www.fairchildsemi.com FAN5066 Ultra Low Voltage Synchronous DC-DC Controller Features Description • • • • • • • • The FAN5066 is a synchronous mode DC-DC controller IC which provides an adjustable output voltage for ultra-low voltage applications, down to 400mV. The FAN5066 uses a high level of integration to deliver load currents in excess of 19A from a 5V source with minimal external circuitry. Synchronous-mode operation offers optimum efficiency over the entire output voltage range, and the internal oscillator can be programmed from 80KHz to 1MHz for additional flexibility in choosing external components. The FAN5066 also offers integrated functions including a four-bit DAC-controlled reference, Power Good, Output Enable, over-voltage protection and current limiting. Output adjustable from 400mV to 3.5V Synchronous Rectification Adjustable operation from 80KHz to 1MHz Integrated Power Good and Enable functions Overvoltage protection Overcurrent protection Drives N-channel MOSFETs 20 pin SOIC or TSSOP package Applications • • • • Power supply DDR SDRAM VTT Power Supply HSTL Power Supply for ASICs Adjustable ultra-low voltage step-down power supply Block Diagram +12V +5V FAN5066 1 5 4 – + OSC – + – 13 + 12 – + +5V DIGITAL CONTROL VO 7 9 CNTRL VREF 16 20 1.24V REFERENCE 4-BIT DAC 19 18 17 8 VID2 VID4 VID1 VID3 POWER GOOD 3 PWRGD 2 ENABLE PRELIMINARY INFORMATION describes products that are not in full production at the time of printing. Specifications are based on design goals and limited characterization. They may change without notice. Contact Fairchild Semiconductor for current information.REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 FAN5066 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION Pin Assignments CEXT 1 20 VREF ENABLE 2 19 VID1 PWRGD 3 18 VID2 IFB 4 17 VID3 VFB 5 16 CNTRL VCCA 6 15 GNDA VCCP 7 14 GNDD VID4 8 13 VCCQP LODRV 9 12 HIDRV GNDP 10 11 GNDP FAN5066 Pin Definitions Pin Number Pin Name 1 CEXT 2 ENABLE Output Enable. A logic LOW on this pin will disable the output. An internal pull-up resistor allows for either open collector or TTL compatibility. 3 PWRGD Power Good Flag. An open collector output that will be at logic LOW if the output voltage is not within ±12% of the nominal output voltage setpoint. 4 IFB High Side Current Feedback. Pins 4 and 5 are used as the inputs for the current feedback control loop. Layout of these traces is critical to system performance. See Application Information for details. 5 VFB Voltage Feedback. Pin 5 is used as the input for the voltage feedback control loop and as the low side current feedback input. See Application Information for details regarding correct layout. 6 VCCA Analog VCC. Connect to system 5V supply and decouple with a 0.1µF ceramic capacitor. 7 VCCP Power VCC for low side FET driver. Connect to system 5V supply and place a 1µF ceramic capacitor for decoupling and local charge storage. 8 VID4 VID4 Input. A logic 1 on this open collector/TTL input will enable the VID3–VID0 inputs to set the output from 2.1V to 3.5V, and a logic 0 will set the output from 1.3V to 2.05V, as shown in Table 1. Pullup resistors are internal to the controller. 9 LODRV Low Side FET Driver. Connect this pin to the gate of an N-channel MOSFET for synchronous operation. The trace from this pin to the MOSFET gate should be < 0.5". 10, 11 GNDP Power Ground. Return pin for high currents flowing in pins 7 and 13 (VCCP and VCCQP). Connect to a low impedance ground. 12 HIDRV High Side FET Driver. Connect this pin to the gate of an N-channel MOSFET. The trace from this pin to the MOSFET gate should be < 0.5". 13 VCCQP Power VCC. For high side FET driver. VCCQP must be connected to a voltage of at least VCCA + VGS,ON (MOSFET), and place a 1µF ceramic capacitor for decoupling and local charge storage. See Application Information for details 14 GNDD Digital Ground. Return path for digital logic. Connect to a low impedance system ground plane to minimize ground loops. 15 GNDA Analog Ground. Return path for low power analog circuitry. This pin should be connected to a low impedance system ground plane to minimize ground loops. 16 CNTRL Voltage Control. The voltage forced on this pin determines the output voltage of the converter. 17-19 20 2 Pin Function Description Oscillator Capacitor Connection. Connecting an external capacitor to this pin sets the internal oscillator frequency. Layout of this pin is critical to system performance. See Application Information for details. VID1-VID3 Voltage Identification Code Inputs. These open collector/TTL compatible inputs will program the output voltage of the reference over the ranges specified in Table 1. Pull-up resistors are internal to the controller. VREF Reference Voltage Test Point. This pin provides access to the DAC output and should be decoupled to ground using 0.1µF capacitor. REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION FAN5066 Absolute Maximum Ratings Supply Voltages, VCCA, VCCP, VCCQP to GND 13V Supply Voltage VCCQP, Charge Pump (VIN+VCCA) 18V Voltage Identification Code Inputs, VID3-VID0 13V VREF Output Current 3mA 150°C Junction Temperature, TJ -65 to 150°C Storage Temperature 300°C Lead Soldering Temperature, 10 seconds Operating Conditions Parameter Supply Voltage, VCCA, VCCP Conditions Min. 4.75 Input Logic HIGH Typ. 5 Max. 5.25 2.0 V Input Logic LOW Ambient Operating Temp Output Driver Supply, VCCQP Units V 0.8 V 0 70 °C 8.5 12 V Electrical Specifications (VCCA = 5V, VCNTRL = 900mV, fosc = 300 KHz, and TA = +25°C using circuit in Figure 1, unless otherwise noted) The • denotes specifications which apply over the full operating temperature range. Parameter Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Units Initial Voltage Setpoint ILOAD = 0.8A, VCTRL = 1.25V VCTRL = 900mV 1.237 891 1.250 900 1.263 909 V mV Output Temperature Drift TA = 0 to 70°C VOUT = 1.25V VOUT = 900mV • • +6 +4 mV mV Load Regulation ILOAD = 0.8A to 3A • -20 mV Line Regulation VIN = 4.75V to 5.25V • ±2 mV Output Ripple 20MHz BW, ILOAD = 3A DAC Output Voltage See Table 1 ±13 DAC Accuracy • Short Circuit Detect Threshold Output Driver Rise and Fall Time See Figure 3 Output Driver Deadtime 1 Output Driver Deadtime 2 Turn-on Response Time ILOAD = 0A to 3A 3.4 V -3 +3 % 150 mV 90 nsec See Figure 3 5 %/fOSC See Figure 3 80 nsec 80 Oscillator Frequency CEXT = 100 pF 270 PWRGD threshold Logic High Logic Low 93 88 PWRGD Minimum Operating Voltage Max Duty Cycle REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 120 80 Oscillator Range Control Pin Input Current mVpk 1.3 90 VCTRL = 400mV to 3.5V • 300 10 msec 1000 KHz 330 KHz 107 112 %VOUT %VOUT 1.0 V 95 % 235 µA 3 FAN5066 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION Table 1. DAC Output Voltage Programming Codes VID4 VID3 VID2 VID1 0 1 1 1 VREF 1.30V 0 1 1 0 1.40V 0 1 0 1 1.50V 0 1 0 0 1.60V 0 0 1 1 1.70V 0 0 1 0 1.80V 0 0 0 1 1.90V 0 0 0 0 2.00V 1 1 1 1 No Output 1 1 1 0 2.2V 1 1 0 1 2.4V 1 1 0 0 2.6V 1 0 1 1 2.8V 1 0 1 0 3.0V 1 0 0 1 3.2V 1 0 0 0 3.4V Note: 1. 0 = processor pin is tied to GND. 1 = processor pin is open. 4 REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION FAN5066 Typical Operating Characteristics (VCCA, VCCD = 5V, fOSC = 280 KHz, and TA = +25°C using circuit in Figure 1, unless otherwise noted) Load Regulation VOUT = 0.9V 0.895 70 0.890 60 VOUT (V) Efficiency (%) Efficiency vs. Output Current 80 50 40 0.885 0.880 0.875 30 0.870 20 0.1 0.3 0 0.6 0.9 1.2 1.5 1.8 2.1 2.4 2.7 0.5 1 3 1.5 2 2.5 3 Output Current (A) Output Current (A) Output Voltage vs. Output Current, RSENSE = 6mΩ Oscillator Frequency vs. CEXT 1250 1.2 1050 Frequency (KHz) 1.4 VOUT (V) 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 850 650 450 250 50 0 1 2 3 Output Current (A) REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 4 5 18 39 75 150 300 560 CEXT (pf) 5 FAN5066 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION Typical Operating Characteristics (continued) Transient Response, 3A to 0.1A VOUT (20mV/div) VOUT (20mV/div) Output Ripple, 900m @ 3A Time (10µs/division) Time (1µs/division) VOUT (20mV/div) Transient Response, 0.1A to 3A Time (1µs/division) 2V/div HIDRV pin LODRV pin Time (1µs/division) VOUT (500mV/div) Output Startup, System Power-up VIN (2V/div ) 5V/div Switching Waveforms, 3A Load Time (5ms/division) 65-5051-12 6 REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION FAN5066 Application Circuit +12V L1 +5V C1 2.2 µH CIN 330µF 0.1µF C2 0.1µF R1 47Ω D1 1N4735A C6 0.1µF C5 1µF +5V FDS6984S R2 Q1 R5 2KΩ U2 FAN4041 R6 324Ω R7 909Ω C9 0.1µF 11 10 9 12 8 13 14 7 15 6 U1 16 FAN5066 5 4 17 3 18 2 19 1 20 C4 1µF 4.7Ω L2 R3 4.7µH Q2 4.7Ω R SENSE VO 25mΩ COUT 470µF CEXT C3 100pF 0.1µF VID4 VID3 VID2 VCC ENABLE C7 0.1µF R4 10KΩ C8 0.1µF PWRGD VID1 Figure 1. Application Circuit for 900mV @ 3A REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 7 FAN5066 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION Table 2. FAN5066 Application Bill of Materials for 900mV @ 3A Reference Manufacturer Part # Quantity Description Requirements/Comments C1–3, C6–C9 Panasonic ECU-V1H104ZFX 7 100nF, 50V Capacitor C4–5 Panasonic ECU-V1C105ZFX 2 1µF, 16V Capacitor Cext Panasonic ECU-V1H101JCG 1 100pF Capacitor 5%, C0G CIN AVX TPSE337*010R0100 1 330µF, 10V Tantalum Irms = 1.3A COUT AVX TPSE477*006R0100 1 470µF, 6.3V Tantalum ESR = 100mΩ D1 Motorola 1N4735A 1 6.2V Zener Diode L1 Coiltronics MP2-2R2 1 2.2µH, 1.4A Inductor DCR ~ 130mΩ See Note 1. L2 Coiltronics UP2B-4R7 1 4.7µH, 5A inductor DCR ~ 17mΩ Q1 Fairchild FDS6984S 1 N-Channel MOSFET with Integrated Schottky R1 Any 1 47Ω R2-3 Any 2 4.7Ω R4 Any 1 10KΩ R5 Any 1 2.0KΩ R6 Any 1 324Ω R7 Any 1 909Ω RSENSE Any 1 25mΩ U1 Fairchild FAN5066M 1 DC/DC Controller U2 Fairchild FAN4041 1 Shunt Regulator Notes: 1. Inductor L1 is recommended to isolate the 5V input supply from noise generated by the MOSFET switching. L1 may be omitted if desired. 8 REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION FAN5066 Application Circuit +12V L1 +5V C1 1.5µH 0.1µF C11 680µF C2 0.1µF R1 47Ω D1 1N4735A C6 0.1µF C5 1µF R2 Q1 VDDQ R5 499 R6 499 11 10 9 12 8 13 14 7 U1 15 6 FAN5066 16 5 17 4 18 3 19 2 20 1 C4 1µF 4.7Ω L2 R3 1.5µH Q2 4.7Ω VO COUT* C10 C9 100pF 0.1µF VCC ENABLE C7 0.1µF R4 10KΩ C8 0.1µF PWRGD *Refer to Table 3 for value of COUT. Figure 2. 12A Application Circuit for DDR VTT REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 9 FAN5066 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION Table 3. FAN5066 Application Bill of Materials for DDR VTT Reference Manufacturer Part # Quantity Description Requirements/Comments C1–2, C6–C9 Panasonic ECU-V1H104ZFX 6 100nF, 50V Capacitor C4–5 Panasonic ECU-V1C105ZFX 2 1µF, 16V Capacitor C10 Panasonic ECU-V1H101JCG 1 100pF Capacitor 5%, C0G C11 Sanyo 6SP680M 1 680µF, 6.3V OSCON IRMS = 4.8A COUT Sanyo 4SP820M 4 820µF, 4V OSCON ESR < 12mΩ D1 Motorola 1N4735A 1 6.2V Zener Diode L1 Coiltronics UP1B-1R5 Optional 1.5µH, 4A Inductor DCR ~ 20mΩ See Note 1. L2 Coiltronics UP4B-1R5 1 1.5µH, 13A Inductor DCR ~ 4mΩ Q1–2 Fairchild FDS6680S 2 N-Channel MOSFET w/ Integrated Schottky RDS(ON) = 17mΩ @ VGS = 4.5V R1 Any 1 47Ω R2-3 Any 2 4.7Ω R4 Any 1 10KΩ R5-6 Any 2 499Ω U1 Fairchild FAN5066M 1 DC/DC Controller Notes: 1. Inductor L1 is recommended to isolate the 5V input supply from noise generated by the MOSFET switching. L1 may be omitted if desired. Test Circuit +12V 47Ω 1µF tR VCCQP +5V VCCA HIDRV tF 90% 4.7Ω HIDRV 50% 0.1µF 90% 50% 3000pF 10% tDT1 4.7Ω VCCP 10% tDT2 LODRV 1µF 3000pF 50% 50% LODRV GNDA GNDD GNDP Figure 3. Output Drive Test Circuit and Timing Diagram 10 REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION Application Information The FAN5066 Controller The FAN5066 is a programmable synchronous DC-DC controller IC. When designed around the appropriate external components, the FAN5066 can be configured to deliver more than 19A of output current. The FAN5066 functions as a fixed frequency PWM step down regulator. Main Control Loop Refer to the FAN5066 Block Diagram on page 1. The FAN5066 implements “summing mode control”, which is different from both classical voltage-mode and current-mode control. It provides superior performance to either by allowing a large converter bandwidth over a wide range of output loads. The control loop of the regulator contains two main sections: the analog control block and the digital control block. The analog section consists of signal conditioning amplifiers feeding into a set of comparators which provide the inputs to the digital control block. The signal conditioning section accepts inputs from the IFB (current feedback) and VFB (voltage feedback) pins and sets up two controlling signal paths. The first, the voltage control path, amplifies the difference between the VFB signal the reference voltage from the DAC and presents the output to one of the summing amplifier inputs. The second, current control path, takes the difference between the IFB and VFB pins and presents the resulting signal to another input of the summing amplifier. These two signals are then summed together with the slope compensation input from the oscillator. This output is then presented to a comparator, which provides the main PWM control signal to the digital control block. The digital control block takes the analog comparator inputs and the main clock signal from the oscillator to provide the appropriate pulses to the HIDRV and LODRV output pins. These two outputs control the external power MOSFETs. The digital block utilizes high speed Schottky transistor logic, allowing the FAN5066 to operate at clock speeds as high as 1MHz. There are additional comparators in the analog control section whose function is to set the point at which the FAN5066 enters its pulse skipping mode during light loads, as well as the point at which the current limit comparator disables the output drive signals to the external power MOSFETs. High Current Output Drivers The FAN5066 contains two identical high current output drivers that utilize high speed bipolar transistors in a pushpull configuration. The drivers’ power and ground are separated from the chip’s power and ground for switching noise immunity. The HIDRV driver has a power supply pin, REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 FAN5066 VCCQP, which is supplied from an external 12V source through a series resistor or from a charge-pump circuit powered from 5V if 12V is not available. The LODRV driver has a power supply pin, VCCP, which can be supplied from either the 12V or 5V source. The resulting voltages are sufficient to provide the gate to source drive to the external MOSFETs required in order to achieve a low RDS,ON. Power Good (PWRGD) The FAN5066 Power Good function is designed in accordance with the Pentium II DC-DC converter specifications and provides a continuous voltage monitor on the VFB pin. The circuit compares the VFB signal to the VREF voltage and outputs an active-low interrupt signal to the CPU should the power supply voltage deviate more than ±12% of its nominal setpoint. The Power Good flag provides no other control function to the FAN5066. Output Enable (ENABLE) The FAN5066 will accept an open collector/TTL signal for controlling the output voltage. The low state disables the output voltage. When disabled, the PWRGD output is in the low state. If an enable is not required in the circuit, this pin may be left open. Over-Voltage Protection The FAN5066 constantly monitors the output voltage for protection against over voltage conditions. If the voltage at the VFB pin exceeds 20% of the selected program voltage, an over-voltage condition is assumed and the FAN5066 disables the output drive signal to the external MOSFETs. The DC-DC converter returns to normal operation after the fault has been removed. Over-Current Protection Current sense is implemented in the FAN5066 to reduce the duty cycle of the output drive signal to the MOSFETs when an over-current condition is detected. The voltage drop created by the output current flowing across a sense resistor is presented to an internal comparator. When the voltage developed across the sense resistor exceeds the 120mV comparator threshold voltage, the FAN5066 reduces the output duty cycle to help protect the power devices. The DC-DC converter returns to normal operation after the fault has been removed. Oscillator The FAN5066 oscillator section uses a fixed current capacitor charging configuration. An external capacitor (CEXT) is used to set the oscillator frequency between 80KHz and 1MHz. This scheme allows maximum flexibility in choosing external components. 11 FAN5066 In general, a higher operating frequency decreases the peak ripple current flowing in the output inductor, thus allowing the use of a smaller inductor value. In addition, operation at higher frequencies decreases the amount of energy storage that must be provided by the bulk output capacitors during load transients due to faster loop response of the controller. Unfortunately, the efficiency losses due to switching of the MOSFETs increase as the operating frequency is increased. Thus, efficiency is optimized at lower frequencies. An operating frequency of 300KHz is a typical choice which optimizes efficiency and minimizes component size while maintaining excellent regulation and transient performance under all operating conditions. PRODUCT SPECIFICATION mately 4.5V. When the MOSFET Q1 turns on, the voltage at the source of the MOSFET is equal to 5V. The capacitor voltage follows, and hence provides a voltage at VCCQP equal to almost 10V. The Schottky diode D1 is required to provide the charge path when the MOSFET is off, and reverses biases when VCCQP goes to 10V. The charge pump capacitor (CP) needs to be a high Q, high frequency capacitor. A 1µF ceramic capacitor is recommended here. +5V Q1 HIDRV Design Considerations and Component Selection Additional information on design and component selection may be found in Fairchild Semiconductor’s Application Note 53. D1 VCCQP CP L2 RS VO PWM/PFM Control COUT LODRV Q2 D2 GNDP MOSFET Selection This application requires N-channel Logic Level Enhancement Mode Field Effect Transistors. Desired characteristics are as follows: • Low Static Drain-Source On-Resistance, RDS,ON < 20mΩ (lower is better) • Low gate drive voltage, VGS = 4.5V rated • Power package with low Thermal Resistance • Drain-Source voltage rating > 15V. The on-resistance (RDS,ON) is the primary parameter for MOSFET selection. The on-resistance determines the power dissipation within the MOSFET and therefore significantly affects the efficiency of the DC-DC Converter. For details and a spreadsheet on MOSFET selection, refer to Applications Bulletin AB-8 Figure 4. Charge Pump Configuration Method 2. 12V Gate Bias Figure 5 illustrates how a 12V source can be used to bias VCCQP. A 47Ω resistor is used to limit the transient current into the VCCQP pin and a 1µF capacitor is used to filter the VCCQP supply. This method provides a higher gate bias voltage (VGS) to the high side MOSFET than the charge pump method, and therefore reduces the RDS,ON and the resulting power loss within the MOSFET. In designs where efficiency is a primary concern, the 12V gate bias method is recommended. A 6.2V Zener diode, D1, is used to clamp the voltage at VCCQP to a maximum of 12V and ensure that the absolute maximum voltage of the IC will not be exceeded. +5V MOSFET Gate Bias +12V The high side MOSFET gate driver can be biased by one of two methods–Charge Pump or 12V Gate Bias. The charge pump method has the advantage of requiring only +5V as an input voltage to the converter, but the 12V method will realize increased efficiency by providing an increased VGS to the high side MOSFETs. Method 1. Charge Pump (Bootstrap) Figure 4 shows the use of a charge pump to provide gate bias to the high side MOSFET when +12V is unavailable. Capacitor CP is the charge pump used to boost the voltage of the FAN5066 output driver. When the MOSFET Q1 switches off, the source of the MOSFET is at approximately 0V because of the MOSFET Q2. (The Schottky D2 conducts for only a very short time, and is not relevent to this discussion.) CP is charged through the Schottky diode D1 to approxi- 12 47Ω D1 VCCQP Q1 HIDRV 1µF L2 RS VO PWM/PFM Control COUT LODRV Q2 D2 GNDP Figure 5. Gate Bias Configuration REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION FAN5066 Inductor Selection ( V in – V out ) V out ESR L min = ------------------------------ × ----------- × ----------------V in V ripple f 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.5 1.0 0.5 where: Vin = Input Power Supply Vout = Output Voltage f = DC/DC converter switching frequency ESR = Equivalent series resistance of all output capacitors in parallel Vripple = Maximum peak to peak output ripple voltage budget. The first order equation for maximum allowed inductance is: L max Output Voltage vs. Output Current RSENSE = 6mΩ 3.5 OUT (V) Choosing the value of the inductor is a tradeoff between allowable ripple voltage and required transient response. The system designer can choose any value within the allowed minimum to maximum range in order to either minimize ripple or maximize transient performance. The first order equation (close approximation) for minimum inductance is: ( V in – V out )D m V tb = 2C O × ----------------------------------------------2 I PP where: Co = The total output capacitance Ipp = Maximum to minimum load transient current Vtb = The output voltage tolerance budget allocated to load transient Dm = Maximum duty cycle for the DC/DC converter (usually 95%). Some margin should be maintained away from both Lmin and Lmax. Adding margin by increasing L almost always adds expense since all the variables are predetermined by system performance except for Co, which must be increased to increase L. Adding margin by decreasing L can either be done by purchasing capacitors with lower ESR or by increasing the DC/DC converter switching frequency. The FAN5066 is capable of running at high switching frequencies and provides significant cost savings for the newer CPU systems that typically run at high supply current. FAN5066 Short Circuit Current Characteristics The FAN5066 short circuit current characteristic includes a hysteresis function that prevents the DC-DC converter from oscillating in the event of a short circuit. Figure 6 shows the typical characteristic of the DC-DC converter circuit with a 6.8 mΩ sense resistor. The converter exhibits a normal load regulation characteristic until the voltage across the resistor exceeds the internal short circuit threshold of 120mV (= 17.5A * 6.8mΩ). At this point, the internal comparator trips and signals the controller to reduce the converter’s duty cycle to approximately 20%. This causes a drastic reduction in the output voltage as the load regulation collapses into the short circuit control mode. With a 40mΩ output short,the voltage is reduced to 15A * 40mΩ = 600mV. REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 0 0 5 10 15 20 25 Output Current (A) Figure 6. FAN5066 Short Circuit Characteristic The output voltage does not return to its nominal value until the output current is reduced to a value within the safe operating range for the DC-DC converter Schottky Selection A schottky diode is not required in Figures 1 and 2, because the low-side MOSFETs have built in schottkies using Fairchild SyncFET technology. If some other type of MOSFET is used, a schottky must be used in anti-parallel with the lowside MOSFET. Selection of a schottky is determined by the maximum output. In the converter of Figure 1, maximum output current is 3A, and suppose the MOSFET has a body diode Vf = 0.75V at this current. The schottky must have at least 100mV less Vf at the same current to ensure that the body diode does not turn on. The MBRS130L diode has Vf = 0.45V typical at 3A at 25°C, and so is a suitable choice. Output Filter Capacitors The output bulk capacitors of a converter help determine its output ripple voltage and its transient response. It has already been seen in the section on selecting an inductor that the ESR helps set the minimum inductance, and the capacitance value helps set the maximum inductance. For most converters, however, the number of capacitors required is determined by the transient response and the output ripple voltage, and these are determined by the ESR and not the capacitance value. That is, in order to achieve the necessary ESR to meet the transient and ripple requirements, the capacitance value required is already very large. The most commonly used choice for output bulk capacitors is aluminum electrolytics, because of their low cost and low ESR. The only type of aluminum capacitor used should be those that have an ESR rated at 100kHz. Consult Application Bulletin AB-14 for detailed information on output capacitor selection. The output capacitance should also include a number of small value ceramic capacitors placed as close as possible to the processor; 0.1µF and 0.01µF are recommended values. 13 FAN5066 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION Input Filter PCB Layout Guidelines The DC-DC converter design may include an input inductor between the system +5V supply and the converter input as shown in Figure 6. This inductor serves to isolate the +5V supply from the noise in the switching portion of the DC-DC converter, and to limit the inrush current into the input capacitors during power up. A value of 2.5µH is recommended. • Placement of the MOSFETs relative to the FAN5066 is critical. Place the MOSFETs such that the trace length of the HIDRV and LODRV pins of the FAN5066 to the FET gates is minimized. A long lead length on these pins will cause high amounts of ringing due to the inductance of the trace and the gate capacitance of the FET. This noise radiates throughout the board, and, because it is switching at such a high voltage and frequency, it is very difficult to suppress. • In general, all of the noisy switching lines should be kept away from the quiet analog section of the FAN5066. That is, traces that connect to pins 9, 12, and 13 (LODRV, HIDRV and VCCQP) should be kept far away from the traces that connect to pins 1 through 5, and pin 16. • Place the 0.1µF decoupling capacitors as close to the FAN5066 pins as possible. Extra lead length on these reduces their ability to suppress noise. • Each VCC and GND pin should have its own via to the appropriate plane. This helps provide isolation between pins. • Surround the CEXT timing capacitor with a ground trace. Be sure to place a ground or power plane underneath the capacitor for further noise isolation, in order to provide additional shielding to the oscillator (pin 1) from the noise on the PCB. In addition, place this capacitor as close to pin 1 as possible. • Place the MOSFETs, inductor, and Schottky as close together as possible for the same reasons as in the first bullet above. Place the input bulk capacitors as close to the drains of the high side MOSFETs as possible. In addition, placement of a 0.1µF decoupling cap right on the drain of each high side MOSFET helps to suppress some of the high frequency switching noise on the input of the DC-DC converter. • Place the output bulk capacitors as close to the CPU as possible to optimize their ability to supply instantaneous current to the load in the event of a current transient. Additional space between the output capacitors and the CPU will allow the parasitic resistance of the board traces to degrade the DC-DC converter’s performance under severe load transient conditions, causing higher voltage deviation. For more detailed information regarding capacitor placement, refer to Application Bulletin AB-5. • The traces that run from the FAN5066 IFB (pin 4) and VFB (pin 5) pins should be run together next to each other and Kelvin connected to the sense resistor. Running these lines together rejects some of the common mode noise that is presented to the FAN5066 feedback input. Try, as much as possible, to run the noisy switching signals (HIDRV, LODRV & VCCQP) on one layer, but use the inner layers for power and ground only. If the top layer is being used to route all of the noisy switching signals, use the bottom layer to route the analog sensing sign VFB and IFB. • A PC Board Layout Checklist is available from Fairchild Applications. Ask for Application Bulletin AB-11. It is necessary to have some low ESR aluminum electrolytic capacitors at the input to the converter. These capacitors deliver current when the high side MOSFET switches on. Figure 7 shows 3 x 1000µF, but the exact number required will vary with the speed and type of the processor. For the top speed Klamath and Deschutes, the capacitors should be rated to take 7A of ripple current. Capacitor ripple current rating is a function of temperature, and so the manufacturer should be contacted to find out the ripple current rating at the expected operational temperature. For details on the design of an input filter, refer to Applications Bulletin AB-15. 2.5µH 5V Vin 1000µF, 10V Electrolytic 0.1µF Figure 7. Input Filter Droop Resistor Figure 8 shows a converter using a “droop resistor”, RD. The function of the droop resistor is to improve the transient response of the converter, potentially reducing the number of output capacitors required. In operation, the droop resistor causes the output voltage to be slightly lower at heavy load current than it otherwise would be. When the load transitions from heavy to light current, the output can swing up farther without exceeding limits, because it started from a lower voltage, thus reducing the capacitor requirements. Q1 RSENSE L2 RDROOP VO Q2 IFB VFB COUT Figure 8. Use of a Droop Resistor 14 REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION FAN5066 Additional Information For additional information contact your local Fairchild Semiconductor representative, or visit us on our website at www.fairchildsemi.com. REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 15 FAN5066 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION Mechanical Dimensions – 20 Lead SOIC Inches Symbol Min. A A1 B C D E e H h L N α ccc Notes: Millimeters Max. Min. Notes .093 .104 .004 .012 .013 .020 .009 .013 .496 .512 .291 .299 .050 BSC 2.35 2.65 0.10 0.30 0.33 0.51 0.23 0.32 12.60 13.00 7.40 7.60 1.27 BSC .394 .010 .016 10.00 0.25 0.40 .419 .029 .050 20 1. Dimensioning and tolerancing per ANSI Y14.5M-1982. Max. 10.65 0.75 1.27 20 0° 8° 0° 8° — .004 — 0.10 2. "D" and "E" do not include mold flash. Mold flash or protrusions shall not exceed .010 inch (0.25mm). 3. "L" is the length of terminal for soldering to a substrate. 4. Terminal numbers are shown for reference only. 5 2 2 5. "C" dimension does not include solder finish thickness. 6. Symbol "N" is the maximum number of terminals. 3 6 11 20 E H 10 1 h x 45° D C A1 A e B SEATING PLANE –C– LEAD COPLANARITY α L ccc C 16 REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION FAN5066 Mechanical Dimensions – 20 Lead TSSOP Inches Symbol Min. A A1 B C D E e H Max. Min. — .047 .002 .006 .007 .012 .004 .008 .252 .260 .169 .177 .026 BSC .252 BSC .018 .030 L N α ccc Notes: Millimeters Notes Max. 2. "D" and "E" do not include mold flash. Mold flash or protrusions shall not exceed .006 inch (0.15mm). — 1.20 0.05 0.15 0.19 0.30 0.09 0.20 6.40 6.60 4.30 4.50 0.65 BSC 6.40 BSC 0.45 0.75 20 3. "L" is the length of terminal for soldering to a substrate. 4. Terminal numbers are shown for reference only. 5. Symbol "N" is the maximum number of terminals. 2 2 3 5 20 0° 8° 0° 8° — .004 — 0.10 1. Dimensioning and tolerancing per ANSI Y14.5M-1982. D E H C A1 A B e SEATING PLANE –C– α L LEAD COPLANARITY ccc C REV. 2.1.4 11/13/01 17 FAN5066 PRODUCT SPECIFICATION Ordering Information Product Number FAN5066M Package 20 pin SOIC FAN5066MTC 20 pin TSSOP FAN5066MTCX 20 pin TSSOP DISCLAIMER FAIRCHILD SEMICONDUCTOR RESERVES THE RIGHT TO MAKE CHANGES WITHOUT FURTHER NOTICE TO ANY PRODUCTS HEREIN TO IMPROVE RELIABILITY, FUNCTION OR DESIGN. FAIRCHILD DOES NOT ASSUME ANY LIABILITY ARISING OUT OF THE APPLICATION OR USE OF ANY PRODUCT OR CIRCUIT DESCRIBED HEREIN; NEITHER DOES IT CONVEY ANY LICENSE UNDER ITS PATENT RIGHTS, NOR THE RIGHTS OF OTHERS. LIFE SUPPORT POLICY FAIRCHILD’S PRODUCTS ARE NOT AUTHORIZED FOR USE AS CRITICAL COMPONENTS IN LIFE SUPPORT DEVICES OR SYSTEMS WITHOUT THE EXPRESS WRITTEN APPROVAL OF THE PRESIDENT OF FAIRCHILD SEMICONDUCTOR CORPORATION. As used herein: 1. Life support devices or systems are devices or systems which, (a) are intended for surgical implant into the body, or (b) support or sustain life, or (c) whose failure to perform when properly used in accordance with instructions for use provided in the labeling, can be reasonably expected to result in significant injury to the user. 2. A critical component is any component of a life support device or system whose failure to perform can be reasonably expected to cause the failure of the life support device or system, or to affect its safety or effectiveness. www.fairchildsemi.com 11/13/01 0.0m 001 Stock#DS30005066 2001 Fairchild Semiconductor Corporation