MIC3775 Micrel MIC3775 750mA µCap Low-Voltage Low-Dropout Regulator Final General Description Features The MIC3775 is a 750mA low-dropout linear voltage regulators that provides low-voltage, high-current output from an extremely small package. Utilizing Micrel’s proprietary Superβeta PNP™ pass element, the MIC3775 offers extremely low-dropout (typically 280mV at 750mA) and low ground current (typically 7.5mA at 750mA). The MIC3775 is ideal for PC add-in cards that need to convert from standard 5V to 3.3V or 3.0V, 3.3V to 2.5V or 2.5V to 1.8V or 1.65V. A guaranteed maximum dropout voltage of 500mV over all operating conditions allows the MIC3775 to provide 2.5V from a supply as low as 3.0V and 1.8V or 1.5V from a supply as low as 2.25V. The MIC3775 is fully protected with overcurrent limiting, thermal shutdown, and reversed-leakage protection. Fixed and adjustable output voltage options are available with an operating temperature range of –40°C to +125°C. • Fixed and adjustable output voltages to 1.24V • 280mV typical dropout at 750mA Ideal for 3.0V to 2.5V conversion Ideal for 2.5V to 1.8V or 1.65V conversion • Stable with ceramic capacitor • 750mA minimum guaranteed output current • 1% initial accuracy • Low ground current • Current limiting and thermal shutdown • Reversed-leakage protection • Fast transient response • Low-profile power MSOP-8 package Applications • • • • • • • • For other voltages, contact Micrel. Fiber optic modules LDO linear regulator for PC add-in cards PowerPC™ power supplies High-efficiency linear power supplies SMPS post regulator Multimedia and PC processor supplies Battery chargers Low-voltage microcontrollers and digital logic Ordering Information Part Number Voltage Junction Temp. Range Package MIC3775-1.5BMM 1.5V –40°C to +125°C MSOP-8 MIC3775-1.65BMM 1.65V –40°C to +125°C MSOP-8 MIC3775-1.8BMM 1.8V –40°C to +125°C MSOP-8 MIC3775-2.5BMM 2.5V –40°C to +125°C MSOP-8 MIC3775-3.0BMM 3.0V –40°C to +125°C MSOP-8 MIC3775-3.3BMM 3.3V –40°C to +125°C MSOP-8 MIC3775BMM Adj. –40°C to +125°C MSOP-8 Typical Applications Dropout vs. Output Current 300 ENABLE SHUTDOWN 250 MIC3775BMM IN OUT DROPOUT (mV) VIN 2.5V 1.25V R1 EN ADJ GND R2 10µF ceramic 1.8VOUT 200 150 100 3.3VOUT 2.5VOUT 50 1.25V/750mA Adjustable Regulator 0 0 0.25 0.5 0.75 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) Superβeta PNP is a trademark of Micrel, Inc. PowerPC is a trademark of Motorola Micrel, Inc. • 1849 Fortune Drive • San Jose, CA 95131 • USA • tel + 1 (408) 944-0800 • fax + 1 (408) 944-0970 • http://www.micrel.com March 2003 1 MIC3775 MIC3775 Micrel Pin Configuration EN 1 8 GND EN 1 8 GND IN 2 7 GND IN 2 7 GND FLG 3 6 GND ADJ 3 6 GND OUT 4 5 GND OUT 4 5 GND MIC3775-x.x Fixed MSOP-8 (MM) MIC3775 Adjustable MSOP-8 (MM) Pin Description Pin No. Fixed Pin No. Adjustable Pin Name 1 1 EN Enable (Input): CMOS-compatible control input. Logic high = enable, logic low or open = shutdown. 2 2 IN Supply (Input). 3 Pin Function FLG Flag (Output): Open-collector error flag output. Active low = output undervoltage. 3 ADJ Adjustment Input: Feedback input. Connect to resistive voltage-divider network. 4 4 OUT Regulator Output. 5–8 5–8 GND Ground. MIC3775 2 March 2003 MIC3775 Micrel Absolute Maximum Ratings (Note 1) Operating Ratings (Note 2) Supply Voltage (VIN) .................................................... 6.5V Enable Voltage (VEN) ................................................. +6.5V Storage Temperature (TS) ....................... –65°C to +150°C Lead Temperature (soldering, 5 sec.) ....................... 260°C ESD ......................................................................... Note 3 Supply Voltage (VIN) .................................... +2.25V to +6V Enable Voltage (VEN) ......................................... 0V to +6V Maximum Power Dissipation (PD(max))..................... Note 4 Junction Temperature (TJ) ....................... –40°C to +125°C Package Thermal Resistance MSOP-8 (θJA) ...................................................... 80°C/W Electrical Characteristics (Note 5) VIN = VOUT + 1V; VEN = 2.25V; TJ = 25°C, bold values indicate –40°C ≤ TJ ≤ +125°C; unless noted Symbol Parameter Condition VOUT Output Voltage 10mA 10mA ≤ IOUT ≤ 750mA, VOUT + 1V ≤ VIN ≤ 6V Line Regulation IOUT = 10mA, VOUT + 1V ≤ VIN ≤ 6V Load Regulation VIN = VOUT + 1V, 10mA ≤ IOUT ≤ 750mA, ∆VOUT/∆T Output Voltage Temp. Coefficient, Note 6 VDO Dropout Voltage, Note 7 IGND Typ Max Units 1 2 % % 0.06 0.5 % 0.2 1 % –1 –2 40 ppm/°C IOUT = 100mA, ∆VOUT = –1% 125 IOUT = 500mA, ∆VOUT = –1% 210 IOUT = 750mA, ∆VOUT = –1% 280 IOUT = 100mA, VIN = VOUT + 1V 700 µA IOUT = 500mA, VIN = VOUT + 1V 3.7 mA IOUT = 750mA, VIN = VOUT + 1V 7.5 15 mA Current Limit VOUT = 0V, VIN = VOUT + 1V 1.6 2.5 A Enable Input Voltage logic low (off) 0.8 V Ground Current, Note 8 IOUT(lim) Min 200 250 mV mV mV 500 mV Enable Input VEN logic high (on) IEN Enable Input Current VEN = 2.25V 2.25 1 V 10 VEN = 0.8V 30 µA 2 4 µA µA Flag Output IFLG(leak) Output Leakage Current VOH = 6V 0.01 1 2 µA µA VFLG(do) Output Low Voltage VIN = 2.250V, IOL, = 250µA 250 500 mV VFLG Low Threshold % of VOUT High Threshold % of VOUT 93 % 99.2 Hysteresis % 1 % Adjustable Output Only Reference Voltage 1.227 1.215 Adjust Pin Bias Current Note 1. Exceeding the absolute maximum ratings may damage the device. Note 2. The device is not guaranteed to function outside its operating rating. Note 3. Devices are ESD sensitive. Handling precautions recommended. Note 4. PD(max) = (TJ(max) – TA) ÷ θJA, where θJA depends upon the printed circuit layout. See “Applications Information.” March 2003 3 1.240 1.252 1.265 V V 40 80 120 nA nA MIC3775 MIC3775 Note 5. Micrel Specification for packaged product only. Note 6. Output voltage temperature coefficient is ∆VOUT(worst case) ÷ (TJ(max) – TJ(min)) where TJ(max) is +125°C and TJ(min) is –40°C. Note 7. VDO = VIN – VOUT when VOUT decreases to 98% of its nominal output voltage with VIN = VOUT + 1V. For output voltages below 1.75V, dropout voltage is the input-to-output voltage differential with the minimum input voltage being 2.25V. Minimum input operating voltage is 2.25V. Note 8. IGND is the quiescent current. IIN = IGND + IOUT. MIC3775 4 March 2003 MIC3775 Micrel Typical Characteristics Power Supply Rejection Ratio Power Supply Rejection Ratio 80 80 VIN = 5V VOUT = 3.3V 40 30 I OUT=750mA 20 COUT =10µF 10 CIN =0 40 30 I OUT=750mA 20 COUT =47µF 10 CIN =0 0 0.01 1000 Power Supply Rejection Ratio DROPOUT (mV) PSRR (dB) 50 40 30 I OUT=750mA 20 COUT =47µF 10 CIN =0 3.3VOUT 100 2.5VOUT 50 1.8 1.6 OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V) OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V) 1.4 1.2 1.0 10mA Load 0.6 750mA Load 0.2 0 1.5 1.7 1.9 2.1 2.3 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 2.5 1.0 0.8 10mA Load 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 1.5 GROUND CURRENT (mA) OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V) Dropout Characteristics (2.5V) 2 2.5 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 2.5 2.0 3.0 2.5 750mA Load 10mA Load 1.0 0.5 4.5 10mA Load 1.0 0.5 2 2.5 3 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 3.5 Ground Current vs. Supply Voltage (1.5V) 0.8 6 2.5VOUT 5 4 3 2 1 0 750mA Load 1.5 0 1.5 3 7 March 2003 100 Ground Current vs. Output Current 3.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 150 0 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 TEMPERATURE (°C) 0.25 0.5 0.75 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) 750mA Load 1.4 1.2 4.0 1.5 200 3.0 Dropout Characteristics (3.3V) 2.0 2.5VOUT 250 Dropout Characteristics (1.8V) Dropout Characteristics (1.5V) 0.4 300 50 0 0 2.0 1000 350 1.8VOUT 150 1000 0.1 1 10 100 FREQUENCY (KHz) Dropout vs. Temperature 200 1.6 0.8 30 I OUT=750mA 20 COUT =10µF 10 CIN =0 400 250 60 0.1 1 10 100 FREQUENCY (KHz) 40 0 0.01 1000 300 VIN =3.3V VOUT =2.5V 0 0.01 50 Dropout vs. Output Current 80 70 0.1 1 10 100 FREQUENCY (KHz) DROPOUT (mV) 0.1 1 10 100 FREQUENCY (KHz) 50 OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V) 0 0.01 60 PSRR (dB) 60 50 VIN =3.3V VOUT =2.5V 70 3.3VOUT 0 0.25 0.5 0.75 OUTPUT CURRENT (A) 5 GROUND CURRENT (mA) PSRR (dB) 60 80 VIN =5V VOUT =3.3V 70 PSRR (dB) 70 0 1.5 Power Supply Rejection Ratio 0.7 0.6 100mA 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 10mA 0.1 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 6 MIC3775 MIC3775 Micrel 10 9 0.8 6 5 4 3 2 1 500mA 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 0.6 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 0 6 16 GROUND CURRENT (mA) 1.0 100mA 0.6 0.4 10mA 1 2 3 4 5 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 12 750mA 8 6 500mA 2 8 6 4 6 7 6 2.5VOUT 4 3 2 IOUT=750mA OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V) GROUND CURRENT (mA) 8 0 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 TEMPERATURE (°C) MIC3775 1 2 3 4 5 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 2 500mA 1 2 3 4 5 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 6 1.2 1.0 0.3 2.5VOUT 0.25 0.2 0.15 0.1 0.05 IOUT=10mA 100mA 0.8 0.6 0.4 10mA 0.2 0 0 6 1 2 3 4 5 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 6 Ground Current vs. Temperature 5 4.5 4 3.5 3 2.5 2.5VOUT 2 1.5 1 0.5 0 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 TEMPERATURE (°C) IOUT=500mA 0 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 TEMPERATURE (°C) Output Voltage vs. Temperature Short Circuit Current vs. Supply Voltage 2.60 9 1 500mA 0.35 Ground Current vs. Temperature 5 750mA GROUND CURRENT (mA) GROUND CURRENT (mA) GROUND CURRENT (mA) 14 1 2 3 4 5 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 4 0 0 0.4 0 6 1.4 10 2 750mA 8 Ground Current vs. Temperature 16 4 10 Ground Current vs. Supply Voltage (3.3V) 12 0 0 6 18 10 12 6 14 Ground Current vs. Supply Voltage (3.3V) 0 1 2 3 4 5 INPUT VOLTAGE (V) 2.55 2.50 2.5VOUT 2.45 2.40 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 TEMPERATURE (°C) 6 SHORT CIRCUIT CURRENT (A) GROUND CURRENT (mA) 18 1.2 0 0 10mA 14 Ground Current vs. Supply Voltage (2.5V) 1.4 0.2 100mA 0.5 Ground Current vs. Supply Voltage (2.5V) 0.8 GROUND CURRENT (mA) 750mA 16 0.7 GROUND CURRENT (mA) 8 7 Ground Current vs. Supply Voltage (1.8V) Ground Current vs. Supply Voltage (1.8V) GROUND CURRENT (mA) GROUND CURRENT (mA) Ground Current vs. Supply Voltage (1.5V) 2.0 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.2 1.0 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 2.25 3 3.75 4.5 5.25 SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V) 6 March 2003 MIC3775 Micrel 1.0 1.6 1.4 0.8 2.5VIN 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 2.5V IN 0.2 0 0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 FLAG CURRENT (mA) 300 250 200 150 100 50 Flag Current = 250µA 0 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 TEMPERATURE (°C) Enable Current vs. Temperature 9 Flag High (OK) 5 4 3 2 Flag Low (FAULT) 1 0.1 1 10 100 1000 10000 RESISTANCE (kΩ) March 2003 ENABLE CURRENT (µA) 6 FLAG VOLTAGE (V) 5V IN 0.4 Error Flag Pull-Up Resistor 0.01 3.3V IN 0.6 0 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 TEMPERATURE (°C) 0 350 FLAG LOW VOLTAGE (mV) 2.0 1.8 1.2 1.0 Flag Low Voltage vs. Temperature Flag Voltage vs. Flag Current FLAG VOLTAGE (V) SHORT CIRCUIT CURRENT (A) Short Circuit Current vs. Temperature 8 7 6 5 4 2.5VEN 3 2 1 0 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 120 TEMPERATURE (°C) 7 MIC3775 MIC3775 Micrel Functional Characteristics Load Transient Response Output Voltage (200mV/div) Output Voltage (200mV/div) Load Transient Response VIN = 3.3V VOUT = 2.5V COUT = 10µF Ceramic VIN = 3.3V VOUT = 2.5V COUT = 10µF Ceramic Output Current (500mA/div) 750mA 10mA TIME (200µs/div) TIME (200µs/div) Line Transient Response Enable Transient Response Enable Voltage (2V/div) 5V 3.3V VIN = 3.3V VOUT = 2.5V COUT = 10µF Ceramic VOUT = 2.5V COUT = 10µF Ceramic TIME (10µs/div) TIME (200µs/div) MIC3775 10mA Output Voltage (1V/div) Output Voltage (50mV/div) Input Voltage (2V/div) Output Current (500mA/div) 750mA 8 March 2003 MIC3775 Micrel Functional Diagrams OUT IN 1.180V FLAG Ref. 1.240V EN Thermal Shutdown GND MIC3775 Fixed Regulator with Flag and Enable Block Diagram OUT IN Ref. 1.240V ADJ EN Thermal Shutdown GND MIC3775 Adjustable Regulator Block Diagram March 2003 9 MIC3775 MIC3775 Micrel Input Capacitor An input capacitor of 1µF or greater is recommended when the device is more than 4 inches away from the bulk AC supply capacitance or when the supply is a battery. Small, surface mount, ceramic chip capacitors can be used for bypassing. Larger values will help to improve ripple rejection by bypassing the input to the regulator, further improving the integrity of the output voltage. Error Flag The MIC3775 features an error flag (FLG), which monitors the output voltage and signals an error condition when this voltage drops 5% below its expected value. The error flag is an open-collector output that pulls low under fault conditions and may sink up to 10mA. Low output voltage signifies a number of possible problems, including an overcurrent fault (the device is in current limit) or low input voltage. The flag output is inoperative during overtemperature conditions. A pull-up resistor from FLG to either VIN or VOUT is required for proper operation. For information regarding the minimum and maximum values of pull-up resistance, refer to the graph in the “Typical Characteristics” section of the data sheet. Enable Input The MIC3775 features an active-high enable input (EN) that allows on-off control of the regulator. Current drain reduces to “zero” when the device is shutdown, with only microamperes of leakage current. The EN input has TTL/CMOS compatible thresholds for simple logic interfacing. EN may be directly tied to VIN and pulled up to the maximum supply voltage Transient Response and 3.3V to 2.5V or 2.5V to 1.8V or 1.65V Conversion The MIC3775 has excellent transient response to variations in input voltage and load current. The device has been designed to respond quickly to load current variations and input voltage variations. Large output capacitors are not required to obtain this performance. A standard 10µF output capacitor, is all that is required. Larger values help to improve performance even further. By virtue of its low-dropout voltage, this device does not saturate into dropout as readily as similar NPN-based designs. When converting from 3.3V to 2.5V or 2.5V to 1.8V or 1.65V, the NPN-based regulators are already operating in dropout, with typical dropout requirements of 1.2V or greater. To convert down to 2.5V or 1.8V without operating in dropout, NPN-based regulators require an input voltage of 3.7V at the very least. The MIC3775 regulator will provide excellent performance with an input as low as 3.0V or 2.5V respectively. This gives the PNP-based regulators a distinct advantage over older, NPN-based linear regulators. Minimum Load Current The MIC3775 regulator is specified between finite loads. If the output current is too small, leakage currents dominate and the output voltage rises. A 10mA minimum load current is necessary for proper regulation. Applications Information The MIC3775 is a high-performance low-dropout voltage regulator suitable for moderate to high-current voltage regulator applications. Its 500mV dropout voltage at full load and overtemperature makes it especially valuable in batterypowered systems and as high-efficiency noise filters in postregulator applications. Unlike older NPN-pass transistor designs, where the minimum dropout voltage is limited by the base-to-emitter voltage drop and collector-to-emitter saturation voltage, dropout performance of the PNP output of these devices is limited only by the low VCE saturation voltage. A trade-off for the low-dropout voltage is a varying base drive requirement. Micrel’s Superβeta PNP™ process reduces this drive requirement to only 2% of the load current. The MIC3775 regulator is fully protected from damage due to fault conditions. Linear current limiting is provided. Output current during overload conditions is constant. Thermal shutdown disables the device when the die temperature exceeds the maximum safe operating temperature. The output structure of these regulators allows voltages in excess of the desired output voltage to be applied without reverse current flow. VIN MIC3775-x.xBMM IN CIN VOUT OUT GND COUT Figure 1. Capacitor Requirements Output Capacitor The MIC3775 requires an output capacitor for stable operation. As a µCap LDO, the MIC3775 can operate with ceramic output capacitors as long as the amount of capacitance is 10µF or greater. For values of output capacitance lower than 10µF, the recommended ESR range is 200mΩ to 2Ω. The minimum value of output capacitance recommended for the MIC3775 is 4.7µF. For 10µF or greater the ESR range recommended is less than 1Ω. Ultra-low ESR ceramic capacitors are recommended for output capacitance of 10µF or greater to help improve transient response and noise reduction at high frequency. X7R/X5R dielectric-type ceramic capacitors are recommended because of their temperature performance. X7Rtype capacitors change capacitance by 15% over their operating temperature range and are the most stable type of ceramic capacitors. Z5U and Y5V dielectric capacitors change value by as much as 50% and 60% respectively over their operating temperature ranges. To use a ceramic chip capacitor with Y5V dielectric, the value must be much higher than an X7R ceramic capacitor to ensure the same minimum capacitance over the equivalent operating temperature range. MIC3775 10 March 2003 MIC3775 Micrel sink thermal resistance) and θSA (sink-to-ambient thermal resistance). Using the power MSOP-8 reduces the θJC dramatically and allows the user to reduce θCA. The total thermal resistance, θJA (junction-to-ambient thermal resistance) is the limiting factor in calculating the maximum power dissipation capability of the device. Typically, the power MSOP-8 has a θJA of 80°C/W, this is significantly lower than the standard MSOP-8 which is typically 160°C/W. θCA is reduced because pins 5 through 8 can now be soldered directly to a ground plane which significantly reduces the case-to-sink thermal resistance and sink-to-ambient thermal resistance. Low-dropout linear regulators from Micrel are rated to a maximum junction temperature of 125°C. It is important not to exceed this maximum junction temperature during operation of the device. To prevent this maximum junction temperature from being exceeded, the appropriate ground plane heatsink must be used. Adjustable Regulator Design VIN MIC3775 OUT IN VOUT R1 ENABLE SHUTDOWN EN ADJ GND R2 COUT R1 VOUT = 1.240V 1 + R2 Figure 2. Adjustable Regulator with Resistors The MIC3775 allows programming the output voltage anywhere between 1.24V and the 6V maximum operating rating of the family. Two resistors are used. Resistors can be quite large, up to 1MΩ, because of the very high input impedance and low bias current of the sense comparator. The resistor values are calculated by: V R1 = R2 OUT − 1 1.240 Where VO is the desired output voltage. Figure 2 shows component definition. Applications with widely varying load currents may scale the resistors to draw the minimum load current required for proper operation (see above). Power MSOP-8 Thermal Characteristics One of the secrets of the MIC3775’s performance is its power MSOP-8 package featuring half the thermal resistance of a standard MSOP-8 package. Lower thermal resistance means more output current or higher input voltage for a given package size. Lower thermal resistance is achieved by joining the four ground leads with the die attach paddle to create a singlepiece electrical and thermal conductor. This concept has been used by MOSFET manufacturers for years, proving very reliable and cost effective for the user. Thermal resistance consists of two main elements, θJC (junction-to-case thermal resistance) and θCA (case-to-ambient thermal resistance). See Figure 3. θJC is the resistance from the die to the leads of the package. θCA is the resistance from the leads to the ambient air and it includes θCS (case-to- MSOP-8 θJA θJC printed circuit board Figure 3. Thermal Resistance Figure 4 shows copper area versus power dissipation with each trace corresponding to a different temperature rise above ambient. From these curves, the minimum area of copper necessary for the part to operate safely can be determined. The maximum allowable temperature rise must be calculated to determine operation along which curve. 100°C 900 800 COPPER AREA (mm2) 40°C 50°C 55°C 65°C 75°C 85°C COPPER AREA (mm2) 700 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 0 700 TJ = 125°C 85°C 50°C 25°C 600 500 400 300 200 100 0 0 0.25 0.50 0.75 1.00 1.25 1.50 POWER DISSIPATION (W) Figure 4. Copper Area vs. Power-MSOP ∆TJA) Power Dissipation (∆ March 2003 ground plane heat sink area AMBIENT 900 800 θCA 0.25 0.50 0.75 1.00 1.25 1.50 POWER DISSIPATION (W) Figure 5. Copper Area vs. Power-MSOP Power Dissipation (TA) 11 MIC3775 MIC3775 Micrel ∆T = TJ(max) – TA(max) TJ(max) = 125°C TA(max) = maximum ambient operating temperature For example, the maximum ambient temperature is 50°C, the ∆T is determined as follows: ∆T = 125°C – 50°C ∆T = 75°C Using Figure 4, the minimum amount of required copper can be determined based on the required power dissipation. Power dissipation in a linear regulator is calculated as follows: PD = (VIN – VOUT) IOUT + VIN × IGND Quick Method Determine the power dissipation requirements for the design along with the maximum ambient temperature at which the device will be operated. Refer to Figure 5, which shows safe operating curves for three different ambient temperatures: 25°C, 50°C and 85°C. From these curves, the minimum amount of copper can be determined by knowing the maximum power dissipation required. If the maximum ambient temperature is 50°C and the power dissipation is as above, 625mW, the curve in Figure 5 shows that the required area of copper is 160mm2. The θJA of this package is ideally 80°C/W, but it will vary depending upon the availability of copper ground plane to which it is attached. If we use a 2.5V output device and a 3.3V input at an output current of 750mA, then our power dissipation is as follows: PD = (3.3V – 2.5V) × 750mA + 3.3V × 7.5mA PD = 600mW + 25mW PD = 625mW From Figure 4, the minimum amount of copper required to operate this application at a ∆T of 75°C is 160mm2. MIC3775 12 March 2003 MIC3775 Micrel Package Information 0.122 (3.10) 0.112 (2.84) 0.199 (5.05) 0.187 (4.74) DIMENSIONS: INCH (MM) 0.120 (3.05) 0.116 (2.95) 0.036 (0.90) 0.032 (0.81) 0.043 (1.09) 0.038 (0.97) 0.012 (0.30) R 0.012 (0.3) 0.0256 (0.65) TYP 0.008 (0.20) 0.004 (0.10) 5° MAX 0° MIN 0.007 (0.18) 0.005 (0.13) 0.012 (0.03) R 0.039 (0.99) 0.035 (0.89) 0.021 (0.53) 8-Lead MSOP (MM) March 2003 13 MIC3775 MIC3775 Micrel MICREL, INC. TEL 1849 FORTUNE DRIVE SAN JOSE, CA 95131 + 1 (408) 944-0800 FAX + 1 (408) 944-0970 WEB USA http://www.micrel.com The information furnished by Micrel in this datasheet 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 at Purchaser’s own risk and Purchaser agrees to fully indemnify Micrel for any damages resulting from such use or sale. © 2003 Micrel, Incorporated. MIC3775 14 March 2003