MIC2297 40V PWM Boost Regulator White LED Driver General Description Features • • • • • • • • • • • • • • The MIC2297 is a 600KHz PWM boost-switching regulator that is optimized for driving 6-10 series white LEDs. With its internal 40V switch and a guaranteed switch current of 1.2A, the MIC2297 easily drives a string of 10 white LEDs in series at 20mA, ensuring a high level of brightness and eliminating several ballast resistors. The MIC2297 implements constant frequency 600KHz PWM control. The high frequency PWM operation saves board space by reducing external component sizes. The added benefit of the constant frequency PWM operation is much lower noise and input ripple injected back to the battery source than with variable frequency topologies. To optimize efficiency, the feedback voltage is set to 200mV. This reduced voltage reduces the power dissipation in the current set resistor, and allows the lowest total output voltage, hence minimal current draw from the battery. The MIC2297 is available with output over-voltage protection that protects the IC and external components in case of open LED conditions. 2.5V to 10V input voltage range Output voltage up to 40V 1.2A switch current 600KHz PWM operation Trimmed 200mV feedback voltage Output over voltage protection (fixed or adjustable) PWM Brightness Control DAC Brightness Control <1% line regulation 1µA shutdown current Over temperature protection UVLO 2.5mm x 2.5mm MLF™-10L package –40oC to +125oC junction temperature range Applications The MIC2297 is available in low profile small size 2.5mm x 2.5mm MLF™-10L package. The MIC2297 has a junction temperature range of –40°C to +125°C. • • • • • • • PDAs GPS systems Smart phones Mini PCs Digital cameras IP phones LED flashlights ___________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Typical Applications 6.8µH-22µH VIN 1-Cell Li I on 3V to 4.2V 1µF 6.8µH-22µH SW EN 0.47µF /50V 1-Ce ll Li I on 3V to 4.2V OVP MIC2297 BRT -42BM L REF 1µF VIN 1µF PWM REF 0.1µF 10 10 Series LED Driver with Output OVP 0.47µF /50V OVP MIC2297 BRT -42BM L FB AGND PGND COMP SW EN 1µF FB AGND PGND COMP 0.1µF 10 10 Series LED Driver with PWM Brightness Control MLF and MicroLeadFrame is a trademark of Amkor Technology Micrel Inc. • 2180 Fortune Drive • San Jose, CA 95131 • USA • tel +1 (408) 944-0800 • fax + 1 (408) 474-1000 • http://www.micrel.com May 2005 M9999-050305 (408) 955-1690 Micrel, Inc. MIC2297 Ordering Information Part Number Lead Finish Output Over Voltage Protection Junction Temperature Range Package MIC2297-15YML Pb-Free 15V -40°C to 125°C 2.5mm x2.5mm MLF™-10L MIC2297-42YML Pb-Free 42V -40°C to 125°C 2.5mm x2.5mm MLF™-10L Pin Configuration PGND 1 10 SW OVP 2 9 FB VIN 3 8 REF EN 4 7 BRT COMP 5 6 AGND Pin Description Pin Number 1 PGND Pin Function Ground (Return). 2 OVP Over Voltage Protection (Input): Connect to the output to clamp the maximum output voltage. A resistor divider from this pin to ground could be used to raise the OVP level of the 15V OVP option. 3 VIN Supply (Input): Input voltage. 4 EN Enable (Input): Logic high enables regulator. Logic low shuts down regulator. 5 COMP Compensation Pin. 6 AGND Analog Ground. BRT Brightness Control (Input): Either an analog (DAC) or filtered PWM signal can be used. The gain equation is: VFB = VBRT / 5. This pin should be left open if the brightness function is not used. In that case, the FB will be set to its default value of 200mV. 8 REF Reference Voltage (Output): This node is equal to the voltage on the FB pin. A capacitor from REF to ground should be used to filter the BRT voltage if PWM dimming is implemented. A capacitor from REF to ground can also be used to implement a soft-start function. This pin can be left open if not used. 9 FB Feedback (Input): Output voltage sense node. Default value is 200mV. Connect the cathode of the LED chain to this pin. Connect current set resistor from this pin to ground. 10 SW Switch Node (Output): Internal power BIPOLAR collector. EPad GND Ground (Return): Backside pad. 7 May 2005 Pin Name 2 M9999-050305 (408) 955-1690 Micrel, Inc. MIC2297 Absolute Maximum Rating (1) Operating Range (2) Supply voltage (VIN)........................................................12V Switch voltage (VSW) ........................................ -0.3V to 50V Enable pin voltage (VEN)....................................... -0.3 to VIN FB Voltage (VFB)...............................................................6V VBRT ..................................................................................6V Switch Current (ISW) .........................................................3A Ambient Storage Temperature (TS)............-65°C to +150°C ESD Rating (3) ................................................................ 2KV Supply Voltage (VIN).......................................... 2.5V to 10V Maximum Output Voltage (VOUT)....................................40V Junction Temperature Range (TJ)..............-40°C to +125°C Package Thermal Impedance θJA 2.5mm x2.5mm MLF™-10L lead .................65°C/W Electrical Characteristics TA=25oC, VIN =VEN = 3.6V, VOUT = 30V, IOUT = 20mA, unless otherwise noted. Bold values indicate -40°C ≤ TJ ≤ 125°C. Symbol Parameter Condition Min VIN Supply Voltage Range 2.5 VUVLO Under-Voltage Lockout 1.8 Typ Max Units 10 V 2.1 2.4 V IVIN Quiescent Current VFB = 200mV (not switching) ISD Shutdown Current VEN = 0V(4) VFB Feedback Voltage IFB Feedback Input Current VFB = 200mV -450 Line Regulation 2.5V ≤ VIN ≤ 4.5V 0.5 Load Regulation 5mA ≤ IOUT ≤ 20mA 0.5 DMAX Maximum Duty Cycle ISW Switch Current Limit (+/-5%) 190 (+/±6.5%) (Over Temp) 187 4 7 mA 0.1 1 µA 200 200 213 1.2 1.7 Switch Saturation Voltage VIN = 2.5V, ISW = 0.5A 220 ISW Switch Leakage Current VEN = 0V, VIN = 10V 0.01 VEN Enable Threshold IEN Enable Pin Current TURN ON TURN OFF fSW Oscillator Frequency VOVP Over Voltage protection TJ Over-Temperature Threshold Shutdown May 2005 2.5 20 A mV 1 0.4 VEN = 10V % % 1.5 VBRT = 0V Brightness Control Accuracy 1 % VSW VREF nA 93 VIN 2.5V mV 40 µA V µA 0.015 VBRT = 1V 0.185 0.2 0.215 VBRT = 5V 0.95 1.0 1.05 VBRT = OPEN 0.19 0.2 0.21 525 600 675 MIC2297-42BML (nominal voltage) 42 46 50 MIC2297-15BML (nominal voltage) 15 16 18 Hysteresis 3 V KHz V 150 °C 10 °C M9999-050305 (408) 955-1690 Micrel, Inc. Notes: 1. 2. 3. 4. MIC2297 Absolute maximum ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to the component may occur. Electrical specifications do not apply when operating the device outside of its operating ratings. The maximum allowable power dissipation is a function of the maximum junction temperature, TJ(Max), the junction-to-ambient thermal resistance, θJA, and the ambient temperature, TA. The maximum allowable power dissipation will result in excessive die temperature, and the regulator will go into thermal shutdown. This device is not guaranteed to operate beyond its specified operating rating. IC devices are inherently ESD sensitive. Handling precautions required. Human body model. ISD = IVIN. May 2005 4 M9999-050305 (408) 955-1690 Micrel MIC2297 Typical Characteristics Supply Current vs. Input Voltage 6 Max Duty Cycle vs. Input Voltage 100 5.5 99 5 700 98 600 4.5 97 4 3.5 3 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 10 Switch Current vs. Switch Voltage 95 2 215 800 210 600 205 400 200 200 195 VIN = 3.6V 500 1000 1500 SWITCH CURRENT (mA) BRT Voltage vs. Input Voltage 1.5 190 2 280 1.3 1.2 260 240 1.1 220 1 200 0.9 180 0.8 0.7 160 140 0.6 120 300 4 5 6 7 8 9 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 10 FB Voltage vs. BRT Voltage 100 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 10 Switch Voltage vs. Input Voltage 10 LED Current vs. Input Voltage 14 12 IFSWITCH = 0.5A 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 10 FB Voltage vs. Input Voltage 10 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 10 LED Current vs. BRT Voltage 30 25 20 15 10 5 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 10 Efficiency for 10 LEDs @ 20mA vs. Input Voltage 80 RSENSE 10001200 BRT VOLTAGE (mV) 0 80 Efficiency for 10 LEDs vs. LED Current VIN = 4.2V 70 VIN = 3.6V VIN = 3.2V 65 76 60 150 74 100 55 50 72 50 45 L = 6.8µH May 2005 4 5 6 7 8 9 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 16 78 200 3 20 75 250 0 400 2 18 300 1.4 3 3 220 1000 0 0 500 96 Not Switching VFB = 1V 1200 0.5 2 Frequency vs. Input Voltage 800 10001200 BRT VOLTAGE (mV) 70 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 5 10 40 0 L = 6.8µH 5 10 15 20 25 30 LED CURRENT (mA) 35 M9999-050305 (408) 955-1690 Micrel MIC2297 Typical Characteristics (continued) 85 Efficiency for 10 LEDs vs. LED Current 80 VIN = 4.2V 80 75 75 VIN = 3.2V VIN = 3.6V 70 65 60 55 50 45 40 35 0 70 VIN = 3.2V 60 60 55 55 50 50 45 3V VIN 20 EN 2V peak PWM 15 REF C3 0.22µF, 10V 10 VIN = 3.6V L = 15µH 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 LED CURRENT (mA) PWM C2 0.47µF, 50V SW MIC2297BML OVP COMP BRT AGND 5 May 2005 35 0 35 C1 1µF, 16V 2V 25 0 0 40 L = 6.8µH 10 15 20 25 30 LED CURRENT (mA) VIN = 3.2V L1 = Murata LQH32CN100K11 L1 4V 5V VIN = 3.6V 65 5 VIN = 4.2V 75 70 65 40 0 Efficiency for 9 LEDs vs. LED Current 80 LED Current vs. Duty Cycle 35 30 40 85 VIN = 4.2V 45 L = 15µH 10 20 30 LED CURRENT (mA) Efficiency for 9 LEDs vs. LED Current PGND C4 0.1µF, 10V FB PWM = 20kHz RSENSE 20 40 60 80 DUTY CYCLE (%) 100 6 M9999-050305 (408) 955-1690 Micrel MIC2297 Functional Characteristics Waveform 1 VIN = 3.6V 10 LEDs @ 5mA L = 15µH Inductor Current (100mA/div) Input Current (100mA/div) SW Voltage (20V/div) Output Voltage Enable Voltage (10V/div) (2V/div) Output Voltage (100mV/div) Enable Characteristics VIN = 3.6V 10 LEDs @ 20mA L = 15µH COUT = 0.47µV TIME (2ms/div) 0A TIME (1µs/div) Inductor Current (200mA/div) SW Voltage (20V/div) Output Voltage (100mV/div) Waveform 2 VIN = 3.6V 10 LEDs @ 20mA L = 15µH 0A TIME (1µs/div) May 2005 7 M9999-050305 (408) 955-1690 Micrel MIC2297 Block Diagram FB BRT COMP OVP EN SW 1.245V 1.245V PWM Generator REF + + 600kHz Oscillator Ramp Generator GND MIC2297 Block Diagram May 2005 8 M9999-050305 (408) 955-1690 Micrel MIC2297 6.8µH-22µH Functional Description The MIC2297 is a constant frequency, PWM current mode boost regulator. The MIC2297 uses peak current mode control. The block diagram is shown above. The MIC2297 is composed of an oscillator, slope compensation ramp generator, current amplifier, gm error amplifier, PWM generator, and a 1.2A bipolar output transistor. The oscillator generates a 600kHz clock. The clock’s two functions are to trigger the PWM generator that turns on the output transistor and to reset the slope compensation ramp generator. The current amplifier is used to measure the switch current by amplifying the voltage signal from the internal sense resistor. The output of the current amplifier is summed with the output of the slope compensation ramp generator. This summed current-loop signal is fed to one of the inputs of the PWM generator. The gm error amplifier measures the LED current through the external sense resistor and amplifies the error between the detected signal and the 200mV reference voltage. The output of the gm error amplifier provides the voltage-loop signal that is fed to the other input of the PWM generator. When the current-loop signal exceeds the voltage-loop signal, the PWM generator turns off the bipolar output transistor. The next clock period initiates the next switching cycle, maintaining the constant frequency current-mode PWM control. The LED current is set by the feedback resistor: I LED = 200mV RFB May 2005 1µF EN 0.47µF /50V OVP MIC2297 BRT -42BM L FB REF 1µF AGND PGND COMP 10 0.1µF Figure 2. Typical Application Circuit Duty Cycle Considerations Duty cycle refers to the switch on-to-off time ratio and can be calculated as follows for a boost regulator: D = 1− Vin Vout However, at light loads the inductor will completely discharge before the end of a switching cycle. The current in the inductor reaches 0A before the end of the switching cycle. This is known as discontinuous conduction mode (DCM). DCM occurs when: I out < Vin I peak ⋅ Vout 2 Where I peak = The Enable pin shuts down the output switching and disables control circuitry to reduce input current-to-leakage levels. Enable pin input current is zero at zero volts. DC-to-DC PWM Boost Conversion The MIC2297 is a constant-frequency boost converter. It operates by taking a DC input voltage and regulating a higher DC output voltage. Figure 2 shows a typical circuit. Boost regulation is achieved by turning on an internal switch, which draws current through the inductor (L1). When the switch turns off, the inductor’s magnetic field collapses. This causes the current to be discharged into the output capacitor through an external Schottky diode (D1). Waveforms 1 and 2 show Output Voltage ripple, SW Voltage, and Indicator Current for 5mA and 20mA LED current respectively. Voltage regulation is achieved by modulating the pulse width or pulse-width modulation (PWM). SW VIN 1-Cell Li I on 3V to 4.2V (Vout − Vin ) ⋅ ⎛⎜ Vin L⋅ f ⎞ ⎜ V ⎟⎟ ⎝ out ⎠ In DCM, the duty cycle is smaller than in continuous conduction mode. In DCM the duty cycle is given by: D= f ⋅ 2 ⋅ L ⋅ I out ⋅ (Vout − Vin ) Vin The duty cycle required for voltage conversion should be less than the maximum duty cycle of 95%. Also, in light load conditions where the input voltage is close to the output voltage, the minimum duty cycle can cause pulse skipping. This is due to the energy stored in the inductor causing the output to overshoot slightly over the regulated output voltage. During the next cycle, the error amplifier detects the output as being high and skips the following pulse. This effect can be reduced by increasing the minimum load or by increasing the inductor value. Increasing the inductor value reduces peak current. 9 M9999-050305 (408) 955-1690 Micrel MIC2297 Over-voltage Protection The MIC2297 has an over-voltage protection function. If an LED is disconnected from the circuit or the feedback pin is shorted to ground, the feedback pin will fall to ground potential. This will cause the MIC2297 to switch at full duty cycle in an attempt to maintain the feedback voltage. As a result, the output voltage will climb out of control. This may cause the switch node voltage to exceed its maximum voltage rating, possibly damaging the IC and the external components. To ensure the highest level of protection, the MIC2297 OVP pin will shut the switch off when an overvoltage condition is detected, saving itself and the output capacitor. Brightness Control In the MIC2297, the reference to the voltage error amplifier is pinned out. The BRT pin and REF pin form a voltage divider off the internal 1.245V reference. The voltage is such that with nothing connected to the BRT pin, the REF voltage is 0.2V and the BRT voltage is 1V. The REF voltage is 1/5 the BRT voltage. The minimum REF voltage with BRT pulled to ground is typically 10mV. With a 10Ω sense resistor, the LED current is typically 1mA with the BRT pin pulled to ground. An analog DC voltage can be connected to the BRT pin. The MIC2297 will create an LED current proportional to the BRT voltage according to the following equation: I LED = BRT 5 • Rsense Where BRT is the voltage applied to the BRT pin, and Rsense is the sense resistor used in the LED string. It’s important to use a 1uF ceramic capacitor on the REF pin to filter any noise. An external PWM signal can be applied to the BRT for dimming. The 1uF REF capacitor and internal BRT 124kΩ resistor form an RC that filters the voltage to the REF pin. The LED current is proportional the PWM duty cycle according to the following equation: I LED = V peak • D Component Selection Inductor Inductor selection is a balance between efficiency, stability, cost, size, and rated current. For most applications a 22µH is the recommended inductor value. It is usually a good balance between these considerations. Larger inductance values reduce the peak-to-peak ripple current, affecting efficiency. This has the effect of reducing both the DC losses and the transition losses. There is also a secondary effect of an inductor’s DC resistance (DCR). The DCR of an inductor will be higher for more inductance in the same package size. This is due to the longer windings required for an increase in inductance. Since the majority of input current (minus the MIC2297 operating current) is passed through the inductor, higher DCR inductors will reduce efficiency. To maintain stability, increasing inductor size will have to be met with an increase in output capacitance. This is due to the unavoidable “right half plane zero” effect for the continuous current boost converter topology. The frequency at which the right half plane zero occurs can be calculated as follows: f rhpz = The right half plane zero has the undesirable effect of increasing gain, while decreasing phase. This requires that the loop gain is rolled off before this has significant effect on the total loop response. This can be accomplished by either reducing inductance (increasing RHPZ frequency) or increasing the output capacitor value (decreasing loop gain). Output Capacitor Output capacitor selection is also a trade-off between performance, size, and cost. Increasing output capacitance will lead to an improved transient response, but also an increase in size and cost. X5R or X7R dielectric ceramic capacitors are recommended for designs with the MIC2297. The output capacitor sets the frequency of the pole and zero in the power stage. The zero is given by: 5 • Rsense Where Vpeak is the peak PWM voltage and D is the duty cycle of the PWM signal. Vin2 Vout ⋅ L ⋅ I out ⋅ 2π fz = 1 C ⋅ Resr ⋅ 2π For ceramic capacitors, the ESR is very small. This puts the zero at a very high frequency where it can be ignored. The frequency of the pole caused by the output capacitor is given by. May 2005 10 M9999-050305 (408) 955-1690 Micrel MIC2297 fp = I out C ⋅ Vout ⋅ π Reference Capacitor A 1uF ceramic should be used on the reference pin to prevent noise from getting into this node. A 1uF ceramic is needed when a PWM signal is connected to the BRT pin. Diode Selection The MIC2297 requires an external diode for operation. A Schottky diode is recommended for most applications due to their lower forward voltage drop and reverse recovery time. Ensure the diode selected can deliver the peak inductor current and the maximum reverse voltage is rated greater than the output voltage. Input capacitor A minimum 1µF ceramic capacitor with an X5R or X7R dielectric is recommended for designing with the MIC2297. Increasing input capacitance will improve performance and greater noise immunity on the source. The input capacitor should be as close as possible to the inductor and the MIC2297, with short traces for good noise performance. The MIC2297 utilizes a feedback pin to compare the LED current to an internal reference. The LED current is adjusted by selecting the appropriate feedback resistor value. The desired output current can be calculated as follows: I LED = May 2005 Compensation The comp pin is connected to the output of the voltage error amplifier. The voltage error amplifier is a transconductance amplifier. Adding a series RC to ground adds a zero at: f zero = 1 2πR1C1 The resistor typically ranges from 10kOhm to 50kOhm. The capacitor typically ranges from 1nF to 100nF. Adding a capacitor from comp to ground adds a pole at f pole = 1 2πR1C 2 This capacitor typically ranges from 100pF to 10nF. Generally an RC to ground is all that is needed. The RC should be placed as close as possible to the comp pin. The capacitor should be a ceramic with a X5R, X7R, or COG dielectric. Grounding Both the AGND and PGND must be connected to the exposed backside pad. The exposed backside pad also improves thermal performance. A large ground plane decreases thermal resistance to ambient air. 0.2V R 11 M9999-050305 (408) 955-1690 Micrel MIC2297 Package Information 10-Pin Package MLF (ML) MICREL, INC. 2180 FORTUNE DRIVE SAN JOSE, CA 95131 USA TEL +1 (408) 944-0800 FAX +1 (408) 474-1000 WEB http:/www.micrel.com The information furnished by Micrel in this data sheet is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by Micrel for its use. Micrel reserves the right to change circuitry and specifications at any time without notification to the customer. Micrel Products are not designed or authorized for use as components in life support appliances, devices or systems where malfunction of a product can reasonably be expected to result in personal injury. Life support devices or systems are devices or systems that (a) are intended for surgical implant into the body or (b) support or sustain life, and whose failure to perform can be reasonably expected to result in a significant injury to the user. A Purchaser’s use or sale of Micrel Products for use in life support appliances, devices or systems is a Purchaser’s own risk and Purchaser agrees to fully indemnify Micrel for any damages resulting from such use or sale. © 2005 Micrel, Incorporated. May 2005 12 M9999-050305 (408) 955-1690