UCD7242 www.ti.com SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 Digital Dual Synchronous-Buck Power Driver Check for Samples: UCD7242 FEATURES APPLICATIONS • • 1 • • • • • • • • • • • • Fully Integrated Power Switches With Drivers for Dual Synchronous Buck Converters Full Compatibility With TI Fusion Digital Power Supply Controllers, Such as the UCD92xx Family Wide Input Voltage Range: 4.75 V to 18 V Operational Down to 2.2 V Input With an External Bias Supply Up to 10A Output Current per Channel Operational to 2 MHz Switching Frequency High Side Current Limit With Current Limit Flag Onboard Regulated 6 V Driver Supply From VIN Thermal Protection Temperature Sense Output – Voltage Proportional to Chip Temperature UVLO and OVLO Circuits Ensure Proper Drive Voltage Rated From –40°C to 125°C Junction Temperature RoHS Compliant Accurate On-Die Current Sensing (±5%) • Digitally-Controlled Synchronous-Buck Power Stages High Current Dual-Phase VRM/EVRD Regulators for Desktop, Server, Telecom and Notebook Processors TMON VIN PWM-B SRE-B FLT-B VGGDIS PWM-A SRE-A FLT-A IMON-B IMON-A BST-B BST-A BSW-B BSW-A SW-B SW-A PGND PGND GND BP3 VGG DESCRIPTION The UCD7242 is a complete power system ready to drive two independent buck power supplies (see Figure 1). High side MOSFETs, low side MOSFETs, drivers, current sensing circuitry and necessary protection functions are all integrated into one monolithic solution to facilitate minimum size and maximum efficiency. Driver circuits provide high charge and discharge current for the high-side NMOS switch and the low-side NMOS synchronous rectifier in a synchronous buck circuit. The MOSFET gates are driven to +6.25 V by an internally regulated VGG supply. The internal VGG regulator can be disabled to permit the user to supply an independent gate drive voltage. This flexibility allows a wide power conversion input voltage range of 2.2V to 18V. Internal under voltage lockout (UVLO) logic ensures VGG is good before allowing chip operation. The synchronous rectifier enable (SRE) pin controls whether or not the low-side MOSFET is turned on when the PWM signal is low. When SRE is high the part operates in continuous conduction mode for all loads. In this mode the drive logic block uses the PWM signal to control both the high-side and low-side gate drive signals. Dead time is also optimized to prevent cross conduction. When SRE is low, the part operates in discontinuous conduction mode at light loads. In this mode the low-side MOSFET is always held off. 1 Please be aware that an important notice concerning availability, standard warranty, and use in critical applications of Texas Instruments semiconductor products and disclaimers thereto appears at the end of this data sheet. PRODUCTION DATA information is current as of publication date. Products conform to specifications per the terms of the Texas Instruments standard warranty. Production processing does not necessarily include testing of all parameters. Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated UCD7242 SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 www.ti.com This integrated circuit can be damaged by ESD. Texas Instruments recommends that all integrated circuits be handled with appropriate precautions. Failure to observe proper handling and installation procedures can cause damage. ESD damage can range from subtle performance degradation to complete device failure. Precision integrated circuits may be more susceptible to damage because very small parametric changes could cause the device not to meet its published specifications. DESCRIPTION (CONTINUED) On-board comparators monitor the current through the high side switch to safeguard the power stage from sudden high current loads. Blanking delay is set for the high side comparator to avoid false reports coincident with switching edge noise. In the event of an over-current fault, the high-side FET is turned off and the Fault Flag (FLT) is asserted to alert the controller. MOSFET current is measured and monitored by a precision integrated current sense element. This method provides an accuracy of ±5% over most of the load range. The amplified signal is available for use by the controller on the IMON pin. An on-chip temperature sense converts the die temperature to a voltage at the TMON pin for the controller’s use. If the die temperature exceeds 170°C, the temperature sensor initiates a thermal shutdown that halts output switching and sets the FLT flag. Normal operation resumes when the die temperature falls below the thermal hysteresis band. VIN VIN VIN TMON 30 31 32 27 19 28 29 VIN UCD7242 PWM-B PWM-A 1 SRE-B Drive Logic 2 FLT-B 26 Thermal Sense SRE-A Drive Logic 25 FLT-A 9 18 VIN IMON-B VGG Generator Current Sense Processor 7 BST-B Current Sense Processor 3 IMON-A 20 BST-A 24 VIN VIN BSW-A BSW-B 4 VOUT-B Driver 23 Driver SW-A SW-B 13 14 PGND VOUT-A PGND 10 Driver VDD LDO 11 15 Driver 16 12 17 8 Testmode 21 GND 6 22 VGG DIS BP3 5 VGG Short Figure 1. Typical Application Circuit and Block Diagram 2 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 UCD7242 www.ti.com SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 ORDERING INFORMATION OPERATING TEMPERATURE RANGE, TA PIN COUNT –40°C to 125°C 32-pin ORDERABLE PART NUMBER SUPPLY UCD7242RSJR Reel of 2500 UCD7242RSJT Reel of 250 PACKAGE TOP SIDE MARKING QFN UCD7242 ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS (1) over operating free-air temperature range (unless otherwise noted) PARAMETER VIN Supply voltage DC RATING VALUE –0.3 to 20 V –0.3 to SW + 7 V 34 V BST Boot voltage VGG, VGG_DIS Gate supply voltage 7 V BP3 Logic supply voltage 4 V –2 to VIN + 1 V 34 V AC (2) DC SW, BSW Switch voltage TMON, IMON, Testmode Analog outputs –0.3 to 3.6 V PWM-A, PWM-B, SRE-A, SRE-B, FLT-A, FLT-B Digital I/O’s –0.3 to 5.5 V TJ Junction temperature –55 to 150 °C Tstg Storage temperature –55 to 150 °C ESD rating HBM: Human Body model 2000 V CDM: Charged device model 500 V (1) AC (2) Stresses beyond those listed under absolute maximum ratings may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only and functional operation of the device at these or any other condition beyond those indicated is not implied. Exposure to absolute-maximum-rated conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. All voltages are with respect to GND. Currents are positive into, negative out of the specified terminal. Consult company packaging information for thermal limitations and considerations of packages. AC levels are limited to within 5 ns. (2) DISSIPATION RATINGS (TYPICAL) PACKAGE AIRFLOW (LFM) RqJA TI EVM BOARD (1) POWER RATING TA = 25°C POWER RATING TA = 85°C 0 (natural convection) 19.1°C/W 5.2 W 2.1 W 200 15.1°C/W 6.6 W 2.6 W 400 13.4°C/W 7.5 W 3.0 W RSJ (1) Data taken using TI EVM. RECOMMENDED OPERATING CONDITIONS over operating free-air temperature range (unless otherwise noted) MIN TYP MAX 4.75 12 18 V 2.2 12 18 V 4.75 6.2 125 °C 2000 kHz VIN Power input voltage (internally generated VGG) VIN Power input voltage (externally generated VGG) VGG Externally supplied gate drive voltage TJ Operating junction temperature range –40 fs Switching frequency 300 750 V Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 UNIT 3 UCD7242 SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 www.ti.com ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS VIN = 12V; 1mF from BP3 to GND, 0.22mF from BST to BSW, 4.7mF from VGG to PGND, TA = TJ = –40°C to 125°C (unless otherwise noted) PARAMETER TEST CONDITION MIN TYP MAX UNIT SUPPLY SECTION Supply current Outputs not switching, VIN = 2.2 V, PWM(INH) = LOW, SRE(INL) = HIGH, VGG_DIS = HIGH, VGG = 5V 6 mA Outputs not switching, VIN = 18 V, PWM(INH) = LOW, SRE(INL) = HIGH, VGG_DIS = LOW 6 mA GATE DRIVE UNDER VOLTAGE LOCKOUT VGG UVLO ON BP3 Rising 4.0 UVLO OFF BP3 Falling 3.8 V 200 mV UVLO hysteresis V VGG SUPPLY GENERATOR VGG VIN = 7 to 18 V VGG drop out 5.2 6.25 6.8 V 600 mV 3.3 3.45 V 2.1 2.3 V VIN = 4.75 to 7 V, IVGG < 50 mA BP3 SUPPLY VOLTAGE BP3 IDD = 0 to 10 mA 3.15 INPUT SIGNAL (PWM, SRE) VIH Positive-going input threshold voltage VIL Negative-going input threshold voltage 1 3-state Condition tHLD_R 3-state hold-off time IPWM Input current 275 VPWM = 5.0 V 133 VPWM = 3.3 V Input current V 1.9 VPWM = 1.65 V V ns 66 VPWM = 0 V ISRE 1.2 1.4 mA –66 VSRE = 5.0 V 1 VSRE = 3.3 V 1 VSRE = 0 V 1 mA VGG DISABLE (VGG_DIS) Input resistance to AGND VGG_DIS 50 Threshold 100 1.35 Hysteresis 150 1.6 550 kΩ V mV FAULT FLAG (FLT) FLT Output High Level IOH = 2 mA FLT Output Low Level IOL = –2 mA 2.7 V 0.6 V CURRENT LIMIT Over current threshold 14.5 15 Tfault_HS delay until HS FET off (1) Tfault_FF delay until FLT asserted (1) Propagation delay from PWM to reset FLT High side blanking time (1) (1) st 1 falling edge of PWM without a fault event Over currents during this period will not be detected 15.5 A 80 ns 100 ns 100 ns 60 ns 21 mA/A CURRENT SENSE AMPLIFIER Gain IMON/ IOUT, (see Figure 14 ) Bandwidth (1) (1) 4 19 5 20 kHz As designed and characterized. Not 100% tested in production. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 UCD7242 www.ti.com SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) VIN = 12V; 1mF from BP3 to GND, 0.22mF from BST to BSW, 4.7mF from VGG to PGND, TA = TJ = –40°C to 125°C (unless otherwise noted) PARAMETER TEST CONDITION MIN TYP MAX UNIT THERMAL SENSE Thermal shutdown (2) 170 Thermal shutdown hysteresis (2) °C 20 °C 10 mV/°C 470 mV 32 ns High side MOSFET RDS(ON) 15.5 mΩ Low side MOSFET RDS(ON) 6.5 Temperature Sense T (2) Gain, TJ = –20°C to 125°C Temperature Sense T Offset (2) TJ = 0°C, –100 mA ≤ ITMON ≤ 100 mA POWER MOSFETS Propagation delay from PWM to switch node going high 5 10 ns (2) 6 11 ns Low side MOSFET turn on – Dead Time (2) mΩ High side MOSFET turn on – Dead Time (2) As designed and characterized. Not 100% tested in production. DEVICE INFORMATION PINOUT 32 31 VIN 30 29 VIN NC PINOUT (BOTTOM VIEW) VIN SWA SWB VIN NC VIN PINOUT (TOP VIEW) 27 28 28 27 29 30 31 32 VIN PWM_B 1 26 PWM_A 26 1 SRE_B 2 25 SRE_A 25 2 24 BST_A 24 3 23 BSW_A 23 4 22 BP3 22 5 21 6 BST_B 3 BSW_B 4 VGG 5 VGG_DIS 6 IMON_B testmode 7 20 AGND IMON_A 21 20 7 8 19 TMON 19 8 FLT_B 9 18 FLT_A 18 9 Special 6mm x 6mm QFN Pkg Code: RSJ PGND 12 13 14 15 16 17 PGND SWB SWA PGND NC PGND NC 10 11 PGND PGND 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 5 UCD7242 SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 www.ti.com PIN FUNCTIONS UCD7242 –BUCK POWER STAGE 6 QFN PIN NAME I/O FUNCTION 1 PWM-B I High impedance digital input capable of accepting 3.3V or 5 V logic level signals up to 2 MHz. A Schmitt trigger input comparator desensitizes this pin from external noise. This pin controls the state of the high side MOSFET and the low side MOSFET when SRE-B is high. PWM = high PWM = low PWM = 1.65 V SRE = high HS = on, LS = off HS = off, LS = on HS = off, LS = off SRE = low HS = on, LS = off HS = off, LS = off HS = off, LS = off 2 SRE-B I Synchronous Rectifier Enable input for the B-channel. High impedance digital input capable of accepting 3.3V or 5V logic level signals used to control the synchronous rectifier switch. An appropriate anti-cross-conduction delay is used during synchronous mode. 3 BST_B I Connection for the B-channel charge pump capacitor that provides a floating supply for the high side driver. Connect a 0.22mF ceramic capacitor from this pin to BSW-B (pin 4). 4 BSW-B I Connection for B-channel charge pump capacitor. Internally connected to SW-B. 5 VGG I/O Gate drive voltage for the power MOSFETs. For VIN ± 4.75V, the internal VGG generator can be used. For VIN > 4.75 V, this pin should be driven from an external bias supply. When externally driven, VGG_DIS must be tied to VGG. In all cases, bypass this pin with a 4.7mF (min), 10V (min) ceramic capacitor to PGND. 6 VGG_DIS I When tied to VGG, disables the on-chip VGG generator to allow gate drive voltage to be supplied from an external source. This is required when VIN is < 4.75V. To use the internal VGG generator, tie to GND. 7 IMON-B O MOSFET current sense monitor output. Provides a current source output that is proportional to the current flowing in the power MOSFETs. The gain on this pin is equal to 20mA/A. The IMON pin should be connected to a resistor to GND to produce a voltage proportional to the power-stage load current. 8 testmode I Test mode only. Tie to GND. 9 FLT-B O Fault flag for the B-channel. This signal is a 3.3V digital output which is latched high when the current in the B-channel high-side FET exceeds the current limit trip point. When tripped, high-side FET drive pulses are truncated to limit output current. FLT is cleared after one complete switching cycle without a fault. Additionally, if the die temperature exceeds 170°C, the temperature sensor will initiate a thermal shutdown that halts output switching and sets the FLT flag. Normal operation resumes when the die temperature falls below the thermal hysteresis band. 10, 12, 15, 17 PGND – Shared power ground return for the buck power stage 11, 16 NC – No internal connection. It is recommended that these pins be tied to PGND. 13 SW-B – Switching node of the B-channel buck power stage and square wave input to the buck inductor. Electrically this is the connection of the high side MOSFET source to the low side MOSFET drain. 14 SW-A – Switching node of the A-channel buck power stage and square wave input to the buck inductor. Electrically this is the connection of the high side MOSFET source to the low side MOSFET drain. 18 FLT-A O Fault flag for the A-channel. This signal is a 3.3V digital output which is latched high when the current in the A-channel high-side FET exceeds the current limit trip point. When tripped, high-side FET drive pulses are truncated to limit output current. FLT is cleared after one complete switching cycle without a fault. Additionally, if the die temperature exceeds 170°C, the temperature sensor initiates a thermal shutdown that halts output switching and sets the FLT flag. Normal operation resumes when the die temperature falls below the thermal hysteresis band. 19 TMON O Temperature sense pin. The voltage on this pin is proportional to the die temperature. The gain is 10mV/°C. At TJ = 0°C, the output voltage has an offset of 0.47V. When the die temperature reaches the thermal shutdown threshold, this pin is pulled to BP3 and the power FETs are switched off. When the die temperature falls below the thermal hysteresis band, the FLT flag clears and normal operation resumes. 20 IMON -A O MOSFET current sense monitor output. Provides a current source output that is proportional to the current flowing in the power MOSFETs. The gain on this pin is equal to 20mA/A. The IMON pin should be connected to a resistor to GND to produce a voltage proportional to the power-stage load current. 21 GND – Analog ground return. 22 BP3 O Output of internal 3.3V LDO regulator for powering internal logic circuits. Bypass this pin with 1mF (min) to GND. This LDO is supplied by the VGG pin. 23 BSW-A – Connection for A-channel charge pump capacitor. Internally connected to SW-A. 24 BST-A – Connection for the A-channel charge pump capacitor that provides a floating supply for the high side driver. Connect a 0.22mF ceramic cap from this pin to BSW-A (pin 23). Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 UCD7242 www.ti.com SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 PIN FUNCTIONS (continued) UCD7242 –BUCK POWER STAGE QFN PIN NAME I/O FUNCTION 25 SRE-A I Synchronous Rectifier Enable input for the A-channel. High impedance digital input capable of accepting 3.3V or 5V logic level signals used to control the synchronous rectifier switch. An appropriate anti-cross-conduction delay is used during synchronous mode. 26 PWM -A I High impedance digital input capable of accepting 3.3V or 5 V logic level signals up to 2 MHz. A Schmitt trigger input comparator desensitizes this pin from external noise. This pin controls the state of the high side MOSFET and the low side MOSFET when SRE-A is high. PWM = high PWM = low PWM = 1.65 V SRE = high HS = on, LS = off HS = off, LS = on HS = off, LS = off SRE = low HS = on, LS = off HS = off, LS = off HS = off, LS = off 27, 29, 30, 32 VIN – Input Voltage to the buck power stage and driver circuit 28, 31 NC – No internal connection. It is recommended that these pins be tied to VIN. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 7 UCD7242 SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 www.ti.com TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS Inductor used in the following plots is a 0.47mH BI Technologies inductor (HM72A). All data taken at room ambient. UCD7242 Efficiency - % 90 85 VO = 3.3 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 8 V VO = 3.3 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 8 V VO = 3.3 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 8 V VO = 2 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 8 V 80 VO = 2 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 8 V VO = 2 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 8 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 8 V 75 VO = 1.2 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 8 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 8 V 0 2 4 6 8 10 Load - A Figure 2. UCD7242 3 VO = 3.3 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 8 V VO = 3.3 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 8 V VO = 3.3 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 8 V VO = 2 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 8 V 2.5 Power Loss - W VO = 2 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 8 V VO = 2 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 8 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 8 V 2 VO = 1.2 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 8 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 8 V 1.5 1 0.5 0 0 2 4 Load - A 6 8 10 Figure 3. 8 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 UCD7242 www.ti.com SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) Inductor used in the following plots is a 0.47mH BI Technologies inductor (HM72A). All data taken at room ambient. UCD7242 Efficiency - % 90 85 VO = 3.3 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 10 V VO = 3.3 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 10 V VO = 3.3 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 10 V VO = 2 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 10 V 80 VO = 2 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 10 V 75 VO = 2 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 10 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 10 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 10 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 10 V 70 0 2 4 6 8 10 6 8 10 Load - A Figure 4. UCD7242 3 2.5 VO = 3.3 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 10 V VO = 3.3 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 10 V VO = 3.3 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 10 V VO = 2 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 10 V Power Loss - W VO = 2 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 10 V 2 VO = 2 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 10 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 10 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 10 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 10 V 1.5 1 0.5 0 0 2 4 Load - A Figure 5. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 9 UCD7242 SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 www.ti.com TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) Inductor used in the following plots is a 0.47mH BI Technologies inductor (HM72A). All data taken at room ambient. UCD7242 90 Efficiency - % 85 80 VO = 3.3 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 12 V VO = 3.3 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 12 V VO = 3.3 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 12 V VO = 2 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 12 V 75 VO = 2 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 12 V 70 VO = 2 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 12 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 12 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 12 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 12 V 65 0 2 4 6 8 10 6 8 10 Load - A Figure 6. UCD7242 2.5 VO = 3.3 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 12 V VO = 3.3 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 12 V VO = 3.3 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 12 V VO = 2 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 12 V 2 VO = 2 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 12 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 12 V Power Loss - W 3 VO = 2 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 12 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 12 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 12 V 1.5 1 0.5 0 0 2 4 Load - A Figure 7. 10 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 UCD7242 www.ti.com SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) Inductor used in the following plots is a 0.47mH BI Technologies inductor (HM72A). All data taken at room ambient. UCD7242 90 Efficiency - % 85 80 75 VO = 3.3 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 14 V VO = 3.3 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 14 V VO = 3.3 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 14 V VO = 2 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 14 V 70 VO = 2 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 14 V VO = 2 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 14 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 14 V 65 VO = 1.2 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 14 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 14 V 60 0 2 4 6 8 10 6 8 10 Load - A Figure 8. UCD7242 3 Power Loss - W 2.5 VO = 3.3 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 14 V VO = 3.3 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 14 V VO = 3.3 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 14 V VO = 2 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 14 V VO = 2 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 14 V VO = 2 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 14 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 500 kHz, VI = 14 V 2 VO = 1.2 V, fs = 750 kHz, VI = 14 V VO = 1.2 V, fs = 1 MHz, VI = 14 V 1.5 1 0.5 0 0 2 4 Load - A Figure 9. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 11 UCD7242 SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 www.ti.com TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) Inductor used in the following plots is a 0.47mH BI Technologies inductor (HM72A). All data taken at room ambient. UCD7242 1 Rail Operating 50 IGG - mA fs = 2000 kHz 40 fs = 1500 kHz 30 fs = 1000 kHz 20 fs = 500 kHz 10 fs = 0 kHz 0 4 4.5 5 5.5 6 6.5 VGG - V Figure 10. VGG Supply Current with 1 Rail Operating and 1 Rail Off UCD7242 2 Rail Operating fs = 2000 kHz 80 IGG - mA fs = 1500 kHz 60 fs = 1000 kHz 40 fs = 500 kHz 20 fs = 0 kHz 0 4 4.5 5 5.5 6 6.5 VGG - V Figure 11. VGG Supply Current with 2 Rails Operating 12 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 UCD7242 www.ti.com SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) Inductor used in the following plots is a 0.47mH BI Technologies inductor (HM72A). All data taken at room ambient. Continuous Operation at IOUT = 10A 10 7 5 MTTF - Years TJ = 150°C 3 TJ = 140°C 2 TJ = 130°C TJ = 120°C 1 TJ = 110°C 0 20 30 50 Duty Cycle - % 70 100 Figure 12. Figure 12 shows the mean time to failure (MTTF) for an output load current of 10A on a single output, or an output load current of 10A on both outputs. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 13 UCD7242 SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 www.ti.com DETAILED DESCRIPTION PWM INPUT The PWM input pin accepts the digital signal from the controller that represents the desired high-side FET on time. This input is designed to accept 3.3V logic levels, but is also tolerant of 5V input levels. The SRE pin sets the behavior of the PWM pin. When the SRE pin is asserted high, the device is placed in synchronous mode. In this mode, the timing duration of the high-side gate drive and the low-side gate drive are both controlled by the PWM input signal. When PWM is high, the high-side MOSFET is on and the low-side MOSFET is off. When PWM is low, the high-side MOSFET is off and the low-side MOSFET is on. An optimized anti-cross-conduction delay is introduced to ensure the proper FET is turned off before the other FET is turned on. When the SRE pin is asserted low, the device is placed in non-synchronous mode. In this mode the PWM input only controls the high-side MOSFET. When PMW is high, the high-side MOSFET is on. The low side FET is always held off. The PWM input supports a 3-state detection feature. It can detect if the PWM input signal has entered a 3-state mode. When 3-state mode is detected, both the high-side and low-side MOSFETs are held off. To support this mode, the PWM input pin has an internal pull-up resistor of approximately 50kΩ to 3.3V and a 50kΩ pull-down resistor to ground. During normal operation, the PWM input signal swings below 0.8V and above 2.5V. If the source driving the PWM pin enters a 3-state or high impedance state, the internal pull-up/pull down resistors will tend to pull the voltage on the PWM pin to 1.65V. If the voltage on the PWM pin remains within the 0.8V to 2.5V 3-state detection band for longer than tHLD_R, 3-state detection hold-off time, then the device enters 3-state mode and turns both MOSFETs off. This behavior occurs regardless of the state of the SRE pin. When exiting 3-state mode, PWM should first be asserted low and SRE High. This ensures that the bootstrap capacitor is recharged before attempting to turn on the high-side FET. The logic threshold of this pin typically exhibits 900mV of hysteresis to provide noise immunity and ensure glitch-free operation. SRE INPUT The SRE (Synchronous Rectifier Enable) pin is a high impedance digital input. It is designed to accept 3.3V logic levels, but is also tolerant of 5V levels. When asserted high, the operation of the low-side synchronous rectifier FET is enabled. The state of the low-side MOSFET is governed by the PWM input. When SRE is asserted low, the low-side FET is continuously held low, keeping the FET off. While held off, current flow in the low-side FET is restricted to its intrinsic body diode. The logic threshold of this pin typically exhibits 900mV of hysteresis to provide noise immunity and ensure glitch-free operation. VIN VIN supplies power to the internal circuits of the device. The input power is conditioned by an internal linear regulator that provides the VGG gate drive voltage. A second regulator that operates off of the VGG rail produces an internal 3.3V supply that powers the internal analog and digital functional blocks. The VGG regulator produces a nominal 6.2V. The output of the VGG regulator is monitored by the Under-Voltage Lock Out (UVLO) circuitry. The device will not attempt to produce gate drive pulses until the VGG voltage is above the UVLO threshold. This ensures that there is sufficient voltage available to drive the power FETs into saturation when switching activity begins. To use the internal VGG regulator, VIN should be at least 4.7V. When performing power conversion with VIN values less than 4.7V, the gate drive voltage must be supplied externally. (See VGG and VGG DIS sections for details.) VGG The VGG pin is the gate drive voltage for the high current gate driver stages. For VIN > 4.75V, the internal VGG generator can be used. For VIN < 4.75 V, this pin should be driven from an external bias supply. When using the internal regulator, the VGG_DIS pin should be tied low. When using an external VGG, VGG_DIS must be tied to VGG. Current is drawn from the VGG supply in fast, high-current pulses. A 4.7mF ceramic capacitor (10V minimum) should be connected from the VGG pin to the PGND pin as close as possible to the package. Whether internally or externally supplied, the voltage on the VGG pin is monitored by the ULVO circuitry. The voltage must be higher than the UVLO threshold before power conversion can occur. The average current drawn from the VGG supply is dependant on the switching frequency, the absolute value of VGG and the total gate charge of the power FETs inside the device. 14 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 UCD7242 www.ti.com SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 VGG_DIS This pin, when asserted high, disables the on-chip VGG linear regulator. When tied low, the VGG linear regulator is used to derive VGG from VIN. This pin is designed to be permanently tied high or low depending on the power architecture being implemented. It is not intended to be switched dynamically while the device is in operation. SW The SW pin is the switching node of the power conversion stage. When configured as a synchronous buck, the voltage swing on SW normally traverses from slightly below ground to above VIN. Parasitic inductance in the high-side FET conduction path and the output capacitance (Coss) of the low side FET form a resonant circuit than can produce high frequency ( > 100MHz) ringing on this node. The voltage peak of this ringing will exceed VIN. Care must be taken not to exceed the maximum voltage rating of this pin. The main areas available to impact this amplitude are: the driver voltage magnitude (VGG) and the parasitic source and return paths for the MOSFET (VIN, PGND). In some cases, a series resistor and capacitor snubber network connected from this pin to PGND can be helpful in damping the ringing and decreasing the peak amplitude. In general this should not be necessary due to the integrated nature of this part. BST The BST pin provides the drive voltage for the high-side FET. A bootstrap capacitor is connected from this pin to the BST-SW node. Internally, a diode connects the BST pin to the VGG supply. In normal operation, when the high side FET is off and the low-side FET is on, the SW node is pulled to ground and, thus, holds one side of the bootstrap capacitor at ground potential. The other side of the bootstrap capacitor is clamped by the internal diode to VGG. The voltage across the bootstrap capacitor at this point is the magnitude of the gate drive voltage available to switch-on the high-side FET. The bootstrap capacitor should be a low ESR ceramic type, a minimum value of 0.22mF is recommended. In order to ensure that the bootstrap capacitor has sufficient time to recharge, the steady-state duty cycle must not exceed what is shown in Figure 13. The curve in Figure 13 is for CBST= 0.22µF. Different values of CBST will have different DMAX limitations. 96 Maximum Duty Cycle - % 94 92 90 88 86 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4 1.6 fs - Switching Frequency - MHz 1.8 2 Figure 13. BST-SW Electrically this node is the same as the SW pin. However, it is physically closer to the BST pin so as to minimize parasitic inductance effects of trace routing to the BST capacitor. Keeping the external traces short should minimize turn on and off times. This pin is not sized for conducting inductor current and should not be tied to the SW pin. It is only for the BST pin capacitor connection. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 15 UCD7242 SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 www.ti.com IMON MOSFET current sense monitor output. This pin provides a current source output that is proportional to the current flowing in the power MOSFETs. The gain on this pin is equal to 20mA/A. The IMON pin should be connected to a resistor to GND to produce a voltage proportional to the power-stage load current. For example, a value of 10kΩ to ground produces a voltage of 2.0V when the power stage current is 10A.The accuracy of the reported current is a function of the peak to peak ripple current in the inductor (ΔI). The nominal behavior is described by Equation 1. The plot illustrates the possible variability in the sensed current as a function of load for a ΔI=4A. If no PWM is detected for 8µs IMON will report 0V. ì μA ïï20 A IOUT IMON(IOUT, DI) = í ï10 μA IOUT + 5 μA DI A A îï ΔI ü 2 ïï ý ΔI ï If IOUT < 2 þï If IOUT ³ (1) 200 175 150 125 100 75 50 DI = 4 A 25 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 IOUT (A) 7 8 9 10 Figure 14. Sensed Current Variability TMON The voltage on this pin is proportional to the die temperature with a gain of 10 mV/°C and an offset voltage of 0.47 V at TJ = 0°C (Equation 2): 10mV TMON(TJ) = 0.47 V + (TJ ) °C (2) 16 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 UCD7242 www.ti.com SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 2.0 1.8 1.6 TMON - V 1.4 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100 110 120 130 TJ - Junction Temperature - °C Figure 15. Typical Characteristics If the junction temperature exceeds approximately 170°C, the device will enter thermal shutdown. This will assert the FLT pin, both MOSFETs will be turned off and the switch node will go high impedance. When the junction temperature cools by approximately 20°C, the device will exit thermal shutdown and resume switching as directed by the PWM and SRE pins. During a thermal shutdown event, the voltage on the Temp pin is driven to 3.3V. FLT This signal is a 3.3V digital output which is latched high when the current in the high-side FET exceeds the current limit trip point. When tripped, high-side FET drive pulses are truncated to limit output current. FLT is cleared on the falling edge of the first PWM pulse without a fault. Additionally, if the die temperature exceeds 170°C, the temperature sensor will initiate a thermal shutdown that halts output switching and sets the FLT flag. Normal operation resumes when the die temperature falls below the thermal hysteresis band. The FLT flag will clear after a PWM pulse occurs without a fault. Current limit is ignored during the high side blanking time. If an over current event occurs during the blanking time the part will not initiate current limit for ~50ns. PWM ILIMIT IL HS LS FLT Figure 16. FLT Signal Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 17 UCD7242 SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 www.ti.com APPLICATION INFORMATION A partial schematic of a power supply application using the UCD7242 power stage is provided below. Although not shown the IC controlling the output is from the UCD92XX family of digital controllers. Vin + 330 mF PWM1 26 PWM-A Vin 29 SRE1 25 SRE-A NC 28 FF1 18 FLT-A CS1 20 IMON-A EAp1 22 mF 25 V Vin 27 1 PWM-B BST-A 24 SRE2 2 SRE-B BSW-A 23 FF2 9 FLT-B PGND 15 CS2 7 IMON-B 19 TMON Vout1 SW-A 14 PWM2 Temp 10 W 800 nH + 0.22 mF 47 mF 330 mF RBIAS GND NC 16 10 W EAn1 PGND 17 Vin 30 EAp2 10 kW 10 kW UCD7242 NC 31 22 mF 25 V Vin 32 22 BP3 10 W 800 nH Vout2 SW-B 13 1 mF 21 AGND BST-B 3 BSW-B 4 5 VGG 4.7 mF 6 VGG DIS 8 Test + 0.22 mF 47 mF RBIAS GND PGND 10 NC 11 PGND 12 330 mF 10 W EAn2 PRE-BIAS OPERATION The UCD7242 has no problem starting up into pre-biased output voltages. However, when one channel is held in tri-state and the second channel is actively switching, the tri-stated channel may generate a DC voltage through weak capacitive coupling between SW-A and SW-B. This coupling comes principally from the close proximity of the switch nodes on the silicon and the PWB layout. There are several options to address this concern. 1. The device(s) that the UCD7242 is powering on a 3-stated channel has a known current draw at sub-regulation voltage levels. This current draw may be sufficient to hold the voltage down. 2. Instead of holding the off channel in a 3-state condition, drive PWM actively low. This forces the synchronous rectifier to turn on and prevent the pre-bias voltage from rising. If this option is elected, it is important to verify that there are no other sources of leakage in the system. 3. Add a small load resistor, RBIAS. In most cases a value of 1kΩ should keep the output voltage below 200mV. Some experimentation may be needed to determine the appropriate value. In many cases, the feedback divider may provide a sufficient load. It is important that VBIAS be less than or equal to the steady state output voltage during regulation. If this condition is not enforced the controller in charge of regulating this rail will be unable to start up. If start up is forced, damage may result. 18 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 UCD7242 www.ti.com SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 OPERATING FREQUENCY Switching frequency is a key place to start the design of any DC/DC converter. This will set performance limits on things such as: maximum efficiency, minimum size, and achievable closed loop bandwidth. A higher switching frequency is, generally, going to yield a smaller design at the expense of a lower efficiency. The size benefit is principally a result of the smaller inductor and capacitor energy storage elements needed to maintain ripple and transient response requirements. The additional losses result from a variety of factors, however, one of the largest contributors is the loss incurred by switching the MOSFETs on and off. The integrated nature of the UCD7242 makes these losses drastically smaller and subsequently enables excellent efficiency from a few hundred kHz up to the low MHz. For a reasonable trade off of size versus efficiency, 750kHz is a good place to start. VGG If 4.75V < VIN ≤ 6V a simple efficiency enhancement can be achieved by connecting VGG_DIS and VGG directly to VIN. This allows the solution to bypass the drop out voltage of the internal VGG linear regulator, subsequently improving the enhancement of the MOSFETs. When doing this it is critical to make sure that VGG never exceeds the absolute maximum rating of 7V. INDUCTOR SELECTION There are three main considerations in the selection of an inductor once the switching frequency has been determined. Any real world design is an iterative trade off of each of these factors. 1. The electrical value which in turn is driven by: (a) RMS current (b) The maximum desired output ripple voltage (c) The desired transient response of the converter 2. Losses (a) Copper (PCu) (b) Core (Pfe) 3. Saturation characteristics of the core INDUCTANCE VALUE The principle equation used to determine the inductance is: di (t) vL (t) = L L dt (3) During the on time of the converter the inductance can be solved to be: V - VOUT D L = IN DI ¦s (4) Where: VIN Input Voltage VOUT Output voltage fs Switching frequency D Duty cycle (VOUT/VIN for a buck converter) ΔI The target peak to peak inductor current. In general, it is desirable to make ΔI large to improve transient response and small to reduce output ripple voltage and RMS current. A number of considerations go into this however, ΔI=0.4 IOUT results in a small ILRMS without an unnecessary penalty on transient response. It also creates a reasonable ripple current that most practical capacitor banks can handle. Here IOUT is defined as the maximum expected steady state current. Plugging these assumptions into the above inductance equation results in: Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 19 UCD7242 SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 www.ti.com V - VOUT D L = 5 IN 2 ´ IOUT ¦s (5) For example, plotting this result as a function of VIN and VOUT results in: Figure 17. Inductance vs. VIN and VOUT In this graph IOUT is 10A, the switching frequency is 750kHz and the inductor ΔI is 4A. If the switching frequency is cut in half then the resulting inductance would be twice the value shown. Notice that the maximum inductance occurs at the maximum VIN and VOUT shown on the plot. In general, this inductance value should be used in order to keep the inductor ripple current from becoming too large over the range of supported VIN and VOUT. INDUCTOR LOSSES AND SATURATION The current rating of an inductor is based on two things: the current necessary to raise the component temperature by 40°C and the current level necessary to reduce the inductance to 80% of its initial value (saturation current (1) ). The current rating is the lower of these two numbers. Both of these factors are influenced by the choice of core material. Popular materials currently in use are: ferrite, powdered alloy and powdered iron. Ferrite is regarded as the highest performance material and as such is the lowest loss and the highest cost. Solid ferrite all by itself will saturate with a relatively small amount of current. This can be addressed by inserting a gap into the core. This, in effect, makes the inductor behave in a linear manner over a wide DC current range. However, once the inductance begins to roll off, these gapped materials exhibit a “sharp” saturation characteristic. In other words, the inductance value reduces rapidly with increases in current above the saturation level. This small inductance that results, can produce dangerously high current levels. (1) 20 Although “saturation current” is standard terminology among many inductor vendors, technically saturation does not occur until the relative permeability of the core is reduced to approximately 1. This is a value much larger than what is typically seen on data sheets. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 UCD7242 www.ti.com SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 Powdered iron has the advantage of lower cost and a soft saturation characteristic; however, its losses can be very large as switching frequencies increase. This can make it undesirable for a UCD7242 based application where higher switching frequency may be desired. It’s also worth noting that many powdered iron cores exhibit an aging characteristic where the core losses increase over time. This is a wear-out mechanism that needs to be considered when using these materials. The powdered alloy cores bring the soft saturation characteristics of powdered iron with considerable improvements in loss without the wear-out mechanism observed in powdered iron. These benefits come at a cost premium. In general the following relative figure of merits can be made: Ferrite Powdered Alloy Powdered Iron High Medium Low Loss Low Medium High Saturation Rapid Soft Soft Cost When selecting an inductor with an appropriate core it’s important to have in mind the following: 1. ILRMS, maximum RMS current 2. ΔI, maximum peak to peak current 3. IMAX, maximum peak current The RMS current can be determined by Equation 6: ILRMS = IO UT 2 + D I2 12 (6) When the 40% ripple constraint is used at maximum load current, this equation simplifies to: ILRMS≈IOUT. It is widely recognized that the Steinmetz equation (Pfe) is a good representation of core losses for sinusoidal stimulation. It is important to recognize that this approximation applies to sinusoidal excitation only. This is a reasonable assumption when working with converters whose duty cycles are near 50%, however, when the duty cycle becomes narrow this estimate may no longer be valid and considerably more loss may result. Pƒe = k × ƒa × BAC b (7) (7) The principle drivers in this equation are the material and its respective geometry (k, a, b), the peak AC flux density (BAC) and the excitation frequency (ƒ). The frequency is simply the switching frequency of the converter while the constant k, can be computed based on the effective core volume (Ve) and a specific material constant (kƒe). k = kƒe × Ve (8) (8) The AC flux density (BAC) is related to the conventional inductance specifications by the following relationship: L DI B AC = Ae ´ N 2 (9) Where L is the inductance, Ae, is the effective cross sectional area that the flux takes through the core and N is the number of turns. Some inductor manufactures use the inductor ΔI as a figure of merit for this loss, since all of the other terms are a constant for a given component. They may provide a plot of core loss versus ΔI for various frequencies where ΔI can be calculated as: V - VOUT D DI = IN L ¦s (10) IMAX has a direct impact on the saturation level. A good rule of thumb is to add 15% of head room to the maximum steady state peak value to provide some room for transients. ΔI ö æ IMAX = 1.15 × çIOUT + ÷ 2ø è (11) Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 21 UCD7242 SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 www.ti.com For example for a 10A design has the following: IOUT 10A ILRMS 10A ΔI 4A IMAX 13.8A Armed with this data one can now approach the inductor data sheet to select a part with a “saturation” limit above 13.8A and current “heating” limit above 10A. Furthermore, total losses can be estimated based on the datasheet DCR value (ILRMS 2DCR) and the core loss curves for a given frequency and ΔI. INPUT CAPACITANCE Due to the non-zero impedance of the power planes of the input voltage rail, it is necessary to add some local capacitance near the UCD7242 to ensure that the voltage at this node is quiet and stable. The primary things to consider are: 1. The radiated fields generated by the di/dt and dv/dt from this node 2. RMS currents capability needed in the capacitors 3. The AC voltage present and respective susceptibility of any device connected to this node ICINRMS = IOUT 2 ´ D ´ (1 - D) + D I2 ´D 12 (12) As a point of reference if ΔI=0.4 IOUT this places the worst case ICINRMS at approximately 5A. This corresponds to a duty cycle of approximately 50%. Other duty cycles can result in a significantly lower RMS current. A good input capacitor would be a 22mF X5R ceramic capacitor. Equally important as selecting the proper capacitor is placing and routing that capacitor. It is crucial that the decoupling be placed as close as possible to both the power pin (VIN) and ground (PGND). It is important to recognize that each power stage should have its own local decoupling. One 22mF capacitor should be placed across each VIN and PGND pair. The proximity of the capacitance to these pins will reduce the radiated fields mentioned above. OUTPUT CAPACITANCE The goal of the output capacitor bank is to keep the output voltage within regulation limits during steady state and transient conditions. The total AC RMS current flowing through the capacitor bank can be calculated as: DI ICOUTRMS = 12 (13) For a single type of output capacitor the output ripple voltage wave form can be approximated by the following equation: VO UT (t) = IC (t) ´ esr + 1 C ò t IC (t ) ´ dt 0 (14) Where: DI ´ ¦ s ì DI D ´ t t< ï ¦s D 2 ï IC (t) = í ï D I ´ ¦ s ´ æ t - D ö + D I otherwise ç ÷ ï 1 - D ¦s ø 2 è î (15) After substitution and simplification yields 22 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 UCD7242 www.ti.com SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 ì æ DI ´ ¦ s esr ´ ç ï D è ï VO UT (t) = í æ DI ´ ¦ s æ D ï ïesr ´ ç 1- D ´ ç t - ¦ è è s î ´ t- 1 æ t ´ ΔI ´ (¦ s ´ t - D ) ΔI ´ (1 - 2 ´ D ) ö ÷ ÷ + ´ç 2ø C è 2×D 12 ´ ¦ s ø DI ö ö DI ö 1 æ DI ´ ÷ + ÷ + ´ç ø 2ø C è (¦ s ´ t - 1) ´ 2 ´ (1- D ) (D - ¦ s ´ ¦s ´ t) - DI ´ t< D ¦s (1 - 2 ´ D ) ö 12 ´ ¦ s ÷ otherwise ø (16) The term in this equation multiplied by the esr gives the ripple voltage component due to esr and the term multiplied by 1/C gives the ripple voltage component due to the change in charge on the capacitor plates. In the case were the esr component dominates the peak to peak output voltage can be approximated as: VPPesr Ⅹ ΔI × esr (17) (17) When the charge term dominates the peak to peak voltage ripple becomes: DI VPPQ » 8 ´ C ´ ¦s (18) It is tempting to simply add these two results together for the case where the voltage ripple is significantly influenced by both the capacitance and the esr. However, this will yield an overly pessimistic result, in that it does not account for the phase difference between these terms. Using the ripple voltage equations and the RMS current equation should give a design that safely meets the steady state output requirements. However, additional capacitance is often needed to meet transient requirements and the specific local decoupling requirements of any IC that is being powered off of this voltage. This is not just a function of the capacitor bank but also the dynamics of the control loop. See the UCD9240 Compensation Cookbook for additional details. DECOUPLING It is necessary that VGG and BP3 have their own local capacitance as physically close as possible to these pins. The VGG capacitor should be connected as close as possible to pin 5 and PGND with a 4.7mF ceramic capacitor. The BP3 capacitor should be connected as close as possible to pin 22 and AGND with a 1mF ceramic capacitor. The UCD7242 also supports the ability to operate from input voltages down to 2.2V. In these cases an additional supply rail must be connected to VGG and VGG_DIS must be shorted to VGG. Potential external bias supply generators for low VIN operation: TPS63000, TPS61220. The amount of current required for this supply is dependant on the VGG voltage, the switching frequency and the number of active channels used in the UCD7242. When both sides are active, use Figure 11: VGG Supply Current with 2 Rails Operating for current draw estimates. If only one side is active, use Figure 10: VGG Supply Current with 1 Rail Operating and 1 Rail Off. CURRENT SENSE An appropriate resistor must be connected to the current sense output pins to convert the IMON current to a voltage. In the case of the UCD9XXX digital controllers, these parts have a full scale current monitor range of 0V to 2V. It is desirable to maximize this range to make full use of the current monitoring resolution inside the controller. In order to ensure that current sensing will occur all the way to IMAX=10A a 1.8V target is chosen. In this case a resistor 9.09kΩ would work. VMON RMO N = mA IMAX ´ 20 A (19) In some applications it may be necessary to filter the IMON signal. The UCD7242 IMON pin is a current source output, so a capacitor to ground in parallel with the current-to-voltage conversion resistor is all that is required. As a rule of thumb, placing the corner frequency of the filter at 20% of the switching frequency should be sufficient. For example, if the switching frequency is 500kHz or higher the ripple frequency will be easily rejected with a corner frequency of approximately 100kHz. With a 100kHz pole point, the filter time constant is 1.6µs. A fast current transient should be detected within 4.8µs. CMON = 1 2 × p × RMON × 20%×fs (20) Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 23 UCD7242 SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 www.ti.com 20A Power Stage It is possible to configure the UCD7242 to supply 20A by tying the outputs of two power stages together. When doing this it is required that the PWM pulse widths of the two PWM input signals be identical. The best way to do this is to drive PWM-A and PWM-B from the same signal. This ensures that balanced volt seconds will be applied to the external SW pins. Vin + 330uF PWM1 26 PWM-A Vin 29 SRE1 25 SRE-A NC 28 EAp1 22uF 25V 18 FLT-A CS1 SN74LVC1G32 FF1 Vin 27 20 IMON-A SW-A 14 1 PWM-B BST-A 24 2 SRE-B BSW-A 23 9 FLT-B PGND 15 7 IMON-B 10r0 800nH Vout1 + 0.22uF 47uF 330uF GND NC 16 10r0 Temp 19 TMON EAn1 PGND 17 Vin 30 4k99 UCD7242 NC 31 22uF 25V Vin 32 1uF 22 VDD 21 AGND BST-B 3 BSW-B 4 5 VGG 4.7uF 6 VGG DIS 8 Test 800nH SW-B 13 0.22uF PGND 10 NC 11 PGND 12 Figure 18. 20A Design Layout Recommendations The primary thermal cooling path is from the VIN, GND, and the SW “stripes” on the bottom of the package. Wide copper traces should connect to these nodes. 1-ounce copper should be the minimum thickness of the top layer; however, 2-ounce copper is better. Multiple thermal vias should be placed near the GND stripes that connect to a PCB ground plane. There is room to place multiple 10-mil (0.25mm) diameter vias next to the VIN and GND stripes under the package. For input bypassing, the 22µF input ceramic capacitors should be connected as close as possible to the VIN and GND stripes. If possible, the input caps should be placed directly under the UCD7242 using multiple 10-mil vias to bring the VIN and GND connections to the back side of the board. Minimizing trace inductance in the bypass path is extremely important to reduce the amplitude of ringing on the switching node. 24 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 UCD7242 www.ti.com SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 VIN C32 TP31 CS3 TP32 FF3 TP33 SRE3 22uF 25V 1210 TP34 PWM3 PWM3 26 PWM-A Vin 29 SRE3 25 SRE-A Vin 28 C8 FF3 18 FF-A CS3 Vin 27 20 Isense-A SW-A 14 PWM4 1 PWM-B BST-A 24 SRE4 2 SRE-B BSW-A 23 FF4 9 FF-B PGND 15 CS4 7 Isense-B PGND 16 19 Tsense PGND 17 T2 T2 TP35 CS4 TP36 FF4 TP37 R36 10k0 0603 SRE4 TP38 C30 4.7uF 0805 EAp3 L1 800nH HM00-08822LF 12.5 x 10.5mm TP40 Vout3 R30 TB4 10r0 1x2 0603 0.2 Vout3 C9 C27 0.22uF 0603 + C10 47uF 1210 RBIAS 330uF 10mm x 12.5mm TP41 GND EAn3 GND R31 10r0 0603 U5 UCD7242 6x6 QFN Pkg RSJ C28 Vin 31 Vin 32 22uF 25V 1210 TP47 SW4 EAp4 L2 800nH HM00-08822LF 12.5 x 10.5mm TP42 Vout4 R32 TB5 10r0 1x2 0603 0.2 Vout4 SW-B 13 C31 1uF 0603 R37 10k0 0603 TP46 SW3 Vin 30 PWM4 TP39 R35 10k0 0603 VGG DIS TP44 VGG TP45 22uF 25V 1210 22 BP3 21 AGND BST-B 3 BSW-B 4 6 VGG DIS PGND 10 5 VGG PGND 11 8 Test PGND 12 C11 C29 0.22uF 0603 + C12 47uF 1210 RBIAS 330uF 10mm x 12.5mm TP43 GND EAn4 GND R33 10r0 0603 Figure 19. Schematic Fragment from 4-Output EVM Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 25 UCD7242 SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 www.ti.com Output cap PGND PGND VIN Input caps PGND PGND Output cap Figure 20. Top Layer 26 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 UCD7242 www.ti.com SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 Note how the ground end of the VIN and VOUT caps and the PGND stripes of the UCD7242 are all tied together with multiple vias. Note: This is the primary heat dispersal layer as well as the major return-current path. Figure 21. Layer 2 - Power GND Plane Figure 22. Layer 3 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 27 UCD7242 SLUS962 – JANUARY 2010 www.ti.com C32 is another VIN bypass cap placed directly under the part. Note use of multiple vias to tie directly to the VIN and PGND stripes. Figure 23. Bottom Layer (X-ray View) 28 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2010, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Link(s): UCD7242 PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM www.ti.com 8-Feb-2010 PACKAGING INFORMATION Orderable Device Status (1) Package Type Package Drawing Pins Package Eco Plan (2) Qty UCD7242RSJR ACTIVE QFN RSJ 32 2500 Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) CU NIPDAU Level-1-260C-UNLIM UCD7242RSJT ACTIVE QFN RSJ 32 250 CU NIPDAU Level-1-260C-UNLIM Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) Lead/Ball Finish MSL Peak Temp (3) (1) The marketing status values are defined as follows: ACTIVE: Product device recommended for new designs. LIFEBUY: TI has announced that the device will be discontinued, and a lifetime-buy period is in effect. NRND: Not recommended for new designs. Device is in production to support existing customers, but TI does not recommend using this part in a new design. PREVIEW: Device has been announced but is not in production. Samples may or may not be available. OBSOLETE: TI has discontinued the production of the device. (2) Eco Plan - The planned eco-friendly classification: Pb-Free (RoHS), Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt), or Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) - please check http://www.ti.com/productcontent for the latest availability information and additional product content details. TBD: The Pb-Free/Green conversion plan has not been defined. Pb-Free (RoHS): TI's terms "Lead-Free" or "Pb-Free" mean semiconductor products that are compatible with the current RoHS requirements for all 6 substances, including the requirement that lead not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous materials. Where designed to be soldered at high temperatures, TI Pb-Free products are suitable for use in specified lead-free processes. Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt): This component has a RoHS exemption for either 1) lead-based flip-chip solder bumps used between the die and package, or 2) lead-based die adhesive used between the die and leadframe. The component is otherwise considered Pb-Free (RoHS compatible) as defined above. Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br): TI defines "Green" to mean Pb-Free (RoHS compatible), and free of Bromine (Br) and Antimony (Sb) based flame retardants (Br or Sb do not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous material) (3) MSL, Peak Temp. -- The Moisture Sensitivity Level rating according to the JEDEC industry standard classifications, and peak solder temperature. Important Information and Disclaimer:The information provided on this page represents TI's knowledge and belief as of the date that it is provided. TI bases its knowledge and belief on information provided by third parties, and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of such information. Efforts are underway to better integrate information from third parties. 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Addendum-Page 1 PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION www.ti.com 20-Jul-2010 TAPE AND REEL INFORMATION *All dimensions are nominal Device Package Package Pins Type Drawing SPQ Reel Reel A0 Diameter Width (mm) (mm) W1 (mm) B0 (mm) K0 (mm) P1 (mm) W Pin1 (mm) Quadrant UCD7242RSJR QFN RSJ 32 2500 330.0 16.4 6.3 6.3 1.5 12.0 16.0 Q2 UCD7242RSJT QFN RSJ 32 250 180.0 16.4 6.3 6.3 1.5 12.0 16.0 Q2 Pack Materials-Page 1 PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION www.ti.com 20-Jul-2010 *All dimensions are nominal Device Package Type Package Drawing Pins SPQ Length (mm) Width (mm) Height (mm) UCD7242RSJR QFN RSJ 32 2500 346.0 346.0 33.0 UCD7242RSJT QFN RSJ 32 250 190.5 212.7 31.8 Pack Materials-Page 2 IMPORTANT NOTICE Texas Instruments Incorporated and its subsidiaries (TI) reserve the right to make corrections, modifications, enhancements, improvements, and other changes to its products and services at any time and to discontinue any product or service without notice. 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