MICREL MIC22950YML

MIC22950
10A Integrated Switch Synchronous
Buck Regulator with Frequency
Programmable to 2MHz
General Description
Features
The Micrel MIC22950 is a high-efficiency 10A integrated
switch, synchronous buck (step-down) regulator. The
MIC22950 switching frequency is programmable from
400kHz to 2MHz, allowing the customer to optimize
designing either for efficiency or for the smallest footprint.
The MIC22950 achieves over 95% efficiency while still
switching at 2MHz over a broad load range.
The ultra-high-speed control loop keeps the output voltage
within regulation, even under extreme transient load
swings commonly found in FPGAs and low voltage ASICs.
The output voltage can be adjusted down to 0.7V in order
to address all low-voltage power needs.
The MIC22950 features a full range of sequencing and
tracking options. The EN/DLY and the DELAY pins,
combined with the POR/PG pin, allow multiple outputs to
be sequenced in several ways during turn-on and turn-off
by using EN pin. The RC (Ramp Control™) pin allows the
device to be connected to any another device in the
MIC22x00 family of products, to keep the output voltages
within a certain delta V during start-up.
The MIC22950 is available in a 32-pin 5mm x 5mm MLF®
with a junction operating range from −40°C to +125°C.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
2.6V to 5.5V supply voltage
Fully-integrated MOSFET switches
Adjustable output voltage option down to 0.7V
Output load current up to 10A
Full sequencing and tracking capability
Power-On Reset
Efficiency >95% across a broad load range
Operating frequency programmable: 400kHz to 2MHz
Ultra-fast transient response
100% maximum duty cycle
Micropower shutdown
Thermal-shutdown and current-limit protection
Available in a 32-pin 5mm x 5mm MLF® package
−40°C to +125°C junction temperature range
Applications
•
•
•
•
•
Datasheet and supporting documentation can be found on
Micrel’s web site at: www.micrel.com.
High-power density point-of-load conversion
Base stations, Servers and Routers
Blu-ray players, DVD Recorders
Computer Peripherals
FPGAs, DSP, and low-voltage ASIC power
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Typical Application
Efficiency vs. Load Current
100
EFFICIENCY (%)
95
90
85
80
75
70
VIN = 5V
VOUT = 3.3V
TA = 25°C
65
60
0
2
4
6
8
10
LOAD CURRENT (A)
MIC22950 10A Synchronous DC-DC Converter
Sequencing and Tracking
Ramp Control is a trademark of Micrel, Inc
MLF and MicroLeadFrame are registered trademarks of Amkor Technology, Inc.
Micrel Inc. • 2180 Fortune Drive • San Jose, CA 95131 • USA • tel +1 (408) 944-0800 • fax + 1 (408) 474-1000 • http://www.micrel.com
February 2010
M9999-021910-B
Micrel, Inc.
MIC22950
Ordering Information
Part Number
Nominal Output Voltage
MIC22950YML
Temperature Range
−40° to +125°C
Adjustable
Package
32-Pin 5mm x 5mm MLF
Lead Finish
®
Lead Free
Note:
®
MLF is a GREEN RoHS-compliant package. Lead finish is NiPdAu. Mold compound is Halogen Free.
Pin Configuration
32-Pin 5mm x 5mm MLF® (ML)
Pin Description
Pin Number
Pin Name
1,2,7,8,17,23,24
PVIN
Pin Function
Power Supply Voltage (Input): Requires bypass capacitor to PGND.
3
EN/DLY
Enable/ delay (Input): This pin has a 1.24V band gap reference. When the pin is pulled higher
that this the part will start up. Below this voltage the device is in its low quiescent current mode.
The pin has a 1µA current source pull-up to VIN. By adding a capacitor to this pin, a delay may
be generated. The enable function will not operate with an input voltage lower than UVLO.
4
DELAY
Delay (Input): A capacitor sets the internal delay timer. Timer delays power-on reset (POR) at
power-up and power-down.
5
RC
Ramp Control (Input): Capacitor-to-ground from this pin determines slew rate of output voltage
during start-up. This can be used for tracking capability as well as soft start. RC pin cannot be
left floating. Use a minimum capacitor value of 120pF or larger.
6
POR/PG
9,10,15,16,25,26,
31,32
PGND
11,12,13,14,27,
28,29,30
SW
18
SGND
19
CF
Frequency Set (Input): Adjustable Frequency with external capacitor.
20
FB
Feedback (Input): Input to the error amplifier, connect to the external resistor divider network to
set the output voltage.
21
COMP
22
SVIN
Signal Power Supply Voltage (Input): Requires bypass capacitor-to-SGND.
EP
GND
Center Tab (Power): Must make a full connection to a GND plane for full output power to be
realized.
February 2010
Power-On-Reset (Output): Open-drain output device indicates when the output is out of
regulation and is active after the delay set by the DELAY pin.
Power Ground (Power): Power Ground.
Switch (Output): Internal power MOSFET output switches.
Signal Ground (Signal): Signal Ground.
Compensation pin (Input): Place a RC-to-SGND to compensate the device, see applications
section.
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Micrel, Inc.
MIC22950
Absolute Maximum Ratings(1)
Operating Ratings(2)
Supply Voltage (PVIN, SVIN).............................. −0.3V to +6V
Output Switch Voltage (VSW) ........................... −0.3V to +6V
Output Switch Current (ISW) ......................Internally Limited
Logic Input Voltage (VEN, VPOR, VDLY)................. –0.3V to VIN
Control Voltage (CF, RC, COMP, FB) .................... –0.3V to VIN
Lead Temperature (soldering, 10sec.)....................... 260°C
Storage Temperature (Ts).........................–65°C to +150°C
Supply Voltage (VIN)......................................... 2.6V to 5.5V
Junction Temperature (TJ) ..................–40°C ≤ TJ ≤ +125°C
Thermal Resistance
MLF® (θJC)..........................................................11°C/W
MLF® (θJA)..........................................................30°C/W
Electrical Characteristics(3)
TA = 25°C with VIN = VEN = 3.3V; VOUT = 1.8V, unless otherwise specified. Bold values indicate –40°C ≤ TJ ≤ +125°C.
Parameter
Condition
Min.
Supply Voltage Range
VIN Turn On Voltage Threshold
Typ.
2.6
(VIN Rising)
2.35
UVLO Hysteresis
2.5
Max.
Units
5.5
V
2.6
V
260
mV
Quiescent Current (PWM Mode)
VEN = >1.34V; VFB = 1.1*VNOM (not switching)
1
2
mA
Shutdown Current
VEN = 0V
5
10
µA
[Adjustable] Feedback Voltage
± 2% (over temperature)
0.714
V
0.686
FB pin input current
1
Current Limit
VFB = 0.9*VNOM
Output Voltage Line Regulation
VOUT 1.8V; VIN = 2.6 to 5.5V, ILOAD = 100mA
0.2
%
Output Voltage Load Regulation
100mA < ILOAD < 10A, Vin = 3.3V
0.2
%
Maximum Duty Cycle
VFB ≤ 0.5V
Switch ON-Resistance PFET
Switch ON-Resistance NFET
ISW = 1000mA VFB=0.5V
ISW = -1000mA VFB=0.9V
Oscillator Frequency
CF = 390pF
10
16.5
nA
21
100
EN/DLY threshold voltage
A
%
11
8
mΩ
mΩ
325
510
610
kHz
1.14
1.24
1.34
V
EN/DLY source current
VIN = 2.6 to VIN = 5.5V
0.6
1
1.8
µA
RC Pin IRAMP
Ramp Control Current
0.6
1
1.8
µA
Power On Reset IPG(LEAK)
VPORH = 5.5V; POR = High
1
2
µA
µA
Output Logic-Low Voltage (undervoltage condition),
Power On Reset VPG(LO)
IPOR = 5mA
Hysteresis
Power On Reset VPG
Threshold, % of VOUT below nominal
7.5
77
mV
2
%
10
12.5
%
Over-temperature Shutdown
160
°C
Over-temperature Shutdown Hysteresis
20
°C
Notes:
1. Exceeding the absolute maximum rating may damage the device.
2. The device is not guaranteed to function outside its operating rating.
3. Specification for packaged product only.
February 2010
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Micrel, Inc.
MIC22950
Typical Characteristics
Shutdown Current
vs. Input Voltage
6
5
4
3
2
TA = 25°C
1
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
VIN = 3.3V
1
0
3
4
5
INPUT VOLTAGE (V)
6
1
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
TA = 25°C
0
0
2
-40
-20
Input Current (no SW)
vs. Temperature
0
20 40 60 80
TEMPERATURE (°C)
2
100 120
0.708
0.708
0.706
0.706
0.84
0.82
0.8
0.78
0.76
0.74
REFERENCE VOLTAGE (V)
0.9
0.86
0.704
0.702
0.7
0.698
0.696
TA = 25°C
0.694
100 120
2
1.26
ENABLE VOLTAGE (V)
1.255
Enable (ON)
1.245
1.24
1.235
1.23
TA = 25°C
1.225
February 2010
3.5
4
4.5
INPUT VOLTAGE (V)
0.696
0.694
-40 -20
6
650
600
1.25
Enable (ON)
1.245
1.24
1.235
1.23
VIN = 3.3V
5
5.5
-40 -20
0
20
40
60
80 100 120
TEM PERATURE (°C)
4
0
20 40 60 80 100 120
TEMPERATURE (°C)
Switching Frequency
vs. Temperature
1.26
1.22
3
0.7
0.698
1.255
1.225
1.22
2.5
0.702
Enable Threshold
vs. Temperature
Enable Threshold
vs. Input Voltage
1.25
3
4
5
INPUT VOLTAGE (V)
FREQUENCY (kHz)
0
20 40 60 80
TEMPERATURE (°C)
0.704
0.692
0.692
-20
6
Reference Voltage
vs. Temperature
0.88
-40
3
4
5
INPUT VOLTAGE (V)
Reference Voltage
vs. Input Voltage
REFERENCE VOLTAGE (V)
INPUT CURRENT (mA)
OPERATING CURRENT (mA)
9
INPUT CURRENT (µA)
SHUTDOWN CURRENT (µA)
1.2
10
7
ENABLE VOLTAGE (V)
Operating Current (no SW)
vs. Input Voltage
Shutdown Current
vs. Temperature
550
500
450
400
CF = 390pF
350
300
-40 -20
0
20 40 60 80
TEMPERATURE (°C)
100 120
M9999-021910-B
Micrel, Inc.
MIC22950
Typical Characteristics (Continued)
Input Voltage UVLO
vs. Temperature
650
2.8
600
2.7
550
500
450
400
CF = 390pF
2.4
2.2
5
5.5
VIN = (OFF)
10
8
RDSON (N-Channel)
4
TCASE = 25°C
0
100
-40
120
100
1800
95
1600
1200
1000
800
600
400
VOUT(NOM) = 1.8V
200
Efficiency vs. Load Current
(VOUT=1.8V)
100 120
Efficiency vs. Load Current
(VOUT=1.2V)
VIN = 3.6V
85
VIN = 2.6V
80
75
VIN = 5V
70
TCASE = 25°C
65
200
400
600
800
RC VOLTAGE (mV)
1000
0
2
4
6
8
LOAD CURRENT (A)
10
Efficiency vs. Load Current
(VOUT=3.3V)
100
95
0
20 40 60 80
TEMPETATURE (°C)
60
0
6
-20
90
1400
0
100
95
90
90
VIN = 3.6V
85
80
EFFICIENCY (%)
EFFICIENCY (%)
20
40
60
80
TEM PETATURE (°C)
2000
0
3
4
5
INPUT VOLTAGE (V)
RDSON (N-Channel)
6
0
-20
EFFICIENCY (%)
OUTPUT VOLTAGE (mV)
RDSon (mΩ )
12
2
8
Output Voltage
vs. RC Voltage
RDSON (P-Channel)
2
10
2
-40
16
6
12
4
RDSon
vs. Input Voltage
14
RDSON (P-Channel)
14
2.5
300
3.5
4
4.5
INPUT VOLTAGE (V)
16
2.6
2.3
3
18
VIN = (ON)
350
2.5
RDSon
vs. Temperature
RDSon (mΩ )
INPUT VOLTAGE (V)
FREQUENCY (kHz)
Switching Frequency
vs. Input Voltage
VIN = 2.6V
75
VIN = 5V
70
TCASE = 25°C
65
85
80
75
70
VIN = 5V
TCASE = 25°C
65
60
60
0
2
February 2010
4
6
8
LOAD CURRENT (A)
10
0
2
4
6
8
LOAD CURRENT (A)
5
10
M9999-021910-B
Micrel, Inc.
MIC22950
Bode Plots
February 2010
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Micrel, Inc.
MIC22950
Functional Characteristics
February 2010
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Micrel, Inc.
MIC22950
Functional Block Diagram
February 2010
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Micrel, Inc.
MIC22950
FB
The FB pin provides the control path to control the
output. A resistor divider connecting the feedback to the
output is used to adjust the desired output voltage. Refer
to the feedback section in Applications Information of
this data sheet for more detail.
Functional Description
PVIN, SVIN
PVIN is the input supply to the internal 11mΩ P-Channel
Power MOSFET. This should be connected externally to
the SVIN pin. The supply voltage range is from 2.6V to
5.5V. A 22µF ceramic is recommended for bypassing
each PVIN supply and 10µF capacitor for SVIN pin.
POR/PG
This is an open drain output. A 47k resistor can be used
for a pull-up to this pin. POR/PG is asserted high when
output voltage reaches 90% of nominal set voltage and
after the delay set by CDELAY. POR/PG is asserted low
without delay when enable is set low or when the output
goes below the −10% threshold. For a power-good (PG)
function, the delay can be set to a minimum. This can be
done by removing the DELAY pin capacitor.
EN/DLY
This pin is internally fed with a 1µA current source to
SVIN. A delayed turn on is implemented by adding a
capacitor to this pin. The delay is proportional to the
capacitor value. The internal circuits are held off until
EN/DLY reaches the enable threshold of 1.24V.
RC
RC pin allows the slew rate of the output voltage to be
programmed by the addition of a capacitor from RC pin
to ground. RC pin is internally fed with a 1µA current
source and VOUT slew rate is proportional to the
capacitor and the 1µA source. The RC pin cannot be left
floating. Use a minimum capacitor value of 120pF or
longer.
CF
This pin allows the setting of the switching frequency. A
200µA source current charges the capacitor on this pin
up to a voltage of 1V. At this point, CF pin capacitor is
then discharged with an internal N-Channel MOSFET
marking the end of the switching period. The capacitor
should be connected very close to the IC and grounded
directly to the SGND pin.
DELAY
Adding a capacitor to this pin allows the delay of the
POR signal.
When VOUT reaches 90% of its nominal voltage, the
DELAY pin current source (1µA) starts to charge the
external capacitor. At 1.24V, POR is asserted high.
SW
This is the connection to the source of the internal Pchannel MOSFET and drain of the N-Channel MOSFET.
This is a high-frequency, high-power connection;
therefore, traces should be kept as short and as wide as
practical.
COMP
The MIC22950 uses an internal-compensation network
containing a fixed-frequency zero (phase-lead response)
and pole (phase-lag response) which allows the external
compensation network to be much simplified for stability.
The addition of a single capacitor and resistor will add
the necessary pole and zero for voltage-mode loop
stability using low-value, low-ESR ceramic capacitors.
February 2010
SGND
Internal signal ground for all low-power sections.
PGND
Internal ground connection to the source of the internal
N-Channel MOSFETs.
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Micrel, Inc.
MIC22950
equal or greater than the current limit of the MIC22950 to
prevent overheating in a fault condition. For best
electrical performance, the inductor should be placed
very close to the SW nodes of the IC. For this reason,
the heat of the inductor is somewhat coupled to the IC,
which offers some level of protection if the inductor gets
too hot. It is important to test all operating limits before
settling on the final inductor choice.
The size requirements refer to the area and height
requirements that are necessary to fit a particular
design. Please refer to the inductor dimensions on their
datasheet.
DC resistance is also important. While DCR is typically
inversely proportional to size, DCR can represent a
significant efficiency loss. Refer to the Efficiency
Considerations section for a more detailed description.
Application Information
The MIC22950 is a 10A synchronous stepdown
regulator IC with a programmable 400kHz to 2MHz
switching frequency. The control loop is a voltage-mode
PWM control scheme. Other features include tracking
and sequencing control for controlling multiple output
power systems with POR/PG output.
Component Selection
Input Capacitor
A minimum 22µF ceramic capacitor (preferable) is
recommended on each of the PVIN pins for bypassing.
X5R or X7R dielectrics are recommended for the input
capacitor. Do not use Y5V dielectrics, aside from losing
most of their capacitance over temperature and voltage,
they also become resistive at high frequencies. This
reduces their ability to localize high-frequency noise.
EN/DLY Capacitor
EN/DLY sources 1µA out of the IC to allow a start-up
delay to be implemented. The delay time is simply the
time it takes 1µA to charge CEN/DLY to 1.24V. Therefore:
Output Capacitor
The MIC22950 was designed specifically for the use of
ceramic output capacitors. It is designed to work with
100µF output capacitor. This output capacitor can be
increased to improve transient performance. Since the
MIC22950 is voltage mode control loop, it relies on the
inductor and output capacitor for compensation. For this
reason, do not use excessively large output capacitors.
The output capacitor requires either an X7R or X5R
dielectric. Do not use Y5V and Z5U dielectric capacitors,
aside from the undesirable effect of their wide variation
in capacitance over temperature, become resistive at
high frequencies. Using Y5V or Z5U capacitors can
cause instability in the MIC22950.
TDLY =
Efficiency Considerations
Efficiency is defined as the amount of useful output
power, divided by the amount of power consumed:
⎛V
×I
Efficiency % = ⎜⎜ OUT OUT
⎝ VIN × IIN
Inductor Selection
Inductor selection will be determined by the following
(not necessarily in the order of importance):
•
Inductance
•
Rated current value
•
Size requirements
•
DC resistance (DCR)
⎞
⎟⎟ × 100
⎠
Maintaining high efficiency serves two purposes. It
reduces power dissipation in the power supply, reducing
the need for heat sinks and thermal-design
considerations and it reduces consumption of current for
battery-powered applications. Reduced current draw
from a battery increases the devices operating time,
critical in hand held devices.
There are mainly two loss terms in switching converters:
Static losses and switching losses. Static losses are
simply the power losses due to V.I or I2R. For example,
power is dissipated in the high-side switch during the on
cycle. Power loss is equal to the high-side MOSFET
RDS(ON) multiplied by the RMS Switch Current squared
(ISW2). During the off cycle, the low-side N-Channel
MOSFET conducts, also dissipating power. Similarly, the
inductor’s DCR and capacitor’s ESR also contribute to
the I2R losses. Device operating current also reduces
efficiency by the product of the quiescent (operating)
current and the supply voltage. The current required to
The MIC22950 is designed for use with a 0.39µH to
2.2µH inductor.
Maximum current ratings of the inductor are generally
given in two methods: permissible DC current and
saturation current. Permissible DC current can be rated
either for a 40°C temperature rise or a 10% loss in
inductance. Ensure that the inductor selected can handle
the maximum operating current. When the saturation
current is specified, make sure that there is enough
margin that the peak current will not saturate the
inductor. The ripple can add as much as 2A to the output
current level. The RMS rating should be chosen to be
February 2010
1.24 × C EN/DLY
1 × 10 − 6
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M9999-021910-B
Micrel, Inc.
MIC22950
drive the gates on and off at a constant 400kHz to 2MHz
frequency and the switching transitions make up the
switching losses.
Figure 2 shows an efficiency curve. The non-shaded
portion, from 0A to 1A, efficiency losses are dominated
by quiescent current losses, gate drive and transition
losses. In this case, lower supply voltages yield greater
efficiency in that they require less current to drive the
MOSFETs and have reduced input power consumption.
Efficiency loss due to DCR is minimal at light loads and
gains significance as the load is increased. Inductor
selection becomes a trade-off between efficiency and
size in this case.
Alternatively, under lighter loads, the ripple current due
to the inductance becomes a significant factor. When
light load efficiencies become more critical, a larger
inductor value maybe desired. Larger inductances
reduce the peak-to-peak inductor ripple current, which
minimize losses. The following graph, in Figure 2,
illustrates the effects of inductance value at light load.
Efficiency vs. Load Current
100
Efficiency vs. Inductance
95
100
95
85
90
80
85
EFFICIENCY (%)
EFFICIENCY (%)
90
75
70
3.6V to 1.8V
65
L = 4.7µH
L = 1µH
80
75
70
65
60
60
0
2
4
6
8
55
10
LOAD CURRENT (A)
50
0
Figure 1. Efficiency Curve
200
400
600
800
1000
OUTPUT CURRENT (mA)
Figure 2. Efficiency vs. Inductance
The dashed region, 1A to 6A, efficiency loss is
dominated by MOSFET RDS(ON) and inductor DC losses.
Higher input supply voltages will increase the Gate-toSource voltage on the internal MOSFETs, thus reducing
the internal RDS(ON). This improves efficiency by
reducing DC losses in the device. All but the inductor
losses are inherent to the device. In which case, inductor
selection becomes increasingly critical in efficiency
calculations. As the inductors are reduced in size, the
DC resistance (DCR) can become quite significant. The
DCR losses can be calculated as follows:
Compensation
The MIC22950 has a combination of internal and
external stability compensation to simplify the circuit for
small, high efficiency designs. In such designs, voltage
mode conversion is often the optimum solution. Voltage
mode is achieved by creating an internal ramp signal
which is derived from the CF current charging an
external capacitor. This ramp is compared to the output
of the error amplifier to modulate the pulse width of the
switch node, maintaining output voltage regulation. With
a typical gain bandwidth of 100 – 200kHz, the MIC22950
is capable of fast transient responses.
The MIC22950 is designed to be stable with a typical
application using a 1µH inductor and a 100µF ceramic
(X5R) output capacitor. These values can be varied
dependant upon the tradeoff between size, cost and
efficiency, keeping the LC natural frequency
1
(
) ideally less than FSW/17 to ensure
2 × π × L × ⋅C
stability can be achieved. The minimum recommended
inductor value is 0.39µH and minimum recommended
output capacitor value is 10µF.
LPD = IOUT2 × DCR
From that, the loss in efficiency due to inductor
resistance can be calculated as follows:
⎡
⎛
Efficiency Loss = ⎢1 − ⎜⎜
⎣⎢
February 2010
VOUT ⋅ IOUT
⎞⎤
⎟⎥ × 100
⎟
⎝ (VOUT ⋅ IOUT ) + LPD ⎠⎦⎥
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Micrel, Inc.
MIC22950
The MIC22950 provides switching frequency at 400kHz
to 2MHz with synchronous internal MOSFETs. The
internal MOSFETs include a high-side 11mΩ P-Channel
MOSFET from the input supply to the switch pin and an
8mΩ N-Channel MOSFET from the switch pin-to-ground.
Since the low-side N-Channel MOSFET provides the
current during the off cycle, a freewheeling Schottky
diode from the switch node-to-ground is not required.
PWM control provides fixed-frequency operation. By
maintaining a constant switching frequency, predictable
fundamental and harmonic frequencies are achieved.
Other methods of regulation, such as burst and skip
modes, have frequency spectrums that change with load
that can interfere with sensitive communication
equipment.
The tradeoff between changing these values is that with
a larger inductor, there is a reduced peak-to-peak
current which yields a greater efficiency at lighter loads.
A larger output capacitor will improve transient response
by providing a larger hold up reservoir of energy to the
output.
The integration of one pole-zero pair within the control
loop greatly simplifies compensation. The optimum
values for CCOMP (in series with a 1k resistor) are shown
below:
CÆ
10-22µF
47-100µF
120-470µF
NA
10*-20pF†
25-47pF
LÈ
0.39 - 0.47µH
‡
†
0.56 – 1.0µH
10 -15pF*
22 -39pF
56-100pF
1.2 – 2.2µH
10-22pF
22-68pF
NA
CF Pin
Each switching cycle begins immediately following the
discharge of the CF pin capacitor. From this point, a
current source of 200µA flows from CF pin into the
external capacitor connected to the CF pin. This creates
a linear voltage ramp rising towards a threshold voltage
of 1V. When this capacitor reaches the 1V threshold, it
triggers the end of the switching cycle by discharging CF
pin to ground via an internal N-Channel; at which point,
the next cycle begins. The actual switching frequency
can be approximated by using the following equation
which accounts for internal delays and capacitance:
† VOUT > 1V; * VOUT > 1.4V; ‡ VOUT > 1.8V
Feedback
The MIC22950 provides a feedback pin to adjust the
output voltage to the desired level. This pin connects
internally to an error amplifier. The error amplifier then
compares the voltage at the feedback to the internal
0.7V reference voltage and adjusts the output voltage to
maintain regulation. To calculate the resistor divider
network for the desired output is as follows:
R2 =
FSW =
R1
⎛ VOUT
⎞
⎜⎜
− 1⎟⎟
⎝ VREF
⎠
1
⎛
(C + CPIN ) ⎞⎟
TDELAY + ⎜⎜ VRAMP ⋅ CF
⎟
ICF
⎝
⎠
Where:
FSW = Switching Frequency
TDELAY = CF pin Discharge time ~ 85ns
VRAMP = Voltage ramp amplitude ~ 0.9V
CCF = External CF capacitor = 68pF to 560pF
CPIN = Internal Pin capacitance ~ 15pF
ICF = CF current source = 200µA
Where VREF is 0.7V and VOUT is the desired output
voltage. A 10kΩ or lower resistor value from the output
to the feedback is recommended since large feedback
resistor values increase the impedance at the feedback
pin, making the feedback node more susceptible to
noise pick-up. A small decoupling capacitor (22pF –
100pF) across the lower resistor can reduce noise pickup by providing a low impedance path to ground.
PWM Operation
The MIC22950 is a voltage-mode, pulse-width
modulation (PWM) controller. By controlling the ratio of
on-to-off time, or duty cycle, a regulated DC output
voltage is achieved. As load or supply voltage changes,
so does the duty cycle to maintain a constant output
voltage. In cases where the input supply runs into a
dropout condition, the MIC22950 will run at 100% duty
cycle.
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MIC22950
However, if EN pin is driven low, POR/PG will fall
immediately to the low state and DELAY pin will begin to
fall as the external capacitor is discharged by the 1µA
current sink. When the threshold of (VTP +1.24V)-1.24V
is crossed (VTP is internal voltage clamp, VTP ≅ 0.9V),
VOUT will begin to fall at a rate determined by the RC pin
capacitor. As the voltage change in both cases is 1.24V,
both rising and falling delays are matched at:
Alternatively, the Figure 3 can be used as a visual guide:
Switching Frequency
vs. CF Capacitance
SWITCHING FREQUENCY (kHz)
2250
2000
1750
1500
1250
TPOR =
1000
750
1.24 × C DELAY
1 × 10 − 6
500
RC Pin
The RC pin provides a trimmed 1µA current source/sink
similar to the DELAY Pin for accurate ramp up (soft
start) and ramp down control. This allows the MIC22950
to be used in systems requiring voltage tracking or ratiometric voltage tracking at startup.
There are two ways of using the RC pin:
250
0
0
250
500
750
CF CAPACITANCE (pF)
1000
Figure 3. Switching Frequency vs. CF Capacitance
This pin should not be over-ridden using an external
clock because the trigger pulses generated when the CF
pin reaches 1V are utilized internally.
1. Externally driven from a voltage source
2. Externally attached capacitor sets output ramp
up/down rate
Sequencing and Tracking
The MIC22950 provides additional pins to provide
up/down sequencing and tracking capability for
connecting multiple voltage regulators together.
In the first case, driving RC pin with a voltage from 0V to
VREF will program the output voltage between 0% and
100% of the nominal set voltage.
In the second case, the external capacitor sets the ramp
up and ramp down rate of the output voltage. The rate is
0.7 × C RC
where TRAMP is the time
given by TRAMP =
1 × 10 − 6
from 0% to 100% nominal output voltage. RC pin cannot
be left floating. Use a minimum capacitor value of 120p
for larger.
EN/DLY Pin
The EN/DLY pin contains a trimmed, 1µA current source
which can be used with a capacitor to implement a fixed
desired delay in some sequenced power systems. The
threshold level for power on is 1.24V with a hysteresis of
20mV.
DELAY Pin
The DELAY pin also has a 1µA trimmed current source and
a 1µA current sink which acts with an external capacitor to
delay the operation of the Power On Reset (POR/PG)
output. This can be used also in sequencing outputs in a
sequenced system, but with the addition of a conditional
delay between supplies; allowing a first up, last down power
sequence.
After EN pin is driven high, VOUT will start to rise (rate
determined by RC pin capacitor). As the FB pin voltage
goes above 90% of its nominal set voltage, DELAY pin
begins to rise as the 1µA source charges the external
capacitor. When the threshold of 1.24V is crossed,
POR/PG is asserted high and DELAY continues to
charge to a voltage SVIN. When FB falls below 90% of
nominal, POR/PG is asserted low immediately.
February 2010
Tracking and Sequencing Examples
There are four distinct variations which are easily
implemented using the MIC22950. The two Sequencing
variations are Delayed and windowed. The two tracking
variants are ratio Metric and Normal. The following
diagrams illustrate methods for connecting two
MIC22950’s to achieve these requirements.
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M9999-021910-B
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MIC22950
Sequencing
Window Sequencing
CRC1 = CRC2 = 0nF,CDELAY1 = 3.3nF, CDELAY2 = 0nF
Delayed Sequencing
CRC1 = CRC2 = 0nF, CDELAY1 = 3.3nF, CDELAY2 = 6.8nF
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MIC22950
Normal Tracking
Ratio Metric Tracking
CCR1 = 3.3nF, CRC2 = 0nF, CDELAY1 = CDELAY2 = 3.3nF
R1 = 1.1k, R2 = 698, R3 = 505, R4 = 698
CCR1 = 3.3nF, CRC2 = 0nF, CDELAY1 = CDELAY2 = 3.3nF
R1 = 1.1k, R2 = 698, R3 = 505, R4 = 698
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MIC22950
Where:
PDISS is the power dissipated within the MLF® package
and is typically 1.5W at 10A load. This has been
calculated for a 1µH inductor and details can be found in
Table 1.
RθJA is a combination of junction-to-case thermal
resistance (RθJC) and case-to-ambient thermal
resistance (RθCA), since thermal resistance of the solder
connection from the ePAD to the PCB is negligible; RθCA
is the thermal resistance of the ground plane to ambient.
So RθJA = RθJC + RθCA.
Current Limit
The MIC22950 is protected against overload in two
stages. The first is to limit the current in the P-Channel
switch; the second is over- temperature shutdown.
Current is limited by measuring the current through the
high-side MOSFET during its power stroke and
immediately switching off the driver when the preset limit
is exceeded.
The circuit in Figure 4 describes the operation of the
current-limit circuit. Since the actual RDSON of the
P-Channel
MOSFET
varies
part-to-part,
overtemperature and with input voltage, simple I.R voltage
detection is not employed. Instead, a smaller copy of the
Power MOSFET (Reference FET) is fed with a constant
current which is a directly proportional to the factory set
current limit. This sets the current limit as a current ratio
and thus, is not dependant upon the RDSON value.
Current limit is set to nominal value. Variations in the
scale factor K between the Power PFET and the
reference PFET used to generate the limit threshold
account for a relatively small inaccuracy.
TA is the Operating Ambient temperature.
VIN
3
3.5
4
4.5
5
1
1.66
1.67
1.68
1.7
1.73
1.2
1.68
1.69
1.71
1.72
1.74
1.8
1.76
1.76
1.77
1.78
1.8
2.5
1.85
1.84
1.84
1.85
1.86
3.3
-
1.92
1.91
1.91
1.92
VOUT
@ 10A
Table 1. Power Dissipation (W) for 10A Output
Example
The Evaluation board has two copper planes
contributing to an RθJA of approximately 25oC/W. The
worst case RθJC of the MLF® is 11oC/W. If we look at a
typical application of 3.6V to 1.8V @ 10A, the estimated
Power dissipation in the MLF® package taken from Table
1 will be 1.76W:
RθJA = RθJC + RθCA
RθJA = 11 + 25 = 36oC/W
Figure 4. Current Limit Detail
Thermal Considerations
The MIC22950 is packaged in the MLF® 5mm x 5mm, a
package that has excellent thermal performance
equaling that of the larger TSSOP packages. This
maximizes heat transfer from the junction to the exposed
pad (ePAD) which connects to the ground plane. The
size of the ground plane attached to the exposed pad
determines the overall thermal resistance from the
junction to the ambient air surrounding the printed circuit
board. The junction temperature for a given ambient
temperature can be calculated using:
To calculate the junction temperature for a 50oC
ambient:
TJ = TA+PDISS. RθJA
TJ = 50 + (1.76 x 36)
TJ = 113oC
This is below our maximum of 125oC.
TJ = TA + PDISS × RθJA
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MIC22950
MIC22950 Schematic
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MIC22950
Bill of Materials
Item
Part Number
C1, C2,
C3, C4
Manufacturer
TDK(2)
C2012X5R0J226K
08056D226MAT2A
AVX
GRM188R60J106ME47D
C5
C7
C1608X5R0J106K
TDK
AVX
4
Capacitor, 10µF, 6.3V, X5R 0603
1
Capacitor, 39pF, 25V, X7R, 0603
1
Ceramic Capacitor, 100pF, 50V, 0603
1
Ceramic Capacitor, 390pF, 50V, 0603
1
Capacitor, 47µF, 6.3V, 1206
2
Vitramon(4)
06033A390FAT2A
AVX
C1608C0G1H390J
TDK
VJ0603Y101KXAAT
Vitramon
AVX
C1608C0G1H101J
TDK
VJ0603Y391KXAAT
Vitramon
06035A391JAT2A
AVX
C1608C0G1H391J
TDK
GRM31CR60J476ME19L
C9, C10
Capacitor, 22µF, 6.3V, X5R, 0805
(3)
06036D106MAT2A
06025A101KAT2A
C8
Qty.
muRata
VJ0603Y390KXXMB
C6
Description
muRata(1)
GRM21BR60J226ME39L
muRata
C3216X5R0J476M
TDK
12066D476MAT2A
AVX
C11
C13
VJ0603Y102KXXMB
Vitramon
Ceramic Capacitor, 1nf, 50V, 0603
2
C14
VJ0603Y103KXXMB
Vitramon
Ceramic Capacitor, 10nf, 50V, 0603
1
06035A121JAT2A
AVX
C12
C1608COG1H121J
TDK
CIN
EEE-FPA122UAP
GRM1885C1H121JA01D
L1
CDEP105ME-1R2MC
R1
CRCW06031101FRT1
Capacitor, 120pF, 50V, COG, 0603
muRata
Panasonic(5)
Sumida
(6)
Vishay Dale(4)
1200uF, 10V, 10x10.2-Case
1
1.2µH, 21A , Inductor
1
Resistor, 1.1k, 1%, 0603
1
R2
CRCW0603698RFRT1
Vishay Dale
Resistor, 698Ω, 1%, 0603
1
R3
CRCW06032002FRT1
Vishay Dale
Resistor, 20k, 1%, 0603
1
R4
CRCW06034752FRT1
Vishay Dale
Resistor, 47.5k 1%, 0603
1
R5
CRCW06031003FRT1
Vishay Dale
Resistor, 100k 1%, 0603
1
2N7002E(SOT-23)
Vishay Corp
Signal MOSFET-SOT-236
1
10A Integrated Switch Synchronous Buck Regulator
with Frequency Programmable to 2MHz
1
Q1
U1
CMDPM7002A
Central Semiconductor(7)
MIC22950YML
Micrel8)
Notes:
1.
muRata: www.murata.com
2.
TDK: www.tdk.com
3.
AVX: www.avx.com
4.
Vishay: www.vishay.com
5.
Panasonic: www.panasonic.com
6.
Sumida: www.sumida.com
7.
Central Semiconductor: www.centralsemi.com
8.
Micrel, Inc.: www.micrel.com
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MIC22950
PCB Layout Recommendation
Top Assembly
Middle Layer 1
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MIC22950
PCB Layout Recommendation (Continued)
Middle Layer 2
Top Layer
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MIC22950
Package Information
32-Pin 5mm x 5mm MLF® (ML)
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MIC22950
Recommended Land Pattern for 32-Pin 5mm x 5mm MLF®
Red circle indicates Thermal Via. Size should be 300 – 350mm in diameter, 1.00mm pitch, and it should be connected to
GND plane for maximum thermal performance.
Green rectangle (with shaded area) indicates Solder Stencil Opening on exposed pad area. Size should be 0.87 x
0.87mm in size, 1.07mm pitch.
MICREL, INC. 2180 FORTUNE DRIVE SAN JOSE, CA 95131 USA
TEL +1 (408) 944-0800 FAX +1 (408) 474-1000 WEB http://www.micrel.com
The information furnished by Micrel in this data sheet is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by Micrel for its
use. Micrel reserves the right to change circuitry and specifications at any time without notification to the customer.
Micrel Products are not designed or authorized for use as components in life support appliances, devices or systems where malfunction of a product
can reasonably be expected to result in personal injury. Life support devices or systems are devices or systems that (a) are intended for surgical implant
into the body or (b) support or sustain life, and whose failure to perform can be reasonably expected to result in a significant injury to the user. A
Purchaser’s use or sale of Micrel Products for use in life support appliances, devices or systems is a Purchaser’s own risk and Purchaser agrees to fully
indemnify Micrel for any damages resulting from such use or sale.
© 2009 Micrel, Incorporated.
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