Sep 2000 SOT-23 Voltage Reference Has 0.05% Initial Accuracy, 10ppm/°C Tempco, Operates on 35µA

LINEAR TECHNOLOGY
VOLUME X NUMBER 3
SEPTEMBER 2000
IN THIS ISSUE…
COVER ARTICLE
SOT-23 Voltage Reference Has
0.05% Initial Accuracy, 10ppm/°C
Tempco, Operates on 35µ A ....... 1
Richard Markell and John Wright
Issue Highlights ....................... 2
LTC® in the News .......................2
SOT-23 Voltage Reference
Has 0.05% Initial Accuracy,
10ppm/°C Tempco,
Operates on 35µA
DESIGN FEATURES
Tiny SOT-23 Buck Regulator
Accepts Inputs from 4V to 25V .. 5
by Richard Markell and John Wright
Jeff Witt
Introduction
Specifications
Inverting Switching Regulator
Delivers High Current/Low Noise
Outputs in a SOT-23 ..................8
The LT1790 brings ultraprecision, low
dropout voltage references to the world
of the very small SOT-23 package.
This new reference boasts 0.05%
initial accuracy and 10ppm/°C temperature coefficient, making it the
ideal reference for handheld and portable instrumentation and equipment
that requires a minimum of trimming. To ensure that handheld
equipment stays calibrated for the
long haul, the LT1790 has excellent
long-term drift and thermal hysteresis specifications of, typically,
50ppm/√kHr and 60ppm, respectively. The part operates as a series
mode, low dropout reference on a
mere 35µA of supply current. This
conserves battery life and also allows
operation down to only a few tenths of
a volt above the battery voltage.
The LT1790 has among the lowest
noise specifications for a SOT-23 voltage reference at 12µVP-P (4.8ppmP-P)
for the 2.5V version. Additionally, the
part can operate on supply voltages
as high as 18V, which allows batterypowered equipment to be plugged into
a wall adapter without the need for
peripheral circuitry to limit the voltage input to the reference. The part is
guaranteed to be operational from
–40°C to 125°C.
Table 1 details some of the relevant
specifications of the LT1790. Note
that many of the specifications are
similar to those of the best SO-8
reference, yet the LT1790 is in the
tiny SOT-23 package. The “bow tie”
curve of Figure 1 shows just how little
the output of the reference changes
when initial accuracy and temperature drift are both considered.
LT®1619 Boost Controller Provides
Efficient Solutions for
Low Voltage Inputs .................. 11
Bing Fong Ma and Kurk Mathews
DESIGN SOFTWARE
FilterCAD™ 3.0 Simplifies Filter
Design and Implementation,
Adds Support for
Continuous Time Filters .......... 15
Philip Karantzalis
DESIGN IDEAS
High Current Positive-to-Negative
Conversion with the LTC1775 No
RSENSE Controller .................. 19
Christopher B. Umminger
Wei Chen
Performance Verification of Low
Noise, Low Dropout Regulators
............................................... 24
Jim Williams and Todd Owen
New Device Cameos .................. 30
Design Tools ............................31
Sales Offices ............................32
The LT1790’s initial accuracy is
achieved by sophisticated post-package trimming techniques. This level
of accuracy is accomplished using
continued on page 3
2.5075
VIN = 2.7V
2.5050
0.3
INITIAL
ACCURACY
0.2
2.5025
2.5000
0.1
LT1790A
±0.05%
10ppm/°C
MAX DRIFT
0.0
2.4975
–0.1
±0.1%
2.4950
LT1790B
2.4925
–40
–0.2
25ppm/°C
MAX DRIFT
25
TEMPERATURE (°C)
OUTPUT ERROR VOLTAGE (%)
PolyPhase™ Switcher Reduces
Parts Count for Smaller, Less
Expensive Mobile CPU Supply
............................................... 20
What’s New in References or
How is this Done?
OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
Albert Wu
–0.3
85
Figure 1. Initial accuracy and temperature
drift of the LT1790A and LT1790B
, LTC and LT are registered trademarks of Linear Technology Corporation. Adaptive Power, Burst Mode, C-Load,
FilterCAD, Hot Swap, LinearView, Micropower SwitcherCAD, Multimode Dimming, No Latency ∆Σ, No RSENSE,
Operational Filter, OPTI-LOOP, Over-The-Top, PolyPhase, PowerSOT, SwitcherCAD and UltraFast are trademarks of
Linear Technology Corporation. Other product names may be trademarks of the companies that manufacture the
products.
DESIGN FEATURES
Table 1. LT1790 Performance: TA = 25°C, VIN = 3.0V, VOUT = 2.5V, CL = 1µF
Parameter
Output Voltage
Output Voltage
Temperature
Coefficient
Load Regulation
Dropout Voltage
Supply Current
Conditions
A Grade
B Grade
M in
–0.05
–0.10
Typ
—
—
—
—
—
—
Max
+0.05
+0.10
Units
A Grade
—
—
—
5
10
ppm/°C
B Grade
IOUT Source = 5mA
IOUT Sink = 5mA
IOUT Source = 5mA
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
12
80
70
0.3
35
12
4.8
25
160
110
0.4
60
—
—
—
50
—
—
—
ppm√kHr
–40°C to 85°C
—
—
—
60
—
—
—
ppm
–40°C to 85°C
—
—
—
—
—
—
18
V
Output Voltage Noise
Long-Term Drift of
Output Voltage
Thermal Hysteresis
Abs. Max Operating
Voltage
—
—
—
–––
%
ppm/mA
V
µA
µVP-P
ppmP-P
LT1790, continued from page 1
The LT1790 has been designed to
minimize both long-term drift and
thermal hysteresis. Long-term drift
and hysteresis (which is an output
voltage shift due to temperature
cycling) can limit system accuracy.
Whereas initial calibration can remove
TC and initial accuracy errors, only
more frequent and sometimes lengthy
calibration procedures can correct
for long-term drift and hysteresis components. (For more information on
interpreting reference specifications,
see Linear Technology Application
Note 82.)
Linear Technology Magazine • September 2000
Hysteresis Limits
Repeatability
When a reference is soldered onto a
PC board, the elevated temperature
and subsequent cooling cause stress
that influences the output. If the
voltage reference is repeatedly temperature cycled, inelastic stress is
applied to the chip and the output
voltage does not return to the 25°C
initial value. The mechanical stress is
due to the difference in thermal coefficients of expansion between the
200
200
150
150
DRIFT (ppm)
Long-Term Drift
and Hysteresis
The only way long-term drift can be
characterized is to measure it over a
specified time period. Some manufacturers are promoting ridiculous
long-term drift specifications based
on accelerated high temperature testing. Actual measurements show that
long-term drift data cannot be
extrapolated from accelerated high
temperature testing. (See “3ppm/°C
Micropower Reference Draws Only
50µA and Operates on 2.8V,” in Linear Technology IX:4 [November 1999]
for more information on measurement of long-term drift.)
To determine long-term drift accurately, data was taken with parts that
were soldered into PC boards, similar
to a “real world” application. These
boards were not preconditioned. They
were placed into a constant-temperature oven with TA = 30°C and their
outputs were scanned regularly and
measured with an 8.5 digit DVM.
DRIFT (ppm)
two external trim pins and newly
developed polysilicon fuses, which
have been shown to have excellent
long-term stability. By post-package
trimming the initial accuracy, variations in output voltage due to
packaging are eliminated. This
ensures a high final test yield to tight
accuracy specifications. Similarly, the
excellent temperature coefficient of
the LT1790 is achieved by proprietary wafer-sort trim methods, as well
as by a carefully designed bandgap
“core.” A patented test technique
allows reduced testing guardbands
and ensures very accurate final test
TC measurements.
Figure 2 shows the long-term drift of
the SOT-23 LT1790S6-2.5. Initially,
data was taken every hour where the
largest changes occur (and the trace
is darker); after several hundred
hours, the frequency of sampling was
lowered to reduce the amount of data
collected. Drift after 1600 hours was
≤ 50ppm.
Figure 3 shows the long-term drift
of a competitive reference that claims
in its data sheet to have a long-term
drift of 0.2ppm/√kHr. Measured data
shows this reference to have drift
between 60ppm/√kHr and 150ppm/
√kHr —300 to 750 times worse than
claimed.
Preconditioning the PC board after
the reference has been soldered onto
the board can reduce long-term drift.
Operating the PC board at room temperature or above stabilizes initial
drifts. This “burn-in” of the PC board
eliminates the output shift that occurs
in the first several hundred hours of
operation. Further changes in output
voltage are typically quasi-logarithmic and changes after 1000 hours
tend to be smaller than before that
time. Because of this decreasing characteristic, long-term drift is specified
in ppm/√kHr.
100
50
0
–50
100
50
0
0
200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600
HOURS
Figure 2. LT1790S6-2.5V SOT-23
long-term drift (three separate units)
–50
0
200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600
HOURS
Figure 3. Competitive 2.5V reference
long-term drift (three separate units)
3
DESIGN FEATURES
PERCENTAGE OF UNITS
50
current. Figure 8 shows the LT1790
configured as a –2.5V negative series
regulator that will supply up to 50mA
of output current.
40
30
85°C TO 25°C
– 40°C TO 25°C
20
Voltage Options
10
0
–200
–160
–120
–80
–40
0
40
DISTRIBUTION (ppm)
80
120
160
200
Figure 4. LT1790S6-2.5 industrial hysteresis
Series, Low Dropout
and Micropower to Boot
silicon chip, its plastic package and
the PC board. This error, known as
“thermally induced hysteresis,” is
expressed in ppm and cannot be
trimmed out because it is variable
and remembers previous temperature excursions. Hysteresis is always
worse with higher temperature
excursions and differs with die attach
and package type.
Hysteresis:
Often the “Missing” Spec
Most manufacturers ignore hysteresis specifications, but they can be
critical in precision designs. To
graphically depict hysteresis, many
references were IR reflow soldered
onto PC boards and the boards
underwent a “heat soak” at 85°C.
This ensured that they all had the
same initializing temperature. The
temperature was then cycled repeatedly between 85°C, 25°C and –40°C
and all 25°C output voltages were
recorded.
The stabilization time at each temperature was 30 minutes. The
worst-case output voltage changes
for the LT1790S6-2.5 at 25°C are
shown in Figure 4. A competitive reference, which makes no mention of
hysteresis on its data sheet, was also
measured and is shown in Figure 5.
A series reference is very similar to a
3-terminal voltage regulator, in that
it operates in series with its load (see
Figure 6). A series voltage reference,
such as the LT1790, maintains a
stable output voltage regardless of
variations in input voltage (there are
changes, but they are very small).
One of the advantages of a series
reference is that at no load the reference consumes a minimal amount of
current, sourcing more current as
the load demands it. Conversely, a
shunt or Zener type of voltage reference (see Figure 7) must idle the
maximum current at all times to
maintain its output voltage specifications. Thus, the series reference can
boost battery life in portable units
considerably because it need not
deliver its full load current until
required.
The LT1790 not only consumes a
mere 35µA of quiescent current, but
also boasts a very low dropout voltage
of 0.2V at 1mA output current. Both
of these features optimize battery
lifetime and minimize current
consumption.
The LT1790 SOT-23 voltage reference is now available with the 2.5V
output voltage option in both A and B
grades. Many additional voltage
options will be available shortly,
including 1.25V, 3.0V, 3.3V, 4.096V
and 5V. These options will be available in both A and B grades in the
SOT-23 package.
Conclusion
Linear Technology continues to
innovate by crafting the LT1790 series
of precision voltage references in
SOT-23 packages. The LT1790, like
other LTC products, is conservatively
specified and includes specifications
for long-term drift and thermal
hysteresis. The LT1790 excels in all
specifications that set system
performance.
VIN
Figure 6. LT1790 series voltage reference
VIN
VOUT
LOAD
The LT1790 Sources
and Sinks Current
Figure 7. Typical shunt voltage
reference configuration
Another feature of the LT1790 is that
it will source and sink up to 5mA of
VCC = 5V
2k
PERCENTAGE OF UNITS
4
40
30
5.1k
– 40°C TO 25°C
85°C TO 25°C
20
10
0
–200
VOUT
LOAD
50
LT1790-2.5
BZX84C5V11CT1*
VZ = 5.1V
MPS2907A
–160
–120
–80
–40
0
40
DISTRIBUTION (ppm)
80
120
160
200
6
1, 2
–2.5V
50mA
VEE = –5V
Figure 5. Competitive 2.5V reference industrial hysteresis
4
LT1790
1µF
*ON SEMICONDUCTOR (800) 282-9855
Figure 8. –2.5V negative 50mA series reference
Linear Technology Magazine • September 2000