40.2k
9.75k
LTC1560-1
1
VIN
–5V
8
2
7
3
6
4
5
6.49k
22pF
2
(OR 5V)
3
0.1µF
+
1/2 LT1364
5V
1
6.65k
6
–
8
+
1/2 LT1364
5
0.1µF
0.1µF
5V
–
49.9Ω
7
VOUT
1560_08.eps
4
0.01µF
0.1µF
0.01µF
–15V
Figure 8. Augmenting the LTC1560-1 for improved delay flatness
Figure 9. 2-level eye diagram of the LTC1560-1 before equalization
Figure 10, an indication of the equalization effect, leads to reduced ISI.
Note that in Figure 8, the equalizer
section has a gain of 2 for driving and
back-terminating 50 cable and load.
For a simple unterminated gain-of-1
equalizer, the 40.2k resistor changes
to 20k and the 49.9 r esistor is re-
Figure 10. 2-level eye diagram of the equalized filter
moved from the circuit. The 22pF
capacitors are 1% or 2% dipped silver
mica or COG ceramic.
Conclusions
The LTC1560-1 is a 5th order elliptic
lowpass filter that features a 10-bit
gain linearity at signal ranges up to
1MHz. Being small and user friendly,
the LTC1560-1 is suitable for any
compact design. It is a monolithic
replacement for larger, more expensive and less accurate solutions in
communications, data acquisitions,
medical instrumentation and other
applications.
Mojitaba Atarodi contributed significant portions
of this article.
for
the latest information
on LTC products,
visit
www.linear-tech.com
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
13
DESIGN FEATURES
The LTC1594 and LTC1598:
Micropower 4- and 8-Channel
12-Bit ADCs
by Kevin R. Hoskins and Marco Pan
Introduction
Data acquisition applications that
require low power dissipation fall into
two general areas: products that require highly efficient power use, such
as battery-powered portable test
equipment and remotely located data
logging equipment, and products that
either operate in high temperature
environments or must not contribute
to increasing ambient temperature.
To help meet these requirements, Linear Technology has introduced the
LTC1594 and LTC1598.
board size and allow the use of processors having fewer I/O pins, both of
which help reduce system costs. Small
packages also shorten the distance
between the ADC and its supply and
voltage reference bypass components.
This reduces lead inductance and
allows bypass components to operate
as efficiently as possible.
SUPPLY CURRENT (µA)
Conserve Power with
Auto Shutdown Operation
The LTC1594 and LTC1598 are
micropower 12-bit ADCs that feature
a 4- and 8-channel multiplexer, respectively. The LTC1594 is available
in a 16-pin SO package and the
LTC1598 is available in a 24-pin SSOP
package. Each ADC includes a simple,
efficient serial interface that reduces
interconnects and, thereby, possible
sources of corrupting digital noise.
Reduced interconnections also reduce
TA = 25°C
VCC = 5V
VREF = 5V
fCLK = 320kHz
100
10
1
0.1
The LTC1594 and LTC1598 include
an auto shutdown feature that reduces power dissipation when the
converter is inactive (whenever the
CS signal is a logic high). Nominal
power dissipation while either converter is clocked at 320kHz is typically
1.6mW. The curve in Figure 1 indicates the amount of current drawn by
this MUXed 12-bit ADC family for
sample rates up to 16.8ksps. As an
example, when converting at 4ksps,
the dissipation is just 450µW and
270µW for the 5V and 3V parts,
respectively.
Micropower ADCs
in Small Packages
ANALOG INPUTS
0V TO 5V
RANGE
1000
1
10
SAMPLE FREQUENCY (kHz)
100
1598_01.eps
Figure 1. Supply current vs sample rate
Supply Flexibility:
2.7V or 5V
To increase applications flexibility,
the LTC1594 and LTC1598 are also
available as 3V parts (LTC1594L and
LTC1598L), which are tested for 2.7V
operation. The L TC1594L and
LTC1598L typically draw 160µA at
maximum conversion rate, one-half
of the supply current drawn by the 5V
parts. Nominal power dissipation
while either converter is clocked at
200kHz (10.5ksps) is typically 800µW.
5V
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
CH5
CH4
CH6
CH3
CH7
CH2
GND
CH1
CLK LTC1598 CH0
CS MUX
DIN
VCC
MUXOUT
COM
ADCIN
GND
VREF
CS ADC
DOUT
NC
VCC
CLK
NC
C6
0.015µF
24
1µF
23
+
22
1/2
LT1368
21
20
R4, 7.5k
C2
0.1µF
5V
R2, 7.5k
C4
0.03µF
–
19
18
1µF
17
R1, 7.5k
16
15
14
C3
0.03µF
13
R3, 7.5k
C5
0.015µF
+
1/2
LT1368
–
C1
0.1µF
DATA OUT
DATA IN
CHIP SELECT
CLOCK
1598_02.eps
Figure 2. A simple data acquisition system takes advantage of the LTC1598’s MUXOUT/ADCIN pins to filter analog signals prior to ADC conversion.
14
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN FEATURES
5V
1µF
5V
LTC1391
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
CH0
CH1
CH2
16
V+
15
D
14
V–
13
+
12
–
CH3
DOUT
CH4
DIN
CH5
CS
CH6
CLK
CH7
GND
1µF
1/2 LT1368
5V
0.1µF
17
ADCIN
11
10
9
64R
20 CH0
32R
21 CH1
16R
22 CH2
8R
23 CH3
4R
24 CH4
2R
1
CH5
R
2
CH6
R
3
CH7
16
15, 19
VREF VCC
CS ADC
CS MUX
8-CHANNEL
MUX
+
12-BIT
SAMPLING
ADC
–
CLK
DOUT
DIN
LTC1598
18
8
MUXOUT
COM
NC
GND
NC
1µF
10
6
5, 14
µP/µC
11
7
12
13
4, 9
1598_03.eps
Figure 3. Using the MUXOUT/ADCIN loop of the LTC1598 to form a PGA with eight gains in a noninverting configuration
MUXOUT/ADCIN
The DC specs include excellent dif- without latch-up. Although an over- Loop Economizes
ferential nonlinearity (DNL) of driven, unselected channel may Signal Conditioning
Good DC Performance
±3/4LSB, as required by pen-screen
and other monitoring applications.
No missing codes are guaranteed over
temperature.
Versatile, Flexible Serial I/O
The serial interface found on the
LTC1594 and LTC1598 is designed
for ease of use, flexibility, minimal
interconnections and I/O compatibility with QSPI, SPI, MICROWIRE™
and other serial interfaces. The MUX
and the ADC have separate chip select (CS) and serial clock inputs, which
adds versatility. The remaining serial
interface signals are data input (DIN)
and data output (DOUT). The maximum serial clock frequencies are
320kHz and 200kHz for the 5V and
3V parts, respectively.
Latch-up Proof MUX Inputs
The LTC1594’s and LTC1598’s input
MUXes are designed to handle input
voltages that exceed the nominal input range, GND to the supply voltage,
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
corrupt a selected, correctly driven
channel, no latch-up occurs and correct conversion results resume when
the offending input voltage is removed.
The MUX inputs remain latch-up proof
for input currents up to ±200mA over
temperature.
Individual ADC
and MUX Chip Selects
Enhance Flexibility
The LTC1594 and LTC1598 feature
separate chip selects for ADC and
MUX. This allows the user to select a
particular channel once for multiple
conversions. This has the following
benefits: first, it eliminates the overhead of sending DIN word for the same
channel each time for each conversion; second, it avoids possible
glitches that may occur if a slowsettling antialiasing filter is used; and
third, it sets the gain once for multiple conversions if the MUXOUT/
ADCIN loop is used to create a programmable gain amplifier (PGA).
The MUXOUT and ADCIN pins form a
very flexible external loop that allows
PGA and/or processing analog input
signals prior to conversion. This loop
is also a cost effective way to perform
the conditioning, because only one
circuit is needed instead of one for
each channel. Figure 2 shows the
loop being used to antialias filter several analog inputs. The output signal
of the selected MUX channel, present
on the MUXOUT pin, is applied to R1
of the Sallen-Key filter. The filter band
limits the analog signal and its output is applied to ADCIN. The LT1368
rail-to-rail op amps used in the filter
will, when lightly loaded as in this
application, swing to within 8mV of
the positive supply voltage. Since only
one circuit is used for all channels,
each channel sees the same filter
characteristics.
MICROWIRE is a trademark of National Semiconductor
Corp.
15
DESIGN FEATURES
5V
with 0.1µF load capacitors. These
capacitors provide frequency compensation for the amplifiers, help reduce
the amplifiers’ output impedance and
improve supply rejection at high frequencies. Because the LT1368’s IB is
low, the RON of the selected channel
will not affect the loop gain given by
the formula above. In the case of the
inverting configuration of Figure 4,
the selected channel’s RON will be
added to the resistor that sets the
loop gain.
+
1/2 LT1368
0.1µF
–
128R
18
LTC1598
MUXOUT
17
ADCIN
5V
16
15, 19
VREF VCC
1µF
128R
20 CH0
64R
21 CH1
32R
22 CH2
16R
23 CH3
8R
24 CH4
4R
1 CH5
2R
2 CH6
R
3 CH7
NC
8 COM
NC
10
CS ADC
6
CS MUX
+
12-BIT
SAMPLING
ADC
5, 14
CLK
–
GND
4, 9
8-Channel, Differential,
12-Bit A/D System Using
the LTC1391 and LTC1598
7
DIN
11
DOUT
12
13
1598_04.eps
Figure 4. Using the MUXOUT/ADCIN loop of the LTC1598 to form a PGA with
eight inverting gains
Using MUXOUT/
ADCIN Loop as PGA
Figure 3 shows the LTC1598’s
MUXOUT/ADCIN loop and an LT1368
being used to create a single-channel
PGA with eight noninverting gains.
Combined with the LTC1391, as
shown in Figure 3, the system can
expand to eight channels and eight
gains for each channel. Using the
LTC1594, the PGA is reduced to four
gains. The output of the LT1368 drives
the ADCIN and the resistor ladder.
The resistors above the selected MUX
channel form the feedback for the
LT1368. The loop gain for this amplifier is (RS1/RS2) + 1. R S1 is the
summation of the resistors above the
selected MUX channel and RS2 is the
summation of the resistors below the
selected MUX channel. If CH0 is selected, the loop gain is 1 since RS1 is
0. Table 1 shows the gain for each
MUX channel. The LT1368 dual railto-rail op amp is designed to operate
continued on page 20
5V
18
LTC1598
MUXOUT
MUX
Channel
0
16
Noninverting
Gain
1
2
–2
2
4
–4
3
8
–8
4
16
–16
5
32
–32
6
64
–64
7
128
–128
16
15, 19
VREF VCC
21 CH1
5V
24 CH4
2 CH6
LTC1391
CH0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
CH7
8
16
3 CH7
15
8 COM
CH0
V+
CH1
D
14
V–
13
CH2
CH3
DOUT
CH4
DIN
CH5
CS
CH6
CLK
CH7
GND
CS ADC
22 CH2
23 CH3
Inverting
Gain
–1
1
17
ADCIN
1µF
20 CH0
1 CH5
Table 1. PGA gain for each MUX channel of
Figures 3 and 4
The LTC1598 can be combined with
the LTC1391 8-channel, serial-interface analog multiplexer to create a
differential A/D system. Figure 5
shows the complete 8-channel, differential A/D circuit. The system uses
the LTC1598’s MUX as the noninverting input multiplexer and the
LTC1391 as inverting input multiplexer. The LTC1598’s MUXOUT
drives the ADCIN directly. The
inverting multiplexer’s output is applied to the LTC1598’s COM input.
The LTC1598 and LTC1391 share the
CS, DIN, and CLK control signals.
CS MUX
8-CHANNEL
MUX
+
12-BIT
SAMPLING
ADC
–
CLK
DIN
DOUT
NC
GND
4, 9
NC
10
6
5, 14
7
11
12
13
1598_05.eps
12
11
10
9
DIN
CLK
CS
DOUT
Figure 5. Using the LTC1598 and LTC1391 as an 8-channel, differential 12-bit ADC system:
opening the indicated connection and shorting the dashed connection daisy-chains the
external and internal MUXes, increasing channel-selection flexibility.
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN FEATURES
LTC1474 and LTC1475 High Efficiency
Switching Regulators Draw Only
10µA Supply Current
by Greg Dittmer
Introduction
Maximizing battery life, one of the key
design requirements for all batterypowered products, is now easier with
Linear Technology’s new family of
ultralow quiescent current, high
efficiency step-down regulator ICs,
the LTC1474 and LTC1475. The
LTC1474/LTC1475 are step-down
regulators with on-chip P-channel
MOSFET power switches. These regulators draw only 10µA supply current
at no load while maintaining the output voltage. With the on-chip switch
(1.3 at V IN = 10V), only four external
components are necessary to make a
complete, high efficiency (up to 92%)
step-down regulator. Low component
count and the LTC1474/LTC1475’s
tiny MSOP packages provide a minimum-area solution to meet the limited
space requirements of portable applications. Wide supply voltage range
(3V–18V) and 100% duty cycle capability for low dropout allow maximum
energy to be extracted from the battery, making the LTC1474/LTC1475
ideal for moderate current (up to
300mA) battery-powered applications.
The peak inductor current is programmable via an optional current
sense resistor to allow the design to
be optimized for a particular applica-
tion and to provide short-circuit protection and excellent start-up
behavior. Other features include Burst
Mode™ operation to maintain high
efficiency over almost four decades of
load current, an on-chip low-battery
comparator and a shutdown mode to
further reduce supply current to 6µA.
The LTC1475 provides on/off control
with push-button switches for use in
handheld products.
The LTC1474/LTC1475 are available in adjustable output voltage
versions, in 8-pin MSOP and SO
packages.
CONNECTION NOT PRESENT IN LTC1474
CONNECTION PRESENT IN LTC1474 ONLY
LBI
VIN
100mV
–
1µA
C
ON
5Ω
RSENSE
(OPTIONAL)
+
VIN
+
SENSE
–
V
ON
+
RUN
5µS
IN
1×
25×
1SHOT OUT
VFB
ON
SW
VOUT
LBOUT
+
1.23V
LB
READY
–
VFB
1.23V
REFERENCE
+
GND
1474_01.eps
LBI
Figure 1. LTC1474/LTC1475 functional block diagram
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
17
DESIGN FEATURES
MODE
ON
5µS OFF-TIME
SLEEP
In Control of
Inductor Current
SHUTDOWN
RUN
INDUCTOR
CURRENT
CURRENT
COMPARATOR
ONE-SHOT
ON (100µA)
OFF
OFF
OFF
ON (5µA)
ON (10µA)
OFF
OFF
VOLTAGE
COMPARATOR
ON (5µA)
OFF
1.23V REFERENCE
ON (4µA)
LOW-BATTERY
COMPARATOR
ON (1µA)
1474_02.eps
Figure 2. Supply current breakdown during each operational mode
High Performance on a
Microampere Budget
The functional block diagram, shown
in Figure 1, provides a study in power
management. LTC1474/LTC1475
control the output voltage by charging the output capacitor in short burst
cycles using Burst Mode operation.
The peak current in each burst cycle
(up to 400mA) is set by the external
sense resistor. As the load increases,
the frequency of the burst cycles increases (up to a maximum of 170kHz)
to maintain the charge in the output
capacitor. The burst cycle begins when
the output voltage falls below the
lower threshold of the voltage comparator (V). The P-channel power
switch turns on to ramp the inductor
current up until either the current
comparator (C) trips on peak current
or the voltage comparator trips on the
upper voltage threshold. At this time
the one-shot is triggered and begins
the 5µs off-time period, during which
the switch is turned off and inductor
current ramps down. If, at the end of
the off-time, the output voltage is
below the upper voltage comparator
threshold, the switch is turned on
again to begin another cycle. If the
upper voltage threshold is exceeded,
however, the switch remains off and
the output capacitor supplies the load
current. The switch remains off until
the load current discharges the output capacitor below the lower voltage
threshold.
18
The ultralow supply current and
very high efficiency at light loads are
achieved by powering only those functions that are necessary at any given
time. Figure 2 is a summary of the
current used by each of the functions
in each of the different operating
modes. During sleep mode, when the
output capacitor is supplying the load,
only the 1.23V reference, the voltage
comparator and low-battery comparator are on; together they draw only
10µA of supply current to perform
their functions. These three functions
are on at all times except during
shutdown. During shutdown, the voltage comparator is turned off to save
an additional 5µA. The current comparator, which, as a result of its speed
requirement necessarily draws more
current, is only turned on during the
switch on-time, when it is needed to
monitor the switch current. When the
current or voltage comparator trips,
the current comparator is turned off
and the one-shot timer is triggered,
drawing 10µA during its 5µs timeout period. When the one-shot times
out it turns off, reducing the supply
current to the 10µA needed for the
voltage comparator, reference and lowbattery comparator, until a new burst
cycle begins.
Excessive peak inductor current can
be a liability. Lower peak current
offers the advantages of smaller voltage ripple (∆V = IPEAK × ESR), lower
noise and less stress on alkaline batteries and other circuit components.
Also, lower peaks allow the use of
inductors with smaller physical size.
The LTC1474/LTC1475 provide flexibility by allowing the peak switch/
inductor current to be programmed
with an optional sense resistor to
provide just enough to meet the load
requirement. Without a sense resistor (that is, with pins 6 and 7 shorted)
the current limit defaults to its maximum of 400mA. Using the default
current limit eliminates the need for a
sense resistor and associated decoupling capacitor.
A sense MOSFET (a portion of the
main power MOSFET) is used to divert a sample (about 5%) of the switch
current through the internal 5 sense
resistor. The internal current comparator monitors the voltage drop
across the series combination of the
internal and external sense resistors
and trips when this voltage drop exceeds 100mV. This results in a peak
current of IPEAK = 0.1/(0.25 + RSENSE)
+ 0.2 × (VIN – VOUT)/L. The second
term in the above equation is the
result of overshoot of the peak current due to delays in the current
comparator and must be taken into
account at lower inductances and
higher supply voltages to guarantee
that maximum current ratings of the
inductor and switch are not exceeded.
Note that worst case will occur during
a short circuit, when VOUT = 0.
3.3V/200mA
Step-Down Regulator
A typical application circuit using the
LTC1474 is shown in Figure 3. This
circuit supplies a 200mA load at 3.3V
with an input supply range of 4V–18V
(3.3V at no load). The 0.1 sense
resistor reduces the peak current to
about 285mA, which is the minimum
level necessary to meet the 200mA
load current requirement with a
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN FEATURES
100
LBI LBO
LTC1474
1
2
1.69M
10pF
3
4
1M
100µF
6.3V
+
VFB
RUN
LBO
VIN
LBI
SENSE
GND
SW
100k
8
7
6
0.1µF
1000pF
90
RUN
VIN
4V-18V
10µF
25V
5
EFFICIENCY (%)
VOUT
3.3V/200mA
0.1Ω
L
100µH
VIN = 5V
VIN = 10V
80
VIN = 15V
70
L= 100 µH
V OUT = 3.3V
R SENSE = 0.1 Ω
1474_03.eps
MBR0530
D:
L:
COUT:
CIN:
60
MBR0530
SUMIDA CDRH74
TPSC107006R0150
THC50EIE106Z
50
0.02
0.2
2
20
LOAD CURRENT (mA)
Figure 3. LTC1474 3.3V/200mA step-down regulator
200
1474_04.eps
Figure 4. Efficiency vs load for Figure 3’s
circuit
100µH inductor. The peak can be
reduced further if a higher value inductor is used. Since the output
capacitor dominates the output voltage ripple, an AVX TPS series low ESR
(150m ) output capacitor is used to
provide a good compromise between
size and low ESR. With this capacitor
the output ripple is less than 50mV.
Efficiency Considerations
The efficiency curves for the 3.3V/
200mA regulator at various supply
voltages are shown in Figure 4. Note
the flatness of the curves over the
upper three decades of load current
and that the efficiency remains high
down to extremely light loads. Efficiency at light loads depends on low
quiescent current. The curves are flat
because all significant sources of loss
except for the 10µA standby current—I2R losses in the switch, catch
diode losses, gate charge losses to
turn on the switch and burst cycle DC
supply current losses—are identical
during each burst cycle. The only
variable is the rate at which the burst
cycles occur. Since burst frequency is
proportional to load, the loss as a
percentage of load remains relatively
constant. The efficiency drops off as
the load decreases below about 1mA
because the non-load-dependent
10µA standby current loss then constitutes a more significant percentage
of the output power. This loss is proportional to VIN and thus its effect is
more pronounced at higher VIN.
Care must be used in selecting the
catch diode to maximize both low and
high current efficiency. Low reverse
leakage current is critical for maximizing low current efficiency because
the leakage can potentially approach
the magnitude of the LTC1474/
LTC1475 supply current. Low forward drop is critical for high current
efficiency because loss is proportional
to forward drop. These are conflicting
parameters, but the MBR0530 0.5A
Schottky diode used in the Figure 3 is
a good compromise. Lower inductances also help by minimizing DCR
without increasing the inductor size.
However, lower inductances also reduce the maximum available output
power for a given IPEAK due to the fixed
5µs off-time and may also increase
the peak current overshoot due to
high di/dt (see formula for IPEAK).
LTC1475 Push-Button
On/Off Operation
The LTC1475 provides the option of
push-button control of run and shutdown modes for handheld products.
In contrast to the LTC1474’s run/
shutdown mode, which is controlled
by a voltage level at the RUN pin
(ground = shutdown, open/high =
run), the LTC1475 run/shutdown
mode is controlled by an internal S/R
flip-flop that is set (run mode) by a
momentary ground at the RUN pin
and reset (shutdown mode) by a momentary ground at the LBI pin (see
Figure 5). This provides simple on/off
control with two push-button
switches. The simplest implementation of this function is shown in Figure
6, with normally open push-button
switches connected to the RUN and
LBI pins. Note that because the switch
on LBI is normally open, it doesn’t
RUN
LTC1474
100k
MODE
RUN
SHUTDOWN
RUN
LTC1475
ON
VFB
RUN OVERRIDES SHUTDOWN
WHILE RUN IS LOW
1
2
3
4
RUN
VFB
RUN
LBO
VIN
LBI/SD SENSE
GND
SW
8
7
6
10µF
5
100µH
OFF
LTC1475
VOUT
LBI
1M
2.2M
100µF
VBATT
MODE
VBATT
+
RUN
SHUTDOWN
RUN
Figure 5. Comparison of RUN/SHUTDOWN
operation for the LTC1474 and LTC1475
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
VFB
1474_05.eps
Figure 6. LTC1475 step-down regulator with push-button on/off control
19
DESIGN FEATURES
affect the normal operation of this
input to the low-battery comparator.
With a resistor divider network connected to the LBI to monitor the input
supply voltage level, the voltage at
this pin will normally be above the
low-battery trip threshold of 1.23V.
When this pin is pulled below 0.7V by
depressing the switch, the internal
flip-flop is reset to invoke shutdown.
Figure 7 shows an example of pushbutton on/off control of a LTC1475
microcontroller application with a
single push button. The push button
is connected to the microcontroller as
a discr ete input so that the
microcontroller can monitor the state
of the push button. The LTC1475 LBI
pin is connected to one of the
microcontroller’s open-drain discrete
outputs so that it can force the
LTC1475 off when it detects a
depressed push button. Because the
L TC1475 supplies power to
the microcontroller, once the microcontroller is off, it can no longer turn
the LTC1475 back on. However, since
the push button is also connected
directly to the RUN pin, the LTC1475
can be turned back on directly from
the push button without the microcontroller. The LTC1475 then powers
up the microcontroller. The discrete
inputs of most microcontrollers have
a reverse biased diode between the
input and supply; thus a blocking
diode with less than 1µA leakage is
necessary to prevent the powered
down microcontroller from pulling
down on the RUN pin.
Conclusion
The LTC1474 and LTC1475 ultralow
quiescent current step-down regulator ICs provide a perfect solution for
low to moderate current (up to 300mA)
battery-powered applications where
high efficiency and maximizing battery life are critical. The 10µA no-load
supply current requirement ensures
that little battery energy is wasted on
the regulator. The internal P-channel
power switch, MSOP package and the
need for as few as four additional
components result in a very compact
solution, and the current programmability and wide supply-voltage
range provide the flexibility necessary to optimize the design for a variety
of applications.
µC
MMBD914LT1
VCC
100k
LTC1475
ON/OFF
VFB
0.1µF
1
2
3
4
VFB
RUN
LBO
VIN
LBI/SD SENSE
GND
SW
8
7
6
100µH
1M
VBATT
10µF
5
VOUT
+
100µF
2.2M
VBATT
VFB
1474_06.eps
Figure 7. A single push-button controls on/off for the LTC1475 regulator and microcontroller.
LTC1594/LTC1598, continued from page 16
This arrangement simultaneously
selects the same channel on each
multiplexer and maximizes the
system’s throughput. The dotted-line
connection daisy-chains the MUXes
of the LTC1391 and LTC1598 together. This configuration provides
the flexibility to select any channel
in the noninverting input MUX with
20
respect to any channel in the inverting input MUX. This allows any
combination of signals applied to the
inverting and noninverting MUX inputs to be routed to the ADC for
conversion.
Conclusion
With their serial interfaces, small
packages, and auto shutdown, the
LTC1594(L) and LTC1598(L) achieve
very low power consumption while
occupying very little circuit board
area. Their outstanding DC specifications make them the choice for
applications that benefit from low
power, battery conserving operation,
multichannel inputs and space and
component saving signal conditioning loop.
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN IDEAS
Biased Detector Yields High Sensitivity
with Ultralow Power Consumption
by Mitchell Lee
RF ID tags, circuits that detect a
“wake-up” call and return a burst of
data, must operate on very low quiescent current for weeks or months, yet
have enough battery power in reserve
to answer an incoming call. For smallest size, most operate in the ultrahigh
frequency range, where the design of
a micropower receiver circuit is problematic. Familiar techniques, such as
direct conversion, super regeneration
or superheterodyne, consume far too
much supply current for long battery
life. A better method involves a
technique borrowed from simple fieldstrength meters: a tuned circuit and
a diode detector.
DESIGN IDEAS
Biased Detector Yields High
Sensitivity with Ultralow Power
Consumption .......................... 21
Mitchell Lee
LT1256 Voltage-Controlled
Amplitude Limiter .................. 22
Frank Cox
New IC Features Reduce EMI from
Switching Regulator Circuits
................................................23
John Seago
Dual Output Voltage Regulator
................................................26
Peter Guan
Figure 1 shows the complete circuit, which was tested at 470MHz.
This circuit contains a couple of improvements over the standard
L/C-with-whip field-strength meter.
Tuned circuits aren’t easily constructed or controlled at UHF, so a
transmission line is used to match
the detector diode (1N5711) to a 6"
whip antenna. The 0.4-wavelength
section presents an efficient, low impedance match to the base of the
quarter-wave whip, but transforms
the received energy to a relatively
high voltage at the diode for good
sensitivity.
Biasing the detector diode improves
the sensitivity by an additional 10dB.
The forward threshold is reduced to
essentially zero, so a very small voltage can generate a meaningful output
change. The detector diode’s bias point
is monitored by an LTC1440 ultralow
power comparator, and by a second
diode, which serves as a reference.
When a signal at the resonant frequency of the antenna is received,
Schottky diode D1 rectifies the
incoming carrier and creates a negative-going DC bias shift at the
noninverting input of the comparator. Note that the bias shift is sensed
at the base of the antenna where the
impedance is low, rather than at the
Schottky where the impedance is high.
This introduces less disturbance into
the tuned antenna and transmissionline system. The falling edge of the
comparator triggers a one-shot, which
temporarily enables answer-back and
other pulsed functions.
Total current consumption is
approximately 5µA. Monolithic oneshots draw significant load current,
but the venerable ‘4047 is about the
best in this respect. Alternatively, a
discrete one-shot constructed from a
quad NAND gate draws negligible
power.
Sensitivity is excellent. The finished circuit can detect 200mW
radiated from a reference dipole at
100'. Range, of course, depends on
operating frequency, antenna orientation and surrounding obstacles; in
the clear, a more reasonable distance,
such as 10', can be covered at 470MHz
with only a few milliwatts.
All selectivity is provided by the
antenna itself. Add a quarter-wave
stub (shorted with a capacitor) to the
base of the antenna for better selectivity and improved rejection of low
frequency signals.
Free Digital Panel Meters from the
Oppressive Yoke of Batteries
................................................27
9VDC
Mitchell Lee
Battery Charger IC Can Also Serve
as Main Step-Down Converter
................................................28
λ/4
D1
1N5711
Arie Ravid
Combine a Switching Regulator
and an UltraFast™ Linear
Regulator for a High Performance
3.3V Supply
................................................29
Craig Varga
What Efficiency Curves
Don’t Tell................................. 30
San-Hwa Chee
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
2X9.1MΩ
λ/2.5
Z0 = 50Ω
DETECTOR
FB
27kΩ
+
CMOS
ONE-SHOT
(CD4047)
LTC1440
100pF
–
Q
Q
27kΩ
100pF
REFERENCE
D2
1N5711
DI1440_01.EPS
Figure 1. Micropower field detector for use at 470MHz
21
DESIGN IDEAS
LT1256 Voltage-Controlled
Amplitude Limiter
Amplitude-limiting circuits are useful where a signal should not exceed
a predetermined maximum amplitude, such as when feeding an A/D or
a modulator. A clipper, which completely removes the signal above a
certain level, is useful for many applications, but there are times when it is
not desirable to lose information. For
instance, when video signals have
amplitude peaks that exceed the
dynamic range of following processing
stages, simply clipping the peaks at
the maximum level will result in the
loss of all detail in the areas where
clipping takes place. Often these well
illuminated areas are the primary
subject of the scene. Because these
peaks usually correspond to the
highest level of luminosity, they are
referred to as “highlights.” One way to
preserve some of the detail in the
highlights is to automatically reduce
the gain (compress) at high signal
levels.
The circuit in Figure 1 is a voltagecontrolled breakpoint amplifier that
can be used for highlight compression. When the input signal reaches a
predetermined level (the breakpoint),
the amplifier gain is reduced. As both
the breakpoint and the gain for signals greater than the breakpoint are
voltage programmable, this circuit is
useful for systems that adapt to changing signal levels. Adaptive highlight
compression finds use in CCD video
cameras, which have a very large
dynamic range. Although this circuit
was developed for video signals, it can
be used to adaptively compress any
signal within the 40MHz bandwidth
of the LT1256.
The LT1256 video fader is connected to mix proportional amounts
of input signal and clipped signal to
provide a voltage-controlled variable
gain. The clipped signal is provided
by a discrete circuit consisting of
three transistors. Q1 acts as an emitter follower until the input voltage
exceeds the voltage on the base of Q2
(the breakpoint voltage or VBP). When
the input voltage is greater than VBP,
Q1 is off and Q2 clamps the emitters
of the two transistors to VBP plus a
VBE. Q3, an NPN emitter follower,
buffers the output and drops the voltage a VBE and thus the DC level of the
input signal is preserved to the extent
allowed by the VBE matching and temperature tracking of the transistors
by Frank Cox
used. The breakpoint voltage at the
base of Q2 must remain constant
when this transistor is turning on or
the signal will be distorted. The
LT1363 maintains a low output
impedance well beyond video frequencies and makes an excellent buffer.
Figure 2 is a multiple-exposure
photograph of a single line of monochrome video, showing four different
levels of compression ranging from
fully limited signal to unprocessed
input signal. The breakpoint is set to
40% of the peak amplitude to clearly
show the effect of the circuit; normally only the top 10% of video would
be compressed.
Figure 2. Multiple-exposure photograph of a
single line of monochrome video, showing
four different levels of compression
5V
Q1, Q2 =2N4957
Q3 =2N2857
2k
1.5k
LT1256
–
Q3
VIDEO
IN
100Ω
Q1
+
Q2
75Ω
5V
VIDEO
75Ω OUT
2k
–5V
+
10k
TO VFS
LT1256, PIN 12
1.5k
LT1004-2.5
5V
BREAK POINT
VOLTAGE
1.5k
100Ω
100k
TO VCONTROL
LT1256, PIN 3
–
+
LT1363
–
510Ω
–5V
1.5k
Figure 1. Voltage-controlled amplitude limiter
22
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN IDEAS
New IC Features Reduce EMI from
Switching Regulator Circuits by John Seago
One disadvantage of using a switching regulator is that it generates
electronic noise, known as EMI (electromagnetic interference). This noise
can be conducted or radiated, and it
can affect other circuits in your product or interfere with the operation of
nearby products. The LTC1436-PLL,
LTC1437, LTC1439 and LTC1539
have features that can be used to
suppress this interference.
Frequently, EMI problems don’t
show up until the integration phase
of product development. By using this
EMI suppression capability, a resistor- or capacitor-value change may
be all that is required to solve an
interference problem. The LTC1436PLL shown in the circuit of Figure 1
produces a switched 5V, 3A output
and a 3.3V, 0.1A linear output. The
circuit is configured to provide either
switch-frequency synchronization or
switch-frequency modulation. Also,
R2, 10k
5.5V TO
24V
R7
10Ω
1
C1
PLL
C3, 0.1µF
2
3
R3, 10k
4
C5, 47pF
C6
100pF
+
C11
22µF
35V
+
C12
22µF
35V
C11, C12: KEMET T495X226M035AS
C13, C14: AVX TPSD107M010R0065
L1: SUMIDA CDRH125-10
Q1 + Q2: SILICONIX Si4936DY (DUAL FET)
Q3: INTERNATIONAL RECTIFIER IRLML2803
R8: IRC LR2010-01-R033-J
R6
47k
MOD
0.01µF
Access to the VCO input also makes it
possible to modulate the regulator’s
switching frequency. Through frequency modulation, the peak energy
of the fundamental is spread over the
frequency range of modulation, thus
decreasing the peak energy level at
any one frequency. This frequency
spreading action increases with each
harmonic, so that the second harmonic has twice the bandwidth and
the third harmonic has three times
the bandwidth until all the harmonics blend together, decreasing the
signal strength at all frequencies. This
can be seen in the spectrum analyzer
plots shown in Figures 2, 3 and 4.
Switching regulator noise results from
switching high currents on and off.
This creates high energy levels at the
switching frequency and all of its
harmonics. A common EMI-control
technique is to synchronize the
switching frequency to an external
clock so that all harmonic frequencies
can be controlled. The LTC1436-PLL
uses a phase-locked loop for synchronization to avoid the loss of slope
compensation common to other synchronizing techniques. In addition,
the input to the VCO in the phaselocked loop is available at the PLL LPF
PLL
C2, 47pF
Switch-Frequency Modulation
Switch-Frequency
Synchronization
MOD
SWITCHFREQUENCY
MODULATOR*
(phase-locked loop lowpass filter) pin
so, that a lowpass filter can be used to
control how fast the loop acquires
lock.
transistor Q3 ensures constant frequency at very low output current
levels, thus eliminating audio frequencies and maintaining high efficiency
using the internal Adaptive Power™
circuitry.
C4
330pF
INTVCC
5
6
7
8
R4, 100Ω
9
C7, 0.001µF
10
R5
100Ω
11
12
R9
20k
PLL LPF
PLLIN
COSC
POR
RUN/SS
BOOST
ITH
TGL
SFB
SW
SGND
VPROG
TGS
LTC1436-PLL
VIN
VOSENSE
INTVCC
–
BG
SENSE
SENSE
+
PGND
AUXON
EXTVCC
AUXFB
AUXDR
* SEE FIGURE 6
24
23
POR
22
21
Q1
20
19
18
17
16
+
R8
0.033Ω
5V
3A
C10
0.1µF
Q3
C8
0.1µF
L1
10µH
+
D1
MBRS0530
C9
4.7µF
D2
MBRS130L
C13, C14
100µF
10V
×2
Q2
15
GND
14
13
R10
35.7k
R11
47k
C15
3.3µF
Q4
MMBT2907ALT1
+
DI1436_01.eps
3.3V
0.1A
Figure 1. 2-output LTC1436-PLL test circuit
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
23
DESIGN IDEAS
Figure 2 shows the full load output
noise level from the circuit of Figure
1, before and after switch-frequency
modulation. The black trace shows
the normal output noise from 1kHz to
1MHz with the VCO at minimum frequency, whereas the colored trace
shows output noise after modulation
around the center frequency. The
228kHz unmodulated switch-frequency output noise decreased more
than 30dB through modulation
between 270kHz and 370kHz. Figures 3 and 4 show a 10dB to 15dB
attenuation in full-load output voltage noise from 1MHz to 30MHz after
modulation.
The VCO in the LTC1436-PLL has
an input range from 0V to 2.4V. As
shown in Figure 5, the switch frequency can be modulated at least
±30% around the center frequency fO.
The ideal modulating signal varies an
equal amount above and below the
center frequency voltage of 1.2V, with
a constant slope. The reference circuit of Figure 6 develops a 100Hz
sawtooth voltage from 0.9V to 1.5V
that modulates the LTC1436-PLL in
Figure 1 to generate the plots shown
in Figures 2, 3 and 4. Modulator
circuit complexity is largely determined by functional requirements.
For most applications, a precision
modulating signal is not required,
because high order harmonics blend
together. Consequently, modulating
frequency, slope and peak-to-peak
voltage are not critical.
Figure 2. Output noise before and after switch-frequency modulation
Figure 3. Output high frequency noise before switch-frequency modulation
Audio Frequency Suppression
The Adaptive Power feature of the
LTC1436-PLL significantly reduces
audio frequency generation, while
maintaining good efficiency under
very light load conditions. Figure 7
shows the audio frequencies generated by the highly efficient cycle
skipping mode of the LTC1436-PLL.
Figure 8 shows the decrease in audio frequencies resulting from
Adaptive Power operation. Figure 9
shows efficiency curves of both the
cycle skipping and Adaptive Power
modes along with the traditional,
forced continuous mode of operation.
Figure 4. Output high frequency noise after switch-frequency modulation
24
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN IDEAS
1.5V
COSC = 100pF
LTC1436-PLL
PIN 17
(5V)
FREQUENCY
1.3f0
COSC = 47pF
0.9V
0.1µF
1
1.2M
TLC555
7
DISCH
3
6
OUT
THRESH
4
5
RESET
CONT
220Ω
2
f0
~10ms
8
GND
+VCC
0V
510k
TRIG
–
0.7f0
2N3904
+
LT1077
LTC1436-PLL
PIN 1
(MOD)
150k
0.1µF
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
VPLL LPF (V)
2.0
2.5
100k
DI1436_06.eps
DI1436_05.eps
Figure 5. Operating frequency vs VPLLPF
LTC1436-PLL
PIN 6
(GND)
Figure 6. Switch-frequency modulator
Conclusion
Cycle skipping is the most efficient
mode during light-load operation,
where the output capacitor supplies
load current most of the time and is
replenished by bursts of energy at a
rate determined by the load. When
load current is low enough, the burst
rate falls into the audio-frequency
range, which can cause problems.
With the addition of Q3, an inexpensive SOT -23 size MOSFET, the
Adaptive Power circuitry inside the
LTC1436-PLL takes control during
light load conditions, turning off high
current MOSFETs Q1 and Q2. Q3
and D2 are then used in a conventional constant frequency buck mode,
eliminating the power loss caused by
charging and discharging the large
input capacitance of both power
MOSFETs.
The conventional way of avoiding
audio-frequency interference is the
forced current mode, where both high
current MOSFETs continue to operate at full frequency and normal duty
–20dBm
The family of LTC1436-PLL parts offers very effective EMI suppression
features. Reviewing the spectrum
analyzer plots in Figures 2, 3 and 4
shows that the output voltage noise
amplitude can be significantly reduced at frequencies to 30MHz with
switch-frequency modulation. The
Adaptive Power mode provides high
efficiency, constant-frequency operation at very low output currents and
avoids audio frequency operation.
–20dBm
–40dBm
–60dBm
–80dBm
–100dBm
Figure 8. Output noise with Adaptive Power
mode operation
3. FORCED CONTINUOUS OPERATION:
CONSTANT FREQUENCY USING
LARGE MOSFETS Q1 AND Q2
10VIN
5VOUT AT 3mA
BW = 100Hz
–120dBm
10Hz
10kHz
20kHz
DI1436_07.eps
Figure 7. Audio frequencies in output noise
during cycle-skipping operation
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
20kHz
DI1436_08.eps
100
90
EFFICIENCY (%)
– 80dBm
10kHz
Pentium is a registered trademark of Intel Corp.
2. Adaptive Power MODE:
CONSTANT FREQUENCY WITH
AUTOMATIC SWITCHOVER TO
SMALL MOSFET Q3
– 60dBm
10VIN
5VOUT AT 3mA
BW = 100Hz
–120dBm
10Hz
1. CYCLE SKIPPING OPERATION:
VARIABLE FREQUENCY
COMPONENTS AT LOWER
OUTPUT CURRENTS
– 40dBm
–100dBm
cycle under all load conditions. This
causes the peak-to-peak inductor
current to flow, even under no load
conditions. The synchronous buck
topology allows the top switch, Q1, to
put current into the output capacitor,
followed by the bottom switch, Q2,
taking current out of the output capacitor while regulating the output
voltage under no-load conditions.
Although constant frequency is maintained, high current I2R losses and
high gate charge losses continue
under light load conditions. LTC1436PLL features forced-current operation
to provide the fast transient response
required for high di/dt loads like the
Intel Pentium® processor.
Cycle skipping, Adaptive Power and
forced current operation are all available on the LTC1436-PLL, so that the
best operating mode can be selected
for each application.
(1)
10V IN
5V OUT
80
70
60
50
1mA
(2)
(3)
10mA
100mA
1A
OUTPUT CURRENT
10A
Figure 9. Efficiency curves for light load currents
25
DESIGN IDEAS
Dual-Output Voltage Regulator
by Peter Guan
The LTC1266-3.3 and LTC1263 are
perfect complements for one another.
The combination of these two parts
provides two regulated outputs of
3.3V/5A and 12V/60mA from an input range of 4.75V to 5.5V. These two
outputs are perfect for notebook and
palmtop computers with microprocessors that burn several amps of
current from a regulated 3.3V supply, flash memories that consume
milliamps of current from a regulated
12V supply and interface and logic
components that still run off the 5V
supply. In fact, this quick and easy
combination may well be the aspirin
for many of the headaches caused by
the rigorous power supply demands
in today’s electronics.
The LTC1263, using only four external components (two 0.47µF charge
capacitors, one 10µF bypass capacitor and a 10µF output capacitor),
generates the regulated 12V/60mA
output from a 5V input using a charge
pump tripler. During every period of
the 300kHz oscillator, the two charge
capacitors are first charged to VCC
and then stacked in series, with the
bottom plate of the bottom capacitor
shorted to VCC and the top plate of the
top capacitor connected to the output
capacitor. As a result, the output
capacitor is slowly charged up from
5V to 12V. The 12V output is regulated by a gated oscillator scheme
that turns the charge pump on when
VOUT is below 12V and turns it off
when it exceeds 12V.
The LTC1266-3.3 then uses the 5V
input along with the 12V output from
the LTC1263 and various external
components, including bypass capacitors, sense resistors and Schottky
diodes, to switch two external N-channel MOSFETs and a 5µH inductor to
charge and regulate the 3.3V/5A output. The charging scheme for this
part, however, is very different from
that of the LTC1263. The LTC12663.3 first charges the output capacitor
by turning on the top N-channel
MOSFET, allowing current to flow
from the 5V input supply and through
the inductor. By monitoring the
continued on page 32
VCC
5V
FROM µP
1
C1–
2
C1+
SHDN
8
C1 = 0.47µF
GND
7
LTC1263
3
C3 = 10µF
VOUT 6
C2–
VOUT = 12V/60mA
C2 = 0.47µF
C4 = 10µF
4
VCC 5
C2+
VCC
Si9410DY
1
1µF
2
3
4
5
6
CT
180pF
7
CC
3300pF
RC
470Ω
8
TDRIVE
BDRIVE
PWR VIN
PGND
PINV
LBOUT
BINH LTC1266-3.3
LBIN
VIN
SGND
CT
SHDN
ITH
NC
SENSE+
SENSE–
1000pF
16
CIN
100µF
20V
×2
D1
MBRS140T3
Si9410DY
15
14
13
12
11
10
L*
5µH
9
RSENSE
0.02Ω
COUT
220µF
10V
×2
VOUT = 3.3V/5A
*COILTRONICS CTX0212801
DI1263_01.eps
Figure 1. 5V to 3.3V/5A and 12V/60mA supply
26
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN IDEAS
Free Digital Panel Meters from the
Oppressive Yoke of Batteries by Mitchell Lee
Digital panel meters (DPMs) have
dropped in price to well under $10 for
3-1/2 digit models, even in singlepiece quantities. These make excellent
displays for many instruments, but
suffer from one major flaw: they require a floating power supply, usually
in the form of a 9V battery. This
renders inexpensive meters useless
for most applications because no one
wants multiple 9V batteries in their
product.
The circuit shown in Figure 1 powers up to five meters from a single
1.8V to 6V source. The source need
not be floating, yet all five outputs are
fully floating, isolated and independent in every respect. The circuit
consists of an LT1303 micropower,
high efficiency DC/DC converter driving a 5-output flyback converter. An
off-the-shelf surface mount coil,
Coiltronics’ Versa-Pac™ VP1-0190, is
maximum switch rating of the LT1303.
The LT1111 is better suited for higher
voltage applications.
Output ripple measures 200mVP–P
and can be proportionately reduced
by increasing the output capacitance.
If more ripple is acceptable, the output capacitors can be reduced in
value. A shutdown feature is available on the LT1303, useful where a
“sleep” function is included to save
power.
With each output loaded at 1mA,
the input current is 16.5mA on a 5V
supply. This figure rises to about
45mA on a 1.8V (2-cell) input. If the
system is battery operated and if the
battery voltage does not exceed 7V,
operate the circuit directly from the
battery for best efficiency. In lineoperated equipment, use a regulated
5VDC or 3.3VDC supply.
used as the transformer. This device
is hipot tested to 500VRMS—more than
adequate for most applications.
Feedback is extracted from the
primary by Q1, which samples the
flyback pedestal during the switch off
time. Typical DPMs draw approximately 1mA supply current. The
primary is also loaded with 1mA for
optimum regulation and ripple. Primary snubbing components, a
necessity in most flyback circuits, are
obviated by the primary feedback rectifier and smoothing capacitor.
Although this circuit has been set up
for 9V output (9.3V, to be exact), some
DPMs need 5V or 7V. Use a 4.3k or
6.2k r esistor in place of R1 for these
voltages. The output voltage is set by
R1 = (VOUT – 0.7)/1mA.
Do not attempt to regulate the output beyond 10V or you will exceed the
Versa-Pac is a trademark of Coiltronics, Inc.
5 × MBR0520L
+
MBR0520L
+
1.8VDC–
6VDC
+
10µF
25V
10µF
25V
ON
+
10µF
25V
SW
SHDN
MBR0520L
FB
GND
10µF
25V
R1
8.2k
Q1
2N3906
VIN
LT1303
OFF
+
10µF
25V
PGND
+
R2
1.2k
+
10.7µH
COILTRONICS
VP1-0190
10µF
25V
10µF
25V
DIGITAL
PANEL
METERS
DIDPM_01.eps
Figure 1. LT1303 flyback regulator provides fully floating and isolated 9V supplies to
five independent digital panel meters. Substitute 4.3k for R1 if 5V meters are used.
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
27
DESIGN IDEAS
Battery Charger IC Can Also Serve
as Main Step-Down Converter by Arie Ravid
Using a power adapter with the
highest feasible output voltage is attractive to portable system designers
for a couple of reasons. Lower current
is required to maintain the same system power, which translates into a
smaller cable and input connector. If
the adapter output voltage is considerably higher than the battery voltage,
the adapter output voltage does not
need to be regulated or well filtered,
resulting in lower adapter cost.
A portable system with a high output-voltage adapter, however, requires
that the system’s DC-to-DC converter
functions over a very wide range of
input voltage: from fully discharged
battery voltage to the highest adapter
output voltage.
This problem can be resolved by
using the LT1510 as both the battery
charger and the main step-down converter, as shown in Figure 1. An
important feature of the circuit in
Figure 1 is the glitch-free transfer
from AC operation to battery operation and back.
The LT1510 battery charger IC is
capable of charge current up to 1.5A
and output (battery) voltage up to
20V. High efficiency and small inductor size are achieved by a saturating
switch running at 200kHz. The
LT1510 is capable of charging lithiumion and sealed-lead-acid batteries in
the constant-voltage/constantcurrent configuration, and nickelcadmium and nickel-metalhydride batteries in the constantcurrent configuration. The LT1510
contains an internal switch and current sense resistor. All the designer
needs to do in order to program the
current and voltage is select the current-programming resistor and the
voltage-divider resistors.
In the circuit shown in Figure 1,
the system’s DC-to-DC converter is
connected to the SENSE pin. This
way, the internal sense resistor is
bypassed for the system load but is
active in regulating the charge current. The sum of the charge current
and system current should not exceed the maximum output current
allowed (limited by thermal considerations or peak switch current). Since
the DC-to-DC converter circuit has a
large input capacitor, it cannot be
connected directly to the SENSE pin.
This is because the internal sense
resistor between SENSE and BAT pins
will see a large capacitance across it,
which will cause instability. A 2.2mH
inductor, such as the DT1608C-222
by Coilcraft (L2), is used to isolate the
input capacitance of the DC-to-DC
converter. CR5 limits the transient
current through the LT1510’s internal sense resistor when the system is
operating on battery and turned on.
Q2 (Si9433) is required if the series
resistance of 0.2 between the BA T
pin and SENSE pin is too high. The
Si9433’s on resistance is 0.075 . The
continued on page 36
VIN
CR3 1N5819
U1
LTC1510CS16
1
C1
0.22µF
VIN
+
CR2
1N914
4
5
6
CR4
1N5817
7
8
GND
GND
SW
VCC1
BOOST
VCC2
GND
PROG
OVP
VC
SENSE
BAT
GND
GND
GND
GND
16
C2†
10µF
15
14
13
12
11
10
R3
1.21K
9
7
SW
4
SENSE
+
U2
LT1300CS8
3
5
C7
NC
SHDN
ILIM
NC 100µF
PGND
GND
8
1
2
C6
100µF
L1**
33µH
L2
2.2mH
L3
10mH
6
3
CR1
1N5819
SYSTEM
ON/OFF
SWITCH
2
Q3
VN2222
C4
0.1µF
C5
1µF
R5
1k
R6
300Ω
R8
16.2k
R9
100k
VIN
SELECT
C8*
0.1µF
SYSTEM
LOAD
Q1*
VIN MPS3906
R1
100k
CR7*
1N914
CR6*
1N914
R4
4.99k
CR5 1N5819
C9*
0.1µF
C3
Q2*
22µF
Si9433
25V
R7*
+
Q4
VN2222
BAT1
CHARGE/TRICKLE
R2*
1M
*SEE TEXT
**COILTRONICS CTX33-2
†TOKIN OR MARCOM CERAMIC SURFACE MOUNT
Figure 1. LT1510 battery charger/main step-down converter provides glitch-free transfer between AC and battery operation.
28
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN IDEAS
Combine a Switching Regulator
and an UltraFast Linear Regulator
for a High Performance 3.3V Supply
by Craig Varga
Introduction
Circuit Operation
It is becoming increasingly necessary
to provide low voltage power to microprocessor loads at very high current
levels. Many processors also exhibit
high speed load transients. The Pentium® Pro processor from Intel exhibits
both of these requirements. This
processor requires 3.3V ±5% at
approximately 14A peak (9A average)
and is capable of making the transition from a low power state to full load
in several clock cycles. Generally,
switching regulators are used to supply such high power devices, because
of the unacceptable power losses
associated with linear regulators.
Unfortunately, switching regulators
exhibit much slower transient response than linear regulators. This
greatly increases the output capacitor requirements for switchers.
Pentium is a registered trademark of Intel Corp.
12V
+
C11
150µF
16V
+
C12
150µF
16V
+
C13
150µF
16V
continued on page 36
C17
1µF
C14, 150µF, 16V
9
1
C8, 68pF
C7, 0.1µF
2
3
C10, 1000pF 4
C9
1500pF
R5
16.5k
5
6
EXTVCC
TG
COSC
SW
RUN/SS
BOOST
ITH
INTVCC
U2
LTC1435
SGND
VOS
C15
1µF
C16
1µF
13
VIN
SFB
The circuit shown in Figure 1 takes
advantage of a new, ultrahigh speed
linear regulator combined with a
switching regulator to get the best of
both worlds. An LTC1435 synchronous buck regulator is combined with
an LT1575 linear regulator to generate a 3.3V output from a 12V input
with an overall conversion efficiency
of approximately 72%. The output is
capable of current slew rates of
approximately 20A per microsecond.
BG
16
Q2
L1
4µH
14
C3, 0.1µF
15
12
D1, CMDSH-3
11
R6
7.5mΩ
R3
100
Q3
+
R4
100
C18
1000µF
10V
C20 +
1000µF
10V
+
C19
1000µF
10V
+ 8
S
PGND
10
S–
C2, 1000pF
7
+
C4, 4.7µF
D2
MBRS330T3
C5
0.1µF
R8
15K
R7
35.7k
1
2
12V
3
L1 =COILTRONICS CTX01-13199-X2
Q2, Q3 =SILICONIX SUD50N03-10
4
C6
0.1µF
C23
1µF
IPOS
S/D
8
7
U1
INEG
LT1575
6
GND
GATE
VIN
FB
COMP
Q1
IRLZ44
5
C21, 10pF
C22
1000pF
R9
2k
R1
2.1k, 1%
C1, 470pF
R2
1.21k
1%
DI1575_01.eps
3.3V
VCORE
40 × 1µF
X7R
CERAMIC
0805 CASE
Figure 1. 12V to 3.3V/9A (14A peak) hybrid regulator
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
29
DESIGN IDEAS
What Efficiency Curves Don’t Tell
by San-Hwa Chee
Introduction
A Short Introduction to the
LTC1174 and LTC1433
The LTC1174 uses a constant offtime architecture to switch its internal
P-channel power MOSFET. The input-to-output voltage ratio sets the
on time and requires the inductor
current to reach a preset limit. Even
at low load current, the LTC1174 still
requires the inductor current to reach
the preset limit before it initiates the
off-time cycle. Burst Mode operation
D1
MBRM5819
+
1
L1
22µH
2
3
4
5
6
C7
0.1µF
7
8
NC
BSW
LTC1433
NC
SGND
RUNSS
LB0
LB1
The circuits in Figures 1a, 1b and 1c
were used to obtain the lifetime data.
All outputs were set at 3.3V and the
SVIN
COSC
POR
ITH
VOSENSE
VPROG
14
C6
100µF
10V
VIN
VOUT
12
L1
1
100µH
2
3
22µH
4
5
C1
6800pF
11
R1
5.1k
9
6
C2
680pF
C7
0.1µF
DI_EFF_01a.eps
L1 = SUMIDA CD54-220
Figure 1a. LTC1433 single-inductor configuration
30
Figures 3 and 4 were obtained with a
load current of 400mA. For Figure 3,
the input power to the regulator was
provided by four AA alkaline batteries, whereas four AA NiCds were used
in Figure 4. The alkaline batteries
lasted longer than the NiCds, due to
MBRM520LT1
MBRM5819
L2
C5
47pF
13
10
4-Cell to 3.3V Configuration
C4
0.1µF
C3
33µF, 20V
16
PWRVIN
PGND 15
SSW
The Setup
power was supplied by either four AA
alkaline (Eveready No. EN91) or four
AA NiCd (Eveready No. CH15) cells or
a single 9V alkaline (Eveready No.
EN22) battery. A current-sink load
was set up to either draw a constant
400mA or provide a load-step characteristic. The load stepping operated at
0.05Hz, going from 10mA to 410mA
with a duty cycle of 10%, providing an
average load current of 50mA.
In Figure 1b, the LTC1433 was set
up to optimize low load current efficiency by configuring the Adaptive
Power output stage with separate inductors for low and high current
operation.
Efficiency curves for each circuit
are shown in Figure 2a and 2b. Figures 3 through 8 show the battery
voltage and regulator output voltage
versus time for various battery and
load combinations.
+
+
VOUT
C6
100µF
10V
of the LTC1174 enhances efficiency
throughout the load-current range
by switching only the required number of cycles to bring the output into
regulation and then stopping switching (going into sleep mode). When the
output voltage has dropped slightly,
the switching sequence resumes. By
doing this, switching losses are reduced and are minimized when the
load current is low, because the sleep
duration is long.
The LTC1433 is a constant-frequency, current mode, monolithic
switching regulator in which the inductor peak current varies according
to the load current. In place of Burst
Mode operation, the LTC1433 has an
Adaptive Power output stage to enhance its efficiency at low load current.
Under low load conditions, the
LTC1433 uses only a fraction of its
power MOSFET, effectively reducing
switching losses without introducing
low frequency noise components.
For more information on both parts,
consult the data sheets.
+
In switching regulators’ data sheets,
there are always efficiency curves that
show how efficient the regulators are
in transforming one voltage to another. Although these curves are
useful in comparing one regulator to
another, they don’t allow a system
designer to determine accurately how
long batteries will last before they
need to be replaced or recharged when
they are used as the power source.
This complication arises because the
type of batteries used to power the
system and the regulator load characteristic strongly affect the lifetime
of the batteries.
In this article, battery lifetime
curves are obtained for the LTC1174
and the LTC1433.
7
8
NC
BSW
C3
22µF, 20V
16
PWRVIN
PGND 15
SSW
LTC1433
SVIN
NC
COSC
SGND
POR
RUNSS
LB0
LB1
C4
0.1µF
ITH
VOSENSE
VPROG
14
VIN
C5
47pF
13
12
C1
6800pF
11
10
R1
5.1k
9
C2
680pF
DI_EFF_01b.eps
L1 = SUMIDA CD54-101
L2 = SUMIDA CD54-220
Figure 1b. LTC1433 dual-inductor configuration
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN IDEAS
VIN
8
2
IBIN
SHDN
LTC1174-3.3 1
LBOUT
VOUT
7
5
IPGM
GND
SW
100
VIN
C2
22µF
50V
VOUT
+
D1
MBR0520LT1
100
FIGURE 1A
FIGURE 1B
FIGURE 1C
95
L1
68µH
4
+
C1
100µF
10V
90
85
80
DI_EFF_01c.eps
90
85
80
75
75
4
L1 = SUMIDA CDRH74-680
FIGURE 1A
FIGURE 1B
FIGURE 1C
95
EFFICIENCY (%)
3
C3
0.1µF
EFFICIENCY (%)
6
5
6
7
INPUT VOLTAGE (V)
8
9
4
5
6
7
INPUT VOLTAGE (V)
DI_EFF_02a.eps
Figure 1c. LTC1174 test circuit
their higher energy capacity. From
Figure 4, it is apparent when the NiCd
gives up, from the cliff-like shape of
the output voltage.
For Figures 5 and 6, a step load
was applied to the regulators instead
of a DC load. Figure 5 and 6 are the
data obtained for alkaline and NiCd
AA cells, respectively. With the average load one-eighth of the previous
experiment, it would be expected that
the lifetime of the alkaline batteries
would be eight times longer or ap-
DI_EFF_02b.eps
Figure 2b. Efficiency curves for Figure 1’s
circuits, ILOAD = 10mA
proximately 18 hours, but Figure 5
shows a significantly better result.
The main reason for this improvement has to do with the internal
resistance of the alkaline cell. At high
constant DC load current, heat is
dissipated by the internal resistance
of the alkaline batteries. The internal
resistance increases as the batteries
voltage decreases, and hence causes
more heat to be dissipated, thus lowering the lifetime.
For the NiCd battery, internal resistance is low and remains relatively
constant over its life span. Therefore,
the lifetime of the NiCd batteries for
the load step case comes out to be
approximately the expected eight
times that of a constant DC load
current.
The above result indicates that if
the load is intermittent in nature, the
user can operate the device much
longer if the power is provided by
6
BATTERY AND OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
BATTERY AND OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
9
Figure 2a. Efficiency curves for Figure 1’s
circuits, ILOAD = 400mA
6
5
4
3
BATTERY OUTPUT
VOLTAGE VOLTAGE
LTC1433 WITH DUAL INDUCTORS
LTC1433 WITH SINGLE INDUCTOR
LTC1174HV
2
1
5
4
3
BATTERY OUTPUT
VOLTAGE VOLTAGE
LTC1433 WITH DUAL INDUCTORS
LTC1433 WITH SINGLE INDUCTOR
LTC1174HV
2
1
0
0
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
TIME (HOURS)
2.0
0
2.5
0.5
1.0
1.5
TIME (HOURS)
2.0
2.5
DI_EFF_04.eps
DI_EFF_03.eps
Figure 3. Lifetime at ILOAD = 400mA—four AA alkaline batteries
Figure 4. Lifetime at ILOAD = 400mA—four AA NiCd batteries
6
6
BATTERY AND OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
BATTERY AND OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
8
5
4
3
2
BATTERY OUTPUT
VOLTAGE VOLTAGE
LTC1433 WITH DUAL INDUCTORS
LTC1433 WITH SINGLE INDUCTOR
LTC1174HV
1
0
5
4
3
BATTERY OUTPUT
VOLTAGE VOLTAGE
LTC1433 WITH DUAL INDUCTORS
LTC1433 WITH SINGLE INDUCTOR
LTC1174HV
2
1
0
0
10
20
30
TIME (HOURS)
40
50
60
DI_EFF_05.eps
Figure 5. Lifetime with load step from 10mA to 410mA, 10% duty
cycle, TPERIOD = 20s—four AA alkaline batteries
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
TIME (HOURS)
14
16
18
20
DI_EFF_06.eps
Figure 6. Lifetime with load step from 10mA to 410mA, 10% duty
cycle, TPERIOD = 20s—four AA NiCd batteries
31
DESIGN IDEAS
9
BATTERY OUTPUT
VOLTAGE VOLTAGE
LTC1433 WITH DUAL INDUCTORS
LTC1433 WITH SINGLE INDUCTOR
LTC1174HV
8
7
BATTERY AND OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
BATTERY AND OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
9
6
5
4
3
2
1
BATTERY OUTPUT
VOLTAGE VOLTAGE
LTC1433 WITH DUAL INDUCTORS
LTC1433 WITH SINGLE INDUCTOR
LTC1174HV
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
0
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
TIME (HOURS)
2.0
2.5
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
TIME (HOURS)
the LTC1174 in Figure 5. The reason
for this is that the LTC1174 inductor’s
current always ramps up to the preset value of 600mA whether the load
current is at 10mA or at 410mA. This
high peak inductor current, combined
with the high internal resistance of
the alkaline AA cells, shortens the
lifetime. Figure 6 shows that the use
time is about the same for the
LTC1174 and the LTC1433 because
of the low, constant internal resistance of the NiCd batteries.
Dual-Output, continued from page 26
than compensates for the extra complexity in bringing in another higher
input voltage, especially if that second input voltage is readily available.
Since both of these devices are very
stingy on quiescent current, their
combination is also very gentle to the
main power supply, especially if that
power supply is a battery. In standby
mode, the LTC1263 and the LTC12663.3 have a total quiescent current of
about 500µA. To conserve even more
current, both of these parts can be
put into shutdown mode by floating
their shutdown pins or pulling them
32
18
20
Figure 8. Lifetime with load step from 10mA to 410mA—one 9V
alkaline battery (10% duty cycle, TPERIOD = 20s)
alkaline batteries. Again, the NiCd
exhibits a sudden “death” at the end
of its life, whereas the alkaline shows
a much gentler decay. The gentle
sloping of the output voltage of Figure
5 towards the end of the battery life
can be attributed to the on-resistance
of the switch when the regulator is in
dropout.
For the above load characteristic,
where the load is light most of the
time, making full use of the Adaptive
Power mode of the LTC1433 by means
of the dual inductor configuration
helps to squeeze an additional 1.5
hours of life compared to the single
inductor LTC1433 configuration.
Another important point to note is
that although the efficiency for the
LTC1174 is better than that of the
single inductor configuration of the
LTC1433 at 10mA load current, the
LTC1433 lasted 2.9 hours longer than
amount of current flow in the inductor with a sense resistor, the 3.3V
output is regulated by turning on and
off the top and bottom N-channel
MOSFETs to charge and discharge
the output capacitor.
If we replaced the top external Nchannel MOSFET with a P-channel,
the LTC1266-3.3 could generate the
same 3.3V/5A output without the
help of the LTC1263. But, since Nchannel MOSFETs have lower gate
capacitance and lower RDS(ON), their
higher efficiency at high currents more
16
DI_EFF_08.eps
DI_EFF_07.eps
Figure 7. Lifetime at ILOAD = 400mA—one 9V alkaline battery
14
9V-to-3.3V
The lifetime graphs are shown in Figures 7 and 8. Comparing the data
between the 9V and the AA alkaline
cells, the lifetime of the AA cells is
about 2.5 times longer. This is because the energy capacity of the 9V
alkaline is much smaller than that of
the AA cells. In addition, the internal
resistance of the 9V alkaline is much
higher than the AA cells, causing
more energy to be dissipated as heat.
For the load step case, the battery
lasted 13.8 times longer than a constant 400mA load. The dual inductor
configuration of the LTC1433 lasted
about an hour longer than the single
inductor one.
Conclusion
Although a switching regulator can
be highly efficient, its architecture,
the type of load it is driving and its
power source can have a significant
effect on how long batteries will last.
For a load that varies from low load to
heavy load at low duty cycle, it is
worthwhile to consider powering your
system with alkaline batteries, because they last longer. For a constant
heavy load, NiCd and alkaline come
out to be about the same but NiCds,
of course, can be recharged.
high. The total shutdown current is
less than 40µA. When loaded, the
LTC1263 has a 76% efficiency,
whereas the LTC1266-3.3 can squeeze
out more than 90%. Together, with a
60mA load at the 12V output and a 5A
load at the 3.3V output, the overall
efficiency is 87%.
The LTC1266-3.3 is available in the
16-pin SO package and the LTC1263
is available in the 8-pin SO package.
Together, these two parts provide an
easy and efficient solution for multiple
power supply demands.
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN INFORMATION
Introducing the LT2078/LT2079
and LT2178/LT2179 Single Supply,
Micropower, Precision Amplifiers in
Surface Mount Packages by Raj Ramchandani
Introduction
Circuit designers seldom have an
opportunity to revisit a product as
successful as the LT1078/LT1079
and LT1178/LT1179 dual and quad
micropower precision op amps. In the
last decade, these amplifiers have
become true industry standards, with
outstanding DC precision and only
55µA and 21µA of supply current per
op amp, respectively. A look at the
data sheet shows that the LT1078
and LT1178 have much better offset
voltage and offset voltage drift in the
dual in-line package (DIP) than in the
small outline surface mount package
(SO) (see Table 1). Since the introduction of these parts, the demand for
surface mount packages has grown
dramatically; today, the majority of
ICs sold are in surface mount packages. The new LT2078 and LT2178
deliver the precision performance of
the LT1078 and LT1178 in SO packages without changing any of the
other characteristics that made these
parts so popular.
This works well in the DIP package
but in the small SO package there is
not enough room for this coating.
Optimizing Performance
in Surface Mount
A new coating with much lower viscosity before curing was developed so
that a thin (about 50 micron) coat
would cover the top of the die. The
coating runs to the edge of the die,
where it stops due to capillary action.
This coating is cured to a jelly-like
consistency before the plastic is
molded, keeping the stress off the top
of the die. A new dispensing system
was developed to control the quantity
of “thin coat” on each die, since it
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
continued on page 36
Table 1. LT1078/LT1079 and LT2078/LT2079 offset voltage performance comparison
Parameter
Maximum VOS
Maximum VOSDrift
Package Limitations
of Precision Specs
An inherent problem with precision
ICs is that as circuit design and
process innovations improve the performance, packaging issues can
become the major limitation in achieving precision specifications. Typically,
the best precision is in metal-can
packages; this is because there is
very little mechanical stress on the
die. Plastic packages exert stress on
the top and sides of the die as the
mold compound cools, causing
changes in the offset voltage. A solution that has been used for many
years is to put a jelly-like coating all
over the die before molding; this keeps
the plastic (and its stress) off the die.
must be controlled more accurately
than the old DIP coating. Unfortunately, the sides of the die in the SO
package are still stressed by the molding compound, although several new
molding compounds have become
available in the last few years that
exert less stress on the die, making
this problem less severe.
We designed a new die in order to
take full advantage of these new surface mount packaging technologies.
The circuit design and process used
for the LT2078 and LT2178 are the
same as their predecessors; only the
die has been changed, resulting in
identical AC performance. The mask
Maximum VOS
Maximum VOSDrift
LT1078S8
(plastic SO-8)
LT2078CS8
(plastic S0-8)
LT2078ACS8
(plastic SO-8)
180µV
120µV
70µV
3.5µV/˚C
2.5µV/˚C
1.8µV/˚C
LT1079S
(plastic SO-16)
LT2079C
(plastic SO-14)
LT2079AC
(plastic SO-14)
300µV
150µV
100µV
4.0µV/˚C
3.5µV/˚C
3.0µV/˚C
Table 2. LT1178/LT1179 and LT2178/LT2179 offset voltage performance comparison
Parameter
Maximum VOS
Maximum VOS Drift
Maximum VOS
Maximum VOS Drift
LT1178AS8
(plastic SO-8)
LT2178CS8
(plastic SO-8)
LT2178ACS8
(plastic SO-14)
180µV0
12 µV
70µV
3.5µV/˚C
2.5µV/˚C
1.8µV/˚C
LT1179S
(plastic SO-16)
LT2179CS
(plastic SO-14)
LT2179ACS
(plastic SO-14)
600µV
150µV
100µV
4.5µV/˚C
3.5µV/˚C
3.0µV/˚C
33
DESIGN INFORMATION
LTC1387 Single 5V RS232/RS485
Multiprotocol Transceiver
Introduction
The LTC1387 is a new addition to
Linear Technology’s family of multiprotocol transceivers. It is a single 5V
supply, logic-configurable, single-port
RS232 or RS485 transceiver. This
part is targeted at handheld computers or point-of-sale terminals and
features software-controlled multiprotocol operation with an emphasis on
flexibility and minimum pin count.
INTERFACE
LTC1387
RS232
RS485
A
A
CONTROLLER
RA
120Ω
RA
RS485
B
B
RB
RB
Y
DY
DY
Z
DX1
DZ/SLEW
DZ
VCC
ON
Positioning and Key Features
The LTC1387 complements the dualport LTC1334 by providing a single
port in a smaller 20-pin SO or SSOP
package. The LTC1387 offers a flexible combination of two RS232 drivers,
two RS232 receivers, an RS485 driver,
an RS485 receiver and an onboard
charge pump to generate boosted voltages for true RS232 levels from a
single 5V supply. The RS232 transceivers and RS485 transceiver are
designed to share the same port I/O
pins for both single-ended and differential signal communication modes.
The RS232 transceiver supports both
RS232 and EIA562 standards,
whereas the RS485 transceiver
supports both RS485 and RS422
standards. Both half-duplex and fullduplex communication are supported.
A logic input selects between RS485
and RS232 modes. Three additional
control inputs allow the LTC1387 to
be reconfigured easily via software to
adapt to various communication
needs, including a one-signal line
by Y.K. Sim
RXEN
RXEN
DXEN
DXEN
485/232
MODE
1387_01.eps
RS232
TRANSMIT MODE
RXEN = 0
DXEN = 1
MODE = 0
RS232
RECEIVE MODE
RXEN = 1
DXEN = 0
MODE = 0
RS485
TRANSMIT MODE
RXEN = 0
DXEN = 1
MODE = 1
RS485
RECEIVE MODE
RXEN = 1
DXEN = 0
MODE = 1
SHUTDOWN
MODE
RXEN = 0
DXEN = 0
MODE = X
Figure 1. Half-duplex RS232, half-duplex RS485
INTERFACE
LTC1387
RS232
RS485
A
A
CONTROLLER
RA
120Ω
RA
RS232
RS485
B
B
Y
RB
RB
RX
DY
DY
Z
DZ
DX1
DZ/SLEW
VCC
ON
RXEN
RXEN
DXEN
DXEN
485/232
MODE
1387_02.eps
RS232
MODE
RXEN = 1
DXEN = 0
MODE = 0
RS485
TRANSMIT MODE
RXEN = 0
DXEN = 1
MODE = 1
RS485
RECEIVE MODE
RXEN = 1
DXEN = 0
MODE = 1
SHUTDOWN
MODE
RXEN = 0
DXEN = 0
MODE = 0
Figure 2. Full-duplex RS232, half-duplex RS485
34
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN INFORMATION
INTERFACE
LTC1387
RS232
A
RS485
A
CONTROLLER
RA
RXD
120Ω
RA
RS485
B
B
RS232
RS485
RB
RB
Y
Y
RX1
DY
120Ω
DY
RS485
Z
Z
DZ/SLEW
DZ
DX1
VCC
ON
RXEN
RXEN
DXEN
DXEN
485/232
MODE
1387_03.eps
RS232 MODE
RXEN = 1
DXEN = 1
MODE = 0
RS485 MODE
RXEN = 1
DXEN = 1
MODE = 1
SHUTDOWN MODE
RXEN = 0
DXEN = 0
MODE = X
Figure 3. Full-duplex RS232 (1-channel), full-duplex RS422
INTERFACE
LTC1387
RS232
A
RS485
A
CONTROLLER
Conclusion
RA
RXD
120Ω
RA
RS232
RS485
B
B
RB
RB
RX1
RX2
CTS
RS232
Y
RS485
Y
DY
TXD
120Ω
RS232
RS485
Z
DY
Z
RTS
DZ
RS232 I/O mode (see function tables
in figures). Four examples of interface port connections are shown in
Figures 1–4.
A SLEW input pin, active in RS485
mode, changes the driver transition
between normal and slow slew-rate
modes. In normal RS485 slew mode,
the twisted pair cable must be terminated at both ends to minimized signal
reflection. In slow-slew mode, the
maximum signal bandwidth is reduced, minimizing EMI and signal
reflection problems. Slow-slew-rate
systems can often use improperly terminated or even unterminated cables
with acceptable results. If cable termination is required, external
termination resistors can be connected through switches or relays.
The LTC1387 features micropower
shutdown mode, loopback mode for
self-test, high data rates (120kbaud
for RS232 and 5Mbaud for RS485)
and 7kV ESD protection at the driver
outputs and receiver inputs.
DZ/SLEW
ON
RXEN
DXEN
485/232
DX1
DX2/SLEW
ON
The LTC1387 is ideal for point-of-sale
terminals, computers, multiplexers,
networks or peripherals that need to
adapt on the fly to various I/O configuration requirements without any
hardware adjustments. The LTC1387,
along with the rest of the LTC multiprotocol inter face line, makes
dedicated single-protocol communication ports obsolete.
RXEN
DXEN
MODE
TERMINATE
1387_04.eps
RS232 MODE
ON = 1
RXEN = 1
DXEN = 1
MODE = 0
RS485 MODE
ON = 1
RXEN = 1
DXEN = 1
MODE = 1
SHUTDOWN MODE
ON = 0
RXEN = 0
DXEN = 0
MODE = X
Figure 4. Full-duplex RS232 (2-channel), full-duplex RS485 with slew and termination control
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
35
CONTINUATIONS
72.5
Battery Charger, continued from page 28
The system switching regulator is
LT1300 (U2) based and powers a 5V/
250mA load. The efficiency, h, of the
complete system is defined as:
72.0
71.5
EFFICIENCY (%)
charge pump comprising C8, C9, CR6,
CR7 and R2 biases the gate of Q2. Q1
and R1 turn Q2 off on AC operation
(VIN active). R7 programs the tricklecharge current (maximum value is
about 100k) and the equivalent value
of R7 and R8 programs the charge
current. The Charge input must be
pulled low at the end of the charge.
The charger in Figure 1 is connected to a 2-cell NiCd battery, BAT1.
71.0
70.5
70.0
h=
69.5
69.0
68.5
68.0
67.5
8
13
18
23
INPUT VOLTAGE (V)
28
LT1300 Output Power + Battery Charger Power
LT1510 Input Power
The efficiency plot is shown in
Figure 2. For the purpose of measurement, the battery voltage is 3.2V and
the charge current is 0.3A.
DI1510_02.eps
Figure 2. System efficiency vs input voltage
100
SWITCHER EFFICIENCY
EFFICIENCY (%)
90
80
TOTAL EFFICIENCY
70
60
50
0
2
4
6
8
10
LOAD CURRENT (A)
12
14
DI1575_02.eps
Figure 2. Efficiency of Figure 1’s circuit
The LT1575 uses an IRLZ44 MOSFET as the pass transistor, allowing
the dropout voltage to be less than
550mV. Setting the switching supply’s
output to only 700mV above the output of the linear regulator ensures
output regulation. The switcher is
therefore set up to deliver 4.0V at 14A
from the 12V supply. Conversion
efficiency of the switcher is around
90% (depending on load), whereas
the LT1575’s efficiency is 82.5% (see
Figure 2). The 12V input current is
only about 5.5A. At an average current of 9A, the power dissipation in
the linear pass transistor is only 6.3W.
A small stamped aluminum heat sink
is adequate.
Figure 3 shows the transient response to a 10A load step with a rise
time of approximately 50ns. The only
output capacitance is 40 1µF ceramic
capacitors. No additional bulk capacitance is required at the
processor. The circuit eliminates approximately a dozen low ESR tantalum
capacitors at the load, which would
be required without the linear postregulator. The switching supply’s
output is decoupled with three aluminum electrolytic capacitors.
Because the transient response at
this point is much less critical than at
the load, the long-term degradation
of the aluminum capacitors will not
be as detrimental to the circuit’s performance as it would be if they were
used for load decoupling.
50mV/DIV
3.3V Supply, continued from page 29
200µs/DIV
Figure 3. Transient response of Figure 1’s
circuit to a 10A load step
Conclusion
By combining a high efficiency switching regulator and an UltraFast™ linear
regulator, it is possible to achieve
reasonable efficiencies with superior
transient dynamics. Power dissipation can be held down to easily
manageable levels while eliminating
the need for very large amounts of
bulk decoupling capacitance.
LT2078/LT2079, continued from page 33
design (layout) of the new ICs carefully placed the input transistors in
the area of the die where the packageinduced stress is most uniform.
Further, the input transistors are
“cross-coupled” to cancel out any
nonuniform stresses. The wafer level
trimming was tightened so that assembled parts have less offset
variation. Postpackage trimming was
36
optimized for the new SO packages.
(Postpackage trimming is done by
taking an input pin above the supply
pin to forward bias a diode and “zap”
a trim Zener.)
The result is that the LT2078/
LT2079 and LT2178/LT2179 are the
best single supply, precision op amps
available in the standard-pinout
surface mount packages. Table 1 com-
pares the dual LT2078 and quad
LT2079 to their predecessors, the
LT1078/LT1079, whereas Table 2
compares the LT2178/LT2179 to the
LT1178/LT1179 in surface mount
packages. These new parts are available in the SO-8 and SO-14 packages
for operation over commercial,
industrial and extended temperature
ranges.
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
NEW DEVICE CAMEOS
New Device Cameos
LT1118 Adjustable
Sink/Source Regulator
The LT1118 adjustable regulator joins
the LT1118-2.5, LT1118-2.85 and
LT1118-5 fixed-output versions of the
sink/source regulator. The output
voltage is programmed by customer
selected feedback resistors to provide
any output voltage between 2.0V and
VIN – 1.0V, for VIN up to 15V. The
regulator maintains regulation for
load currents between 800mA sourced
into the load to 400mA sunk from the
load.
The adjustable regulator is especially useful for data bus terminations,
similar to the use of the 2.85V fixed
version in SCSI applications.
A fused-lead SO-8 package provides a low thermal resistance to PC
board traces. In most applications,
no further heat sinking is required for
the regulator.
A Shutdown pin places the output
in a high impedance state, effectively
disconnecting the load from the regulator. Fault tolerance is provided by
current limiting of both sunk and
sourced output current in addition to
on-chip thermal shutdown.
LT1141A 3-Driver,
5-Receiver RS232 Transceiver
Meets IEC-1000-4-2 ESD
Protection Standards
The LT1141A 3-driver, 5-receiver
RS232 transceiver is the latest Linear
Technology RS232 transceiver to be
upgraded to pass the IEC-1000-4-2
level 4 ESD test. The chip is internally
protected against ±15kV air-gap or
±8kV contact-mode discharges. The
IEC-1000-4-2 test, formerly known
as IEC-801-2, must be passed by all
equipment sold in Europe. The chip
also passes up to ±15kV ESD as tested
by MIL-STD-883, Method 3015. The
on-chip protection of the LT1141A
frees the user from the cost and board
area required by external transientLinear Technology Magazine • February 1997
suppression devices that are usually
required to successfully meet the IEC
ESD protection requirements.
The enhanced ESD protection has
been achieved without compromising
the electrical performance of the device. Present LT1141A users will see
no change in electrical performance.
The 3-driver, 5-receiver device retains
all of the electrical performance features which make it popular. The
enhanced ESD protection devices do
not degrade operation at rates of up to
120kbaud with full 2500pF loads or
to 250kbaud with 1000pF loads.
The LT1141A is available in 24-pin
DIP, SO and SSOP packages.
LT1180A/LT1181A
2-Driver, 2-Receiver
RS232 Transceivers
Meet IEC-1000-4-2
ESD Protection Standards
The LT1180A and LT1181A, Linear
Technology’s popular 2-driver, 2-receiver RS232 transceivers, have been
upgraded to meet the IEC-1000-4-2
level 4 ESD standards. The circuits
are internally protected against ±15kV
air-gap or ±8kV contact-mode discharges. The IEC-1000-4-2 test,
formerly known as IEC-801-2, must
be passed by all equipment sold in
Europe. The chip also passes up to
±15kV ESD as tested by MIL-STD883 Method 3015. The on-chip
protection of the LT1181A frees the
user from the cost and board area
required by external transient-suppression devices that are usually
required to successfully meet the IEC
ESD protection requirements.
Enhanced ESD protection has been
achieved without compromising the
electrical performance of the devices.
Present LT1180A/LT1181A users will
see no change in electrical performance. The devices retain all of the
electrical performance features that
make them popular. The enhanced
ESD protection devices do not degrade operation at rates of up to
120kbaud with full 2500pF loads or
to 250kbaud with 1000pF loads.
The LT1181A is available in 16-pin
DIP, SW and SO packages. The
LT1180A, which includes a shutdown
control, is available in 18-pin DIP and
SW packages.
LTC1438-ADJ:
High Efficiency, Dual,
Adjustable Output Voltage
Synchronous Switching
Power Supply Controller for
Portable Applications
The LTC1438-ADJ is a dual, adjustable output voltage, synchronous
step-down switching regulator controller that drives external N-channel
power MOSFETs in a fixed frequency
architecture.
The LTC1438-ADJ differs from the
LTC1438 in its ability to set both
controller output voltages using external resistive dividers, for output
voltages as low as 1.2V. Externalfeedback voltage setting provides
remote sensing of each output voltage at the load—often required in
higher current applications.
A 1% voltage reference and load
regulation of ±0.8% are guaranteed
over the full temperature range, eliminating output voltage adjustment in
most applications. The operating current levels are user-programmable
via external current sense resistors.
Wide input supply range allows operation from 3.5V to 30V (36V
maximum).
A secondary feedback input can be
used in conjunction with a flyback
winding on the first controller to generate a third output voltage that can
supply power regardless of the load
37
NEW DEVICE CAMEOS
on the first controller’s primary winding. This feedback forces continuous
operation on the first controller using
a simple voltage mode loop. The input
can also be used as a logic input to
force continuous operation, thereby
suppressing Burst Mode operation
on the first controller.
A hysteretic comparator, which has
its inverting input tied to the internal
1.19V reference, is included. The output is an open-drain type and can be
pulled up to any available supply of
up to 10V. A power-on reset timer
(POR) generates a logic-low output
signal during controller start-up,
which persists for 65,536 clock cycles
after the output reaches 7.5% of the
regulated output voltage.
The part is available in a 28-lead
plastic SSOP package.
LTC1605 Single 5V 100ksps
Sampling 16-Bit ADC
of 305µV, which can help ease noise
requirements for the input conditioning circuitry. The input signal is
captured by an onboard sample-andhold and digitized by a differential,
switched capacitor SAR ADC. The
LTC1605 achieves 16-bit performance
without the autocalibration overhead
required with other types of ADCs.
Maximum DC specifications include
±2.0LSB INL and 16 bits with no
missing codes guaranteed over temperature. The part has an internal
2.5V bandgap reference. An external
reference can also be used.
The ADC has a microprocessorcompatible 16-bit parallel output port
that can provide data as a 16-bit word
or as two bytes. The LTC1605 is easily
connected to FIFOs, DSPs and microprocessors using its convert start
input and data ready signal (BUSY).
LT1039A RS232 Transceiver
The LTC1605 is a complete 100ksps Meets IEC-1000-4-2 ESD
sampling 16-bit ADC that operates Protection Standards
on a single 5V supply and typically
dissipates 55mW. Its input range is
an industrial standard ±10V. This
gives the user a large input LSB size
The popular LT1039 3-driver 3receiver RS232 transceiver has been
upgraded to pass the IEC-1000-4-2
level 4 ESD test. The chip is internally
for
the latest information
on LTC products,
visit
www.linear-tech.com
protected against ±15kV air-gap or
±8kV contact-mode discharges. The
IEC-1000-4-2 test, formerly known
as IEC-801-2, must be passed by all
equipment sold in Europe. LT1039A’s
on-chip protection eliminates the cost
and board area required by external
transient-suppression devices, which
are usually needed to successfully
meet the IEC ESD protection
requirements.
The enhanced ESD protection is
achieved without compromising the
electrical performance of the device.
Present LT1039 users will see no
change in electrical performance. The
3-driver, 3-receiver device retains all
of the electrical performance features
that make it popular. Operation to
120kbaud with full 2500pF loads,
and up to 250kbaud with 1000pF
loads, is not degraded by the enhanced ESD protection devices.
The LT1039A is available in 16-pin
and 18-pin DIP and SO packages.
The 18-pin versions include ON-OFF
control and a BIAS pin to power one
receiver when the device is shut
down.
For further infor mation on any
of the devices mentioned in this
issue of Linear Technology, use
the reader service car d or call
the LTC literatur e service
number:
1-800-4-LINEAR
Ask for the pertinent data sheets
and Application Notes.
38
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
DESIGN TOOLS
DESIGN TOOLS
Applications on Disk
Noise Disk — This IBM-PC (or compatible) program
allows the user to calculate circuit noise using LTC op
amps, determine the best LTC op amp for a low noise
application, display the noise data for LTC op amps,
calculate resistor noise and calculate noise using specs
for any op amp.
Available at no charge.
SPICE Macromodel Disk — This IBM-PC (or compatible) high density diskette contains the library of LTC
op amp SPICE macromodels. The models can be used
with any version of SPICE for general analog circuit
simulations. The diskette also contains working circuit
examples using the models and a demonstration copy
of PSPICE™ by MicroSim.
Available at no charge.
SwitcherCAD™ — The SwitcherCAD program is a powerful PC software tool that aids in the design and
optimization of switching regulators. The program can
cut days off the design cycle by selecting topologies,
calculating operating points and specifying component values and manufacturer’s part numbers. 144
page manual included.
$20.00
SwitcherCAD supports the following parts: LT1070
series: LT1070, LT1071, LT1072, LT1074 and LT1076.
LT1082. LT1170 series: LT1170, LT1171, LT1172 and
LT1176. It also supports: LT1268, LT1269 and LT1507.
LT1270 series: LT1270 and LT1271. LT1371 series:
LT1371, LT1372, LT1373, LT1375, LT1376 and
LT1377.
Micropower SwitcherCAD™ — The MicropowerSCAD
program is a powerful tool for designing DC/DC converters based on Linear Technology’s micropower
switching regulator ICs. Given basic design parameters, MicropowerSCAD selects a circuit topology and
offers you a selection of appropriate Linear Technology
switching regulator ICs. MicropowerSCAD also performs circuit simulations to select the other components
which surround the DC/DC converter. In the case of a
battery supply, MicropowerSCAD can perform a battery life simulation. 44 page manual included.
$20.00
MicropowerSCAD supports the following LTC micropower DC/DC converters: LT1073, LT1107, LT1108,
LT1109, LT1109A, LT1110, LT1111, LT1173, LTC1174,
LT1300, LT1301 and LT1303.
Technical Books
1990 Linear Databook, Vol I —This 1440 page collection of data sheets covers op amps, voltage regulators,
references, comparators, filters, PWMs, data conversion and interface products (bipolar and CMOS), in
both commercial and military grades. The catalog
features well over 300 devices.
$10.00
1992 Linear Databook, Vol II — This 1248 page supplement to the 1990 Linear Databook is a collection of all
products introduced in 1991 and 1992. The catalog
contains full data sheets for over 140 devices. The
1992 Linear Databook, Vol II is a companion to the
1990 Linear Databook, which should not be discarded.
$10.00
Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997
1994 Linear Databook, Vol III —This 1826 page
supplement to the 1990 and 1992 Linear Databooks is
a collection of all products introduced since 1992. A
total of 152 product data sheets are included with
updated selection guides. The 1994 Linear Databook
Vol III is a companion to the 1990 and 1992 Linear
Databooks, which should not be discarded. $10.00
1995 Linear Databook, Vol IV —This 1152 page
supplement to the 1990, 1992 and 1994 Linear Databooks is a collection of all products introduced since
1994. A total of 80 product data sheets are included
with updated selection guides. The 1995 Linear Databook Vol IV is a companion to the 1990, 1992 and 1994
Linear Databooks, which should not be discarded.
$10.00
1996 Linear Databook, Vol V —This 1152 page supplement to the 1990, 1992, 1994 and 1995 Linear
Databooks is a collection of all products introduced
since 1995. A total of 65 product data sheets are
included with updated selection guides. The 1996
Linear Databook Vol V is a companion to the 1990,
1992, 1994 and 1995 Linear Databooks, which should
not be discarded.
$10.00
1990 Linear Applications Handbook, Volume I —
928 pages full of application ideas covered in depth by
40 Application Notes and 33 Design Notes. This catalog covers a broad range of “real world” linear circuitry.
In addition to detailed, systems-oriented circuits, this
handbook contains broad tutorial content together
with liberal use of schematics and scope photography.
A special feature in this edition includes a 22-page
section on SPICE macromodels.
$20.00
1993 Linear Applications Handbook, Volume II —
Continues the stream of “real world” linear circuitry
initiated by the 1990 Handbook. Similar in scope to the
1990 edition, the new book covers Application Notes
40 through 54 and Design Notes 33 through 69.
References and articles from non-LTC publications
that we have found useful are also included. $20.00
1997 Linear Applications Handbook, Volume III —
This 976 page handbook maintains the practical outlook
and tutorial nature of previous efforts, while broadening topic selection. This new book includes Application
Notes 55 through 69 and Design Notes 70 through
144. Subjects include switching regulators, measurement and control circuits, filters, video designs,
interface, data converters, power products, battery
chargers and CCFL inverters. An extensive subject
index references circuits in LTC data sheets, design
notes, application notes and Linear Technology magazines.
$20.00
Interface Product Handbook — This 424 page handbook features LTC’s complete line of line driver and
receiver products for RS232, RS485, RS423, RS422,
V.35 and AppleTalk ® applications. Linear’s particular
expertise in this area involves low power consumption,
high numbers of drivers and receivers in one package,
mixed RS232 and RS485 devices, 10kV ESD protection of RS232 devices and surface mount packages.
Available at no charge
Power Solutions Brochure — This 84 page collection
of circuits contains real-life solutions for common
power supply design problems. There are over 88
circuits, including descriptions, graphs and performance specifications. Topics covered include battery
chargers, PCMCIA power management, microprocessor power supplies, portable equipment power supplies,
micropower DC/DC, step-up and step-down switching
regulators, off-line switching regulators, linear regulators and switched capacitor conversion.
Available at no charge.
High Speed Amplifier Solutions Brochure —
This 72 page collection of circuits contains real-life
solutions for problems that require high speed
amplifiers. There are 82 circuits including descriptions, graphs and performance specifications. Topics
covered include basic amplifiers, video-related applications circuits, instrumentation, DAC and photodiode
amplifiers, filters, variable gain, oscillators and current
sources and other unusual application circuits.
Available at no charge
Data Conversion Solutions Brochure — This 52 page
collection of data conversion circuits, products and
selection guides serves as excellent reference for the
data acquisition system designer. Over 60 products
are showcased, solving problems in low power, small
size and high performance data conversion applications—with performance graphs and specifications.
Topics covered include ADCs, DACs, voltage references and analog multiplexers. A complete glossary
defines data conversion specifications; a list of selected application and design notes is also included.
Available at no charge
Telecommunications Solutions Brochure — This 72
page collection of circuits, new products and selection
guides covers a wide variety of products targeted for
the telecommunications industry. Circuits solving real
life problems are shown for central office switching,
cellular phone, base station and other telecom applications. New products introduced include high speed
amplifiers, A/D converters, power products, interface
transceivers and filters. Reference material includes a
telecommunications glossary, serial interface standards, protocol information and a complete list of key
application notes and design notes.
Available at no charge
continued on page 40
Acrobat is a trademark of Adobe Systems, Inc. AppleTalk
is a registered trademark of Apple Computer, Inc. PSPICE™
is a trademark of MicroSim Corp.
Information furnished by Linear Technology Corporation
is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, Linear
Technology makes no representation that the circuits
described herein will not infringe on existing patent rights.
39
DESIGN TOOLS, continued from page 39
CD-ROM
LinearView — LinearView™ CD-ROM is Linear
Technology’s interactive PC-based CD-ROM. It allows
you to instantly access thousands of pages of product
and applications information, covering Linear
Technology’s complete line of high performance analog products, with easy-to-use search tools.
The LinearView CD-ROM includes the complete product specifications from Linear Technology’s Databook
library (Volumes I–IV) and the complete Applications
Handbook collection (Volumes I and II). Our extensive
collection of Design Notes and the complete collection
of Linear Technology magazine are also included.
A powerful search engine built into the LinearView CDROM enables you to select parts by various criteria,
such as device parameters, keywords or part numbers.
All product categories are represented: data conversion, references, amplifiers, power products, filters
and interface circuits. Up-to-date versions of Linear
Technology’s software design tools, SwitcherCAD,
FilterCAD, Noise Disk and Spice Macromodel library,
are also included. Everything you need to know about
Linear Technology’s products and applications is readily
accessible via LinearView.
Available at no charge.
World Wide Web Site
Linear Technology Corporation’s customers can now
quickly and conveniently find and retrieve the latest
technical information covering the Company’s products on LTC’s new internet web site. Located at
www.linear-tech.com, this site allows anyone with
internet access and a web browser to search through
all of LTC’s technical publications, including data sheets,
application notes, design notes, Linear Technology
magazine issues and other LTC publications, to find
information on LTC parts and applications circuits.
Other areas within the site include help, news and
information about Linear Technology and its sales
offices. The site includes a map that eases navigation
through the different information areas.
Other web sites usually require the visitor to download
large document files to see if they contain the desired
information. This is cumbersome and inconvenient. To
save you time and ensure that you receive the correct
information the first time, the first page of each data
sheet, application note and Linear Technology magazine is recreated in a fast, download-friendly format.
This allows you to determine whether the document is
what you need, before downloading the entire file.
The site is searchable. Among the possible search
criteria are part numbers, function, topics and applications. The search is performed on a user-defined
combination of data sheets, application notes, design
notes and Linear Technology magazine articles. Any
data sheet, application note, design note or magazine
article can be downloaded or faxed back. (Files are
downloaded in Adobe Acrobat™ PDF format; you will
need a copy of Acrobat Reader to view or print them.
The site includes a link from which you can download
this program.)
© 1997 Linear Technology Corporation/Printed in U.S.A/ 39.5K
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Linear Technology Magazine • February 1997