Technical Brief 504 ISL70001SEH, ISL70001SRH VOUT Power-Up/Down Glitch Problem Report Abstract This technical brief explains the GIDEP Problem Advisory BP6-P-16-01 issued for the ISL70001SEH, ISL70001SRH devices. Table of Contents Description of Problem. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Summary of Simulation Results . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Discussion of Simulation Results . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 Summary of Bench Testing Results Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Discussion of Bench Testing Results. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 ISL70001SEH, ISL70001SRH Implemented as Clock Slave or Externally Clocked Device. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 List of Figures FIGURE 1. FIGURE 2. FIGURE 3. FIGURE 4. FIGURE 5. FIGURE 6. FIGURE 7. FIGURE 8. FIGURE 9. FIGURE 10. FIGURE 11. FIGURE 12. FIGURE 13. FIGURE 14. FIGURE 15. FIGURE 16. FIGURE 17. FIGURE 18. FIGURE 19. FIGURE 20. FIGURE 21. FIGURE 22. FIGURE 23. April 21, 2016 TB504.0 VOUT Response During a Power-Up . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2 VOUT Power-Up/Down Anomalous Glitch Simulation Schematic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4 Power-Up Simulations of Nominal Processing at Three Temperatures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5 Power-Up Simulations of Process Corners 1 and 3 at +125°C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6 Power-Up Simulations of Process Corners 2 and 4 at +125°C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7 Simulations Close-Up View of Process Corners VOUT Glitch as Compared to 2x (VOUT = 2xVREF) the Soft-Start Voltage. . .8 Process Corner 4 Ramp Down at +150°C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9 Pre and Post 100krad(Si) Power-Up Ramp for Nominal Process at +25°C . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 VOUT Simulation for Constant VIN = 1.796V to Produce a Steady-State Response . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Power-Up Glitch for Unit LOT-3-1 at +25°C Prior to Irradiation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Power-Up Glitch for Unit LOT-3-1 at +25°C after Biased Irradiation to 100krad(Si) and 50-300rad(Si)/s . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Power-Down Glitch for Unit LOT-1-2684 at +25°C . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Power-Down Glitch for Unit LOT-3-1 at +25°C after Biased Irradiation to 100krad(Si) and 50-300rad(Si)/s . . . . . . . . . . 14 DC Behavior of Unit LOT-3-1 at +25°C . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Power-Up Glitch Magnitudes at +25°C Plotted by Product Lot Groupings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Power-Down Glitch Magnitudes at +25°C Plotted by Product Lot Groupings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Anomalous DC VOUT Magnitudes at +25°C Plotted by Product Lot Groupings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Power-Up Glitch Magnitudes at Temperatures +25°C, +85°C, and +125°C for Four Sampled Units . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Power-Down Glitch Magnitudes at Temperatures +25°C, +85°C, and +125°C for Four Sampled Units . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 LOT-1-2684 Power-Down Glitch at +125°C. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Pre- and Post-Radiation (100krad(Si)) +25°C Power-Up Glitch Magnitudes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Pre- and Post-Radiation (100krad(Si)) +25°C Power-Down Glitch Magnitudes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Slow PVIN Rise, Resulting in Early Master LX and SYNC Activity With No Clocked Slave LX Activity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 1 CAUTION: These devices are sensitive to electrostatic discharge; follow proper IC Handling Procedures. 1-888-INTERSIL or 1-888-468-3774 | Copyright Intersil Americas LLC 2016. All Rights Reserved Intersil (and design) is a trademark owned by Intersil Corporation or one of its subsidiaries. All other trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners. Technical Brief 504 Description of Problem The ISL70001SRH and ISL70001SEH can exhibit a VOUT response during a power-up or power-down period when VIN is between 1.3V and 1.8V. This range of VIN is below the nominal VIN POR threshold of approximately 2.65V for PORSEL set to ground and 4.1V for PORSEL set to VIN. For VIN ramps of faster than 10V/ms this anomalous output activity is not possible, however, for slower VIN ramps there is the possibility of output activity. During power-up, VOUT follows a normal soft-start behavior, which will not exceed the VOUT set-point voltage. During power-down VIN ramp the activity again will not exceed the set-point voltage. The size of the anomalous VOUT response is inversely related to the ramp rate of VIN as this sets how long the part is in the anomalous activity range. See Figure 1 for an illustration of the issue. This problem has been fixed on the ISL70001ASEH. Regulator start-up at low PVIN. No voltage stress on LX and no excess inrush current Normal start-up after 2.8V is crossed by PVIN. is never exceeded as indicated by the DC VIN case at the bottom of Table 1. TABLE 1. SIMULATION RESULTS FOR POWER-UP/DOWN ANOMALOUS VOUT GLITCH FOR VIN RAMPING BETWEEN 0V AND 2V AT 0.2V/ms. SIMULATION CONDITIONS (Note 1) VOUT GLITCH (V) Power-up, Nominal Process, -55°C Figure 3 0 Power-up, Nominal Process, +25°C Figure 3 0.058 Power-up, Nominal Process, +125°C (Worst temp) Figure 3 0.236 Power-up, Process Corner 1, +125°C Figure 4 0.103 Power-up, Process Corner 3, +125°C Figure 4 0 Power-up, Process Corner 2, +125°C Figure 5 0.368 Power-up, Process Corner 4, +125°C (Worst case) Figure 5 0.426 Power-down, Process Corner 4, +125°C Figure 7 Discharges from 0.7V Power-up, Post 100krad, Nominal process, Figure 8 0.236 +25°C Inrush current at normal start-up, much greater than start-up at low PVIN Normal start-up of VOUT VOUT rise due to LX pulsing, no overvoltage FIGURE 1. VOUT RESPONSE DURING A POWER-UP Summary of Simulation Results Transistor level simulations indicate that the ISL70001SEH, ISL70001SRH VOUT glitch during power-up and power-down is limited by the soft-start voltage and ultimately by the selected VOUT setting (e.g., 1.2V). The glitch is a normal soft-start event terminated when POR lockout becomes active by 1.8V. That is, the glitch will follow soft-start and not exceed the programmed output voltage setting, even if the VIN stalls in the window of the anomalous switching activity. In the ramped power-up situation, the glitch is dominated by the soft-start voltage so the resulting glitch is substantially smaller than the selected output voltage. During power-down the soft-start voltage can cause the VOUT to discharge if it is precharged to a non-zero value. Discussion of Simulation Results Simulations were run for the anomalous VOUT activity (glitch) during power-up and power-down for 0V < VIN < 2V. Simulations used the schematic shown in Figure 2 on page 4. Note that the VIN ramp rate was set to 0.2V/ms for both power-up and power-down. The results from the sequence of simulations run are summarized in Table 1. The largest power-up glitch in a VOUT of 426mV occurred for process corner 4 run at a temperature of +125°C. This is well below the output set point of 1.2V. Slower ramps will lead to larger glitches, however, the set-point voltage Submit Document Feedback 2 DC VIN = 1.796V for Process Corner 4, +125°C Figure 9 1.178 for 1.200 set NOTE: 1. Simulation plots are in the called out Figures. The first three simulations of Table 1 are depicted in Figure 3 on page 5. For the -55°C case the oscillator (SyncIO) never goes active so that the switching node (Phase1) never activates and consequently the output (VOUT) never charges. The fall of Dfeet activates the POR circuitry and blocks further switching until POR is released at about VIN = 2.65V (for PORSEL set to ground). The +25°C case shows both SyncIO and Phase1 activity before Dfeet goes low. This short activity results in a VOUT glitch of 58mV. At +125°C the SyncIO and Phase1 activity starts at a lower VIN and proceeds to allow VOUT to track the soft-start voltage (SS_cap) with the selected feedback gain of 2x applied. In this case the VOUT glitch reaches 236mV. The +125°C case is the worst temperature for the glitch. The four process corners were run at +125°C and are the next four entries in Table 1. The 1st and 3rd process corners are depicted in Figure 4 in the same fashion as in Figure 3. Corner 1 had a short episode of Phase1 activity that yielded an output glitch of 103mV. Corner 3 exhibited no Phase1 activity and consequently had no glitch on VOUT. Figure 5 depicts the results from the 2nd and 4th process corners. Both cases resulted in appreciable VOUT glitches of 368mV and 426mV respectively. So the worst case power-up glitch of 426mV was seen for process corner 4 and a temperature of +125°C. Figure 6 on page 8 shows the four process cases of power-up simulations at +125ºC comparing the VOUT signal to 2x the soft-start voltage. The factor of 2 comes from the set-point voltage being set to 1.2V and the reference voltage being 0.6V. These plots highlight the fact that the soft-start voltage is in control of the glitch ramp. This indicates that the voltage control loop is functioning and in control of VOUT and that a normal TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Technical Brief 504 soft-start has been initiated. This assertion is further supported by simulation results in Figure 9 on page 11. This simulation allows the anomalous switching condition to continue by holding VIN = 1.796V. The resulting VOUT response ramps up to approximately the set-point voltage of 1.200V (1.178V) and then holds at that level. Again the voltage loop is seen to be active and in control of VOUT. Figure 8 on page 10 presents simulations to represent the effects of radiation. The pre-radiation case shown (on the left) is again the nominal process at +25°C. The post-radiation (100krad(Si), on the right) is the process corner representing the nominal process post-radiation at +25°C. The radiation has increased the glitch from 58mV to 236mV, but the form of the glitch in that it follows the soft-start voltage remains intact. A power-down ramp was simulated for process corner 4 at +150°C and the results are presented in Figure 7 on page 9. In this case the VOUT was precharged to 0.7V to emulate the load discharging VOUT to a diode drop indicative of an active load. The most interesting fact is that the anomalous switching activity leads to the VOUT being discharged. Submit Document Feedback 3 TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Submit Document Feedback 4 Technical Brief 504 NOTE: For power-down simulation the output voltage was precharge to 0.7V based on system power-down behaviors with real loads. TB504.0 April 21, 2016 FIGURE 2. VOUT POWER-UP/DOWN ANOMALOUS GLITCH SIMULATION SCHEMATIC Submit Document Feedback 5 Technical Brief 504 -55°C +25°C +125°C (PRODUCED WORST CASE VOUT GLITCH OF 236mV) FIGURE 3. POWER-UP SIMULATIONS OF NOMINAL PROCESSING AT THREE TEMPERATURES TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Submit Document Feedback 6 Technical Brief 504 NOTE: Only corner 1 generated a VOUT glitch at 103mV. FIGURE 4. POWER-UP SIMULATIONS OF PROCESS CORNERS 1 AND 3 AT +125°C TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Submit Document Feedback 7 FIGURE 5. POWER-UP SIMULATIONS OF PROCESS CORNERS 2 AND 4 AT +125°C Technical Brief 504 NOTE: Corner 4 exhibited the worst case glitch Of 426mV. TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Submit Document Feedback 8 Technical Brief 504 NOTE: These show that the glitch is limited by the soft-start voltage as the part follows a normal soft-start progression. FIGURE 6. SIMULATIONS CLOSE-UP VIEW OF PROCESS CORNERS VOUT GLITCH AS COMPARED TO 2x (VOUT = 2xVREF) THE SOFT-START VOLTAGE. TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Submit Document Feedback 9 Technical Brief 504 NOTE: Starting from a precharge of 0.7V to emulate power-down ramps of actual loads. The switching activity actually causes the VOUT to discharge under soft-start voltage control. FIGURE 7. PROCESS CORNER 4 RAMP DOWN AT +150°C TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Submit Document Feedback 10 Technical Brief 504 FIGURE 8. PRE AND POST 100krad(Si) POWER-UP RAMP FOR NOMINAL PROCESS AT +25°C TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Submit Document Feedback 11 Technical Brief 504 NOTE: Conditions were process corner 4 and +125°C. VOUT stops rising at approximately the set-point voltage of 1.200V (1.178V untrimmed). FIGURE 9. VOUT SIMULATION FOR CONSTANT VIN = 1.796V TO PRODUCE A STEADY-STATE RESPONSE TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Technical Brief 504 Summary of Bench Testing Results Summary Bench testing the ISL70001SEH, ISL70001SRH for the anomalous VOUT response on power-up and power-down demonstrated that the glitch never exceeded 1V when the set voltage was 1.2V. This was true of all 40 units from five different production lots tested at +25°C as well as for the four units selected for testing at +125°C and the six units tested post irradiation to 100krad(Si) at 50-300rad(Si)/s. The pertinent parameters for the bench testing are listed in Table 2. The worst power-up glitch for all testing conditions was 627mV for irradiated LOT-3-1, which also registered the worst case +25°C power-up glitch at 296mV. The pre- and post-irradiation power-up glitches are presented in Figures 10 and 11 respectively. It should be noted that both responses follow normal soft-start charging behavior until termination of the anomalous switching at about VIN = 1.8V. In the post-irradiation case, Figure 11, the VIN ramp barely extended beyond the termination of the anomalous switching period leading to a result indicative of a much slower power-up ramp than intended. A faster ramp would have terminated the switching event sooner and led to a smaller glitch. TABLE 2. PERTINENT PARAMETERS FOR BENCH TESTING ISL70001SEH, ISL70001SRH FOR POWER-UP AND POWER-DOWN ANOMALOUS VOUT GLITCH. PARAMETER VALUE Input Capacitance 200µF Output Inductor 1µH Output Capacitance 500µF Soft-Start Capacitance 100nF VREF Capacitance 220nF Output Set Voltage 1.2V Power-Up Supply Ramp Between 0.1 and 0.2V/ms Power-Down Supply Ramp Between -0.1 and -0.2V/ms VIN Sweep Limits 0V to 2V NOTE: Testing was done on a socketed ISL70001SEH, ISL70001SRH evaluation board. Submit Document Feedback 12 TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Technical Brief 504 VIN LX VOUT FIGURE 10. POWER-UP GLITCH FOR UNIT LOT-3-1 AT +25°C PRIOR TO IRRADIATION VIN LX VOUT FIGURE 11. POWER-UP GLITCH FOR UNIT LOT-3-1 AT +25°C AFTER BIASED IRRADIATION TO 100krad(Si) AND 50-300rad(Si)/S Submit Document Feedback 13 TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Technical Brief 504 The worst case power-down glitch of 467mV was seen on unit LOT-1-2684 at +25°C and is represented in Figure 12. The rapid VOUT charging at the end of switching activity was anomalous among the parts tested. The next worst power-down event was registered by unit LOT-3-1 after irradiation and is shown in Figure 13. The final discharge phase of the glitch was typical behavior. Units were also tested for the DC condition of VIN held at the top of the region of anomalous switching. Of all the units tested in this fashion, LOT-3-1 exhibited the highest VOUT level at 905mV as is represented in Figure 14 on page 15. VIN LX VOUT FIGURE 12. POWER-DOWN GLITCH FOR UNIT LOT-1-2684 AT +25°C VIN LX VOUT FIGURE 13. POWER-DOWN GLITCH FOR UNIT LOT-3-1 AT +25°C AFTER BIASED IRRADIATION TO 100krad(Si) AND 50-300rad(Si)/S Submit Document Feedback 14 TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Technical Brief 504 VIN VOUT LX FIGURE 14. DC BEHAVIOR OF UNIT LOT-3-1 AT +25°C Submit Document Feedback 15 TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Technical Brief 504 Discussion of Bench Testing Results Testing began with all 40 units tested at +25°C for power-up, power-down, and DC anomalous VOUT. Then four units were selected for testing at temperature (+85°C and +125°C), based on simulation results and bench testing indicating the worst case condition to be high temperature. Finally six units were selected for biased irradiation and these parts were again tested at +25°C. The tabular results of all this testing is presented in Table 3. TABLE 3. RESULTS OF BENCH TESTING UNITS FOR ANOMALOUS VOUT RESPONSES FOR VIN RISING, FALLING AND DC OPERATION. LOT SN TEMP (°C) krad(Si) RISING (mV) FALLING (mV) DC (mV) LOT-1 2621 +25 0 109 192 683 LOT-1 2625 +25 0 25 70 289 LOT-1 2626 +25 0 134 92 218 LOT-1 2634 +25 0 147 219 814 LOT-1 2660 +25 0 109 122 212 LOT-1 2661 +25 0 102 109 166 LOT-1 2662 +25 0 25 154 492 LOT-1 2664 +25 0 128 141 134 LOT-1 2665 +25 0 122 116 406 LOT-1 2666 +25 0 113 192 801 LOT-1 2667 +25 0 70 128 387 LOT-1 2668 +25 0 78 147 567 LOT-1 2669 +25 0 89 179 498 LOT-1 2670 +25 0 83 76 317 LOT-1 2684 +25 0 70 467 595 LOT-1 2684 +85 0 184 261 907 LOT-1 2684 +125 0 184 286 920 LOT-1 2688 +25 0 116 206 620 LOT-1 2691 +25 0 154 160 548 LOT-2 2859 +25 0 70 89 418 LOT-2 2860 +25 0 116 179 580 LOT-2 2862 +25 0 63 LOT-2 2864 +25 0 166 141 762 LOT-2 2865 +25 0 141 173 729 LOT-2 2866 +25 0 106 166 498 LOT-2 2868 +25 0 141 193 814 LOT-2 2874 +25 0 128 173 801 LOT-3 1 +25 0 296 297 905 LOT-3 1 +25 100 627 448 LOT-3 2 +25 0 219 222 867 LOT-3 3 +25 0 212 265 867 LOT-3 3 +85 0 280 344 952 LOT-3 3 +125 0 280 389 1016 LOT-3 4 +25 0 212 232 873 LOT-3 4 +25 100 425 387 Submit Document Feedback 16 454 TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Technical Brief 504 TABLE 3. RESULTS OF BENCH TESTING UNITS FOR ANOMALOUS VOUT RESPONSES FOR VIN RISING, FALLING AND DC OPERATION. (Continued) LOT SN TEMP (°C) krad(Si) RISING (mV) FALLING (mV) DC (mV) LOT-3 5 +25 0 199 263 880 LOT-4 0 +25 0 219 303 867 LOT-4 0 +25 100 406 393 LOT-4 1 +25 0 193 283 847 LOT-4 2 +25 0 238 296 873 LOT-4 2 +85 0 306 395 965 LOT-4 2 +125 0 325 408 978 LOT-4 7 +25 0 231 237 873 LOT-4 7 +25 100 436 399 LOT-4 8 +25 0 219 375 867 LOT-5 5 +25 0 63 76 115 LOT-5 6 +25 0 26 86 179 LOT-5 7 +25 0 134 224 542 LOT-5 7 +85 0 235 325 920 LOT-5 7 +125 0 242 363 971 LOT-5 8 +25 0 128 147 215 LOT-5 8 +25 100 296 399 LOT-5 9 +25 0 96 237 LOT-5 9 +25 100 406 356 606 The power-up glitch results at +25°C are graphically presented in Figure 15 on page 18. The extreme point correlates to unit LOT-31 and is represented in Figure 10 on page 13. The power-down glitches at +25°C are graphically represented in Figure 16 on page 18. The extreme value of 467mV corresponds to LOT-1-2684 and is represented in Figure 12 on page 14. This case is an outlier in its form and magnitude. All other parts exhibited a discharge to zero as is the case in Figure 13 on page 14. Submit Document Feedback 17 TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Technical Brief 504 Power-Up Glitch at +25°C 350 300 296 250 mV 200 150 100 50 0 1 2 LOT-1 3 LOT-2 LOT-3 4 LOT-4 5 LOT-5 FIGURE 15. POWER-UP GLITCH MAGNITUDES AT +25°C PLOTTED BY PRODUCT LOT GROUPINGS Power-Down Glitch at +25°C 500 467 450 400 350 mV 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 1 2 LOT-1 3 LOT-2 LOT-3 4 LOT-4 5 LOT-5 FIGURE 16. POWER-DOWN GLITCH MAGNITUDES AT +25°C PLOTTED BY PRODUCT LOT GROUPINGS Submit Document Feedback 18 TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Technical Brief 504 Anomalous DC Level at +25°C 1000 905 900 800 700 mV 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 1 2 LOT-1 3 LOT-2 LOT-3 4 LOT-4 5 LOT-5 FIGURE 17. ANOMALOUS DC VOUT MAGNITUDES AT +25°C PLOTTED BY PRODUCT LOT GROUPINGS The parts were also operated with VIN being a DC level and adjusted to give the maximum VOUT output. The results are graphically represented in Figure 17. All parts tested exhibited output voltages less than the set-point at 1.2V. Four units were selected to test at elevated temperature. As represented in Figure 18 on page 20 all four units tended toward larger power-up glitches as temperature increased. The maximum delta from +25°C was only 114mV at +125°C and the resulting maximum glitch at +125°C was only 325mV. The power-down glitch magnitudes are shown in Figure 19 on page 20. Unit LOT-1-2684 showed more typical behavior at the elevated temperatures than it did at +25°C. The +125°C behavior is depicted in Figure 20 on page 21. This behavior lacks the abrupt rise in VOUT seen in Figure 12 on page 14 and is responsible for the reduced glitch magnitude. Another six units were selected for post radiation testing. The units were irradiated in the standard biased configuration at 50-300rad(Si)/s to a dose of 100krad(Si). Then, the parts were again tested for glitches at +25°C. Figure 21 on page 21 shows the pre- and post-irradiation power-up glitch magnitudes measured at +25°C. The irradiation led to larger glitch magnitudes with the largest one being LOT-3-1 as already shown in Figure 11 on page 13. The power-down glitch behavior over radiation is shown in Figure 22 on page 22. Again the extreme case is that of LOT-3-1 and has already been shown in Figure 11 on page 13. Nothing in all the testing done implies that the power-up or power-down behavior of the part will result in the VOUT exceeding the set point (1.2V in the bench cases here). This is consistent with the simulation results. Submit Document Feedback 19 TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Technical Brief 504 POWER-UP GLITCH WITH TEMPERATURE 350 300 250 mV 200 150 100 50 LOT-5-7 LOT-1-2684 LOT-3-3 LOT-4-2 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 AMBIENT TEMPERATURE (°C) FIGURE 18. POWER-UP GLITCH MAGNITUDES AT TEMPERATURES +25°C, +85°C, AND +125°C FOR FOUR SAMPLED UNITS POWER-DOWN GLITCH WITH TEMPERATURE 500 450 400 350 mV 300 250 200 150 100 50 LOT-5-7 LOT-1-2684 LOT-3-3 LOT-4-2 0 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 AMBIENT TEMPERATURE (°C) FIGURE 19. POWER-DOWN GLITCH MAGNITUDES AT TEMPERATURES +25°C, +85°C, AND +125°C FOR FOUR SAMPLED UNITS Submit Document Feedback 20 TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Technical Brief 504 VIN LX VOUT FIGURE 20. LOT-1-2684 POWER-DOWN GLITCH AT +125°C POWER-UP GLITCH CHANGE WITH 100krad(Si) 700 600 500 mV 400 300 200 100 LOT-5-8 LOT-5-9 LOT-3-1 LOT-3-4 LOT-4-0 LOT-4-7 0 0 100 TID (krad(Si)) FIGURE 21. PRE- AND POST-RADIATION (100krad(Si)) +25°C POWER-UP GLITCH MAGNITUDES Intersil Corporation reserves the right to make changes in circuit design, software and/or specifications at any time without notice. Accordingly, the reader is cautioned to verify that the document is current before proceeding. For information regarding Intersil Corporation and its products, see www.intersil.com Submit Document Feedback 21 TB504.0 April 21, 2016 Technical Brief 504 POWER-DOWN GLITCH CHANGE WITH 100krad(Si) 500 450 400 350 mV 300 250 200 150 100 50 LOT-5-8 LOT-5-9 LOT-3-1 LOT-3-4 LOT-4-0 LOT-4-7 0 0 100 TID (krad(Si)) FIGURE 22. PRE- AND POST-RADIATION (100krad(Si)) +25°C POWER-DOWN GLITCH MAGNITUDES ISL70001SEH, ISL70001SRH Implemented as Clock Slave or Externally Clocked Device The ISL70001SEH, ISL70001SRH, when set as a master, the control signal path that controls output activity is such that LX activity starts at ~1.5V prior to it being inhibited by a fuse read at ~1.7V. This design weakness was corrected on the ISL70001A and all subsequent ISL7000x devices. In the ISL70001SEH, ISL70001SRH when in slave mode, the control signal path from the SYNC input to the output and LX activity is inhibited until the PORSEL selected UVLO threshold is satisfied. This is a different signal path than exists when the ISL70001SEH, ISL70001SRH is in master mode. Figure 23 illustrates the expected behavior when a master and a SYNC clocked slave or externally clocked slave device is powered up slowly. The clocked slave device has its PORSEL = high and the master PORSEL = low. The slow rising PVIN (BLUE) results in the master LX activity (GREEN)) accompanied by SYNC (RED) activity, however, no slave LX (YELLOW) activity until the clocked slave UVLO is satisfied. Summary The conditions where ISL70001SEH, ISL70001SRH do not exhibit LX activity below UVLO. There are several ways to avoid the possibility of ISL70001SEH, ISL70001SRH LX pin pulsing. Any 1 of these 3 conditions will inhibit the LX pin pulsing below UVLO. 1. External Clock a. If the M/S pin is tied low and an external clock is applied to SYNC, the LX pulsing will not occur until UVLO is satisfied. PVIN 2. Enable SLAVE LX a. If the EN pin is held at <0.5 V until VIN > 1.6V, the LX pin pulsing will not occur. b. Using a suitable external resistor divider between VIN and EN will prevent LX pin pulsing. MASTER LX 3. PVIN Ramp SYNC a. A 10V/ms minimum PVIN ramp will prevent the LX pin pulsing. FIGURE 23. SLOW PVIN RISE, RESULTING IN EARLY MASTER LX AND SYNC ACTIVITY WITH NO CLOCKED SLAVE LX ACTIVITY Submit Document Feedback 22 TB504.0 April 21, 2016