LTC3731
3-Phase, 600kHz,
Synchronous Buck Switching
Regulator Controller
DESCRIPTION
FEATURES
3-Phase Current Mode Controller with Onboard
MOSFET Drivers
n ±5% Output Current Matching Optimizes Thermal
Performance and Size of Inductors and MOSFETs
n Differential Amplifier Accurately Senses V
OUT
n ±1% V
Accuracy
Over
Temperature
REF
n V
OUT Range: 0.6V to 5.5V without Diffamp
n V
OUT Range: 0.6V to (VCC – 1.2V) with Diffamp
n 250kHz to 600kHz Per Phase, PLL, Fixed Frequency
n PWM, Stage Shedding™ or Burst Mode® Operation
n OPTI-LOOP® Compensation Minimizes C
OUT
n Adjustable Soft-Start Current Ramping
n Short-Circuit Shutdown Timer with Defeat Option
n Overvoltage Soft Latch
n Adjustable Undervoltage Lockout Threshold
n Selectable Phase Output for Up to 12-Phase Operation
n Available in 5mm × 5mm QFN and 36-Pin Narrow
(0.209") SSOP Packages
The LTC®3731 is a PolyPhase® synchronous step-down
switching regulator controller that drives all N-channel
external power MOSFET stages in a phase-lockable fixed
frequency architecture. The 3-phase controller drives its
output stages with 120° phase separation at frequencies
of up to 600kHz per phase to minimize the RMS current
losses in both the input and output filter capacitors. The
3‑phase technique effectively triples the fundamental frequency, improving transient response while operating each
controller at an optimal frequency for efficiency and ease of
thermal design. Light load efficiency is optimized by using a
choice of output Stage Shedding or Burst Mode operation.
n
A differential amplifier provides true remote sensing of
both the high and low side of the output voltage at the
point of load.
Soft-start and a defeatable, timed short-circuit shutdown
protect the MOSFETs and the load. Current foldback
provides protection for the external MOSFETs under
short-circuit or overload conditions.
APPLICATIONS
L, LT, LTC, LTM, Bust Mode, OPTI-LOOP, PolyPhase, Linear Technology and the Linear logo
are registered and Stage Shedding is a trademark of Linear Technology Corporation. All other
trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Protected by U.S. Patents, including
5481178, 5929620, 6177787, 6144194, 6100678, 5408150, 6580258, 6462525, 630466,
5705919.
Desktop Computers and Servers
n High Performance Notebook Computers
n High Output Current DC/DC Power Supplies
n
TYPICAL APPLICATION
VCC
4.5V TO 7V
VCC
10µF
LTC3731
BOOST1
BOOST2
BOOST3
0.1µF
SW3 SW2 SW1
PGOOD
PLLIN
POWER GOOD INDICATOR
OPTIONAL SYNC IN
PLLFLTR
VIN
TG1
0.8µH
0.003Ω
0.8µH
0.003Ω
0.8µH
0.003Ω
SW1
+
VIN
5V TO 28V
22µF
35V
BG1
SENSE1+
SENSE1–
TG2
VIN
SW2
VOUT
1.35V
55A
BG2
PGND
36k
UVADJ
12k
680pF
5k
0.01µF
7.5k
6.04k
100pF
SENSE2+
SENSE2–
ITH
TG3
RUN/SS
SW3
SGND
EAIN
DIFFOUT
IN –
IN +
VIN
BG3
SENSE3+
SENSE3–
+
COUT
470µF
4V
3731 F01
Figure 1. High Current Triple Phase Step-Down Converter
3731fc
1
LTC3731
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
(Note 1)
Topside Driver Voltages (BOOSTn).............. 38V to –0.3V
Switch Voltage (SWn).................................... 32V to –5V
Boosted Driver Voltage (BOOSTn – SWn)..... 7V to –0.3V
Peak Output Current < 1ms (TGn, BGn).......................5A
Supply Voltages (VCC, VDR), PGOOD
Pin Voltage.................................................... 7V to –0.3V
RUN/SS, PLLFLTR, PLLIN, UVADJ,
FCB Voltages ...............................................VCC to –0.3V
SENSE+, SENSE– Voltages........................ 5.5V to –0.3V
ITH Voltage ................................................ 2.4V to –0.3V
Operating Ambient Temperature Range
LTC3731C................................................. 0°C to 70°C
LTC3731I...............................................–40°C to 85°C
Junction Temperature (Note 2).............................. 125°C
Storage Temperature Range................... –65°C to 125°C
Lead Temperature G Package (Soldering, 10 sec).. 300°C
Peak Body Temperature UH Package.................... 240°C
PIN CONFIGURATION
TOP VIEW
33 TG1
IN+
5
32 SW1
IN–
6
31 BOOST2
DIFFOUT
7
EAIN
SGND
SW1
34 BOOST1
4
TG1
3
FCB
BOOST1
PLLFLTR
TOP VIEW
CLKOUT
35 PGOOD
PLLIN
2
PLLFLTR
PLLIN
FCB
36 CLKOUT
IN +
VCC
1
32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25
IN – 1
24 BOOST2
DIFFOUT 2
23 TG2
30 TG2
EAIN 3
22 SW2
8
29 SW2
SENSE1
+
9
28 VDR
SENSE1 – 5
SENSE1+ 10
27 BG1
SENSE2 + 6
19 PGND
SENSE1– 11
26 PGND
SENSE2 – 7
18 BG2
SENSE2 + 12
25 BG2
SENSE3 – 8
SENSE2 –
13
24 BG3
SENSE3 – 14
23 SW3
SENSE3+ 15
22 TG3
ITH 17
UVADJ 18
21 BOOST3
20 PHASMD
19 SGND2
G PACKAGE
36-LEAD PLASTIC SSOP
TJMAX = 125°C, θJA = 95°C/W, θJC = 32°C/W
21 VCC
33
SGND
20 BG1
17 BG3
SW3
TG3
BOOST3
UVADJ
ITH
RUN/SS
SENSE3 +
9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
PHASMD/PG
RUN/SS 16
4
UH PACKAGE
32-LEAD (5mm × 5mm) PLASTIC QFN
TJMAX = 125°C, θJA = 34°C/W
EXPOSED PAD (PIN 33) IS SGND, MUST BE SOLDERED TO PCB
3731fc
2
LTC3731
ORDER INFORMATION
LEAD FREE FINISH
TAPE AND REEL
PART MARKING
PACKAGE DESCRIPTION
TEMPERATURE RANGE
LTC3731CG#PBF
LTC3731CG#TRPBF
LTC3731CG
36-Lead Plastic SSOP
0°C to 70°C
LTC3731IG#PBF
LTC3731IG#TRPBF
LTC3731IG
36-Lead Plastic SSOP
–40°C to 85°C
LTC3731CUH#PBF
LTC3731CUH#TRPBF
3731
32-Lead (5mm × 5mm) Plastic QFN
0°C to 70°C
LTC3731IUH#PBF
LTC3731IUH#TRPBF
3731I
32-Lead (5mm × 5mm) Plastic QFN
–40°C to 85°C
Consult LTC Marketing for parts specified with wider operating temperature ranges.
Consult LTC Marketing for information on non-standard lead based finish parts.
For more information on lead free part marking, go to: http://www.linear.com/leadfree/
For more information on tape and reel specifications, go to: http://www.linear.com/tapeandreel/
ELECTRICAL
CHARACTERISTICS
The
l denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating
temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. VCC = VRUN/SS = 5V unless otherwise noted.
SYMBOL
PARAMETER
CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
LTC3731I
l
l
0.596
0.594
0.591
0.600
0.600
0.604
0.606
0.609
V
V
V
VEAIN = 0.5V, VITH Open,
VSENSE1–, VSENSE2–, VSENSE3– = 0.6V, 1.8V
LTC3731I
l
l
65
62
60
75
75
85
88
90
mV
mV
mV
5
%
0.5
0.7
–0.5
–0.7
%
%
%
%
Main Control Loop
VREGULATED Regulated Voltage at IN+
VSENSEMAX
Maximum Current Sense Threshold
VITH = 1.2V (Note 3)
IMATCH
Maximum Current Threshold Match
Worst-Case Error at VSENSEMAX
VLOADREG
Output Voltage Load Regulation
(Note 3)
Measured in Servo Loop, ∆ITH Voltage = 1.2V to 0.7V
LTC3731I
Measured in Servo Loop, ∆ITH Voltage = 1.2V to 2V
LTC3731I
VREFLNREG
Output Voltage Line Regulation
VCC = 4.5V to 7V
gm
Transconductance Amplifier gm
ITH = 1.2V, Sink/Source 25µA (Note 3)
LTC3731I
gmOL
Transconductance Amplifier GBW
ITH = 1.2V (gm • ZL, ZL = Series 1k-100kΩ-1nF)
VFCB
Forced Continuous Threshold
IFCB
FCB Bias Current
VFCB = 0.65V
VBINHIBIT
Burst Inhibit Threshold
Measured at FCB Pin
VCC Lowered Until the RUN/SS Pin is Pulled Low
LTC3731I
–5
0.1
0.1
–0.1
–0.1
l
l
l
l
0.03
%/V
l
l
4
3
5
5
6
7
l
l
0.58
0.54
0.60
0.60
0.62
0.66
V
V
0.2
0.7
µA
3
mmho
mmho
MHz
VCC – 1.5 VCC – 0.7 VCC – 0.3
V
3.3
3.8
4.5
V
1.13
1.18
1.23
V
At UVADJ Threshold
0.2
50
nA
Input DC Supply Current
Normal Mode
Shutdown
(Note 4)
VCC = 5V
VRUN/SS = 0V
2.3
50
3.5
100
mA
µA
Soft-Start Charge Current
VRUN/SS = 1.9V
–1.5
–2.5
µA
UVR
Undervoltage RUN/SS Reset
UVADJ
Undervoltage Lockout Threshold
IUVADJ
Undervoltage Bias Current
IQ
IRUN/SS
–0.8
3731fc
3
LTC3731
ELECTRICAL
CHARACTERISTICS
The
l denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating
temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. VCC = VRUN/SS = 5V unless otherwise noted.
SYMBOL
PARAMETER
CONDITIONS
VRUN/SS
RUN/SS Pin ON Threshold
VRUN/SS, Ramping Positive
VRUN/SSARM RUN/SS Pin Arming Threshold
MIN
TYP
MAX
1
1.5
1.9
UNITS
V
VRUN/SS, Ramping Positive Until Short-Circuit
Latch-Off is Armed
3.8
4.5
V
3.2
VRUN/SSLO
RUN/SS Pin Latch-Off Threshold
VRUN/SS, Ramping Negative
ISCL
RUN/SS Discharge Current
Soft-Short Condition VEAIN = 0.375V, VRUN/SS = 4.5V
ISDLHO
Shutdown Latch Disable Current
VEAIN = 0.375V, VRUN/SS = 4.5V
1.5
5
µA
ISENSE
SENSE Pins Source Current
SENSE1+, SENSE1–, SENSE2+, SENSE2–, SENSE3+,
SENSE3– All Equal 1.2V; Current at Each Pin
13
20
µA
DFMAX
Maximum Duty Factor
In Dropout, VSENSEMAX ≤ 30mV
TG tR,tF
Top Gate Rise Time
Top Gate Fall Time
CLOAD = 3300pF
CLOAD = 3300pF
30
40
90
90
ns
ns
BG tR, tF
Bottom Gate Rise Time
Bottom Gate Fall Time
CLOAD = 3300pF
CLOAD = 3300pF
30
20
90
90
ns
ns
TG/BG t1D
Top Gate Off to Bottom Gate On Delay All Controllers, CLOAD = 3300pF Each Driver
Synchronous Switch-On Delay Time
50
ns
BG/TG t2D
Bottom Gate Off to Top Gate On Delay All Controllers, CLOAD = 3300pF Each Driver
Top Switch-On Delay Time
60
ns
tON(MIN)
Minimum On-Time
Tested with a Square Wave (Note 5)
110
ns
0.1
0.5
0.3
1.0
1
µA
–10
±3
10
µA
–7
7
–10
10
–13
13
%
%
100
150
µs
–5
95
V
–1.5
µA
98.5
%
Power Good Output Indication
VPGL
PGOOD Voltage Output Low
IPGOOD = 2mA, G Package
IPGOOD = 1.6mA, UH Package
IPGOOD
PGOOD Output Leakage
VPGOOD = 5V, G Package
IPGOOD
PGOOD/PHASMD Bias I
0 ≤ VPHASMD/PG ≤ VCC, UH Package
VPGTHNEG
VPGTHPOS
PGOOD Trip Thresholds
VDIFFOUT Ramping Negative
VDIFFOUT Ramping Positive
VDIFFOUT with Respect to Set Output Voltage,
HGOOD Goes Low After VUVDLY Delay
VPGDLY
Power Good Fault Report Delay
After VEAIN is Forced Outside the PGOOD Thresholds
V
V
Oscillator and Phase-Locked Loop
fNOM
Nominal Frequency
VPLLFLTR = 1.2V
360
400
440
kHz
fLOW
Lowest Frequency
VPLLFLTR = 0V
190
225
260
kHz
600
680
750
kHz
fHIGH
Highest Frequency
VPLLFLTR = 2.4V
VPLLTH
PLLIN Input Threshold
Minimum Pulse Width > 100ns
RPLLIN
PLLIN Input Resistance
IPLLFLTR
Phase Detector Output Current
Sinking Capability
Sourcing Capability
RRELPHS
Controller 2-Controller 1 Phase
Controller 3-Controller 1 Phase
CLKOUT
Controller 1 TG to CLKOUT Phase
fPLLIN < fOSC
fPLLIN > fOSC
PHASMD = 0V
PHASMD = 5V
1
V
50
kΩ
20
20
µA
µA
120
240
Deg
Deg
30
60
Deg
Deg
3731fc
4
LTC3731
ELECTRICAL
CHARACTERISTICS
The
l denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating
temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. VCC = VRUN/SS = 5V unless otherwise noted.
SYMBOL
PARAMETER
CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
0.995
1.000
1.005
V/V
0.5
5
mV
Differential Amplifier
AV
Differential Gain
VOS
Input Offset Voltage Magnitude
IN+ = IN– = 1.2V, I
CMRR
Common Mode Rejection Ratio
0V < IN+ = IN– < 5V, IOUT = 1mA, Input Referred
ICL
Output Current Sourcing
GBP
Gain-Bandwidth Product
IOUT = 1mA
SR
Slew Rate
RL = 2k
VO(MAX)
Maximum High Output Voltage
IOUT = 1mA
RIN
Input Resistance
Measured at IN+ Pin
OUT = 1mA, Input Referred; Gain = 1
Note 1: Stresses beyond those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings
may cause permanent damage to the device. Exposure to any Absolute
Maximum Rating condition for extended periods may affect device
reliability and lifetime.
Note 2: TJ is calculated from the ambient temperature TA and power
dissipation PD according to the following formula:
LTC3731CG/LTC3731IG: TJ = TA + (PD • 95°C/W)
LTC3731CG/LTC3731IG: TJ = TCASE + (PD • 32°C/W)
LTC3731CUH/LTC3731IUH: TJ = TA + (PD • 34°C/W)
Note 3: The IC is tested in a feedback loop that includes the differential
amplifier loaded with 100µA to ground driving the error amplifier and
servoing the resultant voltage to the midrange point for the error amplifier
(VITH = 1.2V).
50
70
10
40
mA
2
MHz
5
V/µs
VCC – 1.2 VCC – 0.8
80
dB
V
kΩ
Note 4: Dynamic supply current is higher due to the gate charge being
delivered at the switching frequency. See Applications Information.
Note 5: The minimum on-time condition corresponds to an inductor
peak-to-peak ripple current of ≥ 40% of IMAX (see minimum on-time
considerations in the Applications Information Section).
Note 6: This IC includes overtemperature protection that is intended
to protect the device during momentary overload conditions. Junction
temperature will exceed 125°C when overtemperature protection is active.
Continuous operation above the specified maximum operating junction
temperature may impair device reliability.
3731fc
5
LTC3731
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS
Efficiency vs IOUT (Figure 14)
Efficiency vs VIN (Figure 14)
100
95
80 VFCB = 5V
VFCB = 0V
70
90
60
50
40
0.1
1
10
VIN = 5V
IL = 45A
70
60
50
100
5
0
10
15
VIN (V)
20
600
595
5.5
5.0
4.5
4.0
–50
125
–25
0
25
50
75
TEMPERATURE (°C)
700
700
VO = 1.75V
75
VO = 0.6V
70
65
–50
125
–25
0
25
50
75
TEMPERATURE (°C)
100
125
3731 G06
Undervoltage Reset Voltage
vs Temperature
Operating Frequency vs VPLLFLTR
5
VPLLFLTR = 2.4V
500
VPLLFLTR = 1.2V
300
VPLLFLTR = 0V
100
0
–50
–25
0
25
50
75
100
125
TEMPERATURE (°C)
3731 G07
600
UNDERVOLTAGE RESET (V)
VPLLFLTR = 5V
OPERATING FREQUENCY (kHz)
FREQUENCY (kHz)
100
80
3731 G05
Oscillator Frequency
vs Temperature
200
Maximum ISENSE Threshold
vs Temperature
85
3731 G04
400
600
500
3731 G03
MAXIMUM ISENSE THRESHOLD (mV)
605
400
300
FREQUENCY (kHz)
6.0
ERROR AMPLIFIER gm (mmho)
REFERENCE VOLTAGE (mV)
610
100
VIN = 20V
75
200
25
Error Amplifier gm
vs Temperature
0
25
50
75
TEMPERATURE (°C)
VIN = 8V
3731 G02
Reference Voltage
vs Temperature
600
VIN = 12V
85
55
3731 G01
–25
90
80
LOAD CURRENT (A)
590
–50
ILOAD = 20A
VOUT = 1.5V
95
75
20
0
IL = 15A
80
65
VIN = 8V
VOUT = 1.5V
VOUT = 1.5V
f = 250kHz
85
30
10
Efficiency vs Frequency (Figure 14)
100
EFFICIENCY (%)
90 VFCB = OPEN
EFFICIENCY (%)
EFFICIENCY (%)
100
500
400
300
200
0
0.5
1
1.5
2
PLLFLTR PIN VOLTAGE (V)
2.5
4
3
2
1
0
–50
–25
0
25
50
75
100
125
TEMPERATURE (°C)
3731 G08
3731 G09
3731fc
6
LTC3731
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS
Short-Circuit Arming and Latchoff
vs Temperature
80
2.4
SUPPLY CURRENT (mA)
4
LATCHOFF
3
2
1
2.0
60
1.6
40
1.2
0.8
20
2.5
SHUTDOWN CURRENT (µA)
RUN/SS PIN VOLTAGE (V)
ARMING
100
VCC = 5V
2.8
0.4
0
–50
–25
0
25
50
75
100
0
–50
125
–25
0
TEMPERATURE (°C)
25
50
75
100
0
125
0
25
50
75
TEMPERATURE (°C)
40
30
20
5
100
50
25
0
6
0
20
40
60
DUTY FACTOR (%)
3731 G13
30
20
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
PERCENTAGE OF NOMINAL OUTPUT VOLTAGE (%)
3731 G16
0
0.6
1.2
VITH (V)
1.8
30
98
96
94
92
90
–50
2.4
ISENSE Pin Current vs VOUT
20
10
0
–10
–20
10
0
0
40
ISENSE PIN CURRENT (µA)
MAXIMUM DUTY FACTOR (%)
40
15
3731 G15
VPLLFLTR = 0V
70
50
30
Maximum Duty Factor
vs Temperature
100
60
45
–15
100
80
60
3731 G14
Percentage of Nominal Output
vs Peak ISENSE (Foldback)
125
Peak Current Threshold vs VITH
10
PEAK ISENSE VOLTAGE (mV)
–25
75
ISENSE VOLTAGE THRESHOLD (mV)
ISENSE VOLTAGE (mV)
MAXIMUM ISENSE (mV)
50
80
0.5
Maximum Current Sense
Threshold vs Duty Factor
60
3
4
VRUN/SS VOLTAGE (V)
1.0
3731 G12
70
2
1.5
0
–50
75
1
2.0
3731 G11
Maximum ISENSE vs VRUN/SS
0
VRUN/SS = 1.9V
TEMPERATURE (°C)
3731 G10
0
RUN/SS PULL-UP CURRENT (µA)
5
80
RUN/SS Pull-Up Current
vs Temperature
Supply Current vs Temperature
–25
0
25
50
75
TEMPERATURE (°C)
100
125
3731 G17
–30
0
1
3
2
VOUT (V)
4
5
3731 G18
3731fc
7
LTC3731
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS
Differential Amplifier Gain-Phase
0
–3
–45
–6
–90
–9
–135
–12
–180
–15
0001
0.01
0.1
1
10
PHASE (DEG)
GAIN (dB)
0
–225
FREQUENCY (MHz)
3731 G19
Shed Mode at 1 Amp, Light Load
Current (Circuit of Figure 14)
Burst Mode at 1 Amp, Light Load
Current (Circuit of Figure 14)
VOUT
AC, 20mV/DIV
VOUT
AC, 20mV/DIV
VSW1
10V/DIV
VSW1
10V/DIV
VSW2
10V/DIV
VSW3
10V/DIV
VSW2
10V/DIV
VSW3
10V/DIV
4µs/DIV
VIN = 12V
VOUT = 1.5V
VFCB = VCC
FREQUENCY = 250kHz
4µs/DIV
VIN = 12V
VOUT = 1.5V
VFCB = OPEN
FREQUENCY = 250kHz
3731 G20
Transient Load Current Response:
0 Amp to 50 Amp (Circuit of
Figure 14)
Continuous Mode at 1 Amp, Light
Load Current (Circuit of Figure 14)
VOUT
AC, 20mV/DIV
3731 G21
VOUT
AC, 20mV/DIV
VSW1
10V/DIV
ILOAD
20A/DIV
VSW2
10V/DIV
VSW3
10V/DIV
VIN = 12V
4µs/DIV
VOUT = 1.5V
VFCB = 0V
FREQUENCY = 250kHz
3731 G22
VIN = 12V
20µs/DIV
VOUT = 1.5V
VFCB = VCC
FREQUENCY = 250kHz
3731 G23
3731fc
8
LTC3731
PIN FUNCTIONS
BG1 to BG3: High Current Gate Drives for Bottom N‑Channel
MOSFETs. Voltage swing at these pins is from ground to
VCC.
BOOST1 to BOOST3: Positive Supply Pins to the Topside
Floating Drivers. Bootstrapped capacitors, charged with
external Schottky diodes and a boost voltage source, are
connected between the BOOST and SW pins. Voltage swing
at the BOOST pins is from boost source voltage (typically
VCC) to this boost source voltage + VIN (where VIN is the
external MOSFET supply rail).
CLKOUT: Output clock signal available to synchronize
other controller ICs for additional MOSFET stages/phases.
DIFFOUT: Output of the Remote Output Voltage Sensing
Differential Amplifier.
EAIN: This is the input to the error amplifier that compares
the feedback voltage to the internal 0.6V reference voltage.
FCB: Forced Continuous Control Input. The voltage applied to this pin sets the operating mode of the controller.
The forced continuous current mode is active when the
applied voltage is less than 0.6V. Burst Mode operation
will be active when the pin is allowed to float and a Stage
Shedding mode will be active if the pin is tied to the VCC
pin. (Do not apply voltage directly to this pin prior to the
application of voltage on the VCC pin.)
PGOOD: This open-drain output is pulled low when the
output voltage has been outside the PGOOD tolerance
window for the VPGDLY delay of approximately 100µs.
IN+, IN–: Inputs to a precision, unity-gain differential
amplifier with internal precision resistors. This provides
true remote sensing of both the positive and negative load
terminals for precise output voltage control.
ITH: Error Amplifier Output and Switching Regulator Compensation Point. All three current comparator’s thresholds
increase with this control voltage.
PGND: Driver Power Ground. This pin connects directly to the
sources of the bottom N-channel external MOSFETs and the
(–) terminals of CIN.
PHASMD: This pin determines the phase shift between the
first controller’s rising TG signal and the rising edge of
the CLKOUT signal. Logic 0 yields 30 degrees and Logic 1
yields 60 degrees.
Note: the PHASMD and PGOOD functions are internally
tied together in the LTC3731 UH package.
PLLIN: Synchronization Input to Phase Detector. This pin is
internally terminated to SGND with 50kΩ. The phase-locked
loop will force the rising top gate signal of controller 1 to
be synchronized with the rising edge of the PLLIN signal.
PLLFLTR: The phase-locked loop’s lowpass filter is tied
to this pin. Alternatively, this pin can be driven with an AC
or DC voltage source to vary the frequency of the internal
oscillator. (Do not apply voltage directly to this pin prior
to the application of voltage on the VCC pin.)
RUN/SS: Combination of Soft-Start, Run Control Input
and Short-Circuit Detection Timer. A capacitor to ground
at this pin sets the ramp time to full current output as well
as the time delay prior to an output voltage short-circuit
shutdown. A minimum value of 0.01µF is recommended
on this pin.
SENSE1+, SENSE2+, SENSE3+, SENSE1–, SENSE2–,
SENSE3–: The Inputs to Each Differential Current Comparator. The ITH pin voltage and built-in offsets between
SENSE– and SENSE+ pins, in conjunction with RSENSE, set
the current trip threshold level.
SGND: Signal Ground. This pin must be routed separately
under the IC to the PGND pin and then to the main ground
plane. The exposed pad on the LTC3731 UH package is
SGND and must be soldered to the PCB.
SW1 to SW3: Switch Node Connections to Inductors.
Voltage swing at these pins is from a Schottky diode
(external) voltage drop below ground to VIN (where VIN
is the external MOSFET supply rail).
TG1 to TG3: High Current Gate Drives for Top N-channel
MOSFETs. These are the outputs of floating drivers with
a voltage swing equal to the boost voltage source superimposed on the switch node voltage SW.
UVADJ: Input to the Undervoltage Shutdown Comparator. When the applied input voltage is less than 1.2V, this
comparator turns off the output MOSFET driver stages
and discharges the RUN/SS capacitor.
3731fc
9
LTC3731
PIN FUNCTIONS
VDR: (LTC3731G Package Only) Supplies power to the
bottom gate drivers only. This pin needs to be very carefully and closely decoupled to the IC’s PGND pin.
VCC: Main Supply Pin. This pin supplies the controller
circuit power. In the LTC3731 UH package, it also supplies
the high power pulses to drive the external MOSFET gates.
This pin needs to be very carefully and closely decoupled
to the IC’s PGND pin.
FUNCTIONAL DIAGRAM
PLLIN
PHASE DET
FIN
50k
RLP PLLFLTR
CLP
CLKOUT
CLK1
CLK2
CLK3
OSCILLATOR
PHASMD**
PGOOD**
–
0.66V
DUPLICATE FOR SECOND AND THIRD
CONTROLLER CHANNELS
+
100µs
DELAY
DROP
OUT
DET
PROTECTION
+
+
0.6V
–
IN
–
FCB
40k
40k
0.54V
S
RS
LATCH
R
40k
B
0.55V
40k
PGND
–
+
–
+ +
R1
0.600V
+
+
0.660V
–
+
36k SENSE
54k
SS
CLAMP
OV
RSENSE
COUT
+
EA
L
VCC
–
36k SENSE
54k
VOUT
2.4V
–
FCB
1.2V
SHED
0.600V
VCC
RC
I2
5(VFB)
0.86V
ITH
CC
–
+
3mV
SLOPE
COMP
–
BG
BOT
FCB
SHDN
I1
VFB
CIN
VCC (VDR)***
DIFFOUT
EAIN
+
SW
SWITCH
LOGIC
Q
CB
TG
TOP
FORCE BOT
Q
–
A1
+
IN+
BOT
VIN
DB
BOOST
EAIN
–
FCB
R2
VCC
1.5µA
SHDN
RST
5(VFB)
6V
RUN
SOFTSTART
INTERNAL
SUPPLY
UV RESET
UVADJ
VREF
VCC
SGND*
VCC
+
CCC
RUN/SS
–
1.2V
CSS
+
3731 F02
*THE LTC3731UH USES THE EXPOSED DIE ATTACH PAD FOR THE SGND CONNECTIONS
**THE PHASMD AND PGOOD PIN FUNCTIONS ARE TIED TOGETHER IN THE LTC3731 UH PACKAGE
***LTC3731CG/IG ONLY
10
Figure 2
3731fc
LTC3731
OPERATION
(Refer to Functional Diagram)
Main Control Loop
Low Current Operation
The IC uses a constant frequency, current mode step-down
architecture. During normal operation, each top MOSFET
is turned on each cycle when the oscillator sets the RS
latch, and turned off when the main current comparator, I1,
resets each RS latch. The peak inductor current at which I1
resets the RS latch is controlled by the voltage on the ITH
pin, which is the output of the error amplifier EA. The EAIN
pin receives a portion of output voltage feedback signal via
the DIFFOUT pin through the external resistive divider and
is compared to the internal reference voltage. When the
load current increases, it causes a slight decrease in the
EAIN pin voltage relative to the 0.6V reference, which in
turn causes the ITH voltage to increase until each inductor’s
average current matches one third of the new load current
(assuming all three current sensing resistors are equal).
In Burst Mode operation and Stage Shedding mode, after
each top MOSFET has turned off, the bottom MOSFET is
turned on until either the inductor current starts to reverse,
as indicated by current comparator I2, or the beginning
of the next cycle.
The FCB pin is a logic input to select between three modes
of operation.
The top MOSFET drivers are biased from floating bootstrap
capacitor CB, which is normally recharged through an
external Schottky diode when the top FET is turned off.
When VIN decreases to a voltage close to VOUT, however,
the loop may enter dropout and attempt to turn on the
top MOSFET continuously. The dropout detector counts
the number of oscillator cycles that the bottom MOSFET
remains off and periodically forces a brief on period to
allow CB to recharge.
The main control loop is shut down by pulling the RUN/
SS pin low. Releasing RUN/SS allows an internal 1.5µA
current source to charge soft-start capacitor CSS. When
CSS reaches 1.5V, the main control loop is enabled and the
internally buffered ITH voltage is clamped but allowed to
ramp as the voltage on CSS continues to ramp. This “softstart” clamping prevents abrupt current from being drawn
from the input power source. When the RUN/SS pin is low,
all functions are kept in a controlled state. The RUN/SS
pin is pulled low when the supply input voltage is below
4V, when the undervoltage lockout pin (UVADJ) is below
1.2V, or when the IC die temperature rises above 150°C.
A) Burst Mode Operation
When the FCB pin voltage is below 0.6V, the controller
performs as a continuous, PWM current mode synchronous switching regulator. The top and bottom MOSFETs
are alternately turned on to maintain the output voltage
independent of direction of inductor current. When the
FCB pin is below VCC – 1.5V but greater than 0.6V, the
controller performs as a Burst Mode switching regulator.
Burst Mode operation sets a minimum output current
level before turning off the top switch and turns off the
synchronous MOSFET(s) when the inductor current goes
negative. This combination of requirements will, at low
current, force the ITH pin below a voltage threshold that
will temporarily shut off both output MOSFETs until the
output voltage drops slightly. There is a burst comparator
having 60mV of hysteresis tied to the ITH pin. This hysteresis
results in output signals to the MOSFETs that turn them on
for several cycles, followed by a variable “sleep” interval
depending upon the load current. The resultant output
voltage ripple is held to a very small value by having the
hysteretic comparator after the error amplifier gain block.
B) Stage Shedding Operation
When the FCB pin is tied to the VCC pin, Burst Mode
operation is disabled and the forced minimum inductor
current requirement is removed. This provides constant
frequency, discontinuous current operation over the
widest possible output current range. At approximately
10% of maximum designed load current, the second and
third output stages are shut off and the phase 1 controller alone is active in discontinuous current mode. This
“stage shedding” optimizes efficiency by eliminating the
gate charging losses and switching losses of the other
two output stages. Additional cycles will be skipped when
the output load current drops below 1% of maximum
designed load current in order to maintain the output
voltage. This stage shedding operation is not as efficient
as Burst Mode operation at very light loads, but does
provide lower noise, constant frequency operating mode
down to very light load conditions.
3731fc
11
LTC3731
OPERATION
(Refer to Functional Diagram)
C) Continuous Current Operation
Tying the FCB pin to ground will force continuous current
operation. This is the least efficient operating mode, but
may be desirable in certain applications. The output can
source or sink current in this mode. When sinking current
while in forced continuous operation, the controller will
cause current to flow back into the input filter capacitor. If large enough, the input capacitor will prevent the
input supply from boosting to unacceptably high levels.
See CIN/COUT Selection in the Applications Information
section.
Frequency Synchronization
The phase-locked loop allows the internal oscillator to be
synchronized to an external source using the PLLIN pin.
The output of the phase detector at the PLLFLTR pin is
also the DC frequency control input of the oscillator, which
operates over a 250kHz to 600kHz range corresponding
to a voltage input from 0V to 2.4V. When locked, the PLL
aligns the turn on of the top MOSFET to the rising edge of
the synchronizing signal. When no frequency information
is supplied to the PLLIN pin, PLLFLTR goes low, forcing
the oscillator to minimum frequency. A DC source can be
applied to the PLLFLTR pin to externally set the desired
operating frequency. A discharge current of approximately
20µA will be present at the pin with no PLLIN input signal.
Input capacitance ESR requirements and efficiency losses
are reduced substantially in a multiphase architecture
because the peak current drawn from the input capacitor
is effectively divided by the number of phases used and
power loss is proportional to the RMS current squared. A
3-stage, single output voltage implementation can reduce
input path power loss by 90%.
Differential Amplifier
This amplifier provides true differential output voltage
sensing. Sensing both VOUT+ and VOUT– benefits regulation
in high current applications and/or applications having
electrical interconnection losses. This sensing also isolates
the physical power ground from the physical signal ground
preventing the possibility of troublesome “ground loops”
on the PC layout and prevents voltage errors caused by
board-to-board interconnects, particularly helpful in VRM
designs.
Power Good
The PGOOD pin is connected to the drain of an internal
N‑channel MOSFET. The MOSFET is turned on once an
internal delay of about 100µs has elapsed and the output
voltage has been away from its nominal value by greater
than 10%. If the output returns to normal prior to the delay
timeout, the timer is reset. There is no delay time for the
rising of the PGOOD output once the output voltage is
within the ±10% “window.”
Phase Mode
The PHASMD pin determines the phase shift between
the rising edge of the TG1 output and the rising edge of
the CLKOUT signal. Grounding the pin will result in 30
degrees phase shift and tying the pin to VCC will result
in 60 degrees. These phase shift values enable extension
to 6- and 12-phase systems. The PGOOD function above
and the PHASMD function are tied to a common pin in
the UH package.
Undervoltage Shutdown Adjust
The voltage applied to the UVADJ pin is compared to the
internal 1.2V reference to have an externally programmable
undervoltage shutdown. The RUN/SS pin is internally held
low until the voltage applied to the UVADJ pin exceeds
the 1.2V threshold.
Short-Circuit Detection
The RUN/SS capacitor is used initially to turn on and limit
the inrush current from the input power source. Once the
controllers have been given time, as determined by the
capacitor on the RUN/SS pin, to charge up the output
capacitors and provide full load current, the RUN/SS
capacitor is then used as a short-circuit timeout circuit.
If the output voltage falls to less than 70% of its nominal
output voltage, the RUN/SS capacitor begins discharging,
assuming that the output is in a severe overcurrent and/
or short-circuit condition. If the condition lasts for a long
enough period, as determined by the size of the RUN/SS
3731fc
12
LTC3731
OPERATION
(Refer to Functional Diagram)
capacitor, the controller will be shut down until the RUN/
SS pin voltage is recycled. This built-in latchoff can be
overridden by providing >5µA at a compliance of 3.8V
to the RUN/SS pin. This additional current shortens the
soft-start period but prevents net discharge of the RUN/SS
capacitor during a severe overcurrent and/or short-circuit
condition. Foldback current limiting is activated when the
output voltage falls below 70% of its nominal level whether
or not the short-circuit latchoff circuit is enabled. Foldback
current limit can be overridden by clamping the EAIN pin
such that the voltage is held above the (70%)(0.6V) or
0.42V level even when the actual output voltage is low. Up
to 100µA of input current can safely be accommodated
by the RUN/SS pin.
Input Undervoltage Reset
The RUN/SS capacitor will be reset if the input voltage
(VCC) is allowed to fall below approximately 4V. The
capacitor on the RUN/SS pin will be discharged until
the short-circuit arming latch is disarmed. The RUN/SS
capacitor will attempt to cycle through a normal soft-start
ramp up after the VCC supply rises above 4V. This circuit
prevents power supply latchoff in the event of input power
switching break-before-make situations. The PGOOD pin
is held low during start-up until the RUN/SS capacitor
rises above the short-circuit latchoff arming threshold of
approximately 3.8V.
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
Operating Frequency
The IC uses a constant frequency, phase-lockable architecture with the frequency determined by an internal
capacitor. This capacitor is charged by a fixed current plus
an additional current which is proportional to the voltage
applied to the PLLFLTR pin. Refer to the Phase-Locked
Loop and Frequency Synchronization section for additional
information.
A graph for the voltage applied to the PLLFLTR pin versus
frequency is given in Figure 3. As the operating frequency
is increased the gate charge losses will be higher, reducing
700
OPERATING FREQUENCY (kHz)
The basic application circuit is shown in Figure 1 on the
first page of this data sheet. External component selection
is driven by the load requirement, and normally begins
with the selection of an inductance value based upon the
desired operating frequency, inductor current and output
voltage ripple requirements. Once the inductors and operating frequency have been chosen, the current sensing
resistors can be calculated. Next, the power MOSFETs and
Schottky diodes are selected. Finally, CIN and COUT are
selected according to the voltage ripple requirements. The
circuit shown in Figure 1 can be configured for operation
up to a MOSFET supply voltage of 28V (limited by the
external MOSFETs and possibly the minimum on-time).
600
500
400
300
200
0
0.5
1
1.5
2
PLLFLTR PIN VOLTAGE (V)
2.5
3731 F03
Figure 3. Operating Frequency vs VPLLFLTR
efficiency (see Efficiency Considerations). The maximum
switching frequency is approximately 680kHz.
Inductor Value Calculation and Output Ripple Current
The operating frequency and inductor selection are interrelated in that higher operating frequencies allow the use
of smaller inductor and capacitor values. So why would
anyone ever choose to operate at lower frequencies with
larger components? The answer is efficiency. A higher
frequency generally results in lower efficiency because of
MOSFET gate charge and transition losses. In addition to
3731fc
13
LTC3731
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
The inductor value has a direct effect on ripple current.
The inductor ripple current ∆IL per individual section,
N, decreases with higher inductance or frequency and
increases with higher VIN or VOUT:
V
V
∆IL = OUT 1− OUT
fL
VIN
where f is the individual output stage operating frequency.
In a PolyPhase converter, the net ripple current seen by
the output capacitor is much smaller than the individual
inductor ripple currents due to the ripple cancellation. The
details on how to calculate the net output ripple current
can be found in Application Note 77.
Figure 4 shows the net ripple current seen by the output
capacitors for the different phase configurations. The
output ripple current is plotted for a fixed output voltage
as the duty factor is varied between 10% and 90% on the
x‑axis. The output ripple current is normalized against
the inductor ripple current at zero duty factor. The graph
can be used in place of tedious calculations. As shown in
Figure 4, the zero output ripple current is obtained when:
VOUT k
=
where k = 1, 2, ..., N – 1
VIN N
So the number of phases used can be selected to minimize
the output ripple current and therefore the output ripple
voltage at the given input and output voltages. In applications having a highly varying input voltage, additional
phases will produce the best results.
Accepting larger values of ∆IL allows the use of low inductances but can result in higher output voltage ripple.
A reasonable starting point for setting ripple current is
∆IL = 0.4(IOUT)/N, where N is the number of channels and
IOUT is the total load current. Remember, the maximum
∆IL occurs at the maximum input voltage. The individual
inductor ripple currents are constant, determined by the
input and output voltages and the inductance.
1.0
1-PHASE
2-PHASE
3-PHASE
4-PHASE
6-PHASE
12-PHASE
0.9
0.8
0.7
IO(P-P)
VO/fL
this basic trade-off, the effect of inductor value on ripple
current and low current operation must also be considered.
The PolyPhase approach reduces both input and output
ripple currents while optimizing individual output stages to
run at a lower fundamental frequency, enhancing efficiency.
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
0.1
0.2
0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7
DUTY FACTOR (VOUT/VIN)
0.8
0.9
3731 F04
Figure 4. Normalized Peak Output Current
vs Duty Factor [IRMS = 0.3(IO(P-P)]
Inductor Core Selection
Once the value for L1 to L3 is determined, the type of inductor must be selected. High efficiency converters generally
cannot afford the core loss found in low cost powdered
iron cores, forcing the use of ferrite, molypermalloy or
Kool Mµ cores. Actual core loss is independent of core
size for a fixed inductor value, but it is very dependent
on inductance selected. As inductance increases, core
losses go down. Unfortunately, increased inductance
requires more turns of wire and therefore copper losses
will increase.
Ferrite designs have very low core loss and are preferred
at high switching frequencies, so design goals can
concentrate on copper loss and preventing saturation.
Ferrite core material saturates “hard,” which means that
inductance collapses abruptly when the peak design
current is exceeded. This results in an abrupt increase
in inductor ripple current and consequent output voltage
ripple. Do not allow the core to saturate!
Molypermalloy (from Magnetics, Inc.) is a very good, low
loss core material for toroids, but it is more expensive
than ferrite. A reasonable compromise from the same
manufacturer is Kool Mµ. Toroids are very space efficient, especially when you can use several layers of wire.
Because they lack a bobbin, mounting is more difficult.
However, designs for surface mount are available which
do not increase the height significantly.
3731fc
14
LTC3731
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
Power MOSFET and D1, D2, D3 Selection
At least two external power MOSFETs must be selected for
each of the three output sections: One N-channel MOSFET
for the top (main) switch and one or more N-channel
MOSFET(s) for the bottom (synchronous) switch. The
number, type and “on” resistance of all MOSFETs selected
take into account the voltage step-down ratio as well as
the actual position (main or synchronous) in which the
MOSFET will be used. A much smaller and much lower
input capacitance MOSFET should be used for the top
MOSFET in applications that have an output voltage that
is less than one-third of the input voltage. In applications
where VIN >> VOUT, the top MOSFETs’ “on” resistance
is normally less important for overall efficiency than its
input capacitance at operating frequencies above 300kHz.
MOSFET manufacturers have designed special purpose
devices that provide reasonably low “on” resistance with
significantly reduced input capacitance for the main switch
application in switching regulators.
The peak-to-peak MOSFET gate drive levels are set by the
voltage, VCC, requiring the use of logic-level threshold
MOSFETs in most applications. Pay close attention to the
BVDSS specification for the MOSFETs as well; many of the
logic-level MOSFETs are limited to 30V or less.
Selection criteria for the power MOSFETs include the “on”
resistance RDS(ON), input capacitance, input voltage and
maximum output current.
MOSFET input capacitance is a combination of several components but can be taken from the typical “gate
charge” curve included on most data sheets (Figure 5).
The curve is generated by forcing a constant input current into the gate of a common source, current source
VIN
VGS
MILLER EFFECT
a
V
b
QIN
CMILLER = (QB – QA)/VDS
+
VGS
–
Figure 5. Gate Charge Characteristic
+V
DS
–
3731 F05
loaded stage and then plotting the gate voltage versus
time. The initial slope is the effect of the gate-to-source
and the gate-to-drain capacitance. The flat portion of the
curve is the result of the Miller multiplication effect of the
drain-to-gate capacitance as the drain drops the voltage
across the current source load. The upper sloping line is
due to the drain-to-gate accumulation capacitance and
the gate-to-source capacitance. The Miller charge (the
increase in coulombs on the horizontal axis from a to b
while the curve is flat) is specified for a given VDS drain
voltage, but can be adjusted for different VDS voltages by
multiplying by the ratio of the application VDS to the curve
specified VDS values. A way to estimate the CMILLER term
is to take the change in gate charge from points a and b
on a manufacturer’s data sheet and divide by the stated
VDS voltage specified. CMILLER is the most important selection criteria for determining the transition loss term in
the top MOSFET but is not directly specified on MOSFET
data sheets. CRSS and COS are specified sometimes but
definitions of these parameters are not included.
When the controller is operating in continuous mode the
duty cycles for the top and bottom MOSFETs are given by:
Main Switch Duty Cycle =
VOUT
VIN
V –V
Synchronous Switch Duty Cycle = IN OUT
VIN
The power dissipation for the main and synchronous
MOSFETs at maximum output current are given by:
V
I
PMAIN = OUT MAX
VIN N
VIN2
2
(1+ δ )RDS(ON) +
IMAX
(R )(C
)•
2N DR MILLER
1
1
+
( f)
VCC – VTH(IL) VTH(IL)
V –V
I
PSYNC = IN OUT MAX
N
VIN
2
(1+ δ )RDS(ON)
3731fc
15
LTC3731
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
Both MOSFETs have I2R losses while the topside N‑channel
equation includes an additional term for transition losses,
which peak at the highest input voltage. For VIN < 12V,
the high current efficiency generally improves with larger
MOSFETs, while for VIN > 12V, the transition losses rapidly
increase to the point that the use of a higher RDS(ON) device
with lower CMILLER actually provides higher efficiency. The
synchronous MOSFET losses are greatest at high input
voltage when the top switch duty factor is low or during
a short-circuit when the synchronous switch is on close
to 100% of the period.
The term (1 + δ ) is generally given for a MOSFET in the
form of a normalized RDS(ON) vs temperature curve, but
δ = 0.005/°C can be used as an approximation for low
voltage MOSFETs.
The Schottky diodes (D1 to D3 in Figure 1) conduct during
the dead time between the conduction of the two large
power MOSFETs. This prevents the body diode of the bottom MOSFET from turning on, storing charge during the
dead time and requiring a reverse recovery period which
could cost as much as several percent in efficiency. A 2A
to 8A Schottky is generally a good compromise for both
regions of operation due to the relatively small average
current. Larger diodes result in additional transition loss
due to their larger junction capacitance.
CIN and COUT Selection
In continuous mode, the source current of each top
N‑channel MOSFET is a square wave of duty cycle VOUT/
VIN. A low ESR input capacitor sized for the maximum
RMS current must be used. The details of a close form
equation can be found in Application Note 77. Figure 6
shows the input capacitor ripple current for different phase
configurations with the output voltage fixed and input voltage varied. The input ripple current is normalized against
the DC output current. The graph can be used in place of
tedious calculations. The minimum input ripple current
can be achieved when the product of phase number and
output voltage, N(VOUT), is approximately equal to the
input voltage VIN or:
VOUT k
= where k = 1, 2, ..., N – 1
VIN N
So the phase number can be chosen to minimize the input
capacitor size for the given input and output voltages.
In the graph of Figure 4, the local maximum input RMS
capacitor currents are reached when:
VOUT 2k – 1
=
where k = 1, 2, ..., N
VIN
N
These worst-case conditions are commonly used for design
because even significant deviations do not offer much relief.
Note that capacitor manufacturer’s ripple current ratings
are often based on only 2000 hours of life. This makes
it advisable to further derate the capacitor or to choose
a capacitor rated at a higher temperature than required.
Several capacitors may also be paralleled to meet size or
0.6
RMS INPUT RIPPLE CURRENT
DC LOAD CURRENT
where N is the number of output stages, δ is the temperature dependency of RDS(ON), RDR is the effective top driver
resistance (approximately 2Ω at VGS = VMILLER), VIN is
the drain potential and the change in drain potential in the
particular application. VTH(IL) is the data sheet specified typical gate threshold voltage specified in the power MOSFET
data sheet at the specified drain current. CMILLER is the
calculated capacitance using the gate charge curve from
the MOSFET data sheet and the technique described above.
0.5
1-PHASE
2-PHASE
3-PHASE
4-PHASE
6-PHASE
12-PHASE
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
0.1
0.2
0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7
DUTY FACTOR (VOUT/VIN)
0.8
0.9
3731 F06
Figure 6. Normalized Input RMS Ripple Current
vs Duty Factor for One to Six Output Stages
3731fc
16
LTC3731
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
height requirements in the design. Always consult the
capacitor manufacturer if there is any question.
where f = operating frequency of each stage, N is the
number of output stages, COUT = output capacitance and
∆IL = ripple current in each inductor. The output ripple is
highest at maximum input voltage since ∆IL increases with
input voltage. The output ripple will be less than 50mV at
max VIN with ∆IL = 0.4IOUT(MAX) assuming:
The Figure 6 graph shows that the peak RMS input current
is reduced linearly, inversely proportional to the number N
of stages used. It is important to note that the efficiency
loss is proportional to the input RMS current squared and
therefore a 3-stage implementation results in 90% less
power loss when compared to a single phase design. Battery/input protection fuse resistance (if used), PC board
trace and connector resistance losses are also reduced
by the reduction of the input ripple current in a PolyPhase
system. The required amount of input capacitance is further
reduced by the factor, N, due to the effective increase in
the frequency of the current pulses.
and
Ceramic capacitors are becoming very popular for small
designs but several cautions should be observed. “X7R”,
“X5R” and “Y5V” are examples of a few of the ceramic
materials used as the dielectric layer, and these different
dielectrics have very different effect on the capacitance
value due to the voltage and temperature conditions applied. Physically, if the capacitance value changes due to
applied voltage change, there is a concommitant piezo
effect which results in radiating sound! A load that draws
varying current at an audible rate may cause an attendant
varying input voltage on a ceramic capacitor, resulting in
an audible signal. A secondary issue relates to the energy
flowing back into a ceramic capacitor whose capacitance
value is being reduced by the increasing charge. The voltage can increase at a considerably higher rate than the
constant current being supplied because the capacitance
value is decreasing as the voltage is increasing! Nevertheless, ceramic capacitors, when properly selected and
used, can provide the lowest overall loss due to their
extremely low ESR.
Manufacturers such as Nichicon, Nippon Chemi-Con and
Sanyo should be considered for high performance throughhole capacitors. The OS-CON semiconductor dielectric
capacitor available from Sanyo and the Panasonic SP
surface mount types have a good (ESR)(size) product.
Once the ESR requirement for COUT has been met, the
RMS current rating generally far exceeds the IRIPPLE(P-P)
requirement. Ceramic capacitors from AVX, Taiyo Yuden,
Murata and Tokin offer high capacitance value and very
low ESR, especially applicable for low output voltage
applications.
The selection of COUT is driven by the required effective
series resistance (ESR). Typically once the ESR requirement is satisfied the capacitance is adequate for filtering.
The steady-state output ripple (∆VOUT) is determined by:
1
∆VOUT ≈ ∆IRIPPLE ESR +
8NfCOUT
COUT required ESR < N • RSENSE
COUT > 1/(8Nf)(RSENSE)
The emergence of very low ESR capacitors in small, surface
mount packages makes very small physical implementations possible. The ability to externally compensate the
switching regulator loop using the ITH pin allows a much
wider selection of output capacitor types. The impedance
characteristics of each capacitor type is significantly different than an ideal capacitor and therefore requires accurate
modeling or bench evaluation during design.
In surface mount applications, multiple capacitors may
have to be paralleled to meet the ESR or RMS current
handling requirements of the application. Aluminum
electrolytic and dry tantalum capacitors are both available
in surface mount configurations. New special polymer
surface mount capacitors offer very low ESR also but
have much lower capacitive density per unit volume. In
the case of tantalum, it is critical that the capacitors are
surge tested for use in switching power supplies. Several
excellent choices are the AVX TPS, AVX TPSV, the KEMET
T510 series of surface-mount tantalums or the Panasonic
SP series of surface mount special polymer capacitors
3731fc
17
LTC3731
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
available in case heights ranging from 2mm to 4mm. Other
capacitor types include Sanyo POSCAP, Sanyo OS-CON,
Nichicon PL series and Sprague 595D series. Consult the
manufacturers for other specific recommendations.
RSENSE Selection for Output Current
Once the frequency and inductor have been chosen,
RSENSE1, RSENSE2, RSENSE3 are determined based on the
required peak inductor current. The current comparator
has a typical maximum threshold of 75mV/RSENSE and
an input common mode range of SGND to (1.1) • VCC.
The current comparator threshold sets the peak inductor
current, yielding a maximum average output current IMAX
equal to the peak value less half the peak-to-peak ripple
current, ∆IL.
Allowing a margin for variations in the IC and external
component values yields:
50mV
RSENSE = N
IMAX
The IC works well with values of RSENSE from 0.002Ω
to 0.02Ω.
VCC Decoupling
The VCC pin supplies power not only to the internal
circuits of the controller but also to the top and bottom
gate drivers in the LTC3731 UH package, and therefore
must be bypassed very carefully to ground with a ceramic
capacitor, type X7R or X5R (depending upon the operating
temperature environment) of at least 1µF immediately next
to the IC and preferably an additional 10µF placed very
close to the IC due to the extremely high instantaneous
currents involved. The total capacitance, taking into account the voltage coefficient of ceramic capacitors, should
be 100 times as large as the total combined gate charge
capacitance of ALL of the MOSFETs being driven. Good
bypassing close to the IC is necessary to supply the high
transient currents required by the MOSFET gate drivers
while keeping the 5V supply quiet enough so as not to
disturb the very small-signal high bandwidth of the current comparators.
Topside MOSFET Driver Supply (CB, DB)
External bootstrap capacitors, CB, connected to the
BOOST pins, supply the gate drive voltages for the topside MOSFETs. Capacitor CB in the Functional Diagram
is charged though diode DB from VCC when the SW pin
is low. When one of the topside MOSFETs turns on, the
driver places the CB voltage across the gate-source of the
desired MOSFET. This enhances the MOSFET and turns
on the topside switch. The switch node voltage, SW,
rises to VIN and the BOOST pin follows. With the topside
MOSFET on, the boost voltage is above the input supply
(VBOOST = VCC + VIN). The value of the boost capacitor CB
needs to be 30 to 100 times that of the total gate charge
capacitance of the topside MOSFET(s) as specified on the
manufacturer’s data sheet. The reverse breakdown of DB
must be greater than VIN(MAX).
Differential Amplifier/Output Voltage Programming
The IC has a true remote voltage sense capability. The
sensing connections should be returned from the load,
back to the differential amplifier’s inputs through a common, tightly coupled pair of PC traces. The differential
amplifier rejects common mode signals capacitively or
inductively radiated into the feedback PC traces as well as
ground loop disturbances. The differential amplifier output
signal is divided down with an external resistive divider
and compared with the internal, precision 0.6V voltage
reference by the error amplifier.
The differential amplifier has an output swing range of 0V
to VCC – 1.2V. The output uses an NPN emitter follower
without any internal pull-down current. A DC resistive load
to ground is required in order to sink current.
The differential amplifier is not recommended for high
output voltage applications. However, if it is used, monitor
the VCC rail with the UVADJ function to turn off the controller before the differential amplifier runs out of headroom.
The output voltage is set by an external resistive divider
according to the following formula:
R1
VOUT = 0.6V 1+
R2
3731fc
18
LTC3731
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
The resistive divider is connected to the output as shown
in Figure 2, allowing remote voltage sensing.
Soft-Start/Run Function
The RUN/SS pin provides three functions: 1) ON/OFF, 2)
soft-start and 3) a defeatable short-circuit latch off timer.
Soft-start reduces the input power sources’ surge currents by gradually increasing the controller’s current limit
(proportional to an internal buffered and clamped VITH).
The latchoff timer prevents very short, extreme load transients from tripping the overcurrent latch. A small pull-up
current (>5µA) supplied to the RUN/SS pin will prevent
the overcurrent latch from operating. A maximum pullup current of 200µA is allowed into the RUN/SS pin even
though the voltage at the pin may exceed the absolute
maximum rating for the pin. This is a result of the limited
current and the internal protection circuit on the pin. The
following explanation describes how this function operates.
An internal 1.5µA current source charges up the CSS capacitor. When the voltage on RUN/SS reaches 1.5V, the
controller is permitted to start operating. As the voltage on
RUN/SS increases from 1.5V to 3.5V, the internal current
limit is increased from 20mV/RSENSE to 75mV/RSENSE. The
output current limit ramps up slowly, taking an additional
1s/µF to reach full current. The output current thus ramps
up slowly, eliminating the starting surge current required
from the input power supply. If RUN/SS has been pulled
all the way to ground, there is a delay before starting of
approximately:
1.5V
tDELAY =
C = (1s/µF ) CSS
1.5µA SS
tIRAMP =
3V − 1.5V
C = (1s/µF ) CSS
1.5µA SS
By pulling the RUN/SS controller pin below 0.4V the IC is
put into low current shutdown (IQ < 100 µA). The RUN/SS
pin can be driven directly from logic as shown in Figure 7.
Diode, D1, in Figure 7 reduces the start delay but allows
CSS to ramp up slowly, providing the soft-start function.
The RUN/SS pin has an internal 6V zener clamp (see the
Functional Diagram).
3.3V OR 5V
RUN/SS PIN
VCC RUN/SS PIN
5V
D1
SHDN
CSS
RSS
SHDN
CSS
3731 F07
Figure 7. RUN/SS Pin Interfacing
Fault Conditions: Overcurrent Latchoff
The RUN/SS pins also provide the ability to latch off the
controllers when an overcurrent condition is detected. The
RUN/SS capacitor is used initially to turn on and limit the
inrush current of all three output stages. After the controllers have been started and been given adequate time
to charge up the output capacitor and provide full load
current, the RUN/SS capacitor is used for a short-circuit
timer. If the output voltage falls to less than 70% of its
nominal value, the RUN/SS capacitor begins discharging
on the assumption that the output is in an overcurrent
condition. If the condition lasts for a long enough period,
as determined by the size of the RUN/SS capacitor, the
discharge current, and the circuit trip point, the controller
will be shut down until the RUN/SS pin voltage is recycled.
If the overload occurs during start-up, the time can be
approximated by:
tLO1 >> (CSS • 0.6V)/(1.5µA) = 4 • 105 (CSS)
If the overload occurs after start-up, the voltage on the
RUN/SS capacitor will continue charging and will provide
additional time before latching off:
tLO2 >> (CSS • 3V)/(1.5µA) = 2 • 106 (CSS)
This built-in overcurrent latchoff can be overridden by
providing a pull-up resistor to the RUN/SS pin from VCC
as shown in Figure 7. When VCC is 5V, a 200k resistance
will prevent the discharge of the RUN/SS capacitor
during an overcurrent condition but also shortens the
soft-start period, so a larger RUN/SS capacitor value
may be required.
Why should you defeat overcurrent latchoff? During the
prototyping stage of a design, there may be a problem with
noise pick-up or poor layout causing the protection circuit
to latch off the controller. Defeating this feature allows
3731fc
19
LTC3731
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
troubleshooting of the circuit and PC layout. The internal
foldback current limiting still remains active, thereby protecting the power supply system from failure. A decision
can be made after the design is complete whether to rely
solely on foldback current limiting or to enable the latchoff
feature by removing the pull-up resistor.
The value of the soft-start capacitor CSS may need to be
scaled with output current, output capacitance and load
current characteristics. The minimum soft-start capacitance is given by:
CSS > (COUT )(VOUT) (10 –4) (RSENSE)
The minimum recommended soft-start capacitor of
CSS = 0.1µF will be sufficient for most applications.
Current Foldback
In certain applications, it may be desirable to defeat the
internal current foldback function. A negative impedance
is experienced when powering a switching regulator. That
is, the input current is higher at a lower VIN and decreases
as VIN is increased. Current foldback is designed to accommodate a normal, resistive load having increasing
current draw with increasing voltage. The EAIN pin should
be artificially held 70% above its nominal operating level
of 0.6V, or 0.42V in order to prevent the IC from “folding
back” the peak current level. A suggested circuit is shown
in Figure 8.
The emitter of Q1 will hold up the EAIN pin to a voltage in
the absence of VOUT that will prevent the internal sensing
circuitry from reducing the peak output current. Removing the function in this manner eliminates the external
MOSFET’s protective feature under short-circuit conditions.
This technique will also prevent the short-circuit latchoff
VCC
VCC
LTC3731
Q1
CALCULATE FOR
0.42V TO 0.55V
EAIN
3731 F08
Figure 8. Foldback Current Elimination
function from turning off the part during a short-circuit
event and the peak output current will only be limited to
N • 75mV/RSENSE.
Undervoltage Reset
In the event that the input power source to the IC (VCC)
drops below 4V, the RUN/SS capacitor will be discharged
to ground. When VCC rises above 4V, the RUN/SS capacitor
will be allowed to recharge and initiate another soft-start
turn-on attempt. This may be useful in applications that
switch between two supplies that are not diode connected,
but note that this cannot make up for the resultant interruption of the regulated output.
Phase-Locked Loop and Frequency Synchronization
The IC has a phase-locked loop comprised of an internal
voltage controlled oscillator and phase detector. This allows
the top MOSFET of output stage 1’s turn-on to be locked
to the rising edge of an external source. The frequency
range of the voltage controlled oscillator is ±50% around
the center frequency fO. A voltage applied to the PLLFLTR
pin of 1.2V corresponds to a frequency of approximately
400kHz. The nominal operating frequency range of the IC
is 225kHz to 680kHz.
The phase detector used is an edge sensitive digital type
that provides zero degrees phase shift between the external
and internal oscillators. This type of phase detector will
not lock the internal oscillator to harmonics of the input
frequency. The PLL hold-in range, ∆fH, is equal to the
capture range, ∆fC:
∆fH = ∆fC = ±0.5 fO
The output of the phase detector is a complementary pair
of current sources charging or discharging the external
filter components on the PLLFLTR pin. A simplified block
diagram is shown in Figure 9.
If the external frequency (fPLLIN) is greater than the oscillator frequency, fOSC, current is sourced continuously,
pulling up the PLLFLTR pin. When the external frequency is
less than fOSC, current is sunk continuously, pulling down
the PLLFLTR pin. If the external and internal frequencies
are the same, but exhibit a phase difference, the current
sources turn on for an amount of time corresponding to
3731fc
20
LTC3731
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
PHASE
DETECTOR/
OSCILLATOR
EXTERNAL
OSC
RLP
10k
2.4V
CLP
OSC
PLLIN
50k
PLLFLTR
DIGITAL
PHASE/
FREQUENCY
DETECTOR
3731 F09
Figure 9. Phase-Locked Loop Block Diagram
the phase difference. Thus, the voltage on the PLLFLTR pin
is adjusted until the phase and frequency of the external
and internal oscillators are identical. At this stable operating point, the phase comparator output is open and the
filter capacitor CLP holds the voltage. The IC PLLIN pin
must be driven from a low impedance source such as a
logic gate located close to the pin. When using multiple
ICs for a phase-locked system, the PLLFLTR pin of the
master oscillator should be biased at a voltage that will
guarantee the slave oscillator(s) ability to lock onto the
master’s frequency. A voltage of 1.7V or below applied to
the master oscillator’s PLLFLTR pin is recommended in
order to meet this requirement. The resultant operating
frequency will be approximately 550kHz for 1.7V.
The loop filter components (CLP, RLP) smooth out the
current pulses from the phase detector and provide a
stable input to the voltage controlled oscillator. The filter
components CLP and RLP determine how fast the loop
acquires lock. Typically RLP =10k and CLP ranges from
0.01µF to 0.1µF.
Minimum On-Time Considerations
Minimum on-time, tON(MIN), is the smallest time duration
that the IC is capable of turning on the top MOSFET. It is
determined by internal timing delays and the gate charge
of the top MOSFET. Low duty cycle applications may approach this minimum on-time limit and care should be
taken to ensure that:
tON(MIN ) <
VOUT
VIN ( f )
If the duty cycle falls below what can be accommodated
by the minimum on-time, the IC will begin to skip every
other cycle, resulting in half-frequency operation. The
output voltage will continue to be regulated, but the ripple
current and ripple voltage will increase.
The minimum on-time for the IC is generally about 110ns.
However, as the peak sense voltage decreases the minimum
on-time gradually increases. This is of particular concern
in forced continuous applications with low ripple current
at light loads. If the duty cycle drops below the minimum
on-time limit in this situation, a significant amount of cycle
skipping can occur with correspondingly larger current
and voltage ripple.
If an application can operate close to the minimum on-time
limit, an inductor must be chosen that is low enough in
value to provide sufficient ripple amplitude to meet the
minimum on-time requirement. As a general rule, keep
the inductor ripple current for each channel equal to or
greater than 30% of IOUT(MAX) at VIN(MAX).
Efficiency Considerations
The percent efficiency of a switching regulator is equal to
the output power divided by the input power times 100%.
It is often useful to analyze individual losses to determine
what is limiting the efficiency and which change would
produce the most improvement. Percent efficiency can
be expressed as:
%Efficiency = 100% – (L1 + L2 + L3 + ...)
where L1, L2, etc. are the individual losses as a percentage of input power.
Checking Transient Response
The regulator loop response can be checked by looking at the load transient response. Switching regulators
take several cycles to respond to a step in DC (resistive)
load current. When a load step occurs, VOUT shifts by
an amount equal to ∆ILOAD • ESR, where ESR is the effective series resistance of COUT. ∆ILOAD also begins to
charge or discharge COUT, generating the feedback error
signal that forces the regulator to adapt to the current
change and return VOUT to its steady-state value. During
3731fc
21
LTC3731
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
this recovery time, VOUT can be monitored for excessive
overshoot or ringing, which would indicate a stability
problem. The availability of the ITH pin not only allows
optimization of control loop behavior, but also provides
a DC coupled and AC filtered closed-loop response test
point. The DC step, rise time and settling at this test
point truly reflects the closed-loop response. Assuming
a predominantly second order system, phase margin and/
or damping factor can be estimated using the percentage
of overshoot seen at this pin. The bandwidth can also be
estimated by examining the rise time at the pin. The ITH
external components shown in the Figure 1 circuit will
provide an adequate starting point for most applications.
The ITH series RC-CC filter sets the dominant pole-zero
loop compensation. The values can be modified slightly
(from 0.2 to 5 times their suggested values) to maximize
transient response once the final PC layout is done and
the particular output capacitor type and value have been
determined. The output capacitors need to be decided upon
because the various types and values determine the loop
feedback factor gain and phase. An output current pulse
of 20% to 80% of full load current having a rise time of
1µF) supply bypass capacitors. The
discharged bypass capacitors are effectively put in parallel
with COUT, causing a rapid drop in VOUT. No regulator can
alter its delivery of current quickly enough to prevent this
sudden step change in output voltage if the load switch
resistance is low and it is driven quickly. If CLOAD is greater
than 2% of COUT , the switch rise time should be controlled
so that the load rise time is limited to approximately
1000 • RSENSE • CLOAD. Thus a 250µF capacitor and a 2mΩ
RSENSE resistor would require a 500µs rise time, limiting
the charging current to about 1A.
Automotive Considerations: Plugging into the
Cigarette Lighter
As battery-powered devices go mobile, there is a natural
interest in plugging into the cigarette lighter in order to
conserve or even recharge battery packs during operation.
But before you connect, be advised: you are plugging into
the supply from hell. The main battery line in an automobile
is the source of a number of nasty potential transients,
including load dump, reverse battery and double battery.
Load dump is the result of a loose battery cable. When the
cable breaks connection, the field collapse in the alternator can cause a positive spike as high as 60V which takes
several hundred milliseconds to decay. Reverse battery is
just what it says, while double battery is a consequence of
tow-truck operators finding that a 24V jump start cranks
cold engines faster than 12V.
The network shown in Figure 10 is the most straightforward
approach to protect a DC/DC converter from the ravages
of an automotive battery line. The series diode prevents
current from flowing during reverse battery, while the
transient suppressor clamps the input voltage during
load dump. Note that the transient suppressor should not
conduct during double-battery operation, but must still
clamp the input voltage below breakdown of the converter.
Although the IC has a maximum input voltage of 32V on
3731fc
22
LTC3731
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
VBAT
12V
VCC
5V
+
Next verify the minimum on-time is not violated. The
minimum on-time occurs at maximum VCC:
LTC3731
3731 F10
Figure 10. Automotive Application Protection
the SW pins, most applications will be limited to 30V by
the MOSFET BVDSS.
tON(MIN ) =
=
1.3V
1.3V
1−
( 400kHz )(30%)(15A ) 20V
PMAIN ≈
RSENSE1, RSENSE2 and RSENSE3 can be calculated by using
a conservative maximum sense current threshold of 65mV
and taking into account half of the ripple current:
RSENSE =
65mV
= 0.0037Ω
34%
15A 1+
2
Use a commonly available 0.003Ω sense resistor.
1.8V
2
15) 1+ ( 0.005) ( 50°C − 25°C)
(
20V
2 45A
0.007Ω + ( 20 )
( 2Ω ) (1000pF )
( 2) ( 3)
1
1
5V – 1.8V + 1.8V ( 400kHz ) = 2.2W
The worst-case power dissipation by the synchronous
MOSFET under normal operating conditions at elevated
ambient temperature and estimated 50°C junction temperature rise is:
≥ 0.68µH
Using L = 0.6µH, a commonly available value results in
34% ripple current. The worst-case output ripple for the
three stages operating in parallel will be less than 11% of
the peak output current.
1.3V
= 162ns
20V ( 400kHz )
The power dissipation on the topside MOSFET can be
estimated. Using a Fairchild FDS6688 for example, RDS(ON)
= 7mΩ, CMILLER = 15nC/15V = 1000pF. At maximum input
voltage with T(estimated) = 50°C:
As a design example, assume VCC = 5V, VIN = 12V(nominal),
VIN = 20V(max), VOUT = 1.3V, IMAX = 45A and f = 400kHz. The
inductance value is chosen first based upon a 30% ripple
current assumption. The highest value of ripple current in
each output stage occurs at the maximum input voltage.
VOUT VOUT
1−
f ( ∆I)
VIN
VIN(MAX) ( f )
=
The output voltage will be set by the resistive divider from
the DIFFOUT pin to SGND, R1 and R2 in the Functional
Diagram. Set R1 = 13.3k and R2 = 11.3k.
Design Example
L=
VOUT
PSYNC =
20V − 1.3V
(15A )2 (1.25)(0.007Ω) = 1.84W
20V
A short-circuit to ground will result in a folded back current of:
ISC ≈
25mV
1 150ns ( 20V )
+
= 7.5A
(2 + 3)mΩ 2 0.6µH
with a typical value of RDS(ON) and d = (0.005/°C)(50°C)
= 0.25. The resulting power dissipated in the bottom
MOSFET is:
PSYNC = (7.5A)2(1.25)(0.007Ω) ≈ 0.5W
3731fc
23
LTC3731
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
which is less than one third of the normal, full load conditions. Incidentally, since the load no longer dissipates
any power, total system power is decreased by over 90%.
Therefore, the system actually cools significantly during
a shorted condition!
PC Board Layout Checklist
When laying out the printed circuit board, the following
checklist should be used to ensure proper operation of
the IC. These items are also illustrated graphically in the
layout diagram of Figure 11. Check the following in the
PC layout:
L1
SW1
RSENSE1
D1
L2
VIN
SW2
RIN
+
CIN
VOUT
RSENSE2
COUT
D2
BOLD LINES INDICATE HIGH,
SWITCHING CURRENTS.
KEEP LINES TO A MINIMUM
LENGTH.
+
RL
L3
SW3
RSENSE3
D3
3731 F11
Figure 11. Branch Current Waveforms
3731fc
24
LTC3731
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
1) Are the signal and power ground paths isolated? Keep
the SGND at one end of a printed circuit path thus
preventing MOSFET currents from traveling under the
IC. The IC signal ground pin should be used to hook
up all control circuitry on one side of the IC, routing
the copper through SGND, under the IC covering the
“shadow” of the package, connecting to the PGND
pin and then continuing on to the (–) plates of CIN and
COUT. The VCC decoupling capacitor should be placed
immediately adjacent to the IC between the VCC pin and
PGND. A 1µF ceramic capacitor of the X7R or X5R type
is small enough to fit very close to the IC to minimize
the ill effects of the large current pulses drawn to drive
the bottom MOSFETs. An additional 5µF to 10µF of
ceramic, tantalum or other very low ESR capacitance
is recommended in order to keep the internal IC supply
quiet. The power ground returns to the sources of the
bottom N‑channel MOSFETs, anodes of the Schottky
diodes and (–) plates of CIN, which should have as short
lead lengths as possible.
2) Does the IC IN+ pin connect to the (+) plates of COUT?
A 30pF to 300pF feedforward capacitor between the
IN+ and EAIN pins should be placed as close as possible to the IC.
3) Are the SENSE– and SENSE+ printed circuit traces for
each channel routed together with minimum PC trace
spacing? The filter capacitors between SENSE+ and
SENSE– for each channel should be as close as possible
to the pins of the IC. Connect the SENSE– and SENSE+
pins to the pads of the sense resistor as illustrated in
Figure 12.
INDUCTOR
LTC3731
SENSE+
SENSE–
1000pF
SENSE
RESISTOR
3731 F12
4) Do the (+) plates of CPWR connect to the drains of the
topside MOSFETs as closely as possible? This capacitor
provides the pulsed current to the MOSFETs.
5) Keep the switching nodes, SWITCH, BOOST and TG
away from sensitive small-signal nodes (SENSE+,
SENSE –, IN+, IN–, EAIN). Ideally the SWITCH, BOOST
and TG printed circuit traces should be routed away and
separated from the IC and especially the “quiet” side
of the IC. Separate the high dv/dt traces from sensitive
small-signal nodes with ground traces or ground planes.
6) Use a low impedance source such as a logic gate to drive
the PLLIN pin and keep the lead as short as possible.
7) The 47pF to 330pF ceramic capacitor between the ITH
pin and signal ground should be placed as close as
possible to the IC.
Figure 11 illustrates all branch currents in a three-phase
switching regulator. It becomes very clear after studying the current waveforms why it is critical to keep the
high switching current paths to a small physical size.
High electric and magnetic fields will radiate from these
“loops” just as radio stations transmit signals. The output
capacitor ground should return to the negative terminal
of the input capacitor and not share a common ground
path with any switched current paths. The left half of the
circuit gives rise to the “noise” generated by a switching
regulator. The ground terminations of the synchronous
MOSFETs and Schottky diodes should return to the bottom plate(s) of the input capacitor(s) with a short isolated
PC trace since very high switched currents are present.
A separate isolated path from the bottom plate(s) of the
input and output capacitor(s) should be used to tie in the IC
power ground pin (PGND). This technique keeps inherent
signals generated by high current pulses taking alternate
current paths that have finite impedances during the total
period of the switching regulator. External OPTI-LOOP
compensation allows overcompensation for PC layouts
which are not optimized but this is not the recommended
design procedure.
OUTPUT CAPACITOR
Figure 12. Kelvin Sensing RSENSE
3731fc
25
LTC3731
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
Simplified Visual Explanation of How a 3-Phase
Controller Reduces Both Input and Output RMS
Ripple Current
The effect of multiphase power supply design significantly
reduces the amount of ripple current in both the input and
output capacitors. The RMS input ripple current is divided
by, and the effective ripple frequency is multiplied up by
the number of phases used (assuming that the input voltage is greater than the number of phases used times the
output voltage). The output ripple amplitude is also reduced
by, and the effective ripple frequency is increased by the
number of phases used. Figure 13 graphically illustrates
the principle.
The worst-case input RMS ripple current for a single stage
design peaks at twice the value of the output voltage. The
worst-case input RMS ripple current for a two stage design
results in peaks at one-fourth and three-fourths of the
input voltage, and the worst-case input RMS ripple current for a three stage design results in peaks at one-sixth,
one-half and five-sixths of the input voltage. The peaks,
however, are at ever decreasing levels with the addition
of more phases. A higher effective duty factor results
because the duty factors “add” as long as the currents
in each stage are balanced. Refer to AN19 for a detailed
description of how to calculate RMS current for the single
stage switching regulator.
Figure 6 illustrates the RMS input current drawn from
the input capacitance versus the duty cycle as determined
by the ratio of input and output voltage. The peak input
RMS current level of the single phase system is reduced
by two-thirds in a 3-phase solution due to the current
splitting between the three stages.
The output ripple current is reduced significantly when
compared to the single phase solution using the same
inductance value because the VOUT/L discharge currents
term from the stages that has their bottom MOSFETs on
subtract current from the (VCC – VOUT)/L charging current
resulting from the stage which has its top MOSFET on.
The output ripple current for a 3-phase design is:
IP-P =
VOUT
(1– 3DC) VIN > 3VOUT
( f )(L )
SINGLE PHASE
VSW
ICIN
ICOUT
TRIPLE PHASE
VSW1
VSW2
VSW3
IL1
IL2
IL3
ICIN
ICOUT
3731 F13
Figure 13. Single and PolyPhase Current Waveforms
3731fc
26
LTC3731
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
The ripple frequency is also increased by three, further reducing the required output capacitance when
VCC < 3VOUT as illustrated in Figure 6.
The addition of more phases, by phase locking additional
controllers, always results in no net input or output
ripple at VOUT/VIN ratios equal to the number of stages
implemented. Designing a system with multiple stages
close to the VOUT/VIN ratio will significantly reduce the
ripple voltage at the input and outputs and thereby improve
efficiency, physical size and heat generation of the overall
switching power supply. Refer to Application Note 77 for
more information on PolyPhase circuits.
Efficiency Calculation
To estimate efficiency, the DC loss terms include the
input and output capacitor ESR, each MOSFET RDS(ON),
inductor resistance RL, the sense resistance RSENSE and
the forward drop of the Schottky rectifier at the operating
output current and temperature. Typical values for the
design example given previously in this data sheet are:
Main MOSFET RDS(ON) = 7mΩ (9mΩ at 90°C)
Sync MOSFET RDS(ON) = 7mΩ (9mΩ at 90°C)
CINESR = 20mΩ
COUTESR = 3mΩ
RL = 2.5mΩ
RSENSE = 3mΩ
VSCHOTTKY = 0.8V at 15A (0.7V at 90°C)
VOUT = 1.3V
VIN = 12V
IMAX = 45A
δ = 0.5%°C (MOSFET temperature coefficient)
N=3
f = 400kHz
The main MOSFET is on for the duty factor VOUT/VIN and
the synchronous MOSFET is on for the rest of the period
or simply (1 – VOUT/VIN). Assuming the ripple current is
small, the AC loss in the inductor can be made small if
a good quality inductor is chosen. The average current,
IOUT, is used to simplify the calculations. The equation
below is not exact but should provide a good technique
for the comparison of selected components and give a
result that is within 10% to 20% of the final application.
Determining the MOSFETs’ die temperature may require
iterative calculations if one is not familiar with typical
performance. A maximum operating junction temperature
of 90° to 100°C for the MOSFETs is recommended for
high reliability applications.
Common output path DC loss:
I
PCOMPATH ≈N MAX
N
2
(RL +RSENSE ) + COUTESR Loss
This totals 3.7W + COUTESR loss.
Total of all three main MOSFETs’ DC loss:
V
I
PMAIN = N OUT MAX
VIN N
2
( 1+ δ ) RDS(ON) + CINESR Loss
This totals 0.87W + CINESR loss (at 90°C).
Total of all three synchronous MOSFETs’ DC loss:
I
V
PSYNC = N 1– OUT MAX
VIN N
2
( 1+ δ ) RDS(ON)
This totals 7.2W at 90°C.
Total of all three main MOSFETs’ AC loss:
PMAIN ≈ 3(VIN )2
45A
(2Ω)(1000pF)
(2)(3)
1
1
5V – 1.8V + 1.8V (400kHz) = 6.3W
3731fc
27
LTC3731
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
This totals 1W at VIN = 8V, 2.25W at VIN = 12V and 6.25W
at VIN = 20V.
Total of all three synchronous MOSFETs’ AC gate loss:
(3)QG
VIN
VDSSPEC
(f) = (6)(15nC)
VIN
VDSSPEC
(4E5)
This totals 0.08W at VIN = 8V, 0.12W at VIN = 12V and 0.19W
at VIN = 20V. The bottom MOSFET does not experience the
Miller capacitance dissipation issue that the main switch
does because the bottom switch turns on when its drain
is close to ground.
The Schottky rectifier loss assuming 50ns nonoverlap time:
2 • 3(0.7V)(15A)(50ns)(4E5)
This totals 1.26W.
The total output power is (1.3V)(45A) = 58.5W and the
total input power is approximately 60W so the % loss of
each component is as follows:
Main switch’s AC loss (VIN = 12V) 2.25W 3.75%
Main switch’s DC loss
0.87W 1.5%
Synchronous switch AC loss
0.19W 0.3%
Synchronous switch DC loss
7.2W
12%
Power path loss
3.7W
6.1%
The numbers above represent the values at VIN = 12V. It
can be seen from this simple example that two things can
be done to improve efficiency: 1) Use two MOSFETs on the
synchronous side and 2) use a smaller MOSFET for the
main switch with smaller CMILLER to better balance the AC
loss with the DC loss. A smaller, less expensive MOSFET
can actually perform better in the task of the main switch.
3731fc
28
LTC3731
TYPICAL APPLICATIONS
1µF
OPTIONAL FILTER FOR
SYNCHRONIZATION
1000pF
10k
1
VCC
SYNC IN
300kHz
0.01µF
2
3
4
5
100pF
300pF
6.04k
6
9.09k
7
8
9
10
S1+
1000pF
S1–
11
12
S2+
0.01µF
1000pF
S2–
13
S3–
14
1000pF
S3+
15
16
ITH 17
330pF
3.3nF
2.2k
VIN
18
18k
VCC
10Ω
CLK
VCC
PLLIN
PLLFLTR
PGOOD
BOOST1
FCB
TG1
IN+
SW1
IN–
LTC3731G
BOOST2
DIFFOUT
TG2
EAIN
SW2
SGND
VDR
SENSE1+
BG1
SENSE1–
PGND
SENSE2+
BG2
SENSE2–
BG3
SENSE3–
SW3
SENSE3+
TG3
RUN/SS
ITH
UVADJ
BOOST3
PHASMD
SGND
36
35
PGOOD
NC
47k
34
0.1µF
33
1Ω
M1
32
VCC
31
0.1µF
30
VCC
5V TO 7V
VIN
M2
29
VOUT
1.5V AT 65A
L1
D1
0.002Ω
+
S1
S1–
10µF
6.3V
×3
+
VIN
28
M3
27
1µF
26
10µF
25
L2
M4
0.002Ω
D2
S2+
10µF
25V
×5
+
COUT
VIN
CIN 3.3V TO 20V
68µF
25V
S2–
24
23
VIN
22
M5
0.1µF
21
20
M6
L3
0.002Ω
D3
S3+
19
S3–
VCC
12k
3731 F14
VIN: 3.3V TO 20V
VOUT: 1.5V AT 65A
SWITCHING FREQUENCY: 300kHz
CIN: SANYO OS-CON 25SP68M
COUT: 270F/2V ×8 PANASONIC SP EEUE0D271R
OR 470F/2.5V ×6 SANYO POSCAP 2R5 TPD470M
D1 TO D3: DIODES INC. B340A
L1 TO L3: 0.8H SUMIDA CEP125-0R8
M1, M3, M5: IRF7821W ×2, Si7860DP
OR HAT2168 ×2
M2, M4, M6: IRF7832 ×2, Si7892DP ×2
OR HAT2165 ×2
Figure 14. 3-Phase 65A Power Supply
3731fc
29
LTC3731
TYPICAL APPLICATIONS
VCC
VCC
VCC
8.2k
4
5
VOUTS+
220pF
VOUTS–
15k
8
EAIN
9
10
1000pF
S1–
11
12
S2+
1000pF
S2–
13
14
S3–
1000pF
S3+
0.1µF
DIFFOUT
10Ω ×6
S1+
6
7
330pF
15
16
RUN/SS
VIN
2
3
3.3k
4.7k
1
17
357k
18
CLKOUT
VCC
PLLIN
PLLFLTR
PGOOD
BOOST1
FCB
TG1
IN+
SW1
IN–
LTC3731G
BOOST2
DIFFOUT
TG2
EAIN
SW2
SGND
VDR
SENSE1+
BG1
SENSE1–
PGND
SENSE2+
BG2
SENSE2–
BG3
SENSE3–
SW3
SENSE3+
TG3
RUN/SS
ITH
BOOST3
PHASMD
UVADJ
SGND2
36
35
+
10Ω
1µF
PGOOD
10k
CLK1
34
1Ω
0.1µF
33
BOOST2
L1
X2
M2,3
31
0.1µF
BOOST3
10µF
CER
10µF
10V
VIN
M1
32
30
BOOST1
D1
29
0.002Ω
S1+
S1–
VIN
28
1µF +
CER
27
26
M4
4.7µF
25
L2
X2
M5,6
0.002Ω
D2
S2+
S2–
24
23
VIN
22
0.1µF
21
20
19
M7
L3
X2
M8,9
VCC
0.002Ω
D3
S3+
S3–
VOUT
121k
+
100pF 1000pF
VCC
0.01µF
CLK1
1
2
3
4
1000pF
VOUTS+
5
VOUTS–
6
DIFFOUT
S4+
S4–
S5+
S5–
S6–
ITH
100pF
S6+
10pF
10Ω ×6
9
10
1000pF
11
12
1000pF
13
14
1000pF
15
16
RUN/SS
1.2k
7
8
EAIN
270pF
V5
UVADJ
1000pF
10k
V5
17
18
2700pF
VCC
CLKOUT
PLLIN
PLLFLTR
PGOOD
BOOST4
FCB
TG4
IN+
SW4
IN–
LTC3731G
BOOST5
DIFFOUT
TG5
EAIN
SW5
SGND
VDR
SENSE4+
BG4
SENSE4–
PGND
SENSE5+
BG5
SENSE5–
BG6
SENSE6–
SW6
SENSE6+
TG6
RUN/SS
ITH
UVADJ
BOOST6
PHASMD
SGND2
36
35
CLKOUT
PGOOD
BOOST4
34
33
0.1µF
BOOST5
10Ω
0.1µF
29
L4
D4
VIN
CIN
0.002Ω
S4+
S4–
VIN
28
26
+
VIN
X2
M11,12
31
27
BOOST6
M10
32
30
COUT
1µF +
CER
M13
4.7µF
25
X2
M14,15
L5
0.002Ω
D5
S5+
S5–
24
23
VIN
22
21
0.1µF
M16
19
0.002Ω
3731 F15
X2
M17,18
20
L6
D6
S6+
S6–
UVADJ
NOTES:
V5: 5V TO 7V
VIN: 10V TO 14V; VOUT: 2.5V/100A
SWITCHING FREQUENCY: 500kHz (V5 = 5V)
M1, M4, M7, M10, M13, M16:
SILICONIX Si7390DP OR HAT2168
M2, M3, M5, M6, M8, M9, M11, M12, M14, M15,
M17, M18: SILICONIX Si7356DP OR HAT2165
D1 TO D6: B320A
L1 TO L6: TOKO FDH1040: 0.56µH
CIN: 10µF/16V CERAMIC × 10 + 270F/16V SANYO OS-CON
COUT: 100µF/6.3V/X5R × 10 + 330F/4V × 8
Figure 15. 2.5V/100A Power Supply
3731fc
30
LTC3731
PACKAGE DESCRIPTION
G Package
36-Lead Plastic SSOP (5.3mm)
(Reference LTC DWG # 05-08-1640)
12.50 – 13.10*
(.492 – .516)
1.25 ±0.12
7.8 – 8.2
36 35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19
5.3 – 5.7
0.42 ±0.03
7.40 – 8.20
(.291 – .323)
0.65 BSC
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
RECOMMENDED SOLDER PAD LAYOUT
2.0
(.079)
MAX
5.00 – 5.60**
(.197 – .221)
0° – 8°
0.09 – 0.25
(.0035 – .010)
0.55 – 0.95
(.022 – .037)
NOTE:
1. CONTROLLING DIMENSION: MILLIMETERS
MILLIMETERS
2. DIMENSIONS ARE IN
(INCHES)
0.65
(.0256)
BSC
0.22 – 0.38
(.009 – .015)
TYP
0.05
(.002)
MIN
G36 SSOP 0204
3. DRAWING NOT TO SCALE
*DIMENSIONS DO NOT INCLUDE MOLD FLASH. MOLD FLASH
SHALL NOT EXCEED .152mm (.006") PER SIDE
**DIMENSIONS DO NOT INCLUDE INTERLEAD FLASH. INTERLEAD
FLASH SHALL NOT EXCEED .254mm (.010") PER SIDE
3731fc
31
LTC3731
PACKAGE DESCRIPTION
UH Package
32-Lead Plastic QFN (5mm × 5mm)
(Reference LTC DWG # 05-08-1693 Rev D)
0.70 ±0.05
5.50 ±0.05
4.10 ±0.05
3.50 REF
(4 SIDES)
3.45 ± 0.05
3.45 ± 0.05
PACKAGE OUTLINE
0.25 ± 0.05
0.50 BSC
RECOMMENDED SOLDER PAD LAYOUT
APPLY SOLDER MASK TO AREAS THAT ARE NOT SOLDERED
5.00 ± 0.10
(4 SIDES)
BOTTOM VIEW—EXPOSED PAD
0.75 ± 0.05
R = 0.05
TYP
0.00 – 0.05
R = 0.115
TYP
PIN 1 NOTCH R = 0.30 TYP
OR 0.35 × 45° CHAMFER
31 32
0.40 ± 0.10
PIN 1
TOP MARK
(NOTE 6)
1
2
3.50 REF
(4-SIDES)
3.45 ± 0.10
3.45 ± 0.10
(UH32) QFN 0406 REV D
0.200 REF
NOTE:
1. DRAWING PROPOSED TO BE A JEDEC PACKAGE OUTLINE
M0-220 VARIATION WHHD-(X) (TO BE APPROVED)
2. DRAWING NOT TO SCALE
3. ALL DIMENSIONS ARE IN MILLIMETERS
4. DIMENSIONS OF EXPOSED PAD ON BOTTOM OF PACKAGE DO NOT INCLUDE
MOLD FLASH. MOLD FLASH, IF PRESENT, SHALL NOT EXCEED 0.20mm ON ANY SIDE
5. EXPOSED PAD SHALL BE SOLDER PLATED
6. SHADED AREA IS ONLY A REFERENCE FOR PIN 1 LOCATION
ON THE TOP AND BOTTOM OF PACKAGE
0.25 ± 0.05
0.50 BSC
3731fc
32
LTC3731
REVISION HISTORY
(Revision history begins at Rev C)
REV
DATE
DESCRIPTION
PAGE NUMBER
C
7/11
Updated Features section
1
Updated Differential Amplifier section in Electrical Characteristics
5
Updated text in Differential Amplifier/Output Voltage Programming
18
Updated Typical Application and Related Parts
34
3731fc
Information furnished by Linear Technology Corporation is believed to be accurate and reliable.
However, no responsibility is assumed for its use. Linear Technology Corporation makes no representation that the interconnection of its circuits as described herein will not infringe on existing patent rights.
33
LTC3731
TYPICAL APPLICATION
1µF
1
VCC
2
3
SHORT
PLLFLTR TO
SGND
4
5
100pF
20k
6
147k
7
8
9
10
S1+
1000pF
S1–
11
12
S2+
0.01µF
1000pF
S2–
13
S3–
14
1000pF
S3+
15
16
ITH 17
100pF
10nF
3.01k
VIN
18
18k
V5
10Ω
CLK
VCC
PLLIN
PGOOD
PLLFLTR
BOOST1
FCB
TG1
IN+
SW1
LTC3731G
BOOST2
IN–
DIFFOUT
TG2
EAIN
SW2
SGND
VDR
SENSE1+
BG1
SENSE1–
PGND
SENSE2+
BG2
SENSE2–
BG3
SENSE3–
SW3
SENSE3+
TG3
RUN/SS
ITH
BOOST3
PHASMD
UVADJ
SGND
36
35
PGOOD
NC
47k
34
1Ω
0.1µF
33
M1
32
V5
31
0.1µF
30
V5
5V TO 7V
VIN
M2
29
D1
0.003Ω
+
S1
S1–
47µF
10V
×3
+
VIN
28
M3
27
26
VOUT
5V AT 40A
L1
10µF
1µF
25
M4
L2
0.003Ω
D2
S2+
4.7µF
50V
×6
+
S2–
COUT
VIN
CIN 9V TO 28V
47µF
35V
×4
24
23
VIN
22
M5
0.1µF
21
20
M6
L3
0.003Ω
D3
S3+
19
S3–
V5
12k
3731 TA01
VIN: 9V TO 28V
VOUT: 5V AT 40A
SWITCHING FREQUENCY: 225kHz
CIN: KEMET T521X476M035ATE070 ×4
COUT: SANYO 6TPE220MI ×3
D1 TO D3: DIODES INC. B340A
L1 TO L3: 2.2µH WURTH 7443320220
M1, M3, M5: RJK0305DPB
M2, M4, M6: RJK0330DPB
RELATED PARTS
PART NUMBER
DESCRIPTION
COMMENTS
LTC3829
3-Phase, Single Output Synchronous Step-Down Controller with
Diff Amp and DCR Temperature Compensation
Phase-Lockable Fixed 250kHz to 770kHz Frequency,
4.5V ≤ VIN ≤ 38V, 0.8V ≤ VOUT ≤ 5V
LTC3856
2-Phase, Single Output Synchronous Step-Down DC/DC Controller
with Diff Amp and DCR Temperature Compensation
Phase-Lockable Fixed 250kHz to 770kHz Frequency,
4.5V ≤ VIN ≤ 38V, 0.8V ≤ VOUT ≤ 5V
LTC3855
Dual, Multiphase, Synchronous Step-Down DC/DC Controller with
Diffamp and DCR Temperature Compensation
Phase-Lockable Fixed Frequency 250kHz to 770kHz,
4.5V ≤ VIN ≤ 38V, 0.8V ≤ VOUT ≤ 12V
LTC3860
Dual, Multiphase, Synchronous Step-Down DC/DC Controller with
Diffamp and Three-State Output Drive
Operates with Power Blocks or DRMOS Devices,
3V ≤ VIN ≤ 24V, tON(MIN) = 20ns
Triple Output, Multiphase Synchronous Step-Down DC/DC Controller, Phase-Lockable Fixed 250kHz to 750kHz Frequency,
4V ≤ VIN ≤ 24V, VOUT3 Up to 13.5V
RSENSE or DCR Current Sensing and Tracking
LTC3869/LTC3869-2 Dual Output, 2-Phase Synchronous Step-Down DC/DC Controller,
PLL Fixed 250kHz to 750kHz Frequency,
with Accurate Current Share
4V ≤ VIN ≤ 38V, 0.6V ≤ VOUT ≤ 12.5V
LTC3853
3731fc
34 Linear Technology Corporation
LT 0711 REV C • PRINTED IN USA
1630 McCarthy Blvd., Milpitas, CA 95035-7417
(408) 432-1900 ● FAX: (408) 434-0507
●
www.linear.com
LINEAR TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION 2005