FAIRCHILD FAN5240MTC

www.fairchildsemi.com
FAN5240
Multi-Phase PWM Controller for AMD Mobile
AthlonTM and DuronTM
Features
General Description
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
The FAN5240 is a single output 2-Phase synchronous buck
controller to power AMD’s mobile CPU core. The FAN5240
includes a 5-bit digital-to-analog converter (DAC) that
adjusts the core PWM output voltage from 0.925VDC to
2.0VDC, which may be changed during operation. Special
measures are taken to allow the output to transition with
controlled slew rate to comply with AMD’s Power Now
technology. The FAN5240 includes a precision reference,
and a proprietary architecture with integrated compensation
providing excellent static and dynamic core voltage regulation. The regulator includes special circuitry which balances
the 2 phase currents for maximum efficiency.
•
•
•
•
•
•
CPU Core power: 0.925V to 2.0V output range
±1% reference precision over temperature
Dynamic voltage setting with 5-bit DAC
5V to 24V input voltage range
2 phase interleaved switching
Active droop to reduce output capacitor size
Differential remote voltage sense
High efficiency:
>90% efficiency over wide load range
>80% efficiency at light load
Excellent dynamic response with Voltage Feed-Forward
and Average Current Mode control
Dynamic duty cycle clamp minimizes inductor current
build up
Lossless current sensing on low-side MOSFET or
Precision current sensing using sense resistor
Fault protections: Over-voltage, Over-current, and
Thermal Shut-down
Controls: Enable, Forced PWM, Power Good, Power
Good Delay
QSOP28, TSSOP28
Applications
• AMD Mobile Athlon CPU VCORE Regulator
• AMD Mobile Duron CPU VCORE Regulator
At light loads, when the filter inductor current becomes
discontinuous, the controller operates in a hysteretic mode,
dramatically improving system efficiency. The hysteretic
mode of operation can be inhibited by the FPWM control
pin.
The FAN5240 monitors the output voltage and issues a
PGOOD (Power-Good) when soft start is completed and the
output is in regulation. A pin is provided to add delay to
PGOOD with an external capacitor.
A built-in over-voltage protection (OVP) forces the lower
MOSFET on to prevent the output from exceeding a set
voltage. The PWM controller's overcurrent circuitry monitors the converter load by sensing the voltage drop across the
lower MOSFET. The overcurrent threshold is set by an external resistor. If precision overcurrent protection is required,
an optional external current-sense resistor may be used.
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
FAN5240
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
Typical Application
VIN (BATTERY)
= 5 to 24V
VIN
C1
21
VCC
+5
C3
28
25
Q1
HDRV1
24
+5
Phase 1
SW1
23
Q2
EN
R2
26 PGND1
19
ISNS1
22
14
C5
VCORE +
18
FPWM
VID0
VID1
12
ILIM
AGND
4
Phase 2
5
20
16
1
13
2
15
6
C16
L2
R4
Q4
8
7
C15
+5
VIN
C9
9
VID4
C14
D1
BOOT2
3
10
C13
VCORE D
17
11
VID3
DELAY
V CORE
R6
C12
VID2
SS
Q3
LDRV1
27
PGOOD
C8
L1
R1
C10
+5
C7
C4
C11
C2
D2
BOOT1
C6
HDRV2
SW2
Q6
Q5
LDRV2
R3
PGND2
ISNS2
Figure 1. AMD Mobile Athlon/Duron CPU Core Supply
Table 1. BOM for Figure 1
Description
2
Qty
Ref.
Vendor
Capacitor 22µF, Ceramic X7R 25V
2
C1, C2
TDK
Capacitor 1µF, Ceramic
3
C3,C7,C9
Any
Capacitor 0.1µF, Ceramic
6
C4–C6, C8, C11, C12
Any
Capacitor 0.22µF, Ceramic
1
C10
Any
Capacitor 270µF, 2V, ESR 15mΩ
4
C13–C16
Panasonic
10KΩ, 5% Resistor
2
R1
Any
1KΩ, 1% Resistor
1
R2, R3, R6
Any
56.2KΩ, 1% Resistor
2
R4
Any
Part Number
EEFUE0D271R
Schottky Diode 40V
2
D1, D2
Fairchild
MBR0540
Inductor 1.6µH, 20A, 2.4mΩ
1
L1, L2
Panasonic
ETQP6F0R8LFA
N-Channel SO-8 MOSFET, 11mΩ
1
Q1, Q4
Fairchild
FDS6694
N-Channel SO-8 SyncFET™ MOSFET, 6mΩ
1
Q2, Q3, Q5, Q6
Fairchild
FDS6676S
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
FAN5240
Pin Configuration
LDRV2
PGND2
BOOT2
HDRV2
SW2
ISNS2
VID4
VID3
VID2
VID1
VID0
FPWM
ILIM
EN
1
2
28
27
VCC
3
4
26
25
PGND1
5
6
24
23
HDRV1
22
7
FAN5240
21
8
LDRV1
BOOT1
SW1
ISNS1
VIN
9
10
20
19
SS
11
12
18
17
VCORE+
13
14
16
15
DELAY
PGOOD
VCORED
AGND
QSOP-28 or TSSOP-28
θJA = 90°C/W
Pin Definitions
Pin
Number
Pin
Name
1
27
LDRV2
LDRV1
Low-Side Drive. The low-side (lower) MOSFET driver output.
2
26
PGND2
PGND1
Power Ground. The return for the low-side MOSFET driver.
3
25
BOOT2
BOOT1
BOOT. The positive supply for the upper MOSFET driver. Connect as shown in Figure 1.
4
24
HDRV2
HDRV1
High-Side Drive. The high-side (upper) MOSFET driver output.
5
23
SW2
SW1
6
22
ISNS2
ISNS1
Current Sense input. Monitors the voltage drop across the lower MOSFET or external
sense resistor for current feedback.
7 - 11
VID4 VID0
Voltage Identification Code. Input to VID DAC. Sets the output voltage according to the
codes set as defined in Table 2. These inputs have 1µA internal pull-up.
12
FPWM
Forced PWM mode. When logic high, inhibits the chip from entering hysteretic operating
mode. If tied low, hysteretic mode will be allowed.
13
ILIM
Current Limit. A resistor from this pin to GND sets the current limit.
14
EN
ENABLE. This pin enables IC operation when either left open, or pulled up to VCC.
Toggling EN will also reset the chip after a latched fault condition.
15
AGND
Analog Ground. This is the signal ground reference for the IC. All voltage levels are
measured with respect to this pin.
16
DELAY
Power Good / Over-Current Delay. A capacitor to GND on this pin delays the PGOOD
from going high as well delaying the over-current shutdown.
Pin Function Description
Switching node. The return for the high-side MOSFET driver.
18
17
VCORE+ VCORE Output Sense. Differential sensing of the output voltage. Used for regulation as
VCORE– well as PGOOD, under-voltage and over-voltage protection and monitoring. A resistor in
series with this VCORE+ sets the output voltage droop.
19
PGOOD
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
Power Good Flag. An open-drain output that will pull LOW when the core output below
825mV. PGOOD delays its low to high transition for a time determined by CDELAY when
VCORE rises above 875mV.
3
FAN5240
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
Pin Definitions (continued)
Pin
Number
Pin
Name
20
SS
Soft Start. A capacitor from this pin to GND programs the slew rate of the converter during
initialization as well as in operation. This pin is used as the reference against which the
output is compared. During initialization, this pin is charged with a 25µA current source.
Once this pin reaches 0.5V, its function changes, and it assumes the value of the voltage
as set by the VID programming. The current driving this pin is then limited to ±500µA, that
together with CSS sets a controlled slew rate for VID code changes.
21
VIN
Input voltage from battery. This voltage is used by the oscillator for feed-forward
compensation of input voltage variation.
28
VCC
VCC. This pin powers the chip. The IC starts to operate when voltage on this pin exceeds
4.6V (UVLO rising) and shuts down when it drops below 4.3V (UVLO falling).
Pin Function Description
Absolute Maximum Ratings
Absolute maximum ratings are the values beyond which the device may be damaged or have its useful life
impaired. Functional operation under these conditions is not implied.
Parameter
Min.
Typ.
Max.
Units
VCC Supply Voltage:
6.5
V
VIN
27
V
BOOT, SW, HDRV Pins
33
V
BOOT to SW
6.5
V
All Other Pins
–0.3
VCC+0.3
V
Junction Temperature (TJ )
–10
150
°C
Storage Temperature
–65
150
°C
300
°C
Lead Soldering Temperature, 10 seconds
Recommended Operating Conditions
Parameter
Min.
Typ.
Max.
Supply Voltage VCC
4.75
5
5.25
V
Supply Voltage VIN
6
24
V
–20
85
°C
Ambient Temperature (TA )
4
Conditions
Units
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
FAN5240
Electrical Specifications
(VCC = 5V, VIN = 6V–24V, and TA = recommended operating ambient temperature range using circuit of Figure 1,
unless otherwise noted.)
Parameter
Conditions
Min.
Typ.
Max.
Units
Power Supplies
VCC Current
Operating, CL = 10pF
2
mA
10
µA
Operating
25
µA
Shut-down (EN=0)
1
µA
Shut-down (EN=0)
VIN Current
UVLO Threshold
1
Rising VCC
4.3
4.45
4.6
V
Falling VCC
3.8
3.95
4.10
V
per Table 2
0.925
Regulator / Control Functions
Output voltage
2.00
V
Error Amplifier Gain
86
dB
Error Amplifier GBW
2.7
MHz
Error Amplifier Slew Rate
25
ILIM Voltage
RILIM = 30KΩ
ILIM THOLDOFF
CDELAY = 22nF
Over-voltage Threshold
35
µA
0.91
V
1.16
2.2
2.35
mS
2.5
Logic LOW
V
µS
2
Logic HIGH
Phase to Phase current mismatch
30
0.89
Over-voltage Protection delay
EN, input threshold
V/µS
1
VCORE+ Input Current
0.8
2
V
V
IC contribution only
Guaranteed by design
±5
%
Over-Temperature Shut-down
150
°C
Over-Temperature Hysteresis
25
°C
Output Drivers (note 1)
HDRV Output Resistance
LDRV Output Resistance
Sourcing
3.8
5
Ω
Sinking
1.6
3
Ω
Sourcing
3.8
5
Ω
Sinking
0.8
1.5
Ω
300
345
KHz
Oscillator
Frequency
Ramp Amplitude, pk–pk
255
VIN = 16V
Ramp Offset
Ramp Gain
RampAmplitude
---------------------------------------------V IN
2
V
0.5
V
125
mV/V
Reference, DAC and Soft-Start
VID input threshold
Logic LOW
Logic HIGH
VID pull-up current
2.0
to VCC
DAC output accuracy
Soft Start Charging current (ISS)
0.8
V
V
µA
1
–1
1
%
VSS < 90% of Programmed output
20
27
34
µA
VSS > 90% of Programmed output
350
500
650
µA
Note 1: Guaranteed by slew rate testing.
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
5
FAN5240
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
Electrical Specifications (continued)
Conditions
Min.
Typ.
Max.
Units
Falling Edge
800
825
850
mV
Rising Edge
850
875
900
mV
Parameter
PGOOD
VCORE Lower Threshold
PGOOD Output Delay
Low to High, CDELAY = 22nF
12
mS
PGOOD Output Low
IPGOOD = 4mA
0.5
V
Leakage Current
VPULLUP = 5V
1
µA
5V
VDD
CBOOT
BOOT
EN
VIN
POR/UVLO
Q1
SS
HYST
HDRV
HYST
L OUT
SW
VOUT'
DAC
Soft Start &
OVP
PGOOD
Q2
FPWM
VCORE
+
COUT
VDD
LDRV
VIN
Q
OSC
RAMP
CLK
PGND
PWM
S R
S/H
PWM
EA1
PWM/HYST
DUTY
CYCLE
CLAMP
A
ILIM
det.
ISNS1-ISNS2
ISNS1+ISNS2
5
MODE
ISNS1
CURRENT
PROCESSING
ISNS2
RSENSE1
RSENSE2
ISNS1 ISNS2
A2
VCORE+
A1
VOUT'
30mA
ILIM
VCORE-
ISNS2-ISNS1
1K
TO PH 2
MODULATOR
RILIM
B
R6
Figure 2. IC Block Diagram
6
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
FAN5240
Circuit Description
Output Voltage Programming
Overview
The output voltage of the converter is programmed by an
internal DAC in discrete steps of 25mV from 0.925V to
1.300V and then in 50mV steps from 1.300V to 2.00V:
The FAN5240 is a 2-phase, single output power management
IC, which supplies the low-voltage, high-current power to
modern processors for notebook PCs. Using very few external components, the IC controls a precision programmable
synchronous buck converter driving external N-Channel
power MOSFETs. The output voltage is adjustable from
0.925V to 2.0V by changing the DAC (VID) code settings
(see Table 2). The output voltage of the core converter can be
changed on-the-fly with programmable slew rate, which
meets a key requirement of AMD's Mobile Athlon/Duron
processors.
The converter can operate in two modes: fixed frequency
PWM, and variable frequency hysteretic depending on the
load. At loads lower than the point where filter inductor current becomes discontinuous, hysteretic mode of operation is
activated. Switchover from PWM to hysteretic operation at
light loads improves the converter's efficiency and prolongs
battery run time. As the filter inductor resumes continuous
current, the PWM mode of operation is restored.
Table 2. Output voltage VID
VID4
VID3
VID2
VID1
VID0
VOUT to CPU
1
1
1
1
1
0.000
1
1
1
1
0
0.925
1
1
1
0
1
0.950
1
1
1
0
0
0.975
1
1
0
1
1
1.000
1
1
0
1
0
1.025
1
1
0
0
1
1.050
1
1
0
0
0
1.075
1
0
1
1
1
1.100
1
0
1
1
0
1.125
1
0
1
0
1
1.150
1
0
1
0
0
1.175
1
0
0
1
1
1.200
1
0
0
1
0
1.225
1
0
0
0
1
1.250
1
0
0
0
0
1.275
0
1
1
1
1
0.000
0
1
1
1
0
1.300
0
1
1
0
1
1.350
0
1
1
0
0
1.400
0
1
0
1
1
1.450
0
1
0
1
0
1.500
0
1
0
0
1
1.550
0
1
0
0
0
1.600
0
0
1
1
1
1.650
0
0
1
1
0
1.700
0
0
1
0
1
1.750
0
0
1
0
0
1.800
0
0
0
1
1
1.850
0
0
0
1
0
1.900
0
0
0
0
1
1.950
0
0
0
0
0
2.000
1 - Logic High or open, 0 = Logic Low
VID0–4 pins will assume a logic 1 level if left open as each
input is pulled up with a 1µA internal current source.
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
7
FAN5240
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
Initialization, Soft Start and PGOOD
Assuming EN is high, FAN5240 is initialized when power is
applied on VCC. Should VCC drop below the UVLO threshold, an internal Power-On Reset function disables the chip.
The IC attempts to regulate the VCORE output according to
the voltage that appears on the SS pin (VSS). During start-up
of the converter, this voltage is initially 0, and rises linearly
to 90% of the VID programmed voltage via the current supplied to CSS by the 25µA internal current source. The time it
takes to reach this threshold is:
0.9 × V VID × C SS
T 90% = -------------------------------------------25
(1)
where T90% is in seconds if CSS is in µF.
At that point, the current source changes to 500µA, which
establishes the slew rate of voltage changes at the output in
response to changes in VID.
This dual slope approach helps to provide safe rise of voltages and currents in the converters during initial start-up and
at the same time sets a controlled speed of the core voltage
change when the processor commands to do so.
1.5V
1.35V
SS
EN
TDLY
PGOOD
Figure 3. Soft-Start function
CSS typically is chosen based on the slew rate desired in
response to a VID change. For example, if the spec requires a
500mV step to occur in 100µS:
I SS
500µA
C SS = ------------------∆t =  ------------------- 100µS = 0.1µF
 500mV
∆V DAC
(2)
Assuming VID is set to 1.5V, with this value of CSS , the
time for the output voltage to rise to 0.9 of VVID is found
using equation 1:
1.35V × 0.1
T 90% = ------------------------------ = 5.4mS
25
The transition from 90% VID to 100% VID occupies 0.5%
of the total soft-start time, so TSS is essentially T90%.
8
The PGOOD delay (TDLY, Figure 3) can be programmed
with a capacitor to GND on pin 16 (CDELAY):
C DELAY ( in nF ) = 1.8 × TDLY ( in mS )
(3)
For 12mS of TDLY, CDELAY = 22nF.
CDELAY is typically chosen to provide 1mS of "blanking"
for the over-current shut-down (see Over-Current Sensing,
on page 12).
The following conditions set the PGOOD pin low:
1.
Under-voltage - VCORE is below a fixed voltage.
2.
Chip shut-down due to over-temperature or over-current
as defined below.
Converter Operation (see Figure 2)
At nominal current the converter operates in fixed frequency
PWM mode. The output voltage is compared with a reference voltage set by the DAC, which appears on the SS pin.
The derived error signal is amplified by an internally compensated error amplifier and applied to the inverting input
of the PWM comparator. To provide output voltage droop for
enhanced dynamic load regulation, a signal proportional to
the output current is added to the voltage feedback signal
at the + input of A1. Since the processor specifies a +100mV/
-50mV tolerance on VCORE, a fixed positive offset of 30
mV is created with a 30µA current source and external 1K
resistor. Phase load balancing is accomplished by adding
a signal proportional to the difference of the two phase
currents before the error amplifier (at nodes A and B). This
feedback scheme in conjunction with a PWM ramp proportional to the input voltage allows for fast and stable loop
response over a wide range of input voltage and output
current variations. For the sake of efficiency and maximum
simplicity, the current sense signal is derived from the voltage drop across the lower MOSFET during its conduction
time. This current sense signal is used to set droop levels as
well as for phase balancing and current limiting.
The PWM controller has a built-in duty cycle clamp in the
path from the error amplifier to the PWM comparator.
During a severe load step, the output signal from the error
amp can go to its rail, pushing the duty cycle to almost 100%
for a significant amount of time. This could cause a severe
rise in the inductor current, especially at high battery voltage, and lead to a long recovery time or even failure of the
converter. To prevent this, the output of the error amplifier is
clamped to a fixed value after two clock cycles if a large
output voltage excursion is detected. Sensitivity of this
circuit is set in such a way as not to affect the PWM control
during transients normally expected from the load.
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
FAN5240
Operation Mode Control
causes the output voltage (as presented at VSNS) to drop
below the hysteretic regulation level (20mV below VREF),
the mode is changed to PWM on the next clock cycle. This
insures the full power required by the increase in output
current.
The mode-control circuit changes the converter’s mode of
operation from PWM to Hysteretic and visa versa, based
on the voltage polarity of the SW node when the lower
MOSFET is conducting and just before the upper MOSFET
turns on. For continuous inductor current, the SW node is
negative when the lower MOSFET is conducting and the
converters operate in fixed-frequency PWM mode as shown
in Figure 4. This mode of operation achieves high efficiency
at nominal load. When the load current decreases to the point
where the inductor current flows through the lower MOSFET
in the ‘reverse’ direction, the SW node becomes positive,
and the mode is changed to hysteretic, which achieves higher
efficiency at low currents by decreasing the effective switching frequency.
In hysteretic mode, the PWM comparator and the error
amplifier that provide control in PWM mode are inhibited
and the hysteretic comparator is activated. In hysteretic
mode the low side MOSFET is operated as a synchronous
rectifier, where the voltage across VDS(ON) is monitored,
and its gate switched off when VDS(ON) goes positive
(current flowing back from the load) blocking reverse
conduction
The hysteretic comparator initiates a PFM signal to turn on
HDRV when the output voltage (at VSNS) falls below the
lower threshold (10mV below VREF) and terminates the
PFM signal when VSNS rises over the higher threshold
(5mV above VREF).
To prevent accidental mode change or “mode chatter” the
transition from PWM to Hysteretic mode occurs when the
SW node is positive for eight consecutive clock cycles
(see Figure 4). The polarity of the SW node is sampled at the
end of the lower MOSFET's conduction time. At the transition between PWM and hysteretic mode both the upper and
lower MOSFETs are turned off. The phase node will ‘ring’
based on the output inductor and the parasitic capacitance on
the phase node and settle out at the value of the output voltage.
The switching frequency is primarily a function of:
The boundary value of inductor current, where current
becomes discontinuous, can be estimated by the following
expression.
( V IN – V OUT )V OUT
I LOAD ( DIS ) = ------------------------------------------------2F SW L OUT V IN
1.
Spread between the two hysteretic thresholds
2.
ILOAD
3.
Output Inductor and Capacitor ESR
A transition back to PWM (Continuous Conduction Mode or
CCM) mode occurs when the inductor current rises sufficiently to stay positive for 8 consecutive cycles. This occurs
when:
(4)
∆V HYSTERESIS
I LOAD ( CCM ) = ---------------------------------------2 ESR
(5)
Hysteretic Mode
where ∆VHYSTERESIS = 15mV and ESR is the equivalent
series resistance of COUT.
Conversely, the transition from Hysteretic mode to PWM
mode occurs when the SW node is negative for 8 consecutive
cycles.
Because of the different control mechanisms, the value of the
load current where transition into CCM operation takes place
is typically higher compared to the load level at which transition into hysteretic mode occurs.
A sudden increase in the output current will also cause a
change from hysteretic to PWM mode. This load increase
causes an instantaneous decrease in the output voltage due to
the voltage drop on the output capacitor ESR. If the load
VCORE
PWM Mode
IL
Hysteretic Mode
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
VCORE
IL
Hysteretic Mode
0
1
2
3
PWM Mode
4
5
6
7
8
Figure 4. Transitioning between PWM and Hysteretic Mode
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
9
FAN5240
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
Current Processing Section
With Active Droop, the output voltage varies with the load as
if a resistor were connected in series with the converter’s output, in other words, it's effect is to raise the output resistance
of the converter.
The following discussion refers to Figure 6.
Setting RSENSE
Each phase current is sampled about 200nS after the SW
node crosses 0V. For proper converter operation, choose an
RSENSE value of:
1.2
VCORE
VDROOP
R DS ( ON ) • I MAX
R SENSE = ---------------------------------------40µA
which is about 1K for the components in Figure 1.
ILOAD
Active Droop
The core converter incorporates a proprietary output voltage
droop method for optimum handling of fast load transients
found in modern processors.
“Active droop” or voltage positioning is now widely used in
the computer power applications. The technique is based on
raising the converter voltage at light load in anticipation of a
step increase in load current, and conversely, lowering
VCORE in anticipation of a step decrease in load current.
I MAX
Figure 5. Active Droop
To get the most from the Active Droop, its magnitude should
be scaled to match the output capacitor’s ESR voltage drop.
V DROOP = I MAX × ESR
(6)
Active Droop allows the size and cost of the output capacitors required to handle CPU current transients to be reduced.
The reduction may be almost a factor of 2 when compared to
a system without Active Droop.
S/H
B-A
ISNS1-ISNS2
A
ISNS2
ISNS2-ISNS1
ISNS2
5
Σ
V to I
B
ISNS1
in +
ISNS1
R SENSE
A-B
ISNS1
5
ISNS1
8
LDRV1
in D
To A1 (+)
PGND1
0.9V
ILIM det. 1
2.5V
I2 =
ILIM
RILIM
ILIM
ILIM mirror
Figure 6. Current Limit and Active Droop Circuits
10
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
FAN5240
Additionally, the CPU power dissipation is also slightly
reduced as it is proportional to the applied voltage squared
and even slight voltage decrease translates to a measurable
reduction in power dissipated.
ILOAD
upper lim
Vout
(no droop)
VES
The current through each RSENSE resistor (ISNS) is sampled shortly after LDRV is turned on. That current is held for
the remainder of the cycle, and then injected to produce an
offset to VCORE+ through the external 1K resistor (R6 in
Figure 1). This creates a voltage at the input to the error
amplifier that rises with increasing current, causing the regulator’s output to droop as the current increases.
I LOAD • R DS ( ON )
V DROOP = ------------------------------------------3 • R SENSE
(7)
lower lim
upper lim
VES
Vout
droop ≈ ESR
lower lim
Figure 7. Effect of Active Droop on ESR
The processor regulation window including transients is
specified as +100mV..–50mV. To accommodate the droop,
the output voltage of the converter is raised by about 30mV
at no load.
The converter response to the load step is shown in Figure 8.
At zero load current, the output voltage is raised ~30mV
above nominal value of 1.5V. When the load current
increases, the output voltage droops down approximately
55mV. Due to use of Active Droop, the converter’s output
voltage adaptively changes with the load current allowing
better utilization of the regulation window.
Gate Driver section
The gate control logic translates the internal PWM control
signal into the MOSFET gate drive signals providing
necessary amplification, level shifting and shoot-through
protection. Also, it has functions that help optimize the IC
performance over a wide range of operating conditions.
Since MOSFET switching time can vary dramatically from
type to type and with the input voltage, the gate control logic
provides adaptive dead time by monitoring the gate-tosource voltages of both upper and lower MOSFETs. The
lower MOSFET drive is not turned on until the gate-tosource voltage of the upper MOSFET has decreased to less
than approximately 1 volt. Similarly, the upper MOSFET is
not turned on until the gate-to-source voltage of the lower
MOSFET has decreased to less than approximately 1 volt.
This allows a wide variety of upper and lower MOSFETs to
be used without a concern for simultaneous conduction, or
shoot-through.
There must be a low – resistance, low – inductance path
between the driver pin and the MOSFET gate for the adaptive dead-time circuit to work properly. Any delay along that
path will subtract from the delay generated by the adaptive
dead-time circit and a shoot-through condition may occur.
Frequency Loop Compensation
Due to the implemented current mode control, the modulator
has a single pole response with -1 slope at frequency determined by load
1
F PO = -----------------------2πR O C O
Figure 8. Converter response to 5A load step
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
(8)
where RO is load resistance, CO is load capacitance. For this
type of modulator Type 2 compensation circuit is usually
sufficient. To reduce the number of external components and
simplify the design task, the PWM controller has an internally compensated error amplifier. Figure 9 shows a Type 2
amplifier and its response along with the responses of a current mode modulator and of the converter. The Type 2 amplifier, in addition to the pole at the origin, has a zero-pole pair
that causes a flat gain region at frequencies between the zero
and the pole.
11
FAN5240
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
Over-Current sensing (see Figure 10)
C2
When the circuit's current limit signal (“ILIM det” as shown
in Figure 6) goes high, a pulse-skipping circuit is activated
and a 16-clock cycle counter is started. HDRV will be inhibited as long as the sensed current is higher than the ILIM
value. This limits the current supplied by the DC input.
R2 C1
R1
VIN
–
+
REF
Clock
C
Err
or
on
ve
Am
rte
p
18
14
0
EAOut
ILIM det. 1
ILIM det. 2
r
Modulator
RESET
16 Clock
Counter and
Logic
Q TIMER
START
Shut-down
DELAY
FP0
FZ
FP
Figure 10. Over-current shut-down delay logic
Figure 9. Compensation
1
F Z = ---------------------- = 6 kHz
2πR 2 C 1
(9a)
1
F P = ---------------------- = 600 kHz
2πR 2 C 2
(9b)
This region is also associated with phase ‘bump’ or reduced
phase shift. The amount of phase shift reduction depends on
how wide the region of flat gain is and has a maximum value
of 90 degrees. To further simplify the converter compensation, the modulator gain is kept independent of the input
voltage variation by providing feed-forward of VIN to the
oscillator ramp.
The zero frequency, the amplifier high frequency gain and
the modulator gain are chosen to satisfy most typical applications. The crossover frequency will appear at the point
where the modulator attenuation equals the amplifier high
frequency gain. The only task that the system designer has to
complete is to specify the output filter capacitors to position
the load main pole somewhere within one decade lower than
the amplifier zero frequency. With this type of compensation
plenty of phase margin is easily achieved due to zero-pole
pair phase ‘boost’.
Conditional stability may occur only when the main load
pole is positioned too much to the left side on the frequency
axis due to excessive output filter capacitance. In this case,
the ESR zero placed within the 10kHz...50kHz range gives
some additional phase ‘boost’. Fortunately, there is an opposite trend in mobile applications to keep the output capacitor
as small as possible.
Protection
The converter output is monitored and protected against
short circuit (over-current), and over-voltage conditions.
If ILIM det goes high during counts 9-16 of the counter, the
overcurrent delay timer is started and the 16-clock counter
starts again. This timer delays the shut-down of the chip and
its time is a function of the value of CDELAY.
C DELAY ( in nF )
T HOLDOFF ( in mS ) = --------------------------------------19
(10)
Over-current must detected at least once during the first 8
clock cycles and once during the 2nd 8 clock cycles of the
16-cycle counter for the timer to continue timing. If the overcurrent condition does not occur at least once per 8 clock
counts during any clock counter cycle while the timer is
high, the timer and the over-current detection circuit are
reset, preventing shutdown. The clock counter coutinues to
count and look for ILIM det pulses in this manner until
either:
1.
the IC is shut-down because the timer timed out:
If the timer pulse is allowed to finish by timing out, the
IC is shut-down and can only be restarted by removing
power or toggling the EN pin.
2.
ILIM det does not go high at least once per 8 clock
counts. In this case, the timer and over-current shutdown
logic are reset, and a chip shut-down is averted.
PGOOD will go LOW if the IC shuts down from overcurrent.
Setting the Current Limit
ISNS is compared to the current established when a 0.9 V
internal reference drives the ILIM pin. The threshold is
determined at the point when the
I LOAD • R DS ( ON )
ISNS 0.9V
--------------- > -------------- . Since ISNS = ------------------------------------------8
R ILIM
R SENSE
therefore,
0.9V 8 • ( R SENSE )
R ILIM = --------------- × ----------------------------------R DS ( ON )
I LIMIT
12
(11)
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
FAN5240
Since the tolerance on the current limit is largely dependent
on the ratio of the external resistors it is fairly accurate if the
voltage drop on the Switching Node side of RSENSE is an
accurate representation of the load current. When using the
MOSFET as the sensing element, the variation of RDS(ON)
causes proportional variation in the ISNS. This value not
only varies from device to device, but also has a typical
junction temperature coefficient of about 0.4% / °C (consult
the MOSFET datasheet for actual values), so the actual
current limit set point will decrease propotional to increasing
MOSFET die temperature. The same discussion applies to
the VDROOP calculation.
The over-current comparator is sampled just after LDRV is
turned on, when the current is near its peak in the cycle.
Assuming 20% inductor ripple current, we can then add 1/2
of the ripple current, or 10%. An additional factor of 1.2
accounts for the inaccuracy in the initial (room temperature)
RDS(ON) of the MOSFETs with an additional factor of 1.4 to
accommodate the rise of the MOSFET RDS(ON) when operating with TJ @ 125°C. With a maximum load current of
12.5A/phase, the target for ILIMIT (per phase) would be:
20A
I LIMIT > 1.1 • 1.2 • 1.4 •  12.5A + ----------- ≈ 42A

2 
(12c)
so using equation 11, with RDS(ON) = 3mΩ for the 2 parallel
FDS6688 MOSFETs, RILIM ≈ 56K:
Q2
LDRV
21 ISNS
Over-Voltage Protection
RSENSE
R1
22
PGND
Figure 11. Improving current sensing accuracy
More accurate sensing can be achieved by using a resistor
(R1) instead of the RDS(ON) of the FET as shown in Figure
11. This approach causes higher losses, but yields greater
accuracy in both VDROOP and ILIMIT. R1 is a low value
(e.g. 10mΩ) resistor.
The current limit (ILIMIT) set point chosen needs to accommodate ripple current, slew current, and variability in the
MOSFET's RDS(ON).
dV
I LIMIT > I LOAD + C OUT ------dt
(12a)
Should the output voltage exceed 2.35V due to an upper
MOSFET failure, or for other reasons, the overvoltage
protection comparator will force the LDRV high. This action
actively pulls down the output voltage and, in the event of
the upper MOSFET failure, will eventually blow the battery
fuse. As soon as the output voltage drops below the threshold, the OVP comparator is disengaged.
This OVP scheme provides a ‘soft’ crowbar function which
helps to tackle severe load transients and does not invert the
output voltage when activated — a common problem for
OVP schemes with a latch.
Over-Temperature Protection
The chip incorporates an over temperature protection circuit
that shuts the chip down when a die temperature of 150°C is
reached. Normal operation is restored at die temperature
below 125°C with internal Power On Reset asserted, resulting in a full soft-start cycle.
dV
dt
Slew current ( C OUT ------- ) is the current required for the
output voltage to slew upwards during VID code changes,
since the circuit will limit the regulator’s output current by
dV
pulse skipping when ILIMIT is reached. The ------- term we
dt
used earlier in the discussion (set up by the CSS) was
500mV/100µS or 5V/mS. Assuming COUT of 4000µF, the
current required to slew COUT at this rate is:
dV
C OUT ------- = 4mF • 5V/mS = 20A
dt
(12b)
which is contributed roughly equally from each phase,
therefore, 1/2 of the slew current comes from a single phase.
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
13
FAN5240
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
Design and Component Selection
Guidelines
As an initial step, define operating voltage range and minimum and maximum load currents for the controller. For this
discussion,
IOUT Max
25A
VIN
5.5 to 21 V
VOUT
0.925 to 2 V
Output Inductor Selection
The minimum practical output inductor value is the one that
keeps inductor current just on the boundary of continuous
conduction at some minimum load. The industry standard
practice is to choose the ripple current to be somewhere from
15% to 35% of the nominal current. At light load, the ripple
current also determines the point where the converter will
automatically switch to hysteretic mode of operation (IMIN)
to sustain high efficiency. The following equations help to
choose the proper value of the output filter inductor.
∆V OUT
,
∆I = 2 × I MIN = -----------------ESR
where ∆I is the inductor ripple current, which we will choose
for 20% of the full load current (12.5A in each phase) and
∆VOUT is the maximum output ripple voltage allowed.
V IN – V OUT V OUT
L = ------------------------------ × -------------F SW × ∆I
V IN
(13)
for this example we’ll use:
The load transient requirements are a function of the slew
rate (di/dt) and the magnitude of the transient load current.
Modern microprocessors produce transient load rates in
excess of 10A/µs. High frequency ceramic capacitors placed
beneath the processor socket initially supply the transient
and reduce the slew rate seen by the bulk capacitors. The
bulk capacitor values are generally determined by the total
allowable ESR rather than actual capacitance requirements.
High frequency decoupling capacitors should be placed as
close to the processor power pins as physically possible.
Consult with the processor manufacturer for specific
decoupling requirements. Use only specialized low-ESR
electrolytic capacitors intended for switching-regulator
applications for the bulk capacitors. The bulk capacitor’s
ESR will determine the output ripple voltage and the initial
voltage drop after a transient. In most cases, multiple electrolytic capacitors of small case size perform better than a
single large case capacitor.
Input Capacitor Selection
The input capacitor should be selected by its ripple current
rating. For a 2 phase converter, the RMS currents is calculated:
I PK
2
I RMS = -------- 2D – 4D
2
(14)
This equation produces the worst case value at maximum
duty cycle. For our example, that occurs when VIN = 5.5V
and VOUT = 2V. For 25A maximum output the maximum
RMS current at CIN:
I RMS ( MAX ) = 5.6A
VIN = 20V, VOUT = 1.5V
∆I = 20% *12.5A (per phase) = 2.5A
FSW = 300KHz.
Power MOSFET Selection
Therefore,
L ≈ 1.8µH
VIN from 5V to 20V
VOUT = 1.5V @ ILOAD(MAX) = 12.5A/phase
The inductor's current rating should be chosen per the
ILIMIT calculated above. Some transient currents over the
inductor current rating may be tolerable if the inductor’s
The FAN5240 converter’s output voltage is very low with
respect to the input voltage, therefore the Lower MOSFET
(Q2) is conducting the full load current for most of the cycle.
Therefore, Q2 should be selected to be a MOSFET with low
RDS(ON) to minimize conduction losses.
dL
saturation characteristic  ------- is sufficiently “soft”.
dI
For the example in the following discussion, we will be
selecting components for:
Output Capacitor Selection
The output capacitor serves two major functions in a switching power supply. Along with the inductor it filters the
sequence of pulses produced by the switcher, and it supplies
the load transient currents. The filtering requirements are a
function of the switching frequency and the ripple current
allowed, and are usually easy to satisfy in high frequency
converters.
14
In contrast, Q1 is on for a maximum of 20% (when VIN =
5V) of the cycle, and its conduction loss will have less of an
impact. Q1, however, sees most of the switching losses, so
Q1’s primary selection criteria should be gate charge
(QG(SW)).
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
FAN5240
High-Side Losses:
C ISS
CRSS
most of tS occurs when VGS = VSP we can use a constant
current assumption for the driver to simplify the calculation
of tS :
CISS
VDS
Q G ( SW )
Q G ( SW )
t S = --------------------- ≈ -----------------------------------------------------I DRIVER 
VDD – V SP
-----------------------------------------------
 R DRIVER + R GATE
ID
VGS
QGS
QGD
4.5V
VSP
VTH
t2
For the high-side MOSFET, VDS = VIN, which can be as
high as 20V in a typical portable application. Q2, however,
switches on or off with its parallel shottky diode conducting,
therefore VDS ≈ 0.5V. Since PSW is proportional to VDS ,
Q2's switching losses are negligible and we can select Q2
based on RDS(ON) only.
Care should also be taken to include the delivery of the
MOSFET's gate power ( PGATE ) in calculating the power
dissipation required for the FAN5240:
QG(SW)
t1
(16)
t3
t4
t5
P GATE = Q G × VDD × F SW
CISS = CGS || CGD
(17)
Low-Side Losses
Figure 12. Switching losses and QG
Conduction losses for Q2 are given by:
VIN
5V
2
P COND = ( 1 – D ) × I OUT × R DS ( ON )
CGD
RD
19
HDRV
RGATE
G
where RDS(ON) is the RDS(ON) of the MOSFET at the
V
V IN
the minimum duty cycle for the converter. Since DMIN is 5%
CGS
20
(18)
OUT
highest operating junction temperature and D = -------------is
SW
for portable computers, (1-D) ≈ 1, further simplifying the
calculation.
Figure 13. Drive Equivalent Circuit
Assuming switching losses are about the same for both the
rising edge and falling edge, Q1’s switching losses, as can be
seen by Figure 12, are given by:
P UPPER = P SW + P COND
(15a)
V DS × I L
P SW =  --------------------- × 2 × t S F SW


2
(15b)
V OUT
2
P COND = -------------- × I OUT × R DS ( ON )
V IN
(15c)
The maximum power dissipation (PD(MAX) ) is a function of
the maximum allowable die temperature of the low-side
MOSFET, the θJ-A, and the maximum allowable ambient
temperature rise:
T J ( MAX ) – T A ( MAX )
P D ( MAX ) = -----------------------------------------------θJ – A
θJ-A, depends primarily on the amount of PCB area that can
be devoted to heat sinking (see FSC app note AN-1029 for
SO-8 MOSFET thermal information).
where RDS(ON) is @TJ(MAX) and:
tS is the switching period (rise or fall time) and is predominantly the sum of t2, t3 (Figure 12), a function of the impedance of the driver and the QG(SW) of the MOSFET. Since
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
15
FAN5240
Layout Considerations
Switching converters, even during normal operation,
produce short pulses of current which could cause substantial ringing and be a source of EMI if layout constrains are
not observed.
There are two sets of critical components in a DC-DC
converter. The switching power components process large
amounts of energy at high rate and are noise generators.
The low power components responsible for bias and feedback functions are sensitive to noise.
A multi-layer printed circuit board is recommended.
Dedicate one solid layer for a ground plane. Dedicate
another solid layer as a power plane and break this plane
into smaller islands of common voltage levels.
Notice all the nodes that are subjected to high dV/dt voltage
swing such as SW, HDRV and LDRV, for example. All surrounding circuitry will tend to couple the signals from these
nodes through stray capacitance. Do not oversize copper
traces connected to these nodes. Do not place traces connected to the feedback components adjacent to these traces.
It is not recommended to use High Density Interconnect
Systems, or micro-vias on these signals. The use of blind or
buried vias should be limited to the low current signals only.
The use of normal thermal vias is left to the discretion of the
designer.
16
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
Keep the wiring traces from the IC to the MOSFET gate and
source as short as possible and capable of handling peak currents of 2A. Minimize the area within the gate-source path to
reduce stray inductance and eliminate parasitic ringing at the
gate.
Locate small critical components like the soft-start capacitor
and current sense resistors as close as possible to the respective pins of the IC.
The FAN5240 utilizes advanced packaging technology that
will have lead pitch of 0.6mm. High performance analog
semiconductors utilizing narrow lead spacing may require
special considerations in PWB design and manufacturing. It
is critical to maintain proper cleanliness of the area surrounding these devices. It is not recommended to use any
type of rosin or acid core solder, or the use of flux in either
the manufacturing or touch up process as these may contribute to corrosion or enable electromigration and/or eddy currents near the sensitive low current signals. When chemicals
such as these are used on or near the PWB, it is suggested
that the entire PWB be cleaned and dried completely before
applying power.
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
FAN5240
Mechanical Dimensions
28-Pin QSOP
Inches
Symbol
Min.
Max.
Min.
0.053
0.069
0.004
0.010
0.061
0.008
0.012
0.007
0.010
0.386
0.394
0.150
0.157
0.025 BSC
1.35
1.75
0.10
0.25
1.54
0.20
0.30
0.18
0.25
9.81
10.00
3.81
3.98
0.635 BSC
0.228
0.244
5.80
6.19
h
L
N
α
0.0099
0.016
0.0196
0.050
0.26
0.41
0.49
1.27
28
Notes
Max.
A
A1
A2
B
C
D
E
e
H
0°
Notes:
Millimeters
0°
Symbols are defined in the "MO Series Symbol List" in
Section 2.2 of Publication Number 95.
2.
Dimensioning and tolerancing per ANSI Y14.5M-1982.
3.
Dimension "D" does not include mold flash, protrusions
or gate burrs. Mold flash, protrusions shall not exceed
0.25mm (0.010 inch) per side.
4.
Dimension "E" does not include interlead flash or
protrusions. Interlead flash and protrusions shall not
exceed 0.25mm (0.010 inch) per side.
5.
The chamber on the body is optional. If it is not present,
a visual index feature must be located within the
crosshatched area.
6.
"L" is the length of terminal for soldering to a substrate.
7.
"N" is the maximum number of terminals.
8.
Terminal numbers are shown for reference only.
9.
Dimension "B" does not include dambar protrusion.
Allowable dambar protrusion shall be 0.10mm (0.004
inch) total in excess of "B" dimension at maximum
material condition.
9
3
4
5
6
7
28
8°
1.
8°
10. Controlling dimension: INCHES. Converted millimeter
dimensions are not necessarily exact.
D
E
A
H
C
A1
A2
B
e
SEATING
PLANE
–C–
α
L
LEAD COPLANARITY
ccc C
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
17
FAN5240
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
Mechanical Dimensions
28-Pin TSSOP
–A–
9.7 ± 0.1
0.51 TYP
15
28
14
7.72
1.78
3.2
6.4
4.4 ± 0.1
4.16
–B–
B A
0.2
ALL Lead Tips
0.65
0.42
PIN # 1 IDENT
LAND PATTERN RECOMMENDATION
1.2 MAX
0.1 C
ALL LEAD TIPS
+0.15
0.90 –0.10
See Detail A
0.09–0.20
–C–
0.10 ± 0.05
0.65
0.19–0.30
0.13
A B
C
12.00° Top & Botom
R0.16
GAGE PLANE
R0.31
DIMENSIONS ARE IN MILLIMETERS
.025
0°–8°
NOTES:
0.61 ± 0.1
A. Conforms to JEDEC registration MO-153, variation AB,
Ref. Note 6, dated 7/93.
B. Dimensions are in millimeters.
C. Dimensions are exclusive of burrs, mold flash, and tie bar extensions.
D Dimensions and Tolerances per ANsI Y14.5M, 1982
18
SEATING PLANE
1.00
DETAIL A
REV. 1.1.7 8/29/02
FAN5240
PRODUCT SPECIFICATION
Ordering Information
Part Number
Temperature Range
Package
Packing
FAN5240QSC
-10°C to 85°C
QSOP-28
Rails
FAN5240QSCX
-10°C to 85°C
QSOP-28
Tape and Reel
FAN5240MTC
-10°C to 85°C
TSSOP-28
Rails
FAN5240MTCX
-10°C to 85°C
TSSOP-28
Tape and Reel
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ANY PRODUCTS HEREIN TO IMPROVE RELIABILITY, FUNCTION OR DESIGN. FAIRCHILD DOES NOT ASSUME
ANY LIABILITY ARISING OUT OF THE APPLICATION OR USE OF ANY PRODUCT OR CIRCUIT DESCRIBED HEREIN;
NEITHER DOES IT CONVEY ANY LICENSE UNDER ITS PATENT RIGHTS, NOR THE RIGHTS OF OTHERS.
LIFE SUPPORT POLICY
FAIRCHILD’S PRODUCTS ARE NOT AUTHORIZED FOR USE AS CRITICAL COMPONENTS IN LIFE SUPPORT DEVICES
OR SYSTEMS WITHOUT THE EXPRESS WRITTEN APPROVAL OF THE PRESIDENT OF FAIRCHILD SEMICONDUCTOR
CORPORATION. As used herein:
1. Life support devices or systems are devices or systems
which, (a) are intended for surgical implant into the body,
or (b) support or sustain life, and (c) whose failure to
perform when properly used in accordance with
instructions for use provided in the labeling, can be
reasonably expected to result in a significant injury of the
user.
2. A critical component in any component of a life support
device or system whose failure to perform can be
reasonably expected to cause the failure of the life support
device or system, or to affect its safety or effectiveness.
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