MIC7401 Evaluation Board Configurable PMIC, Five-Channel Buck Regulator plus One-Boost with HyperLight Load®, I2C Control and Enable General Description Requirements The MIC7401 is a powerful, highly-integrated, configurable, power-management IC (PMIC) featuring five synchronous buck regulators, one boost regulator, and 2 high-speed I C interface with an internal EEPROM and micro-power shutdown. The device offers two distinct modes of operation “standby mode” and “normal mode”. The MIC7401 evaluation board requires only a single power supply with 5A (minimum) current capability. The output load can either be an active (electronic) or passive (resistive) load. In normal mode, the programmable switching converters can be configured to support a variety of features, including start-up sequencing, timing, soft-start ramp, output voltage levels, current-limit levels, and output discharge for each channel. The MIC7401 evaluation board does not have reverse polarity protection. Applying a negative voltage to the VIN and GND terminals can damage the device. The maximum operating rating for VIN is 5.5V. Exceeding 5.5V on the VIN could damage the device. In standby mode the PMIC can configured in a low power state by either disabling an output or by changing the output voltage to a lower level. Independent exit from 2 standby mode can be achieved either by I C communication or the external STBY pin. Ordering Information Precautions Part Number Description MIC7401EV MIC7401 Evaluation Board MICUSB USB Dongle The initial settings of the evaluation board are: Input: 2.4V to 5.5V Output 1: 1.8V/0.8A Output 4: 1.05V/3.0A Output 2: 1.1V/0.5A Output 5: 1.25V/1.0A Output 3: 1.8V/0.5A Output 6: 12V/0.2A Datasheets and support documentation are available on Micrel’s web site at: www.micrel.com. Evaluation Board A G B F A) B) C) D) E) F) G) INPUT VOLTAGE OUTPUT VOLTAGES USB DONGLE CONNECTOR 2 I C SDA AND SCL 2 I C PULL-UP TO VIN STATUS AND CONTROL BIT HEADER ENABLE E D C HyperLight Load is a registered trademark of Micrel, Inc. Micrel Inc. • 2180 Fortune Drive • San Jose, CA 95131 • USA • tel +1 (408) 944-0800 • fax + 1 (408) 474-1000 • http://www.micrel.com July 21, 2015 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board Getting Started 1. Download GUI To download the GUI, select “Software Package/Kit” from the MIC7401 product page from the Micrel website (www.micrel.com). Users can either save the compressed installation file to hard drive or extract the compressed file using a program such as PeaZip, WinRAR, or WinZip. Then run MIC7401Install.msi to install the GUI. When the installation process is complete, click on the Windows “Start” button, then select “All Programs” to view the Start Menu. Find the new Micrel folder and “click” on the Serial Programmer > MIC7401 to locate the GUI program. Before you launch the GUI, the USB dongle must be connect to the PC by the USB cable, the USB dongle plugged into the evaluation board and the board powered up. 2. Set the USB Dongle and Switch Position The USB dongle has a micro switch with two positions: “I2C” and “NOM” (refer to Figure 1). To ensure the PC is capable of communicating to the IC, confirm that the 2 micro switch is in the I C (or left) position. Pin 1 on the edge connector is the ground pin, which has a square solder pad. Figure 2. USB Dongle Connection to Evaluation Board 4. Configure the GUI for Direct Editing When the MIC7401 GUI Interface window appears (see Figure 3), the connection between the computer and the USB dongle must be verified by clicking on the “Test” button. “Target OK” will appear on the bottom of the GUI window indicating it is operational. Before configuring the MIC7401, the GUI needs to be set for direct editing. To do this click on Link > Link Mode > Directing Editing. Now it is time to program the MIC7401. Save Configuration Figure 1. MIC7401 USB Dongle Micro Switch Test Button 3. Connect USB Dongle The USB dongle is inverted and plugged into the 4-pin socket (see Figure 2). Cutting off the extra pins is recommended. Next, turn on the power supply and slowly ramp up then input voltage. Now, click on the MIC7400 ICON in the Start Menu to launch the GUI. Target OK Figure 3. MIC7401 GUI Interface July 21, 2015 2 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board Evaluation Board Description Programming Options Every regulator has its own configuration settings that allow the output voltage, current-limit, and soft-start ramp rate to be set (Figure 4). The global settings like power-onreset (POR) threshold and start-up delay are at the top of the MIC7401 GUI Interface window (Figure 5). Figure 5. Global Settings The startup delay sets the delay between the internal power good signal and the enable of the next regulator in the sequence. The sequence setting allows the outputs to come up in any order. There are six time slots. Each time slot can be programmed for up to six regulators to be turned on at once or none at all. The MIC7401 can be powered up into either standby or normal mode. The IC will start-up in standby mode if the standby-mode check box is checked. The soft-start speed check box when checked set the soft start ramp to the 8µs to 1024µs speed range. The OT check box is a status indicator when checked indicates an overtemperature fault. Figure 4. Regulator Settings The first dial sets the output voltage for normal mode and the second sets standby mode. To change the voltage setting, click on the up/down arrow or click and hold the right mouse button on the pointer and drag the pointer to the desired voltage level, then release the mouse button. Note that the register associated with the output changes on-the-fly every time the mouse is clicked. As the voltage level in the GUI changes, the output of the MIC7401 will also change. The “On” check box is the ON/OFF control for the regulators. If checked, the regulator is enabled. Evaluation Board The MIC7401 evaluation board provides numerous two-pin headers to monitor various system parameters such as input voltage, output voltage, standby mode, and power good. A standard test clip can be used, but for a more elegant solution, use a test cable from Joy Signal PN: 9905305. The soft-start ramp rate is registered in µs-per-step, with each step being 50mV for the buck regulators and 200mV for the boost. It controls both the rising and falling rate of the output voltage. The PGOOD mask is used to control the global power good output (PG). If this box is checked, then the output will not contribute to the overall power good output. This allows the output to go from normal mode to standby mode without triggering a power good fault. Also the global power good flag will not be affected by an over-current fault. The PG status box is checked when the output is within 91% of its regulated value. The OC status box indicates an overcurrent condition. In Figure 5, the POR threshold monitors AVIN and sets the lower and upper limit of the POR comparator. The POR delay time starts as soon as AVIN voltage rises above the upper threshold. The POR output goes low without delay as soon as AVIN fall below the lower threshold limit. July 21, 2015 3 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board Functional Description The MIC7401 is one of the industry’s most-advanced PMIC devices designed for solid state drives (SSD) on the market today. It is a multi-channel solution which offers software configurable soft-start, sequencing, and digital voltage control (DVC) that minimizes PC board area. These features usually require a pin for programming. However, this approach makes the IC larger by increasing pin count, and also increases BOM cost due to the external components. The MIC7401 has a current-mode boost regulator that can deliver up to 200mA of output current and only consumes 70µA of quiescent current. The 2.0MHz switching frequency allows small chip inductors to be used. Programmable overcurrent sensing protects the boost from overloads and an output disconnect switch opens to protect against a short-circuit condition. Soft-start is also programmable and controls both the rising and falling output. The following is a complete list of the programmable features of the MIC7401: Programmable Buck Soft-Start Control The MIC7401 soft-start feature forces the output voltage to rise gradually, which limits the inrush current during startup. A slower output rise time will draw a lower input surge current. The soft-start time is based on the least significant bit (LSB) of an internal DAC and the speed of the ramp rate, as shown in Figure 6. Figure 6 illustrates the soft-start waveform for all five synchronous buck converters. The initial step starts at 150mV and each subsequent step is 50mV. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Buck output voltage (0.8V – 3.3V/50mV steps) Boost output voltage (7.0V – 14V/ 200mV steps) Power-on-reset (2.25V – 4.25V/50mV steps) Power-on-reset delay (5ms – 160ms/5ms steps) Power-up sequencing (6 time slots) Power-up sequencing delay (0ms – 7ms/1ms steps) Soft-start (4µs – 1024µs per step) Buck current-limit threshold − (1.1A to 6.1A/0.5A steps) Boost current-limit threshold − (1.76A to 2.6A/0.12A steps) Boost pull-down (37mA to 148mA/37mA steps) Buck pull-down (90Ω) Buck standby output voltage programmable Boost standby output voltage programmable Global power-good masking These features give the system designer the flexibility to customize the MIC7401 for their application. For example, VOUT1 current limit can be programmed to 4.1A and VOUT2 can be set to 1.1A. These outputs can be programmed to come up at the same time or 2.0ms apart. In addition, in power-saving standby mode, the outputs can either be turned off or programmed to a lower voltage. With this programmability the MIC7401 can be used in multiple platforms. Figure 6. Buck Soft-Start The output ramp rate (tRAMP) is set by the soft-start registers. Each output ramp rate can be individually set from 4µs to 1024µs, see Table 1 for details. The MIC7401 buck regulators are adaptive on-time synchronous step-down DC-to-DC regulators. They are designed to operate over a wide input voltage range from 2.4V to 5.5V and provide a regulated output voltage at up to 3.0A of output current. An adaptive on-time control scheme is employed to obtain a constant switching frequency and to simplify the control compensation. The device includes an internal soft-start function which reduces the power supply input surge current at start-up by controlling the output voltage rise time. July 21, 2015 4 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board Table 1. Buck Outputs Default Soft-Start Time (DEFAULT) VOUT (V) tRAMP (µs) tSS (µs) VOUT1 1.8 8 264 VOUT2 1.1 8 152 VOUT3 1.8 8 264 VOUT4 1.05 8 144 VOUT5 1.25 8 176 Figure 7 shows the output of Buck 1 ramping up cleanly, starting from 0.15V to its final 1.1V value. The soft-start time tSS can be calculated by Equation 1: − 0.15 V V t SS = OUT × t RAMP 50mV Eq. 1 Where: Figure 7. Buck Soft-Start tSS = Output rise time Buck Digital Voltage Control (DVC) The output voltage has a 6-bit control DAC that can be programmed from 0.8V to 3.3V in 50mV increments. If the output is programmed to a higher voltage, then the output ramps up, as shown in Figure 8. VOUT = Output voltage tRAMP = Output dwell time For example: 1.8 V − 0.15 V t SS = × 8µs 50mV t SS = 264µs Eq. 2 Where: VOUT = 1.8V tRAMP = 8.0µs Figure 8. Buck DVC Control Ramp July 21, 2015 5 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board Programmable Boost Soft-Start Control The boost soft-start time is divided into two parts as shown in Figure 10. T1 is a fixed 367µs delay starting from when the internal enable goes high. This delay gives enough time for the disconnect switch to turn on and bring the inductor voltage to VIN before the boost is turned on. There is a 50µs delay which is controlled by the parasitic capacitance (Cgd) of the disconnect switch before the output starts to rise. The ramp time is determined by Equation 2: VOUT − VOUT _ INIT ∆t = 50mV × t RAMP Eq. 2 Where: After the T1 period, the DAC output ramp starts, T2. The total soft-start time, tSS, is the sum of both periods. Figure 11 displays the actual boost soft-start waveform. VOUT_INIT = Initial output voltage VOUT = Final output voltage tRAMP = Output dwell time When the regulator is set in standby mode or programmed to a lower voltage, then the output voltage ramps down at a rate determined by the output ramp rate (tRAMP), the output capacitance and the external load. Small loads result in slow output voltage decay and heavy loads cause the decay to be controlled by the DAC ramp rate. In Figure 9, VOUT1 is switched to standby mode with an I²C command and then switched back to normal mode either by an I²C command or a low-to-high transition of the STBY pin. In this case, the rise and fall times are the same due to a 1A load on VOUT1. Figure 10. Boost Soft-Start Ramp Figure 9. Buck DVC Control Ramp Figure 11. Boost Soft-Start July 21, 2015 6 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board t SS = T1 + T2 − 1 .4 V ) (V T2 = OUT × t RAMP 0 .2 V (12V − 1.4 V ) T2 = × 16µs 0 .2 V The ramp time can be computed using Equation 4: Eq. 3 VOUT − VOUT _ INIT ∆t = 0 .2 V × t RAMP Eq. 4 Where: Where: VOUT_INIT = Initial output voltage T1 = 367µs T2 = 848µs Table 2. Boost Output Default Soft-Start Time tSS = 367µs + 848µs = 1.215ms VOUT = Output voltage tRAMP = Output dwell time = 16µs VOUT6 VOUT (V) tRAMP (µs) tSS (ms) 12 16 1.215 Buck Current Limit The MIC7401 buck regulators have high-side current limiting that can be varied by a 4-bit code. If the regulator remains in current limit for more than seven consecutive PWM cycles, the output is latched off, the overcurrent status register bit is set to 1, the power-good status register bit is set to 0 and the global power-good (PG) output pin is pulled low. An overcurrent fault on one output will not disable the remaining outputs. Table 3 shows the current-limit register settings vs. output current. The current-limit register setting is set at twice the maximum output current. Boost Digital Voltage Control (DVC) The boost output control works the same way as the buck, except that the voltage steps are 200mV (see Figure 12). When the boost is programmed to a lower voltage the output ramps down at a rate determined by the output ramp rate (tRAMP), the output capacitance and the external load. During both the ramp up and down time, the powergood output is blanked and will not imitate a fault flag. Table 3. Buck Current-Limit Register Settings IPROG BINARY HEX 0.5A 1.1A 1111 F’h 1.0A 2.1A 1101 D’h 1.5A 3.1A 1011 B'h 2.0A 4.1A 1001 9'h 2.5A 5.1A 0111 7'h 3.0A 6.1A 0101 5'h The output can be turned back on by recycling the input power or by software control. To clear the overcurrent fault by software control, set the enable register bit to “0” then clear the overcurrent fault by setting the fault register bit to “0”. This will clear the over-current and power-good status registers. Now the output can be re-enabled by setting the enable register bit to “1”. Figure 12. Boost DVC Control Ramp July 21, 2015 IOUT(MAX) 7 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board Global Power-Good Pin The global power-good output indicates that all the outputs are above the 91% limit after the power-up sequence is completed. Once the power-up sequence is complete, the global power good output stays high unless an output falls below its power-good limit, a thermal fault occurs, the input voltage drops below the lower UVLO threshold or an output is turned OFF by setting the enable register bit to “0” unless the PGOOD_MASK[x] bit is set to “1” (Default). During start-up sequencing if Output 1 is still shorted, Outputs 2 through 4 will come up normally. Once an overcurrent condition is sensed, then the fault register is set to “1” and the start-up sequence will stop and no further outputs will be enabled. The programmable current-limit setting sets the peak switch current threshold, not the average outputs current. The peak current is higher than the average due to the inductor ripple current. Figure 13 illustrates how the current limit threshold varies with input voltage. A power-good mask bit can be used to control the global power-good output. The power-good mask feature is programmed through the PGOOD_MASK[x] registers and is used to ignore an individual power-good fault. When masked, PGOOD_MASK[x] bit is set to “1”, an individual power good fault will not cause the global power good output to de-assert. If all the PGOOD_MASK[x] bits are set to “1”, then the power good output de-asserts as soon as the first output starts to rise. The PGOOD_MASK[x] bit of the last output must be set to “0” to have the PG output stay low until the last output reaches 91% of its final value. The global power-good output is an open-drain output. A pull-up resistor can be connected to VIN or VOUT. Do not connect the pull-up resistor to a voltage higher than AVIN. Standard Delay There is a programmable timer that is used to set the standard delay time between each time slot. The timer starts as soon as the previous time slot’s output power good goes high. When the delay completes, the regulators assigned to that time slot are enabled, see Figure 14. Figure 13. Current-Limit Threshold vs. Input Voltage Boost Current Limit The boost current limit features cycle-by-cycle protection. The duty cycle is cut immediately once the current limit is hit. When the boost current limit is hit for five consecutive cycles, the FAULT signal is asserted and remains asserted with the boost converter keeping on running until the boost is powered off. This protects the boost in normal overload conditions, but not in a short-to-ground case. For a short circuit to ground, the boost current limit will not be able to limit the inductor current. This short-circuit condition is sensed by the current in the disconnect switch. When the disconnect switch current limit is hit for four consecutive master clock cycles (2MHz), regardless if the boost is switching or not, both the disconnect switch and boost are latched off automatically and the FAULT signal is asserted. The output can be turned back on by recycling the input power or by software control. To clear the overcurrent fault by software control, set the enable register bit to “0” then clear the overcurrent fault by setting the fault register bit to “0”. July 21, 2015 Figure 14. Standard Delay Time 8 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board Global Enable Pin When the enable pin rises above the enable threshold voltage, the MIC7401 enters its start-up sequence. Power-Up Sequencing When power is first applied to the MIC7401, all I²C registers are loaded with their default values from the EEPROM. There is about a 1.5ms delay before the first regulator is enabled while the MIC7401 goes through the initialization process. The DELAY register’s STDEL bits set the delay between powering up each regulator at initial power up. Programmable Power-on-Reset (POR) Delay The POR output pin provides the user with a way to let the SOC know that the input power is failing. If the input voltage falls below the power-on reset lower threshold level, the POR output immediately goes low. The lower threshold is set in the PORDN register and the upper threshold uses PORUP register. The sequencing registers allow the outputs to come up in any order. There are six time slots that an output can be configured to power up in. Each time slot can be programmed for up to six regulators to be turned on at once or none at all. The low-to-high POR transition can be delayed from 5ms to 160ms in 5ms increments. This feature can be used to signal the SOC that the power supplies are stable. The PORDEL register sets the delay of the POR pin. The POR delay starts as soon as the AVIN pin voltage rises above the power-on-reset upper threshold limit. Figure 16 shows the POR operation. Figure 15 shows an example of this feature. VOUT4 is enabled in time slot 1. After a 1ms delay, VOUT2 and VOUT3 are enable at the same time in time slot 2. The 1ms is the standard delay for all of the outputs and can be programmed from 0ms to 7ms in 1ms. Next, VOUT1 is powered up in time slot 3 and VOUT5 in time slot 4. There are no regulators programmed for time slot 5. Finally, VOUT6 is powered up in time slot 6. The global power-good output, VPG, goes high as soon as the last output reaches 91% of its final value. Figure 16. Power-on-Reset (POR) Figure 15. Hot Plug – VIN Rising July 21, 2015 9 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board Timing Diagrams Normal Power-Up Sequence for Outputs The STDEL register sets the delay between powering up of each regulator at initial power-up (see power-up sequencing in Figure 17). Once all the internal power-good registers PGOOD[1-6] are all 1, then the global PG pin goes high without delay if the PGOOD_MASK[6] bit is set to “0”. The PORDEL register sets the delay for the POR flag pin. The POR delay time starts as soon as AVIN pin voltage rises above the system UVLO upper threshold set by the PORUP register. The POR output goes low without delay if AVIN falls below the lower UVLO threshold set by the PORDN register. Figure 17. MIC7401 Power-Up/Down July 21, 2015 10 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board Standby (STBY) Pin (Wake-Up) An I²C write command to the STBY_CTRL_REG register or the STBY pin can be used to set the MIC7401 into stand-by mode. The standby (STBY) pin provides a hardware-specific manner in which to wake-up from standby mode and go into normal mode. Figure 18 shows the STBY pin operation. A low-to-high transition on the STBY pin switches the output from stand-by mode to normal mode. There is a 100µs STBY deglitch time that eliminates nuisance tripping, allowing all regulators to enable at the same time and ramp up with their programmed ramp rates. Figure 18. MIC7401 STBY Function (DEFAULT) July 21, 2015 11 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board Evaluation Board Schematic VIN C15 150µF R7 0Ω VOUT3 + VIN PGND R6 499kΩ C1 2.2µF R1 100kΩ VIN EN PG VOUT2 1.1V/0.5A L2 2.2µH C10 22µF 3 36 PGND 4 VIN C11 10µF VOUT3 1.8V/0.5A L3 2.2µH C12 22µF 5 6 8 VIN C13 10µF L4 1.0µH C14 22µF 30 EN 31 AVIN 32 33 NC NC SW1 SW2 OUT1 OUT2 PGND2 PGND1 MIC7401 PVIN3 SW3 PVIN6O OUT3 SW6 9 10 PGND6 PVIN4 PVIN5 27 OUT4 SW5 PGND4 SDA VIN CLK NC GND POR 16 AGND SCL 15 14 13 STBY 12 R4 499kΩ SDA OUT5 PGND5 VIN L1 2.2µH VOUT1 1.8V/0.8A 28 PGND 25 24 VIN L6 2.2µH D1 PMEG4002 VOUT6 12V/0.2A 23 22 C6 10µF C5 22µF C4 10µF PGND 21 20 19 VIN L5 2.2µH C7 10µF VOUT5 1.25V/1.0A C8 22µF 17 18 PGND VIN R5 2kΩ 4 C2 10µF C3 22µF 29 SW4 VIN STAND-BY 26 PGND3 OUT6 11 PGND PVIN1 PVIN6 7 PGND VOUT4 1.05V/3.0A 1 AGND C9 10µF PVIN2 PG 2 VIN 34 35 EN VOUT3 R3 2kΩ R2 100kΩ 3 2 1 STAND-BY POR PG EN July 21, 2015 12 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board Bill of Materials Item Part Number C1 CL05A225KO5NQNC C2, C7, C9, C11, C13 CL10A106MO8NQNC C4, C6 Manufacturer Samsung (1) Description Qty. 2.2µF/16V, Ceramic, X5R, 0402, 0.8mm, ±10% 1 Samsung 10µF/16V, Ceramic, X5R, 0603, 0.8mm, ±20% 5 CL21A106KAYNNNE Samsung 10µF/25V, Ceramic, X5R, 0805, 1.25mm, ±20% 2 C3, C5, C8, C10, C12, C14 CL10A226MQ8NUNE Samsung 22µF/6.3V, Ceramic, X5R, 0603, 0.8mm, ±20% 6 C15 EEF-CX0J151XR 150µF/6.3V, POS Capacitor, SP, ±20% 1 0.2A/40V, Schottky, SOD-882 1 Panasonic (2) (3) D1 PMEG4002EL NXP R1, R2 RC1005F104CS Samsung 100kΩ, Resistor, 0402, 1% 3 R3, R5 RC1005F202CS Samsung 2.0kΩ, Resistor, 0402, 1% 2 R4, R6 RC1005F4993CS Samsung 499kΩ, Resistor, 0402, 1% 1 R7 RC1005J000CS Samsung 0.00Ω, Resistor, 0402, Jumper 1 L1, L2, L3, L5, L6 CIG22H2R2MNE Samsung 2.2µH, 1.6A Inductor, 116mΩ, 2520 × 1.2mm (maximum) 5 L4 CIGW252010GM1R0MNE Samsung 1.0µH, 3.3A Inductor 40mΩ, 2520 × 1.0mm (maximum) 1 U1 MIC7401YFL Micrel Five-Channel Buck Regulator Plus One Boost 2 with HyperLight Load and I C Control 1 , (4) Notes: 1. Samsung: www.samsung.com. 2. Panasonic: www.panasonic.com. 3. NXP: www.nxp.com. 4. Micrel, Inc.: www.micrel.com. July 21, 2015 13 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board PCB Layout Recommendations Evaluation Board Top Layer − Power Component Placement Evaluation Board Top Layer − Layer 1 (Power Routing Layer) July 21, 2015 14 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board PCB Layout Recommendations (Continued) Evaluation Board Top Layer − Layer 1 (Power Routing Layer) Evaluation Board Layer 2 (Ground Plane) July 21, 2015 15 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board PCB Layout Recommendations (Continued) Evaluation Board Top Layer − Layer 3 (Signal Routing Layer) Evaluation Board Layer 4 (Ground Plane) July 21, 2015 16 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board PCB Layout Recommendations (Continued) Evaluation Board Layer − Layer 5 (VIN Plane) Evaluation Board Bottom Later − Layer 6 (Ground Plane) July 21, 2015 17 Revision 1.0 Micrel, Inc. MIC7401 Evaluation Board MICREL, INC. 2180 FORTUNE DRIVE SAN JOSE, CA 95131 USA TEL +1 (408) 944-0800 FAX +1 (408) 474-1000 WEB http://www.micrel.com Micrel, Inc. is a leading global manufacturer of IC solutions for the worldwide high-performance linear and power, LAN, and timing & communications markets. The Company’s products include advanced mixed-signal, analog & power semiconductors; high-performance communication, clock management, MEMs-based clock oscillators & crystal-less clock generators, Ethernet switches, and physical layer transceiver ICs. Company customers include leading manufacturers of enterprise, consumer, industrial, mobile, telecommunications, automotive, and computer products. Corporation headquarters and state-of-the-art wafer fabrication facilities are located in San Jose, CA, with regional sales and support offices and advanced technology design centers situated throughout the Americas, Europe, and Asia. Additionally, the Company maintains an extensive network of distributors and reps worldwide. Micrel makes no representations or warranties with respect to the accuracy or completeness of the information furnished in this datasheet. This information is not intended as a warranty and Micrel does not assume responsibility for its use. Micrel reserves the right to change circuitry, specifications and descriptions at any time without notice. No license, whether express, implied, arising by estoppel or otherwise, to any intellectual property rights is granted by this document. Except as provided in Micrel’s terms and conditions of sale for such products, Micrel assumes no liability whatsoever, and Micrel disclaims any express or implied warranty relating to the sale and/or use of Micrel products including liability or warranties relating to fitness for a particular purpose, merchantability, or infringement of any patent, copyright, or other intellectual property right. Micrel Products are not designed or authorized for use as components in life support appliances, devices or systems where malfunction of a product can reasonably be expected to result in personal injury. Life support devices or systems are devices or systems that (a) are intended for surgical implant into the body or (b) support or sustain life, and whose failure to perform can be reasonably expected to result in a significant injury to the user. A Purchaser’s use or sale of Micrel Products for use in life support appliances, devices or systems is a Purchaser’s own risk and Purchaser agrees to fully indemnify Micrel for any damages resulting from such use or sale. © 2015 Micrel, Incorporated. July 21, 2015 18 Revision 1.0