Renesas ISL6265A Multi-output controller with integrated mosfet drivers for amd svi capable mobile cpus Datasheet

DATASHEET
ISL6265A
FN6884
Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
Multi-Output Controller with Integrated MOSFET Drivers for AMD SVI Capable
Mobile CPUs
The ISL6265A is a multi-output controller with embedded
gate drivers. A single-phase controller powers the
Northbridge (VDDNB) portion of the CPU. The two
remaining controller channels can be configured for
two-phase or individual single-phase outputs. For uniplane
CPU applications, the ISL6265A is configured as a
two-phase buck converter. This allows the controller to
interleave channels to effectively double the output voltage
ripple frequency, and thereby reduce output voltage ripple
amplitude with fewer components, lower component cost,
reduced power dissipation, and smaller area. For dual-plane
processors, the ISL6265A can be configured as independent
single-phase controllers powering VDD0 and VDD1.
Features
The heart of the ISL6265A is the patented R3 Technology™,
Intersil’s Robust Ripple Regulator modulator. Compared with
the traditional buck regulator, the R3 Technology has a
faster transient response. This is due to the R3 modulator
commanding variable switching frequency during a load
transient.
• Serial VID Interface
- Two Wire Clock and Data Bus
- Supports High-Speed I2C
- 0.500V to 1.55V in 12.5mV Steps
- Supports PSI_L Power-Saving Mode
• Voltage Positioning with Adjustable Load Line and Offset
• Internal Gate Drivers with 2A Driving Capability
• Differential Remote CPU Die Voltage Sensing
• Core Differential Current Sensing: DCR or Resistor
• Northbridge Lossless rDS(ON) Current Sensing
• Core Outputs Feature Phase Shedding with PSI_L
• Adjustable Output-Voltage Offset
• Digital Soft-Start of all Outputs
• User Programmable Switching Frequency
• Static and Dynamic Current Sharing (Uniplane Core)
• Overvoltage, Undervoltage, and Overcurrent Protection
• Pb-Free (RoHS compliant)
Pinout
ISL6265AHRTZ
6265A HRTZ -10 to +100 48 Ld 6x6 TQFN L48.6x6
ISL6265AHRTZ-T* 6265A HRTZ -10 to +100 48 Ld 6x6 TQFN L48.6x6
Tape and Reel
*Please refer to TB347 for details on reel specifications.
NOTE: These Intersil Pb-free plastic packaged products employ
special Pb-free material sets, molding compounds/die attach materials,
and 100% matte tin plate plus anneal (e3 termination finish, which is
RoHS compliant and compatible with both SnPb and Pb-free soldering
operations). Intersil Pb-free products are MSL classified at Pb-free peak
reflow temperatures that meet or exceed the Pb-free requirements of
IPC/JEDEC J STD-020
UGATE_NB
PHASE_NB
LGATE_NB
PGND_NB
PKG.
DWG. #
OCSET_NB
PACKAGE
(Pb-Free)
RTN_NB
TEMP
RANGE
(°C)
FB_NB
PART
MARKING
VIN
PART NUMBER
(Note)
VCC
Ordering Information
VSEN_NB
ISL6265A
(48 LD 6X6 TQFN)
TOP VIEW
FSET_NB
A unity-gain differential amplifier is provided for remote CPU
die sensing. This allows the voltage on the CPU die to be
accurately regulated per AMD mobile CPU specifications.
Core output current sensing is realized using lossless
inductor DCR sensing. All outputs feature overcurrent,
overvoltage and undervoltage protection.
• Precision Voltage Regulators
- 0.5% System Accuracy Over-temperature
COMP_NB
The Serial VID Interface (SVI) allows dynamic adjustment of
the Core and Northbridge output voltages independently and
in combination from 0.500V to 1.55V. Core and Northbridge
output voltages achieve a 0.5% system accuracy
over-temperature.
• Core Configuration Flexibility
- Dual Plane, Single-Phase Controllers
- Uniplane, Two-Phase Controller
48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37
36 BOOT_NB
OFS/VFIXEN 1
PGOOD 2
35 BOOT0
34 UGATE0
PWROK 3
SVD 4
33 PHASE0
32 PGND0
SVC 5
31 LGATE0
49
GND
[BOTTOM]
ENABLE 6
RBIAS 7
30 PVCC
OCSET 8
29 LGATE1
VDIFF0 9
FB0 10
28 PGND1
COMP0 11
VW0 12
26 UGATE1
27 PHASE1
25 BOOT1
ISN1
ISP1
VW1
COMP1
FB1
VDIFF1
VSEN1
RTN1
RTN0
VSEN0
ISP0
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
ISN0
13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
Page 1 of 24
ISL6265A
Function Block Diagram
RTN_NB
COMP_NB
FB_NB
VSEN_NB
FSET_NB
PVCC
IFSET_NB
VNB
1
PWROK
NO DROOP
PSI_L
I_OFS
VREF_NB
VREF0
SVI
INTERFACE
AND DAC
SVD
FLT
1.5kW
1.5k
SVC
BOOT_NB
3.0k
MODULATOR
NB
E/A
VREF_NB
MOSFET
DRIVER
PHASE_NB
SHOOT-THRU
PROTECTION
LGATE_NB
DE MODE
PGND_NB
VIN
VREF1
OFS/FIXEN
UGATE_NB
PSI_L
PVCC
VCC
OCSET_NB
FLT
VNB
V0
V1
ISEN0
ISEN1
FAULT
PROTECTION
OCSET
RBIAS
RTN1
POWER-ON
RESET AND
SOFT-START
LOGIC
ENABLE
PGOOD
GND
MODE
VW0
PVCC
IVW0
VIN
COMP0
BOOT0
FB0
FLT
E/A
I_OFS
VDIFF0
VSEN0
ISP0
ISN0
VIN
V0
1

NO
DROOP
ISEN0
ISN1
VSEN1
MODULATOR
CORE
CURRENT
SENSE
CURRENT
SENSE
ISEN1
CURRENT
BALANCE
LGATE0
DE MODE
PGND0
PVCC
UGATE1
MOSFET
DRIVER
MODE

PSI_L
BOOT1
VREF1
RTN1
VDIFF1
SHOOT-THRU
PROTECTION
FLT
NO
DROOP
V1
1
PHASE0
MODE
MODE
ISP1
MOSFET
DRIVER
VREF0
RTN0
UGATE0
PHASE1
SHOOT-THRU
PROTECTION
LGATE1
DE MODE
PGND1
E/A
I_OFS
PSI_L
IVW1
FB1
COMP1
VW1
FIGURE 1. SIMPLIFIED FUNCTION BLOCK DIAGRAM OF ISL6265A
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
Page 2 of 24
ISL6265A
Simplified Application Circuit for Dual Plane and Northbridge Support
+5V
VCC PVCC
VIN
VIN
GND
+VIN
SVI DATA
SVD
SVI CLOCK
SVC
CIN
UGATE0
ENABLE
EN
PWROK
PWROK
BOOT0
VDDPWRGD
PGOOD
PHASE0
VSEN0
LGATE0
REMOTE
SENSE
REMOTE
SENSE
RTN0
LOUT
CORE
LOAD
PGND0
VSEN1
ISP0
RTN1
ISN0
VDD0
VDD_PLANE_STRAP
RBIAS
OFS/VFIXEN
OCSET
VDIFF0
+VIN
CIN
FB0
UGATE1
COMP0
ISL6265A
BOOT1
LOUT
VDD1
PHASE1
VW0
LGATE1
CORE
LOAD
PGND1
VDIFF1
ISP1
ISN1
+VIN
FB1
CIN
COMP1
UGATE_NB
BOOT_NB
VW1
LOUT
VDDNB
PHASE_NB
FSET_NB
LGATE_NB
PGND_NB
COMP_NB
NB
LOAD
OCSET_NB
VSEN_NB
FB_NB
RTN_NB
FIGURE 2. ISL6265A BASED DUAL-PLANE AND NORTHBRIDGE CONVERTERS WITH INDUCTOR DCR CURRENT SENSING
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
Page 3 of 24
ISL6265A
Simplified Application Circuit for Uniplane Core and Northbridge Support
+5V
VIN
+VIN
GND
VCC PVCC
SVI DATA
SVD
SVI CLOCK
SVC
ENABLE
EN
PWROK
PWROK
VDDPWRGD
PGOOD
CIN
UGATE0
BOOT0
PHASE0
LGATE0
CORE
LOAD
PGND0
VSEN0
REMOTE
SENSE
LOUT
ISP0
RTN0
ISN0
REMOTE
SENSE
VSEN1
VDD_PLANE_STRAP
RTN1
RBIAS
OCSET
OFS/VFIXEN
VDD0
+VIN
VDIFF0
CIN
UGATE1
FB0
BOOT1
COMP0
ISL6265A
LOUT
PHASE1
LGATE1
VW0
CORE
LOAD
PGND1
ISP1
OPEN
VDIFF1
OPEN
FB1
OPEN
COMP1
OPEN
VW1
ISN1
+VIN
CIN
UGATE_NB
BOOT_NB
LOUT
VDDNB
PHASE_NB
FSET_NB
LGATE_NB
PGND_NB
COMP_NB
NB
LOAD
OCSET_NB
VSEN_NB
RTN_NB
FB_NB
FIGURE 3. ISL6265A BASED UNIPLANE AND NORTHBRIDGE CONVERTERS WITH INDUCTOR DCR CURRENT SENSING
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
Page 4 of 24
ISL6265A
Simplified Application Circuit for Dual Layout
+5V
VIN
SVI DATA
SVD
SVI CLOCK
SVC
ENABLE
EN
PWROK
PWROK
VDDPWRGD
PGOOD
REMOTE
SENSE
VDD_PLANE_STRAP
+1.8V
REMOTE
SENSE
DNP UNIPLANE
+VIN
GND
VCC PVCC
CIN
UGATE0
BOOT0
LOUT
PHASE0
VDD0
LGATE0
CORE
LOAD
PGND0
VSEN0
ISP0
RTN0
ISN0
RTN1
VSEN1
RBIAS
UNIPLANE
VDD0
OCSET
OFS/VFIXEN
DNP
DUAL
PLANE
+VIN
VDIFF0
CIN
UGATE1
FB0
BOOT1
COMP0
ISL6265A
LOUT
PHASE1
LGATE1
VW0
VDD1
CORE
LOAD
PGND1
ISP1
POPULATION OPTIONAL IN UNIPLANE
VDIFF1
ISN1
+VIN
FB1
COMP1
CIN
UGATE_NB
BOOT_NB
VW1
FSET_NB
VDDNB
PHASE_NB
LGATE_NB
PGND_NB
COMP_NB
LOUT
NB
LOAD
OCSET_NB
VSEN_NB
RTN_NB
FB_NB
FIGURE 4. ISL6265A BASED UNIPLANE OR DUAL PLANE CORE CONVERTER WITH INDUCTOR DCR CURRENT SENSING
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
Page 5 of 24
ISL6265A
Absolute Maximum Ratings
Thermal Information
Supply Voltage, VCC, PVCC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3 - +7V
Battery Voltage, VIN. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +28V
Boot Voltage (BOOT) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3V to +33V
Boot to Phase Voltage (BOOT-PHASE). . . . . . . . -0.3V to +7V(DC)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3V to +9V (<10ns)
Phase Voltage (PHASE) . . . . . . . . . -7V (<20ns Pulse Width, 10µJ)
UGATE Voltage (UGATE) . . . . . . . . . PHASE -0.3V (DC) to BOOT
LGATE Voltage (LGATE) . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3V (DC) to VCC + 0.3V
ALL Other Pins. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3V to (VCC + 0.3V)
Open Drain Outputs, PGOOD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3 - +7V
Thermal Resistance (Typical, Notes 1, 2) JA (°C/W)
JC (°C/W)
48 Ld TQFN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
32
3.5
Maximum Junction Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +150°C
Maximum Storage Temperature Range . . . . . . . . . .-65°C to +150°C
Pb-Free Reflow Profile. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .see link below
http://www.intersil.com/pbfree/Pb-FreeReflow.asp
Recommended Operating Conditions
Supply Voltage, VCC, PVCC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .+5V ±5%
Battery Voltage, VIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +6V to 24V
Ambient Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .-10°C to +100°C
Junction Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .-10°C to +125°C
CAUTION: Do not operate at or near the maximum ratings listed for extended periods of time. Exposure to such conditions may adversely impact product reliability and
result in failures not covered by warranty.
NOTES:
1. JA is measured in free air with the component mounted on a high effective thermal conductivity test board with “direct attach” features. See Tech
Brief TB379.
2. For JC, the “case temp” location is the center of the exposed metal pad on the package underside.
Electrical Specifications
VCC = PVCC = 5V, VIN = 12V, TA = -10°C to +100°C, Unless Otherwise Specified. Parameters with MIN and/or
MAX limits are 100% tested at +25°C, unless otherwise specified. Temperature limits established by
characterization and are not production tested
PARAMETER
SYMBOL
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
EN = 3.3V
-
7.8
10
mA
EN = 0V
-
-
1
µA
VCC PORr
VCC Rising
-
4.35
4.5
V
VCC PORf
VCC Falling
3.9
4.1
-
V
-
-
1
µA
-0.5
-
0.5
%
INPUT POWER SUPPLY
+5V Supply Current
POR (Power-On Reset) Threshold
Battery Supply Current (VIN)
IVCC
IVIN
EN = 0V, VIN = 24V
SYSTEM AND REFERENCES
System Accuracy
(Vcore0, Vcore1, Vcore_NB)
%Error
(VCORE)
No load, closed loop, active mode
VID = 0.75V to 1.55V
RBIAS Voltage
RRBIAS
RRBIAS = 117k
Maximum Output Voltage
VCOREx
(max)
Minimum Output Voltage
VCOREx
(min)
VID = 0.50V to 0.7375V
-5
-
+5
mV
1.15
1.17
1.19
V
SVID = [000_0000b]
-
1.55
-
V
SVID = [101_0100b]
-
0.500
-
V
VIN = 15.5V, VDAC = 1.55V, VFB0 = 1.60V,
force Vcomp_0 = 2V, RVW = 6.81k, 2-Phase Operation
285
300
315
kHz
RFSET_NB = 22.1k, CFSET_NB = 1nF, VDAC = 0.5V,
Vsen_nb = 0.51V
285
300
315
kHz
Core Frequency Adjustment Range
200
-
500
kHz
NB Frequency Adjustment Range
200
-
500
kHz
-
90
-
dB
CHANNEL FREQUENCY
Nominal CORE Switching Frequency
Nominal NB Switching Frequency
fSW_core0
fSW_core_NB
AMPLIFIERS
Error Amp DC Gain (Note 3)
Error Amp Gain-Bandwidth Product
(Note 3)
Error Amp Slew Rate (Note 3)
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
AV0
GBW
CL = 20pF
-
18
-
MHz
SR
CL = 20pF
-
5.0
-
V/µs
Page 6 of 24
ISL6265A
Electrical Specifications
VCC = PVCC = 5V, VIN = 12V, TA = -10°C to +100°C, Unless Otherwise Specified. Parameters with MIN and/or
MAX limits are 100% tested at +25°C, unless otherwise specified. Temperature limits established by
characterization and are not production tested (Continued)
PARAMETER
SYMBOL
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
Current Imbalance Threshold
-
4
-
mV
Input Bias Current
-
20
-
nA
RTN1 Threshold
-
0.8
-
V
1.25
1.875
2.50
mV/µs
5
7.5
10
mV/µs
-
1
1.5

-
2
-
A
CORE CURRENT SENSE
SOFT START/VID-ON-THE-FLY
Soft-Start Voltage Transition
VSS
VID on the Fly Transition
GATE DRIVER DRIVING CAPABILITY [CORE AND NB]
UGATE Source Resistance (Note 4)
RSRC(UGATE) 500mA Source Current
UGATE Source Current (Note 4)
ISRC(UGATE)
UGATE Sink Resistance (Note 4)
RSNK(UGATE) 500mA Sink Current
-
1
1.5

UGATE Sink Current (Note 4)
ISNK(UGATE)
-
2
-
A
LGATE Source Resistance (Note 4)
RSRC(LGATE) 500mA Source Current
-
1
1.5

LGATE Source Current (Note 4)
ISRC(LGATE)
-
2
-
A
VUGATE_PHASE = 2.5V
VUGATE_PHASE = 2.5V
VLGATE = 2.5V
LGATE Sink Resistance (Note 4)
RSNK(LGATE) 500mA Sink Current
-
0.5
0.9

LGATE Sink Current (Note 4)
ISNK(LGATE)
-
4
-
A
UGATE to PHASE Resistance
Rp(UGATE)
-
1
-
k
VLGATE = 2.5V
GATE DRIVER SWITCHING TIMING (Refer to “ISL6265A Gate Driver Timing Diagram” on page 8)
UGATE Rise Time (Note 3)
tRU
PVCC = 5V, 3nF Load
-
8.0
-
ns
LGATE Rise Time (Note 3)
tRL
PVCC = 5V, 3nF Load
-
8.0
-
ns
UGATE Fall Time (Note 3)
tFU
PVCC = 5V, 3nF Load
-
8.0
-
ns
LGATE Fall Time (Note 3)
tFL
PVCC = 5V, 3nF Load
-
4.0
-
ns
UGATE Turn-on Propagation Delay
tPDHU
PVCC = 5V, Outputs Unloaded
-
36
-
ns
LGATE Turn-on Propagation Delay
tPDHL
PVCC = 5V, Outputs Unloaded
-
20
-
ns
0.43
0.58
0.67
V
BOOTSTRAP DIODE
Forward Voltage
VDDP = 5V, Forward Bias Current = 2mA
Leakage
VR = 16V
-
-
5
µA
POWER GOOD AND PROTECTION MONITOR
PGOOD Low Voltage
VOL
IPGOOD = 4mA
-
0.2
0.5
V
PGOOD Leakage Current
IOH
PGOOD = 5V
-1
-
1
µA
PGOOD High After Soft-Start
Enable to PGOOD High, VCOREx = 1.1V
570
700
1010
µs
PGOOD Low After Fault
Fault to PGOOD Low
160
208
250
µs
240
295
350
mV
1.770
1.795
1.820
V
5
6.0
7
mV
9.2
10
10.8
µA
Undervoltage Threshold
UVH
VCOREx falls below set-point for 208µs
Overvoltage Threshold
OVHS
VO rising above threshold > 0.5µs
OVERCURRENT PROTECTION VDD0 AND VDD1
OCSET Reference Voltage
(VISPx - VISNx )
VOCSET = 180mV; VIN = 15.5V
OVERCURRENT PROTECTION VDD_NB
OCSET_NB OCP Current
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
RBIAS pin to GND = 117k; Trips after 8 PWM cycles
Page 7 of 24
ISL6265A
Electrical Specifications
VCC = PVCC = 5V, VIN = 12V, TA = -10°C to +100°C, Unless Otherwise Specified. Parameters with MIN and/or
MAX limits are 100% tested at +25°C, unless otherwise specified. Temperature limits established by
characterization and are not production tested (Continued)
PARAMETER
SYMBOL
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
ROFS = 240k (OFS pin to GND)
1.18
1.2
1.22
V
IOFS = 10µA
9.0
9.9
10.8
µA
OFFSET FUNCTION
OFS Pin Voltage For Droop Enabling
VOFS
FB Pin Source Current
IFB
OFS Pin Voltage Threshold for VFIX
Mode and No Droop Operation
VOFS
-
1.8
-
V
OFS Pin Voltage Threshold for SVI
Mode and No Droop Operation
VOFS
-
4.0
-
V
OFS Bias
IOFS
-
4.0
-
µA
1.8V < OFS < VCC
LOGIC INPUTS
ENABLE Low Threshold
VIL(3.3V)
-
1.35
0.9
V
ENABLE High Threshold
VIH(3.3V)
2.0
1.6
-
V
Logic input is low
-1
0
-
µA
Logic input is high at 3.3V
-
0
1
µA
PWROK Input Low Threshold
-
0.65
0.8
V
PWROK Input High Threshold
-
0.9
-
V
SVC, SVD Input HIGH (VIH)
1.05
0.87
-
V
SVC, SVD Input LOW (VIL)
-
0.68
0.45
V
Schmitt Trigger Input Hysteresis
-
0.19
-
V
ENABLE Leakage Current
SVI INTERFACE
SVD Low Level Output Voltage
3mA Sink Current
-
0.1
0.285
V
SVC, SVD Leakage
EN = 0V, SVC, SVD = 0V
-
< -100
-
nA
EN = 5V, SVC, SVD = 1.8V
-
< -100
-
nA
VSEN = 0.5V to 1.55V; RTN = 0 ±0.1V
-2
-
2
mV
DIFF AMP
Accuracy
NOTES:
3. Limits should be considered typical and are not production tested.
4. Limits established by characterization and are not production tested.
ISL6265A Gate Driver Timing Diagram
PWM
tPDHU
tFU
tRU
1V
UGATE
LGATE
1V
tFL
tRL
tPDHL
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
Page 8 of 24
ISL6265A
UGATE_NB
PHASE_NB
PWROK
LGATE_NB
PGND_NB
OCSET_NB
RTN_NB
VSEN_NB
FSET_NB
COMP_NB
FB_NB
VCC
VIN
Functional Pin Description
48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 37
36 BOOT_NB
OFS/VFIXEN 1
PGOOD 2
35 BOOT0
34 UGATE0
PWROK 3
SVD 4
33 PHASE0
32 PGND0
SVC 5
31 LGATE0
49
GND
[BOTTOM]
ENABLE 6
RBIAS 7
30 PVCC
OCSET 8
29 LGATE1
VDIFF0 9
FB0 10
28 PGND1
COMP0 11
VW0 12
26 UGATE1
27 PHASE1
25 BOOT1
ISN1
ISP1
VW1
COMP1
FB1
VDIFF1
VSEN1
RTN1
RTN0
VSEN0
ISP0
ISN0
13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
VCC
System power good input. When this pin is high, the SVI
interface is active and I2C protocol is running. While this pin is
low, the SVC, SVD, and VFIXEN input states determine the
pre-PWROK metal VID or VFIX mode voltage. This pin must
be low prior to the ISL6265A PGOOD output going high per the
AMD SVI Controller Guidelines.
PGOOD
Controller power-good open-drain output. This pin is typically
pulled up externally by a 2.0k resistor to +3.3V. During normal
operation, this pin indicates whether all output voltages are
within specified overvoltage and undervoltage limits and no
overcurrent condition is present. If any output voltage exceeds
these limits or a reset event occurs, the pin is pulled low. This pin
is always low prior to the end of soft-start.
SVC
This pin is the serial VID clock input from the AMD processor.
SVD
This pin is the serial VID data bidirectional signal to and from
the master device on the AMD processor.
The bias supply for the IC’s control circuitry. Connect this pin to
a +5V supply and decouple using a quality 0.1µF ceramic
capacitor.
ENABLE
VIN
FSET_NB
Battery supply voltage. It is used for input voltage feed-forward to
improve the input line transient performance.
A resistor from this pin to GND programs the switching
frequency of the Northbridge controller (for example,
22.1k ~ 260kHz).
PVCC
Digital input enable. A high level logic signal on this pin
enables the ISL6265A.
The power supply pin for the internal MOSFET gate drivers of
the ISL6265A. Connect this pin to a +5V power supply.
Decouple this pin with a quality 1.0µF ceramic capacitor.
FB_NB
GND
COMP_NB
The bias and reference ground for the IC. The GND connection
for the ISL6265A is through the thermal pad on the bottom of
the package.
This pin is the output of the Northbridge controller error
amplifier.
RBIAS
Remote Northbridge voltage sense input and return. Connect
isolated traces from these pins to the Northbridge sense points
of the processor.
A 117k resistor from RBIAS to GND sets internal reference
currents. The addition of capacitance to this pin must be
avoided and can create instabilities in operation.
OFS/VFIXEN
A resistor from this pin to GND programs a DC current source,
which generates a positive offset voltage across the resistor
between FB and VDIFF pins. In this case, the OFS pin voltage
is +1.2V and VFIX mode is not enabled. If OFS is pulled up to
+3.3V, VFIX mode is enabled, the DAC decodes the SVC and
SVD inputs to determine the programmed voltage, and the
OFS function is disabled. If OFS is pulled up to +5V, the OFS
function and VFIX mode are disabled.
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
This pin is the output voltage feedback to the inverting input of
the Northbridge controller error amplifier.
VSEN_NB, RTN_NB
OCSET_NB
Overcurrent protection selection input for the Northbridge
controller. A resistor from this pin to PHASE_NB sets the OC
trip point.
UGATE_NB
Upper MOSFET gate signal from Northbridge controller.
LGATE_NB
Lower MOSFET gate signal from Northbridge controller.
Page 9 of 24
ISL6265A
PHASE_NB
Switch node of the Northbridge controller. This pin should
connect to the source of the Northbridge channel upper
MOSFET(s).
BOOT_NB
This pin is the upper gate drive supply voltage for the
Northbridge controller. Connect an appropriately sized ceramic
bootstrap capacitor between the BOOT_NB and PHASE_NB
pins. An internal bootstrap diode connected to the PVCC pin
provides the necessary bootstrap charge.
PGND_NB
The return path of the Northbridge controller lower gate driver.
Connect this pin to the source of the lower MOSFET(s).
OCSET
CORE_0 and CORE_1 common overcurrent protection
selection input. The voltage on this pin sets the (ISPx - ISNx)
voltage limit for OC trip.
corresponding channel’s sense capacitor. These pins can also
be used for discrete resistor sensing.
BOOT0, BOOT1
These pins provide the bias voltage for the corresponding
upper MOSFET drives. Connect these pins to appropriately
chosen external bootstrap capacitors. Internal bootstrap diodes
connected to the PVCC pin provide the necessary bootstrap
charge.
UGATE0, UGATE1
Connect these pins to the corresponding upper MOSFET
gate(s). These pins control the upper MOSFET gate(s) and are
monitored for shoot-through prevention.
LGATE0, LGATE1
Connect these pins to the corresponding lower MOSFET
gate(s).
PHASE0, PHASE1
A resistor from this pin to corresponding COMPx pin programs the
switching frequency (for example, 6.81k ~ 300kHz).
Switch node of the CORE_0 and CORE_1 controllers. Connect
these pins to the sources of the corresponding upper
MOSFET(s). These pins are the return path for the upper
MOSFET drives.
COMP0, COMP1
PGND0, PGND1
The output of the CORE_0 and CORE_1 controller error
amplifiers respectively. FBx, VDIFFx, and COMPx pins are tied
together through external R-C networks to compensate the
regulator.
The return path of the lower gate driver for CORE_0 and
CORE_1 respectively. Connect these pins to the
corresponding sources of the lower MOSFETs.
FB0, FB1
The ISL6265A is a flexible multi-output controller supporting
Northbridge and single or dual power planes required by Class
M AMD Mobile CPUs. In single plane applications, both core
voltage regulators operate single-phase. In uniplane core
applications, the core voltage regulators are configured to
operate as a two-phase regulator. All three regulator outputs
include integrated gate drivers for reduced system cost and
small board area. The regulators provide optimum steady-state
and transient performance for microprocessor applications.
System efficiency is enhanced by idling a phase in uniplane
configurations at low-current and implementing automatic
DCM-mode operation when PSI_L is asserted to logic low.
VW0, VW1
These pins are the output voltage feedback to the inverting
input of the CORE_0 and CORE_1 error amplifiers.
VDIFF0, VDIFF1
Output of the CORE_0 and CORE_1 differential amplifiers.
VSEN0, RTN0
Inputs to the CORE_0 VR controller precision differential
remote sense amplifier. Connect to the sense pins of the
VDD0_FB[H, L] portion of the processor.
VSEN1, RTN1
Inputs to the CORE_1 VR controller precision differential
remote sense amplifier. Connect to the sense pins of the
VDD1_FB[H,L] portion of the processor. The RTN1 pin is also
used for detection of the VDD_PLANE_STRAP signal prior to
enable.
ISP0, ISN0, ISP1, ISN1
These pins are used for differentially sensing the corresponding
channel output current. The sensed current is used for channel
balancing, protection, and core load line regulation.
Connect ISN0 and ISN1 to the node between the RC sense
elements surrounding the inductor of their respective channel.
Tie the ISP0 and ISP1 pins to the VCORE side of their
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
Theory of Operation
The heart of the ISL6265A is the R3 Technology™, Intersil's
Robust Ripple Regulator modulator. The R3 modulator
combines the best features of fixed frequency PWM and
hysteretic PWM while eliminating many of their shortcomings.
The ISL6265A modulator internally synthesizes an analog of
the inductor ripple current and uses hysteretic comparators on
those signals to establish PWM pulse widths. Operating on
these large-amplitude, noise-free synthesized signals allows
the ISL6265A to achieve lower output ripple and lower phase
jitter than either conventional hysteretic or fixed frequency
PWM controllers. Unlike conventional hysteretic converters,
the ISL6265A has an error amplifier that allows the controller to
maintain a 0.5% voltage regulation accuracy throughout the
Page 10 of 24
ISL6265A
VIN
PWM FREQUENCY
CONTROL
VO
+
gmVO
-
Modulator
The ISL6265A modulator features Intersil’s R3 technology, a
hybrid of fixed frequency PWM control and variable frequency
hysteretic control (see Figure 5). Intersil’s R3 technology can
simultaneously affect the PWM switching frequency and PWM
duty cycle in response to input voltage and output load
transients. The R3 modulator synthesizes an AC signal VR,
which is an analog representation of the output inductor ripple
current. The duty-cycle of VR is the result of charge and
discharge current through a ripple capacitor CR. The current
through CR is provided by a transconductance amplifier gm that
measures the VIN and VO voltages. The positive slope of VR
can be written as determined by Equation 1:
V RPOS =  g m    V IN – V OUT 
VR
+
-
+
R
PWM Q
S
VCOMP
+
CR TO
PWM
CONTROL
ISL6265A
FIGURE 5. MODULATOR CIRCUITRY
RIPPLE CAPACITOR VOLTAGE CR
WINDOW VOLTAGE VW
ERROR AMPLIFIER VOLTAGE VCOMP
(EQ. 1)
The negative slope of VR can be written as determined by
Equation 2:
V RNEG = g m  V OUT
+
VW
-
FSET
-
+
gmVIN
-
The hysteresis window voltage is relative to the error amplifier
output such that load current transients result in increased
switching frequency, which gives the R3 regulator a faster
response than conventional fixed frequency PWM controllers.
In uniplane configurations, transient load current is inherently
shared between active phases due to the use of a common
hysteretic window voltage. Individual average phase currents
are monitored and controlled to equally share current among
the active phases.
pins, the controller then checks the state of the SVC and SVD
pins to determine the soft-start target output voltage level..
-
VID range from 0.75V to 1.55V. Voltage regulation accuracy is
slightly wider, ±5mV, over the VID range from 0.7375V to 0.5V.
PWM
(EQ. 2)
Where gm is the gain of the transconductance amplifier.
A window voltage VW is referenced with respect to the error
amplifier output voltage VCOMP, creating an envelope into
which the ripple voltage VR is compared. The amplitude of VW
is set by a resistor connected across the FSET and GND pins.
The VR, VCOMP, and VW signals feed into a window comparator
in which VCOMP is the lower threshold voltage and VW is the
higher threshold voltage. Figure 6 shows PWM pulses being
generated as VR traverses the VW and VCOMP thresholds. The
PWM switching frequency is proportional to the slew rates of
the positive and negative slopes of VR; it is inversely
proportional to the voltage between VW and VCOMP.
Initialization
Once sufficient bias is applied to the VCC pin, internal logic
checks the status of critical pins to determine the controller
operation profile prior to ENABLE. These pins include RTN1
which determines single vs two-phase operation and
OFS/VFIXEN for enabling/disabling the SVI interface and core
voltage droop. Depending on the configuration set by these
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
FIGURE 6. MODULATOR WAVEFORMS DURING LOAD
TRANSIENT
Power-On Reset
The ISL6265A requires a +5V input supply tied to VCC and
PVCC to exceed a rising power-on reset (POR) threshold
before the controller has sufficient bias to guarantee proper
operation. Once this threshold is reached or exceeded, the
ISL6265A has enough bias to begin checking RTN1,
OFS/VFIXEN, ENABLE, and SVI inputs. Hysteresis between
the rising the falling thresholds assure the ISL6265A will not
inadvertently turn-off unless the bias voltage drops
substantially (see “Electrical Specifications” on page 8).
Core Configuration
The ISL6265A determines the core channel requirements of the
CPU based on the state of the RTN1 pin prior to ENABLE. If
RTN1 is low prior to ENABLE, both VDD0 and VDD1 core planes
are required. The core controllers operate as independent singlephase regulators. RTN1 is connected to the CPU Core1 negative
sense point. For single core CPU designs (uniplane), RTN1 is tied
to a +1.8V or greater supply. Prior to ENABLE, RTN1 is detected
as HIGH and the ISL6265A drives the core controllers as a twophase multi-phase regulator. Dual purpose motherboard designs
Page 11 of 24
ISL6265A
should include resistor options to open the CPU Core1 negative
sense and connect the RTN1 pin to a pull-up resistor.
Pre-PWROK Metal VID
Mode Selection
The OFS/VFIXEN pin selects between the AMD defined VFIX
and SVI modes of operation and enables droop if desired in
SVI mode only. If OFS/VFIXEN is tied to VCC, then SVI mode
with no droop on the core output(s) is selected. Connected to
+3.3V, VFIX mode is active with no droop on the core
output(s). SVI mode with droop is enabled when OFS/VFIXEN
is tied to ground through a resistor sized to set the core voltage
positive offset. Further information is provided in “Offset
Resistor Selection” on page 17.
Assuming the OFS/VFIXEN pin is not tied to +3.3V during
controller configuration, typical motherboard start-up begins
with the controller decoding the SVC and SVD inputs to
determine the pre-PWROK metal VID setting (see Table 1).
Once the enable input (EN) exceeds the rising enable
threshold, the ISL6265A decodes and locks the decoded value
in an on-board hold register.
TABLE 1. PRE-PWROK METAL VID CODES
SVC
SVD
OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
0
0
1.1
0
1
1.0
Serial VID Interface
1
0
0.9
The on-board Serial VID Interface (SVI) circuitry allows the
processor to directly control the Core and Northbridge voltage
reference levels within the ISL6265A. The SVC and SVD states
are decoded according to the PWROK and VFIXEN inputs as
described in the following sections. The ISL6265A uses a digitalto-analog converter (DAC) to generate a reference voltage
based on the decoded SVI value. See Figure 7 for a simple SVI
interface timing diagram.
1
1
0.8
1
2
3
4
5
6
The internal DAC circuitry begins to ramp Core and
Northbridge planes to the decoded pre-PWROK metal VID
output level. The digital soft-start circuitry ramps the internal
reference to the target gradually at a fixed rate of
approximately 2mV/µs. The controlled ramp of all output
7
8
9
10
11
12
VCC
SVC
SVD
ENABLE
PWROK
METAL_VID
VDD AND VDDNB
V_SVI
METAL_VID
V_SVI
VDDPWRGD
(PGOOD)
FIXEN
Interval 1 to 2: ISL6265A waits to POR.
Interval 2 to 3: SVC and SVD are externally set to pre-Metal VID code.
Interval 3 to 4: EN locks core output configuration and pre-Metal VID code. All outputs soft-start to this level.
Interval 4 to 5: PGOOD signal goes HIGH indicating proper operation.
Interval 5 to 6: CPU detects VDDPWRGD high and drives PWROK high to allow ISL6265A to prepare for SVI code.
Interval 6 to 7: SVC and SVD data lines communicate change in VID code.
Interval 7 to 8: ISL6265A responds to VID-ON-THE-FLY code change.
Interval 8 to 9: PWROK is driven low and ISL6265A returns all outputs to pre-PWROK Metal VID level.
Interval 9 to 10: PWROK driven high once again by CPU and ISL6265A prepares for SVI code.
Interval 10 to 11: SVC and SVD data lines communicate new VID code.
Interval 11 to 12: ISL6265A drives outputs to new VID code level.
Post 12 : Enable falls and all internal drivers are tri-stated and PGOOD is driven low.
FIGURE 7. SVI INTERFACE TIMING DIAGRAM: TYPICAL PRE-PWROK METAL VID STARTUP
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
Page 12 of 24
ISL6265A
voltage planes reduces in-rush current during the soft-start
interval. At the end of the soft-start interval, the PGOOD output
transitions high indicating all output planes are within
regulation limits.
If the EN input falls below the enable falling threshold, the
ISL6265A tri-states all outputs. PGOOD is pulled low with the
loss of EN. The Core and Northbridge planes will decay based
on output capacitance and load leakage resistance. If bias to
VCC falls below the POR level, the ISL6265A responds in the
same manner previously described. Once VCC and EN rise
above their respective rising thresholds, the internal DAC
circuitry re-acquires a pre-PWROK metal VID code and the
controller soft-starts.
VFIX MODE
In VFIX Mode, the SVC and SVD levels fixed external to the
controller through jumpers to either GND or VDDIO. These
inputs are not expected to change. In VFIX mode, the IC
decodes the SVC and SVD states per Table 2.
TABLE 2. VFIXEN VID CODES
SVC
SVD
OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
0
0
1.4
0
1
1.2
1
0
1.0
1
1
0.8
Once enabled, the ISL6265A begins to soft-start both Core and
Northbridge planes to the programmed VFIX level. The internal
soft-start circuitry slowly ramps the reference up to the target
value. The same fixed internal rate of approximately 2mV/µs
results in a controlled ramp of the power planes. Once soft-start
has ended and all output planes are within regulation limits, the
PGOOD pin transitions high.
In the same manner described in “Pre-PWROK Metal VID” on
page 12, the POR circuitry impacts the internal driver operation
and PGOOD status.
SVI MODE
Once the controller has successfully soft-started and PGOOD
transitions high, the processor can assert PWROK to signal
the ISL6265A to prepare for SVI commands. The controller
actively monitors the SVI interface for set VID commands to
move the plane voltages to start-up VID values. Details of the
SVI Bus protocol are provided in the AMD Design Guide for
Voltage Regulator Controllers Accepting Serial VID Codes
specification.
Once a set VID command is received, the ISL6265A decodes
the information to determine which output plane is affected and
the VID target required (see Table 3).The internal DAC circuitry
steps the required output plane voltage to the new VID level.
During this time, one or more of the planes could be targeted. In
the event either core voltage plane, VDD0 or VDD1, is
commanded to power-off by serial VID commands, the PGOOD
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
signal remains asserted. The Northbridge voltage plane must
remain active during this time.
If the PWROK input is deasserted, then the controller steps
both Core and Northbridge planes back to the stored
pre-PWROK metal VID level in the holding register from initial
soft-start. No attempt is made to read the SVC and SVD inputs
during this time. If PWROK is reasserted, then the on-board
SVI interface waits for a set VID command.
If EN goes low during normal operation, all internal drivers are
tri-stated and PGOOD is pulled low. This event clears the prePWROK metal VID code and forces the controller to check
SVC and SVD upon restart.
A POR event on VCC during normal operation will shutdown all
regulators and PGOOD is pulled low. The pre-PWROK metal
VID code is not retained.
VID-on-the-Fly Transition
Once PWROK is high, the ISL6265A detects this flag and
begins monitoring the SVC and SVD pins for SVI instructions.
The microprocessor will follow the protocol outlined in the
following sections to send instructions for VID-on-the-Fly
transitions. The ISL6265A decodes the instruction and
acknowledges the new VID code. For VID codes higher than
the current VID level, the ISL6265A begins stepping the
required regulator output(s) to the new VID target with a typical
slew rate of 7.5mV/µs, which meets the AMD requirements.
When the VID codes are lower than the current VID level, the
ISL6265A begins stepping the regulator output to the new VID
target with a typical slew rate of -7.5mV/µs. Both Core and NB
regulators are always in CCM during a down VID transition.
The AMD requirements under these conditions do not require
the regulator to meet the minimum slew rate specification of 5mV/µs. In either case, the slew rate is not allowed to exceed
10mV/µs. The ISL6265A does not change the state of PGOOD
(VDDPWRGD in AMD specifications) when a VID-on-the-fly
transition occurs.
SVI WIRE Protocol
The SVI wire protocol is based on the I2C bus concept. Two
wires (serial clock (SVC) and serial data (SVD)), carry
information between the AMD processor (master) and VR
controller (slave) on the bus. The master initiates and
terminates SVI transactions and drives the clock, SVC, during
a transaction. The AMD processor is always the master and
the voltage regulators are the slaves. The slave receives the
SVI transactions and acts accordingly. Mobile SVI wire protocol
timing is based on high-speed mode I2C. See AMD Griffin
(Family 11h) processor publications for additional details.
Page 13 of 24
ISL6265A
TABLE 3. SERIAL VID CODES
SVID[6:0]
VOLTAGE
(V)
SVID[6:0]
VOLTAGE
(V)
SVID[6:0]
VOLTAGE
(V)
SVID[6:0]
VOLTAGE
(V)
000_0000b
1.5500
010_0000b
1.1500
100_0000b
0.7500
110_0000b
0.3500*
000_0001b
1.5375
010_0001b
1.1375
100_0001b
0.7375
110_0001b
0.3375*
000_0010b
1.5250
010_0010b
1.1250
100_0010b
0.7250
110_0010b
0.3250*
000_0011b
1.5125
010_0011b
1.1125
100_0011b
0.7125
110_0011b
0.3125*
000_0100b
1.5000
010_0100b
1.1000
100_0100b
0.7000
110_0100b
0.3000*
000_0101b
1.4875
010_0101b
1.0875
100_0101b
0.6875
110_0101b
0.2875*
000_0110b
1.4750
010_0110b
1.0750
100_0110b
0.6750
110_0110b
0.2750*
000_0111b
1.4625
010_0111b
1.0625
100_0111b
0.6625
110_0111b
0.2625*
000_1000b
1.4500
010_1000b
1.0500
100_1000b
0.6500
110_1000b
0.2500*
000_1001b
1.4375
010_1001b
1.0375
100_1001b
0.6375
110_1001b
0.2375*
000_1010b
1.4250
010_1010b
1.0250
100_1010b
0.6250
110_1010b
0.2250*
000_1011b
1.4125
010_1011b
1.0125
100_1011b
0.6125
110_1011b
0.2125*
000_1100b
1.4000
010_1100b
1.0000
100_1100b
0.6000
110_1100b
0.2000*
000_1101b
1.3875
010_1101b
0.9875
100_1101b
0.5875
110_1101b
0.1875*
000_1110b
1.3750
010_1110b
0.9750
100_1110b
0.5750
110_1110b
0.1750*
000_1111b
1.3625
010_1111b
0.9625
100_1111b
0.5625
110_1111b
0.1625*
001_0000b
1.3500
011_0000b
0.9500
101_0000b
0.5500
111_0000b
0.1500*
001_0001b
1.3375
011_0001b
0.9375
101_0001b
0.5375
111_0001b
0.1375*
001_0010b
1.3250
011_0010b
0.9250
101_0010b
0.5250
111_0010b
0.1250*
001_0011b
1.3125
011_0011b
0.9125
101_0011b
0.5125
111_0011b
0.1125*
001_0100b
1.3000
011_0100b
0.9000
101_0100b
0.5000
111_0100b
0.1000*
001_0101b
1.2875
011_0101b
0.8875
101_0101b
0.4875*
111_0101b
0.0875*
001_0110b
1.2750
011_0110b
0.8750
101_0110b
0.4750*
111_0110b
0.0750*
001_0111b
1.2625
011_0111b
0.8625
101_0111b
0.4625*
111_0111b
0.0625*
001_1000b
1.2500
011_1000b
0.8500
101_1000b
0.4500*
111_1000b
0.0500*
001_1001b
1.2375
011_1001b
0.8375
101_1001b
0.4375*
111_1001b
0.0375*
001_1010b
1.2250
011_1010b
0.8250
101_1010b
0.4250*
111_1010b
0.0250*
001_1011b
1.2125
011_1011b
0.8125
101_1011b
0.4125*
111_1011b
0.0125*
001_1100b
1.2000
011_1100b
0.8000
101_1100b
0.4000*
111_1100b
OFF
001_1101b
1.1875
011_1101b
0.7875
101_1101b
0.3875*
111_1101b
OFF
001_1110b
1.1750
011_1110b
0.7750
101_1110b
0.3750*
111_1110b
OFF
001_1111b
1.1625
011_1111b
0.7625
101_1111b
0.3625*
111_1111b
OFF
NOTE:
* Indicates a VID not required for AMD Family 10h processors.
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
Page 14 of 24
PSI_L
ISL6265A
6
5
4
3
2
1
7
0
(See Table 3)
SVID
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
SVC
STOP
ACK
DATA PHASE
ACK
SLAVE ADDRESS PHASE
WRITE
START
SVD
FIGURE 8. SEND BYTE EXAMPLE
SVI Bus Protocol
The AMD processor bus protocol is compliant with SMBus send
byte protocol for VID transactions (see Figure 8). During a send
byte transaction, the processor sends the start sequence followed
by the slave address of the VR for which the VID command
applies. The address byte must be configured according to Table
4. The processor then sends the write bit. After the write bit, if the
ISL6265A receives a valid address byte, it sends the
acknowledge bit. The processor then sends the PSI-L bit and VID
bits during the data phase. The Serial VID 8-bit data field
encoding is outlined in Table 5. If ISL6265A receives a valid 8-bit
code during the data phase, it sends the acknowledge bit. Finally,
the processor sends the stop sequence. After the ISL6265A has
detected the stop, it can then proceed with the VID-on-the-fly
transition.
TABLE 4. SVI SEND BYTE ADDRESS DESCRIPTION
BITS
DESCRIPTION
6:4 Always 110b
3
Reserved by AMD for future use
2
VDD1, if set then the following data byte contains the VID for
VDD1
1
VDD0, if set then the following data byte contains the VID for
VID0
0
VDDNB, if set then the following data byte contains the VID
for VIDNB
TABLE 5. SERIAL VID 8-BIT DATA FIELD ENCODING
BITS
7
6:0
DESCRIPTION
PSI_L:
= 0 means the processor is at an optimal load for the
regulator(s) to enter power-savings mode
= 1 means the processor is not at an optimal load for the
regulator(s) to enter power-saving mode
SVID[6:0] as defined in Table 3.
Operation
After the start-up sequence, the ISL6265A begins regulating
the core and Northbridge output voltages to the pre-PWROK
metal VID programmed. The controller monitors SVI
commands to determine when to enter power-savings mode,
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
implement dynamic VID changes, and shutdown individual
outputs.
The ISL6265A controls the no-load output voltage of core and
Northbridge output to an accuracy of ±0.5% over-the-range of
0.75V to 1.5V. A fully differential amplifier implements core
voltage sensing for precise voltage control at the microprocessor
die.
Switching Frequency
The R3 modulator scheme is a variable frequency PWM
architecture. The switching frequency increases during the
application of a load to improve transient performance. It also
varies slightly due to changes in input and output voltage and
output current. This variation is normally less than 10% in
continuous conduction mode.
CORE FREQUENCY SELECTION
A resistor connected between the VW and COMP pins of the
Core segment of the ISL6265A adjusts the switching window
and therefore adjusts the switching frequency. The RFSET
resistor that sets up the switching frequency of the converter
operating in CCM can be determined using Equation 3, where
RFSET is in k and the switching period is in ms. Designs for
300kHz switching frequency would result in a RFSET value of
6.81k.
R FSET  k  =  Period  s  – 0.4   2.33
(EQ. 3)
In discontinuous conduction mode (DCM), the ISL6265A runs
in period stretching mode.
NORTHBRIDGE FREQUENCY SELECTION
The Northbridge switching frequency to programmed by a
resistor connected from the FSET_NB pin to the GND pin. The
approximate PWM switching frequency is written as shown in
Equation 4:
1
F SW = ----------------------------------K  R FSETNB
(EQ. 4)
Estimating the value of RFSET_NB is written as shown in
Equation 5:
1
R FSET = --------------------K  F SW
(EQ. 5)
Where FSW is the PWM switching frequency, RFSET_NB is the
programming resistor and K = 1.5 x 10-10.
Page 15 of 24
ISL6265A
It is recommended that whenever the control loop
compensation network is modified, the switching frequency
should be checked and adjusted by changing RFSET_NB if
necessary.
Current Sense
Core and Northbridge regulators feature two different types of
current sense circuits.
CORE CONTINUOUS CURRENT SENSE
The ISL6265A provides for load current to be measured using
either resistors in series with the individual output inductors or
using the intrinsic series resistance of the inductors as shown
in the applications circuits in Figures 2 and 3. The load current
in a particular output is sampled continuously every switching
cycle. During this time, the current-sense amplifier uses the
current sense inputs to reproduce a signal proportional to the
inductor current. This sensed current is a scaled version of the
inductor current.
IL
VIN
UGATE
L
VL(s)
+
+
INDUCTOR
VC(s)
R1
COUT
C1
R2
ISL6265A INTERNAL CIRCUIT
RNTC
ISP
CURRENT
SENSE
VOUT
-
LGATE
DCR
-
MOSFET
DRIVER
R3
OPTIONAL
NTC
NETWORK
FIGURE 9. DCR SENSING COMPONENTS
Inductor windings have a characteristic distributed resistance
or DCR (Direct Current Resistance). For simplicity, the inductor
DCR is considered as a separate lumped quantity, as shown in
Figure 9. The inductor current, IL, flowing through the inductor,
passes through the DCR. Equation 6 shows the s-domain
equivalent voltage, VL, across the inductor.
(EQ. 6)
A simple R-C network across the inductor (R1, R2 and C)
extracts the DCR voltage, as shown in Equation 7. The voltage
across the sense capacitor, VC, can be shown to be
proportional to the output current IL, shown in Equation 7.
sL
 ------------+ 1
 DCR

V C  s  = -----------------------------------------------------------  K  DCR  I L
  R1  R2 

 s  ------------------------  C 1 + 1
+
R
R


1
2
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
R2
K = --------------------R2 + R1
(EQ. 8)
Sensing the time varying inductor current accurately requires
that the parallel R-C network time constant match the inductor
L/DCR time constant. If the R-C network components are
selected, such that the R-C time constant matches the inductor
L/DCR time constant (see Equation 9), then VC is equal to the
voltage drop across the DCR multiplied by the ratio of the
resistor divider, K.
R1  R2
L
-  C1
------------- = -------------------R1 + R2
DCR
(EQ. 9)
The inductor current sense information is used for current
balance in dual plane applications, overcurrent detection in
core outputs and output voltage droop depending on controller
configuration.
CORE DCR TEMPERATURE COMPENSATION
It may also be necessary to compensate for changes in inductor
DCR due to temperature. DCR shifts due to temperature cause
time constant mismatch, skewing inductor current accuracy.
Potential problems include output voltage droop and OC trip
point, both shifting significantly from expected levels. The
addition of a negative temperature coefficient (NTC) resistor to
the R-C network compensates for the rise in DCR due to
temperature. Typical NTC values are in the 10k range. A
second resistor, R3, in series with the NTC allows for more
accurate time-constant and resistor-ratio matching as the pair of
resistors are placed in parallel with R2 (Figure 9). The NTC
resistor must be placed next to the inductor for good heat
transfer, while R1, R2, R3, and C1 are placed close to the
controller for interference immunity.
CORE DCR COMPONENT SELECTION FOR DROOP
ISN
V L  s  = I L   s  L + DCR 
Where:
(EQ. 7)
By adjusting the ratio between inductor DCR drop and the
voltage measured across the sense capacitor, the load line can
be set to any level, giving the converter the correct amount of
droop at all load currents.
Equation 10 shows the relation between droop voltage,
I MAX
V DROOP = --------------  5  V C OC
I OC
(EQ. 10)
maximum output current (IMAX), OC trip level and current
sense capacitor voltage at the OC current level, VC(OC).
AMD specifications do not require droop and provide no load
line guidelines. Tight static output voltage tolerance limits push
acceptable level of droop below a useful level for Griffin
applications. Care must be taken in applications which
implement droop to balance time constant mismatch, sense
capacitor resistor ratio, OC trip and droop equations.
Temperature shifts related to DCR must also be addressed, as
outlined in the previous section.
Page 16 of 24
ISL6265A
NORTHBRIDGE CURRENT SENSE
During the off-time following a PHASE transition low, the
Northbridge controller samples the voltage across the lower
MOSFET rDS(ON). A ground-referenced amplifier is connected
to the PHASE node through a resistor, ROCSET_NB. The
voltage across ROCSET_NB is equal to the voltage drop across
the rDS(ON) of the lower MOSFET while it is conducting. The
resulting current into the OCSET_NB pin is proportional to the
inductor current. The sensed inductor current is used for
overcurrent protection and described in the “Fault Monitoring
and Protection” on page 18. The Northbridge controller does
not support output voltage droop.
Selecting RBIAS For Core Outputs
To properly bias the ISL6265A, a reference current is established
by placing a 117k, 1% tolerance resistor from the RBIAS pin to
ground. This will provide a highly accurate, 10µA current source
from which OC reference current is derived.
Care must be taken in layout to place the resistor very close to
the RBIAS pin. A good quality signal ground should be
connected to the opposite end of the RBIAS resistor. Do not
connect any other components to this pin as this would
negatively impact performance. Capacitance on this pin could
create instabilities and is to be avoided.
A resistor divider off this pin is used to set the Core side OC
trip level. Additional direction on how to size is provided in
“Fault Monitoring and Protection” on page 18 on how to size
the resistor divider.
Offset Resistor Selection
If the OFS pin is connected to ground through a resistor, the
ISL6265A operates in SVI mode with droop active. The resistor
between the OFS pin and ground sets the positive Core
voltage offset per Equation 11.
1.2V  R FB
R OFS = ---------------------------V OFS
(EQ. 11)
Where VOFS is the user defined output voltage offset. Typically,
VOFS is determined by taking half the total output voltage droop.
The resulting value centers the overall output voltage waveform
around the programmed SVID level. For example, RFB of 1k
and a total output droop of 24mV would result in an offset
voltage of 12mV and a ROFS of 100k.
Internal Driver Operation
The ISL6265A features three internal gate-drivers to support
the Core and Northbridge regulators and to reduce solution
size. The drivers include a diode emulation mode, which helps
to improve light-load efficiency.
MOSFET Gate-Drive Outputs
The ISL6265A has internal gate-drivers for the high-side and
low-side N-Channel MOSFETs. The low-side gate-drivers are
optimized for low duty-cycle applications where the low-side
MOSFET conduction losses are dominant, requiring a low
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
r DS(ON) MOSFET. The LGATE pull-down resistance is low in
order to strongly clamp the gate of the MOSFET below the
VGS(th) at turn-off. The current transient through the gate at
turn-off can be considerable because the gate charge of a low
r DS(ON) MOSFET can be large. Adaptive shoot-through
protection prevents a gate-driver output from turning on until
the opposite gate-driver output has fallen below approximately
1V.
The high-side gate-driver output voltage is measured across
the UGATE and PHASE pins while the low-side gate-driver
output voltage is measured across the LGATE and PGND pins.
The power for the LGATE gate driver is sourced directly from
the PVCC pin. The power for the UGATE gate-driver is
sourced from a “boot” capacitor connected across the BOOT
and PHASE pins. The boot capacitor is charged from a 5V bias
supply through a “boot diode” each time the low-side MOSFET
turns on, pulling the PHASE pin low. The ISL6265A has an
integrated boot diode connected from the PVCC pin to the
BOOT pin.
Diode Emulation
The ISL6265A implements forced
continuous-conduction-mode (CCM) at heavy load and diodeemulation-mode (DE) at light load, to optimize efficiency in the
entire load range. The transition is automatically achieved by
detecting the inductor current when PSI_L is low. If PSI_L is
high, the controller disables DE and forces CCM on both Core
and NB regulators.
Positive-going inductor current flows either from the source of
the high-side MOSFET, or into the drain of the low-side
MOSFET. Negative-going inductor current flows into the drain
of the low-side MOSFET. When the low-side MOSFET
conducts positive inductor current, the phase voltage is
negative with respect to the GND and PGND pins. Conversely,
when the low-side MOSFET conducts negative inductor
current, the phase voltage is positive with respect to the GND
and PGND pins. The ISL6265A monitors the phase voltage
when the low-side MOSFET is conducting inductor current to
determine the direction of the inductor current.
When the output load current is less than half the inductor ripple
current, the inductor current goes negative. Sinking the negative
inductor through the low-side MOSFET lowers efficiency by
preventing DCM period stretching and allowing unnecessary
conduction losses. In DE, the ISL6265A Core regulators
automatically enter DCM after the PHASE pin has detected
positive voltage and LGATE was allowed to go high. The NB
regulator enters DCM after the PHASE pin has detected positive
voltage and LGATE was allowed to go high for eight consecutive
PWM switching cycles. The ISL6265A turns off the low-side
MOSFET once the phase voltage turns positive, indicating
negative inductor current. The ISL6265A returns to CCM on the
following cycle after the PHASE pin detects negative voltage,
indicating that the body diode of the low-side MOSFET is
conducting positive inductor current.
Page 17 of 24
ISL6265A
Efficiency can be further improved with a reduction of
unnecessary switching losses by reducing the PWM frequency.
It is characteristic of the R3 architecture for the PWM frequency
to decrease while in diode emulation. The extent of the
frequency reduction is proportional to the reduction of load
current. Upon entering DCM, the PWM frequency makes an
initial step-reduction because of a 33% step-increase of the
window voltage V W.
Power-Savings Mode
The ISL6265A has two operating modes to optimize efficiency
based on the state of the PSI_L input from the AMD SVI
control signal. When this input is low, the controller expects to
deliver low power and enters a power-savings mode to
improve efficiency in this low power state. The controller’s
operational modes are designed to work in conjunction with the
AMD SVI control signal to maintain the optimal system
configuration for all conditions.
Northbridge And Dual Plane Core
While PSI_L is high, the controller operates all three regulators
in forced CCM. If PSI_L is asserted low by the SVI interface, the
ISL6265A initiates DE in all three regulators. This transition
allows the controller to achieve the highest possible efficiency
over the entire load range for each output. A smooth transition is
facilitated by the R3 technology™, which correctly maintains the
internally synthesized ripple current throughout mode transitions
of each regulator.
Uniplane Core
In uniplane mode, the ISL6265A Core regulator is in 2-phase
multiphase mode. The controller operates with both phases fully
active, responding rapidly to transients and delivering the
maximum power to the load. When the processor asserts PSI_L
low under reduced load levels, the ISL6265A sheds one phase to
eliminate switching losses associated with the idle channel. Even
with the regulator operating in single-phase mode, transient
response capability is maintained.
While operating in single-phase DE with PSI_L low, the lower
MOSFET driver switches the lower MOSFET off at the point of
zero inductor current to prevent discharge current from flowing
from the output capacitor bank through the inductor. In DCM,
switching frequency is proportionately reduced, thus greatly
reducing both conduction and switching loss. In DCM, the
switching frequency is defined by Equation 12.
2
2  L  IO
F CCM
F DCM = -------------------  ------------------------------------2
VO 

1.33
V O   1 – ---------
V IN

monitors trigger protective measures to prevent damage to the
processor. One common power good indicator is provided for
linking to external system monitors.
Power-Good Signal
The power-good pin (PGOOD) is an open-drain logic output
that signals if the ISL6265A is not regulating Core and
Northbridge output voltages within the proper levels or output
current in one or more outputs has exceeded the maximum
current setpoint.
This pin must be tied to a +3.3V or +5V source through a resistor.
During shutdown and soft-start, PGOOD is pulled low and is
released high only after a successful soft-start has raised Core
and Northbridge output voltages within operating limits. PGOOD
is pulled low when an overvoltage, undervoltage, or overcurrent
(OC) condition is detected on any output or when the controller is
disabled by a POR or forcing enable (EN) low. Once a fault
condition is triggered, the controller acts to protect the processor.
The controller latches off and PGOOD is pulled low. Toggling EN
or VCC initiates a soft-start of all outputs. In the event of an OV,
the controller will not initiate a soft-start by toggling EN, but
requires VCC be lowered below the falling POR threshold to
reset.
Overcurrent Protection
Core and Northbridge outputs feature two different methods of
current sensing. Core output current sensing is achieved via
inductor DCR or discrete resistor sensing. The Northbridge
controller uses lower MOSFET rDS(ON) sensing to detect
output current.
CORE OC DETECTION
Core outputs feature an OC monitor which compares a voltage
set at the OCSET pin to the voltage measured across the
current sense capacitor, VC. When the voltage across the
current sense capacitor exceeds the programmed trip level,
the comparator signals an OC fault. Figure 10 shows the basic
OC functions within the IC.
CURRENT
SENSE
ISP
5x
5 x VC(OC) @
OC TRIP CURRENT
Fault Monitoring and Protection
OC
+
Vc
_
ISN
BIAS
CKT
(EQ. 12)
Where FCCM is equivalent to the Core frequency set by
Equation 3.
SEE FIGURE 9 FOR
ADDITIONAL DETAIL
1.17V
RBIAS
10µA
+
VOCSET
6
6
RBIAS
OCSET
VOCSET
ROCSET
ISL6265A
FIGURE 10. OC TRIP CIRCUITRY
The ISL6265A actively monitors Core and Northbridge output
voltages and currents to detect fault conditions. These fault
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
Page 18 of 24
ISL6265A
The sense capacitor voltage, VC, will increase as inductor
current rises per Equation 7. When the inductor current rises to
the OC trip level, the voltage across the sense capacitor will
reach a maximum based on the resistor ratio K. This maximum
value, VC(OC), is gained up by a factor of 5 and compared to
the static OC trip level set by the OCSET pin.
The recommended voltage range for VC,OC is 6mV to 25mV,
which sets the resistor divider ratio K, where IOC is the
user-defined OC trip level (see Equation 13). Typical inductor
DCR values are on the order of 1m which result in more than
enough voltage drop to support this VC,OC range.
V C  OC 
K = ---------------------------I OC  DCR
(EQ. 13)
The resistor divider components also impact time-constant
matching, these components need to meet the parallel
combination requirements of Equation 9.
Based on the selected VC(OC) level, the required OC monitor
trip level is set. The recommended VC(OC) level range will
result in an OC monitor trip level range of 30mV to 125mV
based on the internal gain of 5.
This OC monitor trip level sets the voltage level required at the
OCSET pin to create an OC fault at the user-defined OC trip
level. A resistor divider from the RBIAS pin to ground with the
mid-point connected to OCSET sets the voltage at the pin (see
Figure 10). This voltage is internally divided by 6 and
compared with VC(OC). Working backwards, the voltage
required at the OCSET pin to achieve this OC trip level ranges
from 180mV to 0.750mV as defined in Equation 14.
V OCSET = V C  OC   30
(EQ. 14)
The resistor divider ratio used to determine the RBIAS and
ROCSET values is shown in Equation 15.
V OCSET
R OCSET
----------------------------------------------- = ----------------------R OCSET + R BIAS
1.17V
(EQ. 15)
The resistor values must also meet the RBIAS requirement that
the total series resistance to ground equal 117k. An OC
condition must be sustained for 100µs before action is taken by
the controller in response to the OC fault.
A short-circuit OC loop is also active based on the same sense
elements outlined above with a threshold set to 2.25 times the
OCSET threshold set. The controller takes immediate action
when this fast OC fault is detected.
NORTHBRIDGE OC DETECTION
Northbridge OC sensing is achieved via rDS(ON) sensing
across the lower MOSFET. An internal 10µA current source
develops a voltage across ROCSET_NB, which is compared with
the voltage developed across the low-side MOSFET as
measured at the PHASE pin. When the voltage drop across
the MOSFET exceeds the voltage drop across the resistor, an
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
OC event occurs. The OCSET_NB resistor is selected based
on the relationship in Equation 16.
I OC  r DS  ON 
R OCSETNB = ------------------------------------10A
(EQ. 16)
Where IOC is the OC trip level selected for the Northbridge
application and rDS(ON) is the drain-source ON-resistance of
the lower MOSFET.
OC FAULT RESPONSE
When an OC fault occurs on any combination of outputs, both
Core and Northbridge regulators shutdown and the driver
outputs are tri-stated. The PGOOD signal transitions low
indicating a fault condition. The controller will not attempt to
restart the regulators and the user must toggle either EN or
VCC to clear the fault condition.
Overvoltage Protection
The ISL6265A monitors the individual Core and Northbridge
output voltages using differential remote sense amplifiers. The
ISL6265A features a severe overvoltage (OV) threshold of
1.8V. If any of the outputs exceed this voltage, an OV fault is
immediately triggered. PGOOD is latched low and the low-side
MOSFETs of the offending output(s) are turned on. The lowside MOSFETs will remain on until the output voltage is pulled
below 0.85V at which time all MOSFETs are turned off. If the
output again rises above 1.8V, the protection process repeats.
This offers protection against a shorted high-side MOSFET
while preventing output voltage from ringing below ground. The
OV is reset by toggling EN low. OV detection is active at all
times that the controller is enabled including after one of the
other faults occurs so that the processor is protected against
high-side MOSFET leakage while the MOSFETs are
commanded off.
Undervoltage Protection
Undervoltage protection is independent of the OC limit. A fault
latches if any of the sensed output voltages are less than the
VID set value by a nominal 295mV for 205µs. The PWM
outputs turn off both Core and Northbridge internal drivers and
PGOOD goes low.
General Application Design Guide
This design guide is intended to provide a high-level explanation
of the steps necessary to design a single-phase power
converter. It is assumed that the reader is familiar with many of
the basic skills and techniques referenced in the following
section. In addition to this guide, Intersil provides complete
reference designs that include schematics, bills of materials, and
example board layouts.
Selecting the LC Output Filter
The output inductor and output capacitor bank form a low-pass
filter responsible for smoothing the pulsating voltage at the
phase node. The output filter also must support the transient
energy required by the load until the controller can respond.
Because it has a low bandwidth compared to the switching
Page 19 of 24
ISL6265A
The duty cycle of an ideal buck converter is a function of the
input and the output voltage. This relationship is written as
Equation 17:
VO
D = --------V IN
(EQ. 17)
The output inductor peak-to-peak ripple current is written as
Equation 18:
VO   1 – D 
I P-P = -----------------------------f SW  L
(EQ. 18)
For this type of application, a typical step-down DC/DC
converter has an IP-P of 20% to 40% of the maximum DC output
load current. The value of IP-P is selected based upon several
criteria such as MOSFET switching loss, inductor core loss, and
the resistive loss of the inductor winding. The DC copper loss of
the inductor can be estimated by Equation 19:
P COPPER = I LOAD
2

DCR
(EQ. 19)
Where ILOAD is the converter output DC current.
The copper loss can be significant so attention must be given to
the DCR selection. Another factor to consider when choosing the
inductor is its saturation characteristics at elevated temperature. A
saturated inductor could cause destruction of circuit components
as well as nuisance OCP faults.
A DC/DC buck regulator must have output capacitance CO into
which ripple current IP-P can flow. Current IP-P develops a
corresponding ripple voltage VP-P across CO, which is the sum
of the voltage drop across the capacitor ESR and of the
voltage change stemming from charge moved in and out of the
capacitor. These two voltages are written as shown in
Equation 20:
V ESR = I PP  E SR
(EQ. 20)
(EQ. 21)
SW
If the output of the converter has to support a load with high
pulsating current, several capacitors will need to be paralleled to
reduce the total ESR until the required VP-P is achieved. The
inductance of the capacitor can cause a brief voltage dip if the
load transient has an extremely high slew rate. Capacitor ESL
can significantly impact output voltage ripple. Low inductance
capacitors should be considered. A capacitor dissipates heat as
a function of RMS current and frequency. Be sure that IP-P is
shared by a sufficient quantity of paralleled capacitors so that
they operate below the maximum rated RMS current at FSW.
Take into account that the rated value of a capacitor can
degrade as much as 50% as the DC voltage across it increases.
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
The input capacitors are responsible for sourcing the AC
component of the input current flowing into the upper
MOSFETs. Their RMS current capability must be sufficient to
handle the AC component of the current drawn by the upper
MOSFETs, which is related to duty cycle and the number of
active phases.
The important parameters for the bulk input capacitance are
the voltage rating and the RMS current rating. For reliable
operation, select bulk capacitors with voltage and current
ratings above the maximum input voltage and capable of
supplying the RMS current required by the switching circuit.
Their voltage rating should be at least 1.25x greater than the
maximum input voltage, while a voltage rating of 1.5x is a
preferred rating. Figure 11 is a graph of the input RMS ripple
current, normalized relative to output load current, as a function
of duty cycle for a single-phase regulator that is adjusted for
converter efficiency.
0.60
0.55
IP-P,N = 0.50
IP-P,N = 1
IP-P,N = 0.75
0.50
0.45
0.40
IP-P,N = 0
0.35
0.30
IP-P,N = 0.25
0.25
0.20
0.15
0.10
0.05
0
0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.9
1.0
DUTY CYCLE (VIN/VO)
FIGURE 11. NORMALIZED RMS INPUT CURRENT FOR
SINGLE PHASE CONVERTER
The normalized RMS current calculation is written as
Equation 22:
I IN_RMS N =
and Equation 21:
I PP
V C = ----------------------------8  CO  f
Selection of the Input Capacitor
NORMALIZED INPUT RMS
RIPPLE CURRENT (IRMS/IO)
frequency, the output filter limits the system transient response.
The output capacitors must supply or sink load current while
the current in the output inductors increases or decreases to
meet the demand.
2
D
D   1 – D  +  ------  I PP ,N
 12
(EQ. 22)
Where:
-
IMAX is the maximum continuous ILOAD of the converter
IPP,N is the ratio of inductor peak-to-peak ripple current to
IMAX
- D is the duty cycle that is adjusted to take into account the
efficiency of the converter which is written as:
VO
D = -----------------V IN  
(EQ. 23)
- where  is converter efficiency
Figure 12 provides the same input RMS current information for
two-phase designs.
In addition to the bulk capacitance, some low ESL ceramic
capacitance is recommended to decouple between the drain of
the high-side MOSFET and the source of the low-side
MOSFET.
Page 20 of 24
NORMALIZED INPUT RMS
RIPPLE CURRENT (IRMS/IO)
ISL6265A
0.3
Selecting The Bootstrap Capacitor
0.2
All three integrated drivers feature an internal bootstrap
schottky diode. Simply adding an external capacitor across the
BOOT and PHASE pins completes the bootstrap circuit. The
bootstrap function is also designed to prevent the bootstrap
capacitor from overcharging due to the large negative swing at
the PHASE node. This reduces voltage stress on the BOOT
and PHASE pins.
IP-P,N = 0.5
IP-P,N = 0.75
0.1
The bootstrap capacitor must have a maximum voltage rating
above PVCC + 4V and its capacitance value is selected per
Equation 27:
IP-P,N = 0
0
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
DUTY CYCLE (VIN/VO)
MOSFET Selection and Considerations
The choice of MOSFETs depends on the current each
MOSFET will be required to conduct, the switching frequency,
the capability of the MOSFETs to dissipate heat, and the
availability and nature of heat sinking and air flow.
Typically, a MOSFET cannot tolerate even brief excursions
beyond their maximum drain to source voltage rating. The
MOSFETs used in the power stage of the converter should
have a maximum VDS rating that exceeds the sum of the upper
voltage tolerance of the input power source and the voltage
spike that occurs when the MOSFETs switch.
There are several power MOSFETs readily available that are
optimized for DC/DC converter applications. The preferred highside MOSFET emphasizes low gate charge so that the device
spends the least amount of time dissipating power in the linear
region. The preferred low-side MOSFET emphasizes low r DS(ON)
when fully saturated to minimize conduction loss.
For the low-side (LS) MOSFET, the power loss can be assumed
to be conductive only and is written as Equation 24:
2
(EQ. 24)
For the high-side (HS) MOSFET, the its conduction loss is
written as Equation 25:
P CON_HS = I LOAD
2

r DS  ON _HS  D
(EQ. 25)
For the high-side MOSFET, the switching loss is written as
Equation 26:
V IN  I PEAK  t OFF  f
V IN  I VALLEY  t ON  f
SW
SW
P SW_HS = ----------------------------------------------------------------- + ------------------------------------------------------------2
2
(EQ. 26)
Where:
- IVALLEY is the difference of the DC component of the
inductor current minus 1/2 of the inductor ripple current
- IPEAK is the sum of the DC component of the inductor
current plus 1/2 of the inductor ripple current
- tON is the time required to drive the device into saturation
- tOFF is the time required to drive the device into cut-off
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
(EQ. 27)
Where:
FIGURE 12. NORMALIZED RMS INPUT CURRENT FOR
2-PHASE CONVERTER
P CON_LS  I LOAD  r DS  ON _LS   1 – D 
Qg
C BOOT  -----------------------V BOOT
- Qg is the total gate charge required to turn on the
high-side MOSFET
- VBOOT, is the maximum allowed voltage decay across
the boot capacitor each time the high-side MOSFET is
switched on
As an example, suppose the high-side MOSFET has a total
gate charge Qg, of 25nC at VGS = 5V, and a VBOOT of 200mV.
The calculated bootstrap capacitance is 0.125µF; for a
comfortable margin, select a capacitor that is double the
calculated capacitance. In this example, 0.22µF will suffice.
Use a low temperature-coefficient ceramic capacitor.
PCB Layout Considerations
Power and Signal Layers Placement on the PCB
As a general rule, power layers should be close together, either
on the top or bottom of the board, with the weak analog or logic
signal layers on the opposite side of the board. The groundplane layer should be adjacent to the signal layer to provide
shielding. The ground plane layer should have an island located
under the IC, the compensation components, and the FSET
components. The island should be connected to the rest of the
ground plane layer at one point.
Component Placement
There are two sets of critical components in a DC/DC
converter; the power components and the small signal
components. The power components are the most critical
because they switch large amount of energy. The small signal
components connect to sensitive nodes or supply critical
bypassing current and signal coupling.
The power components should be placed first and these
include MOSFETs, input and output capacitors, and the
inductor. It is important to have a symmetrical layout for each
power train, preferably with the controller located equidistant
from each power train. Symmetrical layout allows heat to be
dissipated equally across all power trains. Keeping the
distance between the power train and the control IC short
helps keep the gate drive traces short. These drive signals
include the LGATE, UGATE, PGND, PHASE and BOOT.
Page 21 of 24
ISL6265A
VIAS TO
GROUND
PLANE
VOUT
INDUCTOR
VCC PIN
GND
OUTPUT
CAPACITORS
SCHOTTKY
DIODE
PHASE
NODE
HIGH-SIDE
MOSFETS
VIN
LOW-SIDE
MOSFETS
INPUT
CAPACITORS
FIGURE 13. TYPICAL POWER COMPONENT PLACEMENT
When placing MOSFETs, try to keep the source of the upper
MOSFETs and the drain of the lower MOSFETs as close as
thermally possible (see Figure 13). Input high-frequency
capacitors should be placed close to the drain of the upper
MOSFETs and the source of the lower MOSFETs. Place the
output inductor and output capacitors between the MOSFETs
and the load. High-frequency output decoupling capacitors
(ceramic) should be placed as close as possible to the
decoupling target (microprocessor), making use of the shortest
connection paths to any internal planes. Place the components
in such a way that the area under the IC has less noise traces
with high dV/dt and di/dt, such as gate signals and phase node
signals.
Signal Ground and Power Ground
The bottom of the ISL6265A QFN package is the signal ground
(GND) terminal for analog and logic signals of the IC. Connect
the GND pad of the ISL6265A to the island of ground plane
under the top layer using several vias, for a robust thermal and
electrical conduction path. Connect the input capacitors, the
output capacitors, and the source of the lower MOSFETs to the
power ground plane.
For best performance, place the decoupling capacitor very
close to the VCC and GND pins.
PVCC PIN
For best performance, place the decoupling capacitor very
close to the PVCC and respective PGND pins, preferably on
the same side of the PCB as the ISL6265A IC.
ENABLE AND PGOOD PINS
These are logic signals that are referenced to the GND pin.
Treat as a typical logic signal.
FB PINS
The input impedance of the FB pin is high, so place the voltage
programming and loop compensation components close to the
COMP, FB, and GND pins keeping the high impedance trace
short.
FSET_NB PIN
This pin requires a quiet environment. The resistor RFSET
should be placed directly adjacent to this pin. Keep fast moving
nodes away from this pin.
LGATE ROUTING
The LGATE trace has a signal going through it that is both high
dV/dt and di/dt, with high peak charging and discharging
current. Route this trace in parallel with the trace from the
PGND pin. These two traces should be short, wide, and away
from other traces. There should be no other weak signal traces
in proximity with these traces on any layer.
BOOT AND PHASE ROUTING
Specific pins (and the trace routing from them), require extra
attention during the layout process. The following sub-sections
outline concerns by pin name.
The signals going through these traces are both high dv/dt and
high di/dt, with high peak charging and discharging current.
Route the UGATE and PHASE pins in parallel with short and
wide traces. There should be no other weak signal traces in
proximity with these traces on any layer.
PGND PINS
Copper Size for the Phase Node
This is the return path for the pull-down of the LGATE low-side
MOSFET gate driver. Ideally, PGND should be connected to
the source of the low-side MOSFET with a low-resistance, lowinductance path.
The parasitic capacitance and parasitic inductance of the
phase node should be kept very low to minimize ringing. It is
best to limit the size of the PHASE node copper in strict
accordance with the current and thermal management of the
application. An MLCC should be connected directly across the
drain of the upper MOSFET and the source of the lower
MOSFET to suppress the turn-off voltage.
Routing and Connection Details
VIN PIN
The VIN pin should be connected close to the drain of the highside MOSFET, using a low- resistance and low-inductance
path.
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
Page 22 of 24
ISL6265A
Package Outline Drawing
L48.6x6
48 LEAD THIN QUAD FLAT NO-LEAD PLASTIC PACKAGE
Rev 1, 4/07
4X 4.4
6.00
44X 0.40
A
B
6
PIN 1
INDEX AREA
6
PIN #1 INDEX AREA
48
37
1
6.00
36
4 .40 ± 0.15
25
12
0.15
(4X)
13
24
0.10 M C A B
0.05 M C
TOP VIEW
48X 0.45 ± 0.10
4 48X 0.20
BOTTOM VIEW
SEE DETAIL "X"
0.10 C
BASE PLANE
MAX 0.80
(
SEATING PLANE
0.08 C
( 44 X 0 . 40 )
( 5. 75 TYP )
C
SIDE VIEW
4. 40 )
C
0 . 2 REF
5
( 48X 0 . 20 )
( 48X 0 . 65 )
0 . 00 MIN.
0 . 05 MAX.
DETAIL "X"
TYPICAL RECOMMENDED LAND PATTERN
NOTES:
1. Dimensions are in millimeters.
Dimensions in ( ) for Reference Only.
2. Dimensioning and tolerancing conform to AMSE Y14.5m-1994.
3. Unless otherwise specified, tolerance : Decimal ± 0.05
4. Dimension b applies to the metallized terminal and is measured
between 0.15mm and 0.30mm from the terminal tip.
5. Tiebar shown (if present) is a non-functional feature.
6. The configuration of the pin #1 identifier is optional, but must be
located within the zone indicated. The pin #1 indentifier may be
either a mold or mark feature.
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
Page 23 of 24
ISL6265A
© Copyright Intersil Americas LLC 2009. All Rights Reserved.
All trademarks and registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
For additional products, see www.intersil.com/en/products.html
Intersil products are manufactured, assembled and tested utilizing ISO9001 quality systems as noted
in the quality certifications found at www.intersil.com/en/support/qualandreliability.html
Intersil products are sold by description only. Intersil may modify the circuit design and/or specifications of products at any time without notice, provided that such
modification does not, in Intersil's sole judgment, affect the form, fit or function of the product. Accordingly, the reader is cautioned to verify that datasheets are
current before placing orders. Information furnished by Intersil is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by Intersil or its
subsidiaries for its use; nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties which may result from its use. No license is granted by implication or
otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Intersil or its subsidiaries.
For information regarding Intersil Corporation and its products, see www.intersil.com
FN6884 Rev 0.00
May 11, 2009
Page 24 of 24
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