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LTC3838EUHF-2#PBF

LTC3838EUHF-2#PBF

  • 厂商:

    AD(亚德诺)

  • 封装:

    WFQFN38

  • 描述:

    IC REG CTRLR BUCK 38QFN

  • 数据手册
  • 价格&库存
LTC3838EUHF-2#PBF 数据手册
LTC3838-2 Dual, Fast, Accurate Step-Down DC/DC Controller with External Reference Voltage and Dual Differential Output Sensing Description Features Wide VIN Range: 4.5V to 38V n V OUT1: 0.6V to 5.5V, ±0.67% Output Regulation Accuracy, with Internal 0.6V VREFERENCE n V OUT2: 0.4V to 5.5V, ±4mV Regulation Accuracy, with Differential External VREFERENCE Sensing n Differential Remote Output Sensing; Up to ±500mV (VOUT1) and ±200mV (VOUT2) Ground Deviations n Fast Load Transient Response Without Clock Delay n Detect Transient Release (DTR) Reduces V OUT Overshoot n Frequency Programmable from 200kHz to 2MHz, Synchronizable to External Clock n t ON(MIN) = 30ns, tOFF(MIN) = 90ns n R SENSE or Inductor DCR Current Sensing n Overvoltage Protection and Current Limit Foldback n Power Good Output Voltage Monitor n Thermally Enhanced 38-Pin (5mm × 7mm) QFN Package The switching frequency can be programmed from 200kHz to 2MHz with an external resistor, and can be synchronized to an external clock. Very low tON and tOFF times allow for near 0% and near 100% duty cycles, respectively. Voltage tracking soft start-up and multiple safety features are provided. Applications See Table 1 for a comparison of LTC3838, LTC3838-1 and LTC3838-2. n Power for ASICs with Dynamic Voltage Scaling Low Voltage, High Current, High Step-Down Ratio Converters That Demand Tight Transient Regulation n The LTC®3838-2 is a dual-channel, PolyPhase® synchronous step-down DC/DC switching regulator controller. Two independent channels drive all N-channel power MOSFETs. The two channels can also be combined into a multiphase single output configuration with external reference. The controlled on-time, valley current mode control architecture allows for not only fast response to transients without a clock delay, but also constant frequency switching at a steady-load condition. Its proprietary load-release transient detection feature (DTR) significantly reduces overshoot at low output voltages. L, LT, LTC, LTM, PolyPhase, OPTI-LOOP, µModule, Linear Technology and the Linear logo are registered trademarks of Linear Technology Corporation. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Protected by U.S. Patents, including 5481178, 5847554, 6580258, 6304066, 6476589, 6774611. n Typical Application 1.2V/15A and 0.8V to 2.5V/15A, 350kHz Step-Down Converter (See Figure 16 for Complete Design) VIN 4.5V TO 38V SENSE1– SENSE2– SENSE1+ SENSE2+ VIN 0.56µH LTC3838-2 10k 0.1µF ×2 BG1 BG2 PGND EXTVREF2 + VOUTSENSE1 VOUTSENSE1– 20k 0.1µF DRVCC2 DRVCC1 4.7µF 10k 0.56µH BOOST2 BOOST1 + 330µF 90 TG2 SW2 0.4V TO 1.25V + 10k 20k VOUT2 0.8V TO 2.5V 15A 330µF ×2 + VDFB2 VDFB2– 115k ITH1 RT SGND EXTVCC RUN1 ITH2 MODE/PLLIN CLKOUT PHASMD RUN2 2.0 80 1.5 EFFICIENCY 70 POWER LOSS 60 1.0 0.5 50 40 TRACK/SS1 TRACK/SS2 2.5 FORCED CONTINUOUS MODE DISCONTINUOUS MODE POWER LOSS (W) VOUT1 1.2V 15A SW1 INTVCC EFFICIENCY (%) TG1 Efficiency/Power Loss 100 VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.2V 0.1 1 LOAD CURRENT (A) 10 0 38382 TA01b 38382 TA01a 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 1 LTC3838-2 BOOST2 PGOOD2 RUN2 DTR2 SENSE2– SENSE2+ TOP VIEW VDFB2– 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 VDFB2+ 1 31 TG2 EXTVREF2 2 30 SW2 ITH2 3 29 BG2 TRACK/SS2 4 28 DRVCC2 27 EXTVCC MODE/PLLIN 5 CLKOUT 6 26 INTVCC 39 PGND SGND 7 25 PGND 24 VIN RT 8 23 DRVCC1 PHASMD 9 ITH1 10 22 BG1 TRACK/SS1 11 21 SW1 VOUTSENSE1+ 12 20 TG1 BOOST1 PGOOD1 DTR1 RUN1 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 SENSE1– VIN Voltage.................................................. –0.3V to 40V BOOST1, BOOST2 Voltages........................ –0.3V to 46V SW1, SW2 Voltages....................................... –5V to 40V INTVCC, DRVCC1, DRVCC2, EXTVCC, PGOOD1, PGOOD2, RUN1, RUN2, (BOOST1-SW1), (BOOST2-SW2), MODE/PLLIN Voltages....... –0.3V to 6V SENSE1+, SENSE2+,SENSE1–, SENSE2– Voltages........................................................ –0.6V to 6V VOUTSENSE1+, Voltage............... –0.6V to (INTVCC + 0.3V) VOUTSENSE1–, Voltage.....................–0.6V to VOUTSENSE1+ TRACK/SS1, TRACK/SS2 Voltages............... –0.3V to 5V DTR1, DTR2, PHASMD, RT, EXTVREF2, VDFB2+, VDFB2–, ITH1, ITH2 Voltages................. –0.3V to (INTVCC + 0.3V) Operating Junction Temperature Range (Notes 2, 3, 4)......................................... –40°C to 125°C Storage Temperature Range................... –65°C to 150°C Pin Configuration SENSE1+ (Note 1) VOUTSENSE1– Absolute Maximum Ratings UHF PACKAGE 38-LEAD (5mm × 7mm) PLASTIC QFN TJMAX = 125°C, θJA = 34°C/W EXPOSED PAD (PIN 39) IS PGND, MUST BE SOLDERED TO PCB Order Information (http://www.linear.com/product/LTC3838-2#orderinfo) LEAD FREE FINISH TAPE AND REEL PART MARKING* PACKAGE DESCRIPTION TEMPERATURE RANGE LTC3838EUHF-2#PBF LTC3838EUHF-2#TRPBF 38382 38-Lead (5mm × 7mm) Plastic QFN –40°C to 125°C LTC3838IUHF-2#PBF LTC3838IUHF-2#TRPBF 38382 38-Lead (5mm × 7mm) Plastic QFN –40°C to 125°C Consult LTC Marketing for parts specified with wider operating temperature ranges. *The temperature grade is identified by a label on the shipping container. 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/. Some packages are available in 500 unit reels through designated sales channels with #TRMPBF suffix. Table 1. Comparison of LTC3838 Options PART NUMBER DESCRIPTION LTC3838 ±0.67% Differential Output Regulation on Channel 1 ±1% Output Regulation on Channel 2 Separate-Per-Channel Continuous 30mV to 100mV Current Sense Range Controls LTC3838-1 ±0.67% on Channel 1 and ±0.75% on Channel 2, Differential Output Regulation on Both Channel 1 and 2 Single-Pin 30mV/60mV Current Sense Range Control, Improved Current Limit Accuracy Than LTC3838 LTC3838-2 ±0.67% Differential Output Regulation with Internal Reference on Channel 1 ±4mV Differential Output Regulation with External Reference Voltage on Channel 2 Fixed 30mV Current Sense Range, Improved Current Limit Accuracy Than LTC3838 38382fa 2 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 Electrical Characteristics The l denotes the specifications which apply over the specified operating junction temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. VIN = 15V unless otherwise noted (Note 3). SYMBOL PARAMETER CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS Main Control Loops VIN Input Voltage Operating Range VOUT1,2 Regulated Output Voltage Operating Range IQ Input DC Supply Current Both Channels Enabled Only One Channel Enabled Shutdown Supply Current VFB1 Regulated Feedback Voltage on Channel 1 (VOUTSENSE1+ – VOUTSENSE1–) 38 V 0.6 5.5 V MODE/PLLIN = 0V, No Load RUN1 or RUN2 (But Not Both) = 0V RUN1 = RUN2 = 0V Regulated Feedback Voltage on Channel 1 Over Line, Load and Common Mode VFB2 VOUT1 Regulated Differentially with Respect to VOUTSENSE1–, VOUT2 Regulated Differentially with Respect to VDFB2– 4.5 ITH1 = 1.2V, VOUTSENSE1– = 0V (Note 5) TA = 25°C TA = 0°C to 85°C TA = –40°C to 125°C VIN = 4.5V to 38V, ITH1 = 0.5V to 1.9V, –0.5V < VOUTSENSE1– < 0.5V (Note 5) TA = 0°C to 85°C TA = –40°C to 125°C –0.2V < VOUTSENSE1– < 0.2V TA = 0°C to 85°C TA = –40°C to 125°C Regulated Feedback Voltage on Channel 2 (2 • VDFB2+ – VDFB2–) VDFB2– = 0V, ITH2 = 1.2V (Note 5) EXTVREF2 = 0.6V, TA = 25°C Regulated Feedback Voltage on Channel 2 Over Line, Load and Common Mode ITH2 = 0.5V to 1.9V, –0.2V < VDFB2– < 0.2V, TA = –40°C to 125°C (Note 5) EXTVREF2 = 0.6V, VIN = 4.5V to 38V EXTVREF2 = 1.5V, VIN = 4.5V to 38V EXTVREF2 = 2.5V, VIN = 5.5V to 38V 3 2 15 mA mA µA l l 0.5985 0.596 0.594 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.6015 0.604 0.606 V V V l l 0.594 0.591 0.6 0.6 0.606 0.609 V V l 0.5955 l 0.594 0.6 0.6 0.6045 0.606 V V 0.598 0.6 0.602 V 0.596 1.494 2.493 0.6 1.5 2.5 0.604 1.506 2.507 V V V l l l IVOUTSENSE1+ VOUTSENSE1+ Input Bias Current VOUTSENSE1+ = 0.6V, VOUTSENSE1– = 0V 0 ±25 nA IVOUTSENSE1– VOUTSENSE1– Input Bias Current VOUTSENSE1+ = 0.6V, VOUTSENSE1– = 0V –25 –50 µA IEXTVREF2 EXTVREF2 Input Bias Current EXTVREF2 = 0.6V –5 ±50 nA VEXTVREF2 Maximum EXTVREF2 Input Operating Voltage VIN ≥ INTVCC ≥ 5V, TRACK/SS2 > 2.5V VIN ≥ INTVCC ≥ 4V, TRACK/SS2 > 1.5V 0.4 V IVDFB2+ VDFB2+ Input Bias Current VDFB2+ = 0.3V, VDFB2– = 0V 0 ±25 nA IVDFB2– VDFB2– Input Bias Current VDFB2+ = 0.3V, VDFB2– = 0V –6 –12 µA gm(EA)1,2 Error Amplifier Transconductance (∆ITH1,2 /∆VFB1,2) ITH = 1.2V (Note 5) 1.7 mS tON(MIN)1,2 Minimum Top Gate On-Time VIN = 38V, VOUT = 0.6V, RT = 20k (Note 6) 30 ns tOFF(MIN)1,2 Minimum Top Gate Off-Time (Note 6) 90 ns Minimum EXTVREF2 Input Operating Voltage l l 2.5 1.5 V V l Current Sensing VSENSE(MAX)1,2 Maximum Valley Current Sense Threshold (VSENSE1,2+ – VSENSE1,2–) VOUTSENSE1+ = 0.57V, VOUTSENSE1– = 0V, EXTVREF2 = 0.6V, VDFB2+ = 0.285V, VDFB2– = 0V, VSENSE1,2– = 2.5V VSENSE(MIN)1,2 Minimum Valley Current Sense Threshold (VSENSE1,2+ – VSENSE1,2–) (Forced Continuous Mode) VOUTSENSE1+ = 0.63V, VOUTSENSE1– = 0V, EXTVREF2 = 0.6V, VDFB2+ = 0.315V, VDFB2– = 0V, VSENSE1,2– = 2.5V –15 l 24 30 ISENSE1,2+ SENSE1,2+ Pins Input Bias Current VSENSE+ = 0.6V VSENSE+ = 5V ±5 1 ISENSE1,2– SENSE1,2– Pins Input Bias Current (Internal 500k Resistor to SGND) VSENSE– = 0.6V VSENSE– = 5V 1.2 10 36 mV mV ±50 ±2 nA µA µA µA 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 3 LTC3838-2 Electrical Characteristics The l denotes the specifications which apply over the specified operating junction temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. VIN = 15V unless otherwise noted (Note 3). SYMBOL PARAMETER CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS Start-Up and Shutdown RUN Pin On Threshold VRUN1,2 Rising RUN Pin On Hysteresis VRUN1,2 Falling from On Threshold 100 RUN Pin Pull-Up Current when Off RUN1,2 = SGND 1.2 µA RUN Pin Pull-Up Current Hysteresis IRUN1,2(HYS) = IRUN1,2(ON) – IRUN1,2(OFF) 5 µA UVLO INTVCC Undervoltage Lockout INTVCC Falling INTVCC Rising ITRACK/SS1,2 Soft-Start Pull-Up Current 0V < TRACK/SS1,2 < 0.6V VRUN1,2 IRUN1,2 l l l 1.1 3.3 1.2 3.7 4.2 1.3 V mV 4.5 1 V V µA Frequency and Clock Synchronization f Clock Output Frequency (Steady-State Switching Frequency) RT = 205k RT = 80.6k RT = 18.2k Channel 2 Phase (Relative to Channel 1) PHASMD = SGND PHASMD = Floating PHASMD = INTVCC 180 180 240 Deg Deg Deg CLKOUT Phase (Relative to Channel 1) PHASMD = SGND PHASMD = Floating PHASMD = INTVCC 60 90 120 Deg Deg Deg 450 200 500 2000 550 kHz kHz kHz VPLLIN(H) Clock Input High Level Into MODE/PLLIN VPLLIN(L) Clock Input Low Level Into MODE/PLLIN RMODE/PLLIN MODE/PLLIN Input DC Resistance With Respect to SGND 600 kΩ 2 V 0.5 V Gate Drivers RTG(UP)1,2 TG Driver Pull-Up On Resistance TG High 2.5 Ω RTG(DOWN)1,2 TG Driver Pull-Down On Resistance TG Low 1.2 Ω RBG(UP)1,2 BG Driver Pull-Up On Resistance BG High 2.5 Ω RBG(DOWN)1,2 BG Driver Pull-Down On Resistance BG Low 0.8 Ω tD(TG/BG)1,2 Top Gate Off to Bottom Gate On Delay Time (Note 6) 20 ns tD(BG/TG)1,2 Bottom Gate Off to Top Gate On Delay Time (Note 6) 15 ns Internal VCC Regulator VDRVCC1 Internally Regulated DRVCC1 Voltage 6V < VIN < 38V DRVCC1 Load Regulation IDRVCC1 = 0mA to –100mA VEXTVCC EXTVCC Switchover Voltage EXTVCC Rising 5.0 4.4 EXTVCC Switchover Hysteresis EXTVCC to DRVCC2 Voltage Drop VEXTVCC = 5V, IDRVCC2 = –100mA 5.3 5.6 V –1.5 –3 % 4.6 4.8 V 200 mV 200 mV PGood Output OV PGOOD Overvoltage Threshold VFB1,2 Rising from Regulated Voltage 5 7.5 10 % UV PGOOD Undervoltage Threshold VFB1,2 Falling from Regulated Voltage –5 –7.5 –10 % PGOOD Threshold Hysteresis VFB1,2 Returning to Regulated Voltage 15 VPGOOD(L)1,2 PGOOD Low Voltage IPGOOD = 2mA 0.1 tD(PGOOD)1,2 Delay from VFB Fault (OV/UV) to PGOOD Falling Delay from VFB Good (OV/UV Cleared) to PGOOD Rising 50 20 mV 0.3 V µs µs 38382fa 4 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 Electrical Characteristics 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: The junction temperature (TJ, in °C) is calculated from the ambient temperature (TA, in °C) and power dissipation (PD, in Watts) according to the formula: TJ = TA + (PD • θJA) where θJA (in °C/W) is the package thermal impedance. Note 3: The LTC3838-2 is tested under pulsed load conditions such that TJ ≈ TA. The LTC3838E-2 is guaranteed to meet specifications over the 0°C to 85°C operating junction temperature range. Specifications over the –40°C to 125°C operating junction temperature range are assured by design, characterization and correlation with statistical process controls. The LTC3838I-2 is guaranteed to meet specifications over the –40°C to 125°C operating junction temperature range . Note that the maximum ambient temperature consistent with these specifications is determined by specific operating conditions in conjunction with board layout, the rated package thermal impedance and other environmental factors. Note 4: This IC includes overtemperature protection that is intended to protect the device during momentary overload conditions. The maximum rated junction temperature will be exceeded when this protection is active. Continuous operation above the specified absolute maximum operating junction temperature may impair device reliability or permanently damage the device. Note 5: The LTC3838-2 is tested in a feedback loop that adjusts voltages on VOUTSENSE1+ and VDFB2+ pins to achieve specified error amplifier output voltages (ITH1,2). In order to simplify the total system error computation, the regulated voltage is defined in one combined specification which includes the effects of line, load and common mode variation. The combined regulated voltage specification is tested by independently varying line, load, and common mode, which by design do not significantly affect one another. For any combination of line, load, and common mode variation, the regulated voltage should be within the limits specified that are tested in production to the following conditions: Line: VIN = 4.5V to 38V, ITH = 1.2V, VOUTSENSE1– = 0V, VDFB2– = 0V Load: VIN = 15V, ITH = 0.5V to 1.9V, VOUTSENSE1– = 0V, VDFB2– = 0V Common mode: VIN = 15V, ITH = 1.2V, VOUTSENSE1– = ±0.5V, ±0.2V, VDFB2– = ±0.2V Note 6: Delay times are measured with top gate (TG) and bottom gate (BG) driving minimum load, and using 50% levels. 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 5 LTC3838-2 Typical Performance Characteristics Transient Response (Forced Continuous Mode) Load Step (Forced Continuous Mode) Load Release (Forced Continuous Mode) ILOAD 10A/DIV ILOAD 10A/DIV ILOAD 10A/DIV VOUT 50mV/DIV AC-COUPLED VOUT 50mV/DIV AC-COUPLED VOUT 50mV/DIV AC-COUPLED IL 10A/DIV IL 10A/DIV 50µs/DIV LOAD TRANSIENT = 0A TO 15A TO 0A VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.2V FIGURE 17 CIRCUIT, CHANNEL 1 IL 10A/DIV 5µs/DIV LOAD STEP = 0A TO 15A VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.2V FIGURE 17 CIRCUIT, CHANNEL 1 38382 G01 Transient Response (Discontinuous Mode) 5µs/DIV LOAD RELEASE = 15A TO 0A VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.2V FIGURE 17 CIRCUIT, CHANNEL 1 Load Step (Discontinuous Mode) ILOAD 10A/DIV ILOAD 10A/DIV VOUT 50mV/DIV AC-COUPLED VOUT 50mV/DIV AC-COUPLED IL 10A/DIV IL 10A/DIV 38382 G04 50µs/DIV LOAD TRANSIENT = 500mA TO 15A TO 500mA VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.2V FIGURE 17 CIRCUIT, CHANNEL 1 38382 G03 Load Release (Discontinuous Mode) ILOAD 10A/DIV VOUT 50mV/DIV AC-COUPLED IL 10A/DIV 5µs/DIV LOAD STEP = 500mA TO 15A VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.2V FIGURE 17 CIRCUIT, CHANNEL 1 Load Release with Detect Transient (DTR) Feature Enabled 38382 G05 5µs/DIV LOAD RELEASE = 15A TO 500mA VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.2V FIGURE 17 CIRCUIT, CHANNEL 1 38382 G06 Load Release with Detect Transient (DTR) Feature Disabled SW 3V/DIV SW 3V/DIV VOUT 50mV/DIV AC-COUPLED ITH 1V/DIV VOUT 50mV/DIV AC-COUPLED IL 10A/DIV IL 10A/DIV ITH 1V/DIV 5µs/DIV LOAD RELEASE = 15A TO 5A VIN = 5V VOUT = 0.6V 38382 G07 LOAD RELEASE = 15A TO 5A VIN = 5V VOUT = 0.6V FIGURE 17 CIRCUIT, CHANNEL 1 MODIFIED: RFB2 = 0Ω, CITH1 = 120pF, CITH2 = 0pF, FROM DTR1 PIN: RITH1 = 46.4k TO SGND, RITH2 = 42.2k TO INTVCC SHADING OBTAINED WITH INFINITE PERSISTENCE ON OSCILLOSCOPE WAVEFORMS 6 38382 G02 5µs/DIV 38382 G08 FIGURE 17 CIRCUIT, CHANNEL 1 MODIFIED: RFB2 = 0Ω, CITH1 = 120pF, CITH2 = 0pF, RITH1/2 = 46.4k TO SGND//42.2k TO INTVCC, CONNECTION FROM RITH1/2 AND CITH1 TO DTR1 PIN REMOVED. DTR1 PIN TIED TO INTVCC For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 38382fa LTC3838-2 Typical Performance Characteristics Soft Start-Up with Internal Reference Soft Start-Up Into Prebiased Output RUN1 5V/DIV RUN1 5V/DIV TRACK/SS1 200mV/DIV EXTVREF2 500mV/DIV TRACK/SS2 500mV/DIV VOUT 500mV/DIV TRACK/SS1 200mV/DIV CSS = 10nF 1ms/DIV VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.2V FORCED CONTINUOUS MODE FIGURE 17 CIRCUIT, CHANNEL 1 38382 G09 CSS = 10nF 1ms/DIV VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.2V VOUT PRE-BIASED TO 0.75V FIGURE 17 CIRCUIT, CHANNEL 1 Overcurrent Protection 38382 G10 VOUT 1V/DIV FULL CURRENT LIMIT WHEN VOUT HIGHER THAN HALF OF REGULATED Overvoltage Protection CURRENT LIMIT STARTS TO FOLD BACK AS VOUT DROPS BELOW HALF OF REGULATED COUT RECHARGE VIN = 12V 500µs/DIV VOUT = 1.2V ILOAD = 0A FIGURE 17 CIRCUIT, CHANNEL 1 38382 G12 Phase Relationship: PHASMD = Ground SW1 10V/DIV 0° 38382 G14 VIN = 12V 20µs/DIV VOUT = 1.2V BG STAYS ON UNTIL FORCED VOUT IS PULLED CONTINUOUS MODE BELOW OVERVOLTAGE THRESHOLD ILOAD = 0A FIGURE 17 CIRCUIT, CHANNEL 1 Phase Relationship: PHASMD = INTVCC PLLIN 5V/DIV SW1 10V/DIV 0° SW2 10V/DIV 180° 60° 38382 G15 500ns/DIV FIGURE 21 CIRCUIT VIN = 12V VOUT1 = 5V, VOUT2 = 3.3V LOAD = 0A MODE/PLLIN = 333kHz EXTERNAL CLOCK CLKOUT 5V/DIV OVERVOLTAGE CREATED BY APPLYING A CHARGED CAPACITOR TO VOUT BG1 5V/DIV 38382 G13 PLLIN 5V/DIV SW2 10V/DIV VOUT 100mV/DIV AC-COUPLED Phase Relationship: PHASMD = Float PLLIN 5V/DIV 38382 G11 IL 10A/DIV IL 10A/DIV VOUT 100mV/DIV AC-COUPLED VIN = 12V 5ms/DIV VOUT = 1.2V FORCED CONTINUOUS MODE CURRENT LIMIT = 17A OVERLOAD = 7.5A TO 17.5A FIGURE 17 CIRCUIT, CHANNEL 1 CSS = 10nF 2ms/DIV VIN = 12V EXTVREF2 = 1.2V VOUT = 1.2V FORCED CONTINUOUS MODE FIGURE 17 CIRCUIT, CHANNEL 2 Short-Circuit Protection SHORTCIRCUIT TRIGGER IL 5A/DIV CLKOUT 5V/DIV RUN2 5V/DIV VOUT 500mV/DIV VOUT 500mV/DIV SW1 10V/DIV Soft Start-Up with External Reference 0° SW2 10V/DIV 180° 90° 38382 G16 500ns/DIV FIGURE 21 CIRCUIT VIN = 12V VOUT1 = 5V, VOUT2 = 3.3V LOAD = 0A MODE/PLLIN = 333kHz EXTERNAL CLOCK CLKOUT 5V/DIV 240° 120° 38382 G17 500ns/DIV FIGURE 21 CIRCUIT VIN = 12V VOUT1 = 5V, VOUT2 = 3.3V LOAD = 0A MODE/PLLIN = 333kHz EXTERNAL CLOCK 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 7 LTC3838-2 Typical Performance Characteristics Output Regulation vs Input Voltage NORMALIZED ∆VOUT (%) 0.1 NORMALIZED ∆VOUT (%) 0.2 VOUT = 0.6V ILOAD = 5A VOUT NORMALIZED AT VIN = 15V 0 –0.1 Output Regulation vs Temperature 0.6 VIN = 15V VOUT = 0.6V VOUT NORMALIZED AT ILOAD = 4A 0.1 NORMALIZED ∆VOUT (%) 0.2 Output Regulation vs Load Current 0 VIN = 15V VOUT = 0.6V 0.4 ILOAD = 0A VOUT NORMALIZED AT TA = 25°C 0.2 0 –0.2 –0.1 –0.4 –0.2 0 5 10 15 20 25 VIN (V) 30 35 –0.2 40 2 0 6 4 ILOAD (A) 8 Error Amplifier Transconductance vs Temperature 1.80 CLKOUT/Switching Frequency vs Temperature 2 2 1 1 1.60 NORMALIZED ∆f (%) NORMALIZED ∆f (%) 1.75 1.65 0 –1 VOUT = 0.6V ILOAD = 5A f = 500kHz FREQUENCY NORMALIZED AT VIN = 15V 1.55 1.50 –50 –25 0 –2 25 50 75 100 125 150 TEMPERATURE (°C) 0 5 10 20 25 VIN (V) 15 30 tON(MIN) and tOFF(MIN) vs VOUT (Voltage on SENSE– Pin) 0 –1 –2 –50 –25 40 100 90 90 tOFF(MIN) 100 90 tOFF(MIN) 80 80 70 60 tON(MIN) 30 tON(MIN) 40 30 20 0 1 2 3 4 VSENSE– (V) 5 6 38382 G24 tON(MIN) 20 VOUT = 0.6V RT ADJUSTED FOR fCLKOUT = 2MHz 10 0 tOFF(MIN) 50 40 30 20 VIN = 38V RT ADJUSTED FOR fCLKOUT = 2MHz 10 0 50 TIME (ns) 70 60 TIME (ns) 70 50 25 50 75 100 125 150 TEMPERATURE (°C) tON(MIN) and tOFF(MIN) vs Switching Frequency 60 40 0 38382 G23 tON(MIN) and tOFF(MIN) vs Voltage on VIN Pin 100 TIME (ns) 35 VIN = 15V, VOUT = 0.6V ILOAD = 0A f = 500kHz FREQUENCY NORMALIZED AT TA = 25°C 38382 G21 38382 G27 80 25 50 75 100 125 150 TEMPERATURE (°C) 38382 G20 CLKOUT/Switching Frequency vs Input Voltage 1.70 0 38382 G19 38382 G18 TRANSCONDUCTANCE (mS) –0.6 –50 –25 10 0 5 10 15 20 25 VIN (V) 30 VIN = 38V VOUT = 0.6V 0 500 200 800 1100 1400 1700 2000 CLKOUT/SWITCHING FREQUENCY (kHz) 10 35 40 38382 G25 38382 G26 38382fa 8 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 Typical Performance Characteristics Current Sense Voltage vs ITH Voltage 80 60 40 20 0 –20 –40 –60 0 0.8 1.2 1.6 ITH VOLTAGE (V) 0.4 2.4 2 100 80 60 40 20 0 –50 –25 0 25 50 75 100 125 150 TEMPERATURE (°C) 38382 G28 RUN Pin Thresholds vs Temperature SWITCHING REGION STAND-BY REGION 0.8 0.6 SHUTDOWN REGION 3 0.95 0.90 0.85 0 0.80 –50 –25 25 50 75 100 125 150 TEMPERATURE (°C) UVLO RELEASE (INTVCC RISING) 3.5 BOTH CHANNELS ON 30 UVLO LOCK (INTVCC FALLING) 25 20 15 10 3.5 130°C 25°C –45°C 5 25 50 75 100 125 150 TEMPERATURE (°C) 38382 G33 25 50 75 100 125 150 TEMPERATURE (°C) Quiescent Current Into VIN Pin vs Temperature 35 3.9 0 38382 G32 40 CURRENT (µA) UVLO THRESHOLDS (V) 1.00 38381 G31 4.5 0 5.5 1.05 Shutdown Current Into VIN Pin vs Voltage on VIN Pin 4.1 1.5 2.5 3.5 4.5 SENSE – PIN VOLTAGE (V) 38382 G22 RUN PIN BELOW 1.2V SWITCHING THRESHOLD 0 –50 –25 25 50 75 100 125 150 TEMPERATURE (°C) INTVCC Undervoltage Lockout Thresholds vs Temperature 0 0.5 1.10 4 38382 G30 3.3 –50 –25 0 –0.5 TRACK/SS Pull-Up Currents vs Temperature RUN PIN ABOVE 1.2V SWITCHING THRESHOLD 5 1 3.7 20 1.15 0.2 4.3 40 7 2 0 60 1.20 0.4 0 –50 –25 80 8 6 CURRENT (µA) RUN PIN THRESHOLDS (V) 1.2 1.0 100 RUN Pull-Up Currents vs Temperature 1.6 1.4 120 38382 G29 CURRENT (µA) CURRENT SENSE VOLTAGE (mV) 100 120 MAXIMUM CURRENT SENSE VOLTAGE (mV) MAXIMUM CURRENT SENSE VOLTAGE (mV) FORCED CONTINUOUS MODE Maximum Current Sense Voltage vs Voltage on SENSE– Pin 0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 VIN (V) 38382 G34 QUIESCENT CURRENT (mA) 120 Maximum Current Sense Voltage vs Temperature 3.0 2.5 CHANNEL 1 ON ONLY OR CHANNEL 2 ON ONLY 2.0 1.5 1.0 –50 –25 0 25 50 75 100 125 150 TEMPERATURE (°C) 38382 G35 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 9 LTC3838-2 Pin Functions VDFB2+ (Pin 1): Differential Feedback Amplifier Positive (+) Input of Channel 2. As shown in the Functional Diagram, connect this pin to a 3-resistor feedback divider network, which is composed of RDFB1 and RDFB2 from this pin to the negative and positive terminals of VOUT2 respectively, and a third resistor from this pin to the remote ground of external reference voltage (VREF2–). The third resistor must have a value equal to RDFB1//RDFB2 for accurate differential regulation. With the 3-resistor feedback divider network, the LTC3838-2 will regulate the differential output (VOUT2+ – VOUT2–) to (VREF2+ – VREF2–) • (RDFB1 + RDFB2)/RDFB1. EXTVREF2 (Pin 2): External Reference Voltage for Channel 2. Connect this pin to the positive (+) terminal of external reference voltage (VREF2+). The internal feedback voltage VFB2 (i.e., 2 • VDFB2+ – VDFB2–) will be regulated to the voltage on this pin, so that the differential VOUT2 equals (VREF2+ – VREF2–) • (RDFB1 + RDFB2)/RDFB1. When this pin is less than around 100mV, the TRACK/SS2 pin will be pulled to ground to keep channel 2 from switching. Channel 2’s overvoltage and undervoltage thresholds are ±7.5% of this EXTVREF2 pin voltage. For valid PGOOD2 signal upon startup and to avoid prebiased VOUT2 (if any) being pulled down, apply EXTVREF2 before RUN2 is enabled. Normal operations are only guaranteed with an EXTVREF2 of 0.4V minimum and 1.5V maximum at INTVCC ≥ 4V, or 2.5V maximum at INTVCC ≥ 5V. Note its small bias current (see the Electrical Characteristics section) may cause offset if external R-C filter is connected to this pin for either limiting voltage slew rate or filtering noise. MODE/PLLIN (Pin 5): Operation Mode Selection or External Clock Synchronization Input. When this pin is tied to INTVCC, forced continuous mode operation is selected. Tying this pin to SGND allows discontinuous mode operation. When an external clock is applied at this pin, both channels operate in forced continuous mode and synchronize to the external clock. This pin has an internal 600k pull-down resistor to SGND. CLKOUT (Pin 6): Clock Output of Internal Clock Generator. Its output level swings between INTVCC and SGND. If clock input is present at the MODE/PLLIN pin, it will be synchronized to the input clock, with phase set by the PHASMD pin. If no clock is present at MODE/PLLIN, its frequency will be set by the RT pin. To synchronize other controllers, it can be connected to their MODE/PLLIN pins. SGND (Pin 7): Signal Ground. All small-signal analog and compensation components should be connected to this ground. Connect SGND to the exposed pad and PGND pin using a single PCB trace. RT (Pin 8): Clock Generator Frequency Programming Pin. Connect an external resistor from RT to SGND to program the switching frequency between 200kHz and 2MHz. An external clock applied to MODE/PLLIN should be within ±30% of this programmed frequency to ensure frequency lock. When the RT pin is floating, the frequency is internally set to be slightly under 200kHz. PHASMD (Pin 9): Phase Selector Input. This pin determines the relative phases of channels and the CLKOUT signal. With zero phase being defined as the rising edge of TG1: Pulling this pin to SGND locks TG2 to 180°, and CLKOUT to 60°. Connecting this pin to INTVCC locks TG2 to 240° and CLKOUT to 120°. Floating this pin locks TG2 to 180° and CLKOUT to 90°. ITH1, ITH2 (Pin 10, Pin 3): Current Control Threshold. This pin is the output of the error amplifier and the switching regulator’s compensation point. The current comparator threshold increases with this control voltage. The voltage ranges from 0V to 2.4V, with 0.8V corresponding to zero sense voltage (zero inductor valley current). TRACK/SS1, TRACK/SS2 (Pin 11, Pin 4): External Tracking and Soft-Start Input. Channel 1 regulates the feedback voltage VFB1 = VOUTSENSE1+ – VOUTSENSE1– to the smaller of 0.6V or the voltage on the TRACK/SS1 pin. Channel 2 regulates the VFB2 = 2 • VDFB2+ – VDFB2– to the smaller of the voltage on the EXTVREF2 pin or the voltage on the TRACK/SS2 pin. An internal 1µA temperature-independent pull-up current source is connected to each TRACK/SS pin. A capacitor to ground at this pin sets the ramp time to the final regulated output voltage. Alternatively, another voltage supply connected to this pin allows the output to track the other supply during start-up. In applications that operate simultaneously at both high EXTVREF2 (>1.5V) and low VIN (1.5V, up to 2.5V) at the same time, an external pull-up (current or resistor from INTVCC) could be added to the TRACK/SS2 pin so that TRACK/SS2 settles well above EXTVREF2. This prevents VFB2 from being regulated to an insufficient TRACK/SS2 voltage instead of the desired EXTVREF2 after soft-start. Upon enabling the RUN pin, if VOUT is prebiased at a level above zero, the top gate (TG) will remain off and VOUT stays prebiased. Once TRACK/SS rises above the prebiased feedback level, and TG starts switching, VOUT will be regulated according to TRACK/SS or the reference, whichever is lower. Alternatively, the TRACK/SS pin can be used to track an external supply like in a master slave configuration. Typically, this requires connecting a resistor divider from the master supply to the TRACK/SS pin (see the Applications Information section). TRACK/SS is pulled low internally when the corresponding channel’s RUN pin is pulled below the 1.2V threshold (hysteresis applies), or when INTVCC or either of the DRVCC1,2 pins drop below their respective undervoltage lockout (UVLO) thresholds. TRACK/SS2 is also pulled low internally when voltage on the EXTVREF2 pin is less than 0.1V, which prevents channel 2 from starting to switch until a valid EXTVREF2 is present and TRACK/SS2 is released. When EXTVREF2 rises from below 0.1V, a fast voltage step up can be applied on EXTVREF2, as TRACK/SS2 allows VOUT2 to soft-start. However, once the soft-start ends and TRACK/SS2 rises above EXTVREF2, it is recommended that dynamic voltage change on EXTVREF2 be rate-limited. If EXTVREF2 jumps up, inductor current may reach its full limit. If EXTVREF2 steps down, overvoltage (OV) may be triggered, which turns on BG2 and discharges VOUT2 without any limit on inductor current. If any external R-C filter is connected in series to control the slew rate of EXTVREF2 voltage, be careful about the offset caused by the pin’s bias current (see the Electrical Characteristics section) through the resistor. Light Load Current Operation If the MODE/PLLIN pin is tied to INTVCC or an external clock is applied to MODE/PLLIN, the LTC3838-2 will be forced to operate in continuous mode. With load current less than one-half of the full load peak-to-peak ripple, the inductor current valley can drop to zero or become negative. This allows constant-frequency operation but at the cost of low efficiency at light loads. If the MODE/PLLIN pin is left open or connected to signal ground, the channel will transition into discontinuous mode operation, where a current reversal comparator (IREV) shuts off the bottom MOSFET (MB) as the inductor current approaches zero, thus preventing negative inductor current and improving light-load efficiency. In this mode, both switches can remain off for extended periods of time. As the output capacitor discharges by load current and the output voltage droops lower, EA will eventually move the ITH voltage above the zero current level (0.8V) to initiate another switching cycle. Power Good and Fault Protection Each PGOOD pin is connected to an internal open-drain N‑channel MOSFET. An external resistor or current source can be used to pull this pin up to 6V (e.g., VOUT1,2 or DRVCC). Overvoltage or undervoltage comparators (OV, UV) turn on the MOSFET and pull the PGOOD pin low when the feedback voltage is outside the ±7.5% window of the channel’s reference voltage. The PGOOD pin is also pulled low when the channel’s RUN pin is below the 1.2V threshold (hysteresis applies), or in undervoltage lockout (UVLO). When the feedback voltage is within the ±7.5% window, the open-drain NMOS is turned off and the pin is pulled up by the external source. The PGOOD pin will indicate power good immediately after the feedback is within the window. But when a feedback voltage of a channel goes out of the window, there is an internal 50µs delay before its PGOOD is pulled low. In an overvoltage (OV) condition, MT is turned off and MB is turned on immediately without delay and held on until the overvoltage condition clears. Upon enabling the RUN1 pin, if VOUT1 is prebiased so that the VFB1 is at more than 7.5% above the regulated voltage, OV stays triggered and 38382fa 16 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 operation (Refer to Functional Diagram) bottom gate (BG) forced to pull VOUT1 low until VFB1 is ~15mV (or ~2.5% of 0.6V internal reference) hysteresis below the OV threshold. For channel 2, the OV threshold is set at 7.5% above the voltage on EXTVREF2 pin, but the ~15mV hysteresis remains the same regardless of the OV threshold. To ensure that OV and UV thresholds are not determined by extremely low reference voltages, apply a stable EXTVREF2 before enabling RUN2, which also prevents BG from being turned on, and any prebiased VOUT2 from being pulled low upon start-up. Foldback current limiting is provided if the output is below one-half of the regulated voltage, such as being shorted to ground. As the feedback approaches 0V, the internal clamp voltage for the ITH pin drops from 2.4V to around 1.3V, which reduces the inductor valley current level to about 30% of its maximum value. Foldback current limiting is disabled at start-up. tion. The clock input levels should be no less than 2V for “high” and no greater than 0.5V for “low”. The MODE/ PLLIN pin has an internal 600k pull-down resistor. Multichip Operations The PHASMD pin determines the relative phases between the internal reference clock signals for the two channels as well as the CLKOUT signal, as shown in Table 2. The phases tabulated are relative to zero degree (0°) being defined as the rising edge of the internal reference clock signal of channel 1. The CLKOUT signal can be used to synchronize additional power stages in a multiphase power supply solution feeding either a single high current output, or separate outputs. The system can be configured for up to 12-phase operation with a multichip solution. Typical configurations are shown in Table 3 to interleave the phases of the channels. Table 2 Frequency Selection and External Clock Synchronization PHASMD An internal oscillator (clock generator) provides phaseinterleaved internal clock signals for individual channels to lock up to. The switching frequency and phase of each switching channel is independently controlled by adjusting the top MOSFET turn-on time (on-time) through the one-shot timer. This is achieved by sensing the phase relationship between a top MOSFET turn-on signal and its internal reference clock through a phase detector, and the time interval of the one-shot timer is adjusted on a cycle-by-cycle basis, so that the rising edge of the top MOSFET turn-on is always trying to synchronize to the internal reference clock signal for the respective channel. The frequency of the internal oscillator can be programmed from 200kHz to 2MHz by connecting a resistor, RT , from the RT pin to signal ground (SGND). The RT pin is regulated to 1.2V internally. SGND FLOAT INTVCC Channel 1 0° 0° 0° Channel 2 180° 180° 240° CLKOUT 60° 90° 120° Table 3 NUMBER OF PHASES NUMBER OF LTC3838-2 PIN CONNECTIONS [PIN NAME (CHIP NUMBER)] 2 1 PHASMD(1) = FLOAT or SGND 3 2 PHASMD(1) = INTVCC MODE/PLLIN(2) = CLKOUT(1) 4 2 PHASMD(1) = FLOAT PHASMD(2) = FLOAT or SGND MODE/PLLIN(2) = CLKOUT(1) 6 3 PHASMD(1) = SGND PHASMD(2) = SGND MODE/PLLIN(2) = CLKOUT(1) PHASMD(3) = FLOAT or SGND MODE/PLLIN(3) = CLKOUT(2) 12 6 PHASMD(1) = SGND PHASMD(2) = SGND MODE/PLLIN(2) = CLKOUT(1) PHASMD(3) = FLOAT MODE/PLLIN(3) = CLKOUT(2) PHASMD(4) = SGND MODE/PLLIN(4) = CLKOUT(3) PHASMD(5) = SGND MODE/PLLIN(5) = CLKOUT(4) PHASMD(6) = FLOAT or SGND MODE/PLLIN(6) = CLKOUT(5) For applications with stringent frequency or interference requirements, an external clock source connected to the MODE/PLLIN pin can be used to synchronize the internal clock signals through a clock phase-locked loop (Clock PLL). The LTC3838-2 operates in forced continuous mode of operation when it is synchronized to the external clock. The external clock frequency has to be within ±30% of the internal oscillator frequency for successful synchroniza- 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 17 LTC3838-2 operation (Refer to Functional Diagram) Single-Output External-Reference PolyPhase Configurations To use LTC3838-2 for a 2-phase single output externalreferenced step-down controller: Tie the VOUTSENSE1+ pin to INTVCC, which will disable channel 1’s error amplifier and internally connect ITH2 to ITH1. Tie the compensation R-C components to the ITH2 pin. The ITH1 pin can be either left open or shorted to ITH2 externally. The TRACK/SS1 and PGOOD1 pins become defunct and can be left open. Note that the RUN1 and RUN2, as well as DTR1 and DTR2 pins still function for the two channels individually, therefore should be shorted externally for single-output applications. Set PHASMD to SGND or FLOAT so that the two channels are 180° out-of-phase. Efficiency losses may be substantially reduced 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 2-phase implementation can reduce the input path power loss by up to 75%. To make a single-output converter of three or more phases, additional LTC3838-2 ICs can be used. The first chip should be tied the same way as the 2-phase above. If only one more channel of an additional LTC3838-2 is needed, use channel 2 for the additional phase: • Tie the ITH2 pin to the ITH2 pin of the first chip • Tie the RUN2 pin to the RUN pins of the first chip • Tie the VDFB2+ pin to the VDFB2+ pin of the first chip • Tie the VDFB2– pin to the VDFB2– pin of the first chip • Tie the TRACK/SS2 pin to the TRACK/SS2 pin of the first chip If both channels are needed, the additional LTC3838-2 chip should be tied the same way as the first LTC3838-2 chip to disable channel 1’s EA: • Tie the VOUTSENSE1+ pin to the chip’s own INTVCC • Tie the ITH2 pin to the ITH2 pin of the first chip • Tie the RUN pins to the RUN pins of the first chip • Tie the VDFB2+ pin to the VDFB2+ pin of the first chip • Tie the VDFB2– pin to the VDFB2– pin of the first chip • Tie the TRACK/SS2 pin to the TRACK/SS2 pin of the first chip 38382fa 18 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 Applications Information Once the required output voltage and operating frequency have been determined, external component selection is driven by load requirement, and begins with the selection of inductors and current sense method (either sense resistors RSENSE or inductor DCR sensing). Next, power MOSFETs are selected. Finally, input and output capacitors are selected. Output Voltage Programming As shown in Figure 1, external resistor dividers are used from the regulated outputs to their respective ground references to program the output voltages. On Channel 1, the resistive divider is tapped by the VOUTSENSE1+ pin, and the ground reference is remotely sensed by the VOUTSENSE1– pin; this voltage is sensed differentially. By regulating the tapped (differential) feedback voltages to the internal reference 0.6V, the resulting output voltages are: VOUT1+ – VOUT1– = 0.6V • (1 + RFB2/RFB1) The minimum (differential) VOUT1 is limited to the internal reference 0.6V, when RFB1 is removed (effectively RFB1 = ∞), and/or RFB2 is shorted (effectively RFB2 = 0). On channel 2, add a 3rd resistor with value equal to the two voltage-divider resistors in parallel (or simply add two parallel resistors equal to each of the two voltage divider resistors). Note the external reference VREF2 is sensed differentially through the EXTVREF2 pin and the 3rd resistor: VOUT2+ – VOUT2– = (VREF2+ – VREF2–) • (1 + RDFB2/RDFB1) The minimum (differential) VOUT2 is limited to the (differential) external reference VREF2. To program VOUT2 = VREF2, RDFB1 can be removed and the RDFB3 = RDFB1//RDFB2 uses the same value as RDFB2, as effectively RDFB1 = ∞. The maximum output voltages on both channels can be set up to 5.5V, as limited by the maximum voltage that can be applied on the SENSE pins. VOUTSENSE1+ and VDFB2+ are high impedance pins with no input bias current other than leakage in the nA range. The VOUTSENSE1– pin has about 25µA of current flowing out of the pin. The VDFB2– pin has a current of around (VDFB2+ – VDFB2–)/50k flowing out of the pin. Differential output sensing allows for more accurate output regulation in high power distributed systems having large line losses. Figure 2 illustrates the potential variations in the power and ground lines due to parasitic elements. The variations may be exacerbated in multi-application systems with shared ground planes. Without differential output sensing, these variations directly reflect as an error in the regulated output voltage. The LTC3838-2’s differential output sensing can correct for up to ±500mV of common-mode deviation in the output’s power and ground lines on channel 1, and ±200mV on channel 2. The LTC3838-2’s differential output sensing schemes are distinct from conventional schemes where the regulated output and its ground reference are directly sensed with a difference amplifier whose output is then divided down with an external resistor divider and fed into the error amplifier input. This conventional scheme is limited by the common mode input range of the difference amplifier and typically limits differential sensing to the lower range of output voltages. VOUT2+ VOUT1+ RFB2 COUT1 LTC3838-2 RDFB2 VOUTSENSE1+ VDFB2+ RDFB1 RFB1 VOUT1– REMOTELY-SENSED POWER GROUND 1, ±500mV MAX vs SGND VOUTSENSE1– VDFB2– EXTVREF2 VREF2+ + – VREF2– RDFB3 = RDFB1//RDFB2 TO PROGRAM VOUT2 = VREF2, COUT2 REMOVE RDFB1AND USE RDFB3 = RDFB2 VOUT2– REMOTELY-SENSED POWER GROUND 2, ±200mV MAX vs SGND REMOTELY-SENSED EXTERNAL REFERENCE GROUND 38382 F01 Figure 1. Setting Output Voltage 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 19 LTC3838-2 Applications Information CIN MT LTC3838-2 VOUTSENSE1+ VOUTSENSE1– RFB2 + – VIN POWER TRACE PARASITICS L ±VDROP(PWR) MB COUT RFB1 ILOAD ILOAD GROUND TRACE PARASITICS ±VDROP(GND) OTHER CURRENTS FLOWING IN SHARED GROUND PLANE 38382 F02 Figure 2. Differential Output Sensing Used to Correct Line Loss Variations in a High Power Distributed System with a Shared Ground Plane The LTC3838-2 allows for seamless differential output sensing by sensing the resistively divided feedback voltage differentially. This allows for differential sensing in the full output ranges. Channel 1’s difference amplifier (DIFFAMP) has a bandwidth of around 8MHz, and channel 2’s feedback amplifier has a bandwidth of around 4MHz, both high enough so as not to affect main loop compensation and transient behavior. The switching frequency of the LTC3838-2 can be programmed from 200kHz to 2MHz by connecting a resistor from the RT pin to signal ground. The value of this resistor can be chosen according to the following formula: RT [kΩ] = 41550 – 2.2 f [kHz ] To avoid noise coupling into the feedback voltages, the resistor dividers should be placed close to the VOUTSENSE1+ and VOUTSENSE1–, or VDFB2+ and VDFB2– pins. Remote output and ground traces should be routed together as a differential pair to the remote output. For best accuracy, these traces to the remote output and ground should be connected as close as possible to the desired regulation point. The overall controller system, including the clock PLL and switching channels, has a synchronization range of no less than ±30% around this programmed frequency. Therefore, during external clock synchronization be sure that the external clock frequency is within this ±30% range of the RT programmed frequency. It is advisable that the RT programmed frequency be equal the external clock for maximum synchronization margin. Refer to the “Phase and Frequency Synchronization” section for more details. Switching Frequency Programming Inductor Value Calculation The choice of operating frequency is a trade-off between efficiency and component size. Lowering the operating frequency improves efficiency by reducing MOSFET switching losses but requires larger inductance and/or capacitance to maintain low output ripple voltage. Conversely, raising the operating frequency degrades efficiency but reduces component size. The operating frequency and inductor selection are interrelated in that higher operating frequencies allow the use of smaller inductor and capacitor values. A higher frequency generally results in lower efficiency because of MOSFET gate charge losses. In addition to this basic trade-off, the effect of inductor value on ripple current and low current operation must also be considered. 38382fa 20 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 Applications Information The inductor value has a direct effect on ripple current. The inductor ripple current ∆IL decreases with higher inductance or frequency and increases with higher VIN: frequency, especially in the MHz range, core loss can be very significant. Be sure to check with the manufacturer on the frequency characteristics of the core material.  V  V  ∆IL =  OUT 1– OUT   f • L  VIN  Current Sense Pins Accepting larger values of ∆IL allows the use of low inductances, but results in higher output voltage ripple, higher ESR losses in the output capacitor, and greater core losses. A reasonable starting point for setting ripple current is ∆IL = 0.4 • IMAX. The maximum ∆IL occurs at the maximum input voltage. To guarantee that ripple current does not exceed a specified maximum, the inductance should be chosen according to:  V   V OUT 1– OUT  L =   f • ∆IL(MAX)  VIN(MAX)  Inductor Core Selection Once the value for L is known, the type of inductor must be selected. The two basic types are iron powder and ferrite. The iron powder types have a soft saturation curve which means they do not saturate hard like ferrites do. However, iron powder type inductors have higher core losses. 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. 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 core material saturates hard, which means that inductance collapses abruptly when the peak design current is exceeded. This results an abrupt increase in inductor ripple current and consequent output voltage ripple. Do not allow the core to saturate! A variety of inductors designed for high current, low voltage applications are available from manufacturers such as Sumida, Panasonic, Coiltronics, Coilcraft, Toko, Vishay, Pulse and Würth. In designs of higher switching Inductor current is sensed through voltage between SENSE+ and SENSE– pins, the inputs of the internal current comparators. Care must be taken not to float these pins during normal operation. The SENSE+ pins are quasi-high impedance inputs. There is no bias current into a SENSE+ pin when its corresponding channel’s SENSE– pin ramps up from below 1.1V and stays below 1.4V. But there is a small (~1μA) current flowing into a SENSE+ pin when its corresponding SENSE– pin ramps down from 1.4V and stays above 1.1V. Such currents also exist on SENSE– pins. But in addition, each SENSE– pin has an internal 500k resistor to SGND. The resulted current (VOUT/500k) will dominate the total current flowing into the SENSE– pins. SENSE+ and SENSE– pin currents have to be taken into account when designing either RSENSE or DCR inductor current sensing. Current Limit Programming The current sense comparators’ maximum trip voltage between SENSE+ and SENSE– (or VSENSE(MAX)), when ITH is clamped at its maximum 2.4V, is 30mV typical. The valley current mode control loop does not allow the inductor current valley to exceed VSENSE(MAX). But note that the peak inductor current is higher than this valley current limit by the amount of the inductor ripple current. Also when calculating the peak current limit, allow sufficient margin to account for the tolerance of VSENSE(MAX) as given in the Electrical Characteristics table, and variations in values of external components (such as the inductor), as well as the range of the input voltage(since ripple current is a function of input voltage). Either low value series current sensing resistor (RSENSE) or the DC resistance of the inductor (DCR) can be used to monitor the inductor current. The choice between the two current sensing schemes is largely a design tradeoff among accuracy, power consumption, and cost. The RSENSE method offers more precise control of the current 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 21 LTC3838-2 Applications Information limit but the resistor will dissipate loss. The DCR method saves the cost of the sense resistors and may offer better efficiency, especially in high current applications, but tolerance and the variation over temperature in the DCR value usually requires larger design margins. RSENSE is chosen based on the required maximum output current. Given the maximum current, IOUT(MAX), maximum sense voltage, VSENSE(MAX), and maximum inductor ripple current ∆IL(MAX), the value of RSENSE can be chosen as: RSENSE = RSENSE Inductor Current Sensing The LTC3838-2 can be configured to sense the inductor currents through either current sensing resistors (RSENSE) or inductor DC resistance (DCR). The current sensing resistors provide the most accurate current limits for the controller. A typical RSENSE inductor current sensing scheme is shown in Figure 3a. The filter components (RF , CF) need to be placed close to the IC. The positive and negative sense traces need to be routed as a differential pair close together and Kelvin (4-wire) connected underneath the sense resistor, as shown in Figure 3b. Sensing current elsewhere can effectively add parasitic inductance to the current sense element, degrading the information at the sense terminals and making the programmed current limit unpredictable. RSENSE RESISTOR AND PARASITIC INDUCTANCE R LTC3838-2 SENSE– CF VOUT CF • 2RF ≤ ESL/RS POLE-ZERO CANCELLATION RF SENSE+ ESL RF 38382 F03a FILTER COMPONENTS PLACED NEAR SENSE PINS Figure 3a. RSENSE Current Sensing TO SENSE FILTER, NEXT TO THE CONTROLLER COUT RSENSE 38382 F03b Figure 3b. Sense Lines Placement with Sense Resistor VSENSE(MAX) ∆IL(MAX) IOUT(MAX) – 2 Conversely, given RSENSE and IOUT(MAX), VSENSE(MAX) can be determined from the above equation. To ensure the maximum output current, sufficient margin should be built in the calculations to account for variations of the ICs under different operating conditions and tolerances of external components. Because of possible PCB noise in the current sensing loop, the current sensing voltage ripple ∆VSENSE = ∆IL • RSENSE also needs to be checked in the design to get a good signal-to-noise ratio. In general, for a reasonably good PCB layout, 10mV of ∆VSENSE is recommended as a conservative number to start with, either for RSENSE or Inductor DCR sensing applications. For today’s highest current density solutions the value of the sense resistor can be less than 1mΩ and the peak sense voltage can be as low as 20mV. In addition, inductor ripple currents greater than 50% with operation up to 2MHz are becoming more common. Under these conditions, the voltage drop across the sense resistor’s parasitic inductance becomes more relevant. A small RC filter placed near the IC has been traditionally used to reduce the effects of capacitive and inductive noise coupled in the sense traces on the PCB. A typical filter consists of two series 10Ω resistors connected to a parallel 1000pF capacitor, resulting in a time constant of 20ns. This same RC filter, with minor modifications, can be used to extract the resistive component of the current sense signal in the presence of parasitic inductance. For example, Figure 4a illustrates the voltage waveform across a 2mΩ sense resistor with a 2010 footprint for a 1.2V/15A converter operating at 100% load. The waveform is the superposition of a purely resistive component and a purely inductive component. It was measured using two scope probes and waveform math to obtain a differential 38382fa 22 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 Applications Information measurement. Based on additional measurements of the inductor ripple current and the on-time and off-time of the top switch, the value of the parasitic inductance was determined to be 0.5nH using the equation: ESL = VESL(STEP) tON • tOFF • ∆IL tON + tOFF where VESL(STEP) is the voltage step caused by the ESL and shown in Figure 4a, and tON and tOFF are top MOSFET on-time and off-time respectively. If the RC time constant is chosen to be close to the parasitic inductance divided by the sense resistor (L/R), the resulting waveform looks resistive again, as shown in Figure 4b. For applications using low VSENSE(MAX), check the sense resistor manufacturer’s data sheet for information about parasitic inductance. In the absence of data, measure the voltage drop directly across the sense resistor to extract the magnitude of the ESL step and use the equation above to determine the ESL. However, do not over filter. Keep the RC time constant less than or equal to the inductor time constant to maintain a high enough ripple voltage on VRSENSE. Note that the SENSE1– and SENSE2– pins are also used for sensing the output voltage for the adjustment of top gate on time, tON. For this purpose, there is an additional internal 500k resistor from each SENSE– pin to SGND, VSENSE 20mV/DIV VESL(STEP) 500ns/DIV therefore there is an impedance mismatch with their corresponding SENSE+ pins. The voltage drop across the RF causes an offset in sense voltage. For example, with RF = 100Ω, at VOUT = VSENSE– = 5V, the sense-voltage offset VSENSE(OFFSET) = VSENSE– • RF/500k = 1mV. Such small offset may seem harmless for current limit, but could be significant for current reversal detection (IREV), causing excess negative inductor current at discontinuous mode. Also, at VSENSE(MAX) = 30mV, a mere 1mV offset will cause a significant shift of zero-current ITH voltage by (2.4V – 0.8V) • 1mV/30mV = 53mV. Too much shift may not allow the output voltage to return to its regulated value after the output is shorted due to ITH foldback. Therefore, when a larger filter resistor RF value is used, it is recommended to use an external 500k resistor from each SENSE+ pin to SGND, to balance the internal 500k resistor at its corresponding SENSE– pin. The previous discussion generally applies to high density/ high current applications where IOUT(MAX) > 10A and low inductor values are used. For applications where IOUT(MAX) < 10A, set RF to 10Ω and CF to 1000pF. This will provide a good starting point. The filter components need to be placed close to the IC. The positive and negative sense traces need to be routed as a differential pair and Kelvin (4-wire) connected to the sense resistor. VSENSE 20mV/DIV 38382 F04a 500ns/DIV Figure 4a. Voltage Waveform Measured Directly Across the Sense Resistor 38382 F04b Figure 4b. Voltage Waveform Measured After the Sense Resistor Filter. CF = 1000pF, RF = 100Ω 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 23 LTC3838-2 Applications Information DCR Inductor Current Sensing For applications requiring higher efficiency at high load currents, the LTC3838-2 is capable of sensing the voltage drop across the inductor DCR, as shown in Figure 5. The DCR of the inductor represents the small amount of DC winding resistance, which can be less than 1mΩ for today’s low value, high current inductors. In a high current application requiring such an inductor, conduction loss through a sense resistor would cost several points of efficiency compared to DCR sensing. The inductor DCR is sensed by connecting an RC filter across the inductor. This filter typically consists of one or two resistors (R1 and R2) and one capacitor (C1) as shown in Figure 5. If the external (R1||R2) • C1 time constant is chosen to be exactly equal to the L/DCR time constant, the voltage drop across the external capacitor is equal to the voltage drop across the inductor DCR multiplied by R2/ (R1 + R2). Therefore, R2 may be used to scale the voltage across the sense terminals when the DCR is greater than the target sense resistance. C1 is usually selected in the range of 0.01µF to 0.47µF. This forces R1||R2 to around 2k to 4k, reducing error that might have been caused by the SENSE pins’ input bias currents. INDUCTOR L DCR VOUT COUT L/DCR = (R1||R2) C1 LTC3838-2 Resistor R1 should be placed close to the switching node, to prevent noise from coupling into sensitive small-signal nodes. Capacitor C1 should be placed close to the IC pins. The first step in designing DCR current sensing is to determine the DCR of the inductor. Where provided, use the manufacturer’s maximum value, usually given at 25°C. Increase this value to account for the temperature coefficient of resistance, which is approximately 0.4%/°C. A conservative value for inductor temperature TL is 100°C. The DCR of the inductor can also be measured using a good RLC meter, but the DCR tolerance is not always the same and varies with temperature; consult the manufacturers’ data sheets for detailed information. From the DCR value, VSENSE(MAX) is easily calculated as: VSENSE(MAX) = DCRMAX(25°C) • 1+ 0.4% ( TL(MAX) – 25°C)  ∆I  • IOUT(MAX) – L   2  If VSENSE(MAX) is within the maximum sense voltage (30mV typical) of the LTC3838-2, then the RC filter only needs R1. If VSENSE(MAX) is higher, then R2 may be used to scale down the maximum sense voltage so that it falls within range. The maximum power loss in R1 is related to duty cycle, and will occur in continuous mode at the maximum input voltage: R1 SENSE+ C1 SENSE– R2 (OPT) C1 NEAR SENSE PINS Figure 5. DCR Current Sensing 38382 F05 PLOSS (R1) = ( VIN(MAX) – VOUT ) • VOUT R1 Ensure that R1 has a power rating higher than this value. If high efficiency is necessary at light loads, consider this power loss when deciding whether to use DCR sensing or RSENSE sensing. Light load power loss can be modestly higher with a DCR network than with a sense resistor due to the extra switching losses incurred through R1. However, DCR sensing eliminates a sense resistor, reduces conduction losses and provides higher efficiency at heavy loads. Peak efficiency is about the same with either method. 38382fa 24 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 Applications Information To maintain a good signal-to-noise ratio for the current sense signal, start with a ∆VSENSE of 10mV. For a DCR sensing application, the actual ripple voltage will be determined by: V –V V ∆VSENSE = IN OUT • OUT R1• C1 VIN • f Two external N-channel power MOSFETs must be selected for each channel of the LTC3838-2 controller: one for the top (main) switch and one for the bottom (synchronous) switch. The gate drive levels are set by the DRVCC voltage. This voltage is typically 5.3V. Pay close attention to the BVDSS specification for the MOSFETs as well; most of the logic-level MOSFETs are limited to 30V or less. Selection criteria for the power MOSFETs include the onresistance, RDS(ON), Miller capacitance, CMILLER, input voltage and maximum output current. Miller capacitance, CMILLER, can be approximated from the gate charge curve usually provided on the MOSFET manufacturers’ data sheet. CMILLER is equal to the increase in gate charge along the horizontal axis while the curve is approximately flat (or the parameter QGD if specified on a manufacturer’s data sheet), divided by the specified VDS test voltage: QGD VDS(TEST) When the IC is operating in continuous mode, the duty cycles for the top and bottom MOSFETs are given by: DTOP = VOUT VIN DBOT = 1– PTOP = DTOP •IOUT(MAX)2 • RDS(ON)(MAX) (1+ δ) + VIN 2   IOUT(MAX)  RTG(DOWN)  RTG(UP) • +  • CMILLER  • f 2 VMILLER     VDRVCC – VMILLER    PBOT = DBOT • IOUT(MAX)2 • RDS(ON)(MAX) • (1 + δ ) Power MOSFET Selection CMILLER ≅ The MOSFET power dissipations at maximum output current are given by: where δ is the temperature dependency of RDS(ON), RTG(UP) is the TG pull-up resistance, and RTG(DOWN) is the TG pulldown resistance. VMILLER is the Miller effect VGS voltage and is taken graphically from the MOSFET ’s data sheet. Both MOSFETs have I2R losses while the topside N-channel equation includes an additional term for transition losses, which are highest at high input voltages. For VIN < 20V, the high current efficiency generally improves with larger MOSFETs, while for VIN > 20V, 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 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 in the power MOSFET data sheet. For low voltage MOSFETs, 0.5% per degree (°C) can be used to estimate δ as an approximation of percentage change of RDS(ON): δ = 0.005/°C • (TJ – TA) where TJ is estimated junction temperature of the MOSFET and TA is ambient temperature. VOUT VIN 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 25 LTC3838-2 Applications Information CIN Selection In continuous mode, the source current of the top Nchannel MOSFET is a square wave of duty cycle VOUT/ VIN. To prevent large voltage transients, a low ESR input capacitor sized for the maximum RMS current must be used. The worst-case RMS current occurs by assuming a single‑phase application. The maximum RMS capacitor current is given by: IRMS ≅ IOUT(MAX) • VIN VOUT • –1 VIN VOUT This formula has a maximum at VIN = 2VOUT , where IRMS = IOUT(MAX)/2. This simple worst-case condition is commonly used for design because even significant deviations do not offer much relief. Note that capacitor manufacturers’ 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 height requirements in the design. Due to the high operating frequency of the LTC3838-2, additional ceramic capacitors should also be used in parallel for CIN close to the IC and power switches to bypass the high frequency switching noises. Typically multiple X5R or X7R ceramic capacitors are put in parallel with either conductive-polymer or aluminum-electrolytic types of bulk capacitors. Because of its low ESR, the ceramic capacitors will take most of the RMS ripple current. Vendors do not consistently specify the ripple current rating for ceramics, but ceramics could also fail due to excessive ripple current. Always consult the manufacturer if there is any question. Figure 6 represents a simplified circuit model for calculating the ripple currents in each of these capacitors. The input inductance (LIN) between the input source and the input of the converter will affect the ripple current through the capacitors. A lower input inductance will result in less ripple current through the input capacitors since more ripple current will now be flowing out of the input source. For simulations with this model, look at the ripple current during steady-state for the case where one phase is fully loaded and the other was not loaded. This will in general LIN 1µH + – VIN + ESR(BULK) ESR(CERAMIC) ESL(BULK) ESL(CERAMIC) CIN(BULK) IPULSE(PHASE1) IPULSE(PHASE2) CIN(CERAMIC) 38382 F06 Figure 6. Circuit Model for Input Capacitor Ripple Current Simulation be the worst case for ripple current since the ripple current from one phase will not be cancelled by ripple current from the other phase. Note that the bulk capacitor also has to be chosen for RMS rating with ample margin beyond its RMS current per simulation with the circuit model provided. For a lower VIN range, a conductive-polymer type (such as Sanyo OS‑CON) can be used for its higher ripple current rating and lower ESR. For a wide VIN range that also require higher voltage rating, aluminum-electrolytic capacitors are more attractive since it can provide a larger capacitance for more damping. An aluminum-electrolytic capacitor with a ripple current rating that is high enough to handle all of the ripple current by itself will be very large. But when in parallel with ceramics, an aluminum-electrolytic capacitor will take a much smaller portion of the RMS ripple current due to its high ESR. However, it is crucial that the ripple current through the aluminum-electrolytic capacitor should not exceed its rating since this will produce significant heat, which will cause the electrolyte inside the capacitor to dry over time and its capacitance to go down and ESR to go up. The benefit of PolyPhase operation is reduced RMS currents and therefore less power loss on the input capacitors. Also, the input protection fuse resistance, battery resistance, and PC board trace resistance losses are also reduced due to the reduced peak currents in a PolyPhase system. The details of a close form equation can be found in Application Note 77 High Efficiency, High Density, PolyPhase Converters for High Current Applications. Figure 7 shows the input capacitor RMS ripple currents normalized against the DC output currents with respect to the duty 38382fa 26 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 Applications Information cycle. This graph can be used to estimate the maximum RMS capacitor current for a multiple-phase application, assuming the channels are identical and their phases are fully interleaved. Figure 7 shows that the use of more phases will reduce the ripple current through the input capacitors due to ripple current cancellation. However, since LTC3838-2 is only truly phase-interleaved at steady state, transient RMS currents could be higher than the curves for the designated number of phase. Therefore, it is advisable to choose capacitors by taking account the specific load situations of the applications. It is always the safest to choose input capacitors’ RMS current rating closer to the worst case of a single-phase application discussed above, calculated by assuming the loss that would have resulted if controller channels switched on at the same time. 0.5 DC LOAD CURRENT RMS INPUT RIPPLE CURRNET 0.6 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 DUTY FACTOR (VO/VIN) The VIN sources of the top MOSFETs should be placed close to each other and share common CIN(s). Separating the sources and CIN may produce undesirable voltage and current resonances at VIN. A small (0.1µF to 1µF) bypass capacitor between the IC’s VIN pin and ground, placed close to the IC, is suggested. A 2.2Ω to 10Ω resistor placed between CIN and the VIN pin is also recommended as it provides further isolation from switching noise of the two channels. COUT Selection The selection of output capacitance COUT is primarily determined by the effective series resistance, ESR, to minimize voltage ripple. The output voltage ripple ∆VOUT , in continuous mode is determined by:   1 ∆VOUT ≤ ∆IL RESR +  8 • f • COUT   1-PHASE 2-PHASE 3-PHASE 4-PHASE 6-PHASE 0.4 rarely be at 100% of IOUT(MAX). Using the worst-case load current should already have margin built in for transient conditions. 0.8 0.9 38382 F07 Figure 7. Normalized RMS Input Ripple Current However, it is generally not needed to size the input capacitor for such worst-case conditions where on-times of the phases coincide all the time. During a load step event, the overlap of on-time will only occur for a small percentage of time, especially when duty cycles are low. A transient event where the switch nodes align for several cycles at a time should not damage the capacitor. In most applications, sizing the input capacitors for 100% steady-state load should be adequate. For example, a microprocessor load may cause frequent overlap of the on-times, which makes the ripple current higher, but the load current may where f is operating frequency, and ∆IL is ripple current in the inductor. The output ripple is highest at maximum input voltage since ∆IL increases with input voltage. Typically, once the ESR requirement for COUT has been met, the RMS current rating generally far exceeds that required from ripple current. In multiphase single-output applications, it is advisable to consider ripple requirements at specific load conditions. At steady state, the LTC3838-2’s individual phases are interleaved, and their ripples cancel each other at the output, so ripple on COUT is reduced. During transient, when the phases are not fully interleaved, the ripple cancellation may not be as effective. While the worst-case ∆IL is the sum of the ∆ILs of individual phases aligned during a fast transient, such ripple tends to counteract the effect of load transient itself and lasts for only a short time. For example, during sudden load current increase, the phases align to ramp up the total inductor current to quickly pull the VOUT up from the droop. 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 27 LTC3838-2 Applications Information The choice of using smaller output capacitance increases the ripple voltage due to the discharging term but can be compensated for by using capacitors of very low ESR to maintain the ripple voltage. Multiple capacitors placed in parallel may be needed to meet the ESR and RMS current handling requirements. Dry tantalum, special polymer, aluminum electrolytic and ceramic capacitors are all available in surface mount packages. Special polymer capacitors offer very low ESR but have lower capacitance density than other types. Tantalum capacitors have the highest capacitance density but it is important to only use types that have been surge tested for use in switching power supplies. Aluminum electrolytic capacitors have significantly higher ESR, but can be used in cost-sensitive applications provided that consideration is given to ripple current ratings and long-term reliability. Ceramic capacitors have excellent low ESR characteristics but can have a high voltage coefficient and audible piezoelectric effects. The high Q of ceramic capacitors with trace inductance can also lead to significant ringing. When used as input capacitors, care must be taken to ensure that ringing from inrush currents and switching does not pose an overvoltage hazard to the power switches and controller. For high switching frequencies, reducing output ripple and better EMI filtering may require small value capacitors that have low ESL (and correspondingly higher self-resonant frequencies) to be placed in parallel with larger value capacitors that have higher ESL. This will ensure good noise and EMI filtering in the entire frequency spectrum of interest. Even though ceramic capacitors generally have good high frequency performance, small ceramic capacitors may still have to be parallel connected with large ones to optimize performance. High performance through-hole capacitors may also be used, but an additional ceramic capacitor in parallel is recommended to reduce the effect of their lead inductance. Remember also to place high frequency decoupling capacitors as close as possible to the power pins of the load. Top MOSFET Driver Supply (CB, DB) An external bootstrap capacitor, CB, connected to the BOOST pin supplies the gate drive voltage for the topside MOSFET. This capacitor is charged through diode DB from DRVCC when the switch node is low. When the top MOSFET turns on, the switch node rises to VIN and the BOOST pin rises to approximately VIN + INTVCC. The boost capacitor needs to store approximately 100 times the gate charge required by the top MOSFET. In most applications a 0.1µF to 0.47µF, X5R or X7R dielectric capacitor is adequate. It is recommended that the BOOST capacitor be no larger than 10% of the DRVCC capacitor, CDRVCC, to ensure that the CDRVCC can supply the upper MOSFET gate charge and BOOST capacitor under all operating conditions. Variable frequency in response to load steps offers superior transient performance but requires higher instantaneous gate drive. Gate charge demands are greatest in high frequency low duty factor applications under high load steps and at start-up. DRVCC Regulator and EXTVCC Power The LTC3838-2 features a PMOS low dropout (LDO) linear regulator that supplies power to DRVCC from the VIN supply. The LDO regulates its output at the DRVCC1 pin to 5.3V. The LDO can supply a maximum current of 100mA and must be bypassed to ground with a minimum of 4.7µF ceramic capacitor. Good bypassing is needed to supply the high transient currents required by the MOSFET gate drivers and to minimize interaction between the channels. High input voltage applications in which large MOSFETs are being driven at high frequencies may cause the maximum junction temperature rating for the LTC3838-2 to be exceeded, especially if the LDO is active and provides DRVCC. Power dissipation for the IC in this case is highest and is approximately equal to VIN • IDRVCC. The gate charge current is dependent on operating frequency as discussed in the Efficiency Considerations section. The junction temperature can be estimated by using the equation given in Note 2 of the Electrical Characteristics. For example, when using the LDO, LTC3838-2’s DRVCC current is limited to less than 42mA from a 38V supply at TA = 70°C: TJ = 70°C + (42mA)(38V)(34°C/W) = 125°C 38382fa 28 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 Applications Information To prevent the maximum junction temperature from being exceeded, the input supply current must be checked while operating in continuous conduction mode at maximum VIN. When the voltage applied to the EXTVCC pin rises above the switchover voltage (typically 4.6V), the VIN LDO is turned off and the EXTVCC is connected to DRVCC2 pin with an internal switch. This switch remains on as long as the voltage applied to EXTVCC remains above the hysteresis (around 200mV) below the switchover voltage. Using EXTVCC allows the MOSFET driver and control power to be derived from the LTC3838-2’s switching regulator output VOUT during normal operation and from the LDO when the output is out of regulation (e.g., start up, short circuit). If more current is required through the EXTVCC than is specified, an external Schottky diode can be added between the EXTVCC and DRVCC pins. Do not apply more than 6V to the EXTVCC pin and make sure that EXTVCC is less than VIN. Significant efficiency and thermal gains can be realized by powering DRVCC from the switching converter output, since the VIN current resulting from the driver and control currents will be scaled by a factor of (Duty Cycle)/(Switcher Efficiency). 3. EXTVCC connected to an external supply. If a 4.8V or greater external supply is available, it may be used to power EXTVCC providing that the external supply is sufficient for MOSFET gate drive requirements. 4. EXTVCC connected to an output-derived boost network. For 3.3V and other low voltage converters, efficiency gains can still be realized by connecting EXTVCC to an output-derived voltage that has been boosted to greater than 4.8V. For applications where the main input power never exceeds 5.3V, tie the DRVCC1 and DRVCC2 pins to the VIN input through a small resistor, (such as 1Ω to 2Ω) as shown in Figure 8 to minimize the voltage drop caused by the gate charge current. This will override the LDO and will prevent DRVCC from dropping too low due to the dropout voltage. Make sure the DRVCC voltage exceeds the RDS(ON) test voltage for the external MOSFET which is typically at 4.5V for logic-level devices. LTC3838-2 DRVCC2 DRVCC1 RDRVCC VIN CDRVCC CIN Tying the EXTVCC pin to a 5V supply reduces the junction temperature in the previous example from 125°C to: TJ = 70°C + (42mA)(5V)(34°C/W) = 77°C However, for 3.3V and other low voltage outputs, additional circuitry is required to derive DRVCC power from the converter output. The following list summarizes the four possible connections for EXTVCC: 1. EXTVCC left open (or grounded). This will cause INTVCC to be powered from the internal 5.3V LDO resulting in an efficiency penalty of up to 10% at high input voltages. 2. EXTVCC connected directly to switching converter output VOUT is higher than the switchover voltage’s higher limit (4.8V). This provides the highest efficiency. 38382 F08 Figure 8. Setup for VIN ≤ 5.3V Input Undervoltage Lockout (UVLO) The LTC3838-2 has two functions that help protect the controller in case of input undervoltage conditions. An internal UVLO comparator constantly monitors the INTVCC and DRVCC voltages to ensure that adequate voltages are present. The comparator enables internal UVLO signal, which locks out the switching action of both channels, until the INTVCC and DRVCC1,2 pins are all above their respective UVLO thresholds. The rising threshold (to release UVLO) 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 29 LTC3838-2 Applications Information of the INTVCC is typically 4.2V, with 0.5V falling hysteresis (to re-enable UVLO). The UVLO thresholds for DRVCC1,2 are lower than that of INTVCC but higher than typical threshold voltages of power MOSFETs, to prevent them from turning on without sufficient gate drive voltages. Generally for VIN > 6V, a UVLO can be set through monitoring the VIN supply by using external voltage dividers at the RUN pins from VIN to SGND. To design the voltage divider, note that both RUN pins have two levels of threshold voltages. The precision gate-drive-enable threshold voltage of 1.2V can be used to set a VIN to turn on a channel’s switching. If resistor dividers are used on both RUN pins, when VIN is low enough and both RUN pins are pulled below the ~0.8V threshold, the part will shut down all bias of INTVCC and DRVCC and be put in micropower shutdown mode. The RUN pins’ bias currents depend on the RUN voltages. The bias current changes should be taken into account when designing the external voltage divider UVLO circuit. An internal proportional-to-absolute-temperature (PTAT) pull-up current source (~1.2µA at 25°C) is constantly connected to this pin. When a RUN pin rises above 1.2V, the corresponding channel’s TG and BG drives are turned on and an additional    5µA temperature-independent pull-up current is connected internally to the RUN pin. Pulling the RUN pin to fall below 1.2V by more than an 80mV hysteresis turns off TG and BG of the corresponding channel, and the additional 5µA pull-up current is disconnected. As voltage on a RUN pin increases, typically beyond 3V, its bias current will start to reverse direction and flow into the RUN pin. Keep in mind that neither of the RUN pins can sink more than 50µA; Even if a RUN pin may slightly exceed 6V when sinking 50µA, a RUN pin should never be forced to higher than 6V by a low impedance voltage source to prevent faulty conditions. Soft-Start and Tracking The LTC3838-2 has the ability to either soft-start by itself with a capacitor or track the output of another channel or an external supply. Note that the soft-start and tracking features are achieved not by limiting the maximum output current of the controller, but by controlling the output ramp voltage according to the ramp rate on the TRACK/SS pin. When a channel is configured to soft-start by itself, a capacitor should be connected to its TRACK/SS pin. TRACK/ SS is pulled low until the RUN pin voltage exceeds 1.2V and UVLO is cleared (also for channel 2, a valid external reference voltage greater than 0.1V is present at the EXTVREF2 pin). After the pull-down of TRACK/SS is released, an internal current of 1µA charges the soft-start capacitor, CSS, connected to the TRACK/SS pin. Currentlimit foldback is disabled during this phase to ensure smooth soft-start or tracking. The soft-start or tracking range is defined to be the voltage range from 0V to the reference VREF (internal 0.6V for channel 1, or EXTVREF2 pin voltage for channel 2) on the TRACK/SS pin. The total soft-start time can be calculated as: tSS (SEC) = VREF (V) • CSS (µF) 1(µA) Care should be taken for channel 2 to assure that TRACK/ SS2 settles well above the EXTVREF2 voltage after softstart is complete under all operating conditions. Typically TRACK/SS will be pulled up by the internal current source to well above 3V when the VIN pin is greater than 6V. However, when the VIN pin voltage is close to its low end, the internal pull-up current may stop at a voltage less than 3V. An external pull-up circuit to TRACK/SS2 may be required in applications that operate with low VIN pin voltages and high EXTVREF2 voltages simultaneously, especially when both the VIN pin is less than 6V (down to 4.5V) and EXTVREF2 is greater than 1.5V (up to 2.5V). The external pull-up circuit to the TRACK/SS2 pin can be a fixed current source, or simply a resistor from INTVCC. Note that the soft-start time will change according to the external pull-up used. The external pull-up is to prevent VFB2 from being regulated to a low TRACK/SS2 voltage instead of the intended EXTVREF2. When one particular channel is configured to track an external supply, a voltage divider can be used from the external supply to the TRACK/SS pin to scale the ramp rate appropriately. Two common implementations are coincidental tracking and ratiometric tracking. For coincident tracking, make the divider ratio from the external supply the same as the divider ratio for the differential feedback voltage. Ratiometric tracking could be achieved by using a different ratio than the differential feedback. 38382fa 30 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 Applications Information Note that the 1µA soft-start capacitor charging current is still flowing, producing a small offset error. To minimize this error, select the tracking resistive divider values to be small enough to make this offset error negligible. The LTC3838-2 allows the user to program how its two channels’ outputs track each other ramping up or down. Since channel 2 uses EXTVREF2 as reference, by tying EXTVREF2 to VOUT1, either directly or through a voltage divider of a certain ratio, VOUT2 can be set to track VOUT1. Note the EXTVREF2 pin has a small bias current (see Electrical Characteristics). If any series external resistor is connected to this pin, make sure the offset caused by the bias current through its resistance is within the tolerance of VOUT2 regulation. Place a 100k resistor from the EXTVREF2 pin to ground in case this pin is disconnected from the external reference. Do not let this pin float. In addition, TRACK/SS pins can be utilized for either channel to track each other. In the following discussions, VOUT1 refers to the LTC3838‑2’s output 1 as a master channel and VOUT2 refers to the LTC3838-2’s output 2 as a slave channel. In practice though, either channel can be used as the master. By selecting different resistors, the LTC3838-2 can achieve different modes of tracking including the two in Figure 9. To implement the coincident tracking, connect an additional resistive divider to VOUT1 and connect its midpoint to the TRACK/SS pin of the slave channel. The ratio of this divider should be the same as that of the slave channel’s feedback divider shown in Figure 9b. In this tracking mode, VOUT1 must be set higher than VOUT2. To implement the ratiometric tracking as shown in Figure 9, the additional divider should be of the same ratio as the master channel’s feedback divider. Under the ratiometric mode, when the master channel’s output experiences dynamic excursion (under load transient, for example), the slave channel output will be affected as well. For better output regulation, use the coincident tracking mode instead of ratiometric, or use the additional divider with a ratio of somewhere between coincident and ratiometric tracking modes. VOUT2 VOUT1 OUTPUT VOLTAGE OUTPUT VOLTAGE VOUT1 VOUT2 TIME TIME Coincident Tracking 38382 F09a Ratiometric Tracking Figure 9a. Two Different Modes of Output Tracking VOUT1+ TO TRACK/SS2 PIN VOUT2+ RDFB2 RDFB1 SGND RFB2(1) TO VOUTSENSE1+ PIN RFB1(1) TO VOUTSENSE1– PIN VOUT1– RDFB2 TO VDFB2+ PIN TO VDFB2– PIN RDFB1 VOUT2– Coincident Tracking Setup RDFB1//RDFB2 SGND VOUT1+ TO TRACK/SS2 PIN VOUT2+ RFB2(1) RFB2(1) RFB1(1) RFB1(1) SGND TO VOUTSENSE1+ PIN TO VOUTSENSE1– PIN VOUT1– Ratiometric Tracking Setup TO VDFB2+ PIN TO VDFB2– PIN RDFB2 RDFB1 VOUT2– RDFB1//RDFB2 SGND 38382 F09b Figure 9b. Setup for Coincident and Ratiometric Tracking 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 31 LTC3838-2 Applications Information Phase and Frequency Synchronization For applications that require better control of EMI and switching noise or have special synchronization needs, the LTC3838-2 can synchronize the turn-on of the top MOSFET to an external clock signal applied to the MODE/ PLLIN pin. The applied clock signal needs to be within ±30% of the RT programmed frequency to ensure proper frequency and phase lock. The clock signal levels should generally comply to VPLLIN(H) > 2V and VPLLIN(L) < 0.5V. The MODE/PLLIN pin has an internal 600k pull-down resistor to ensure discontinuous current mode operation if the pin is left open. The LTC3838-2 uses the voltages on VIN and VOUT as well as RT to adjust the top gate on-time in order to maintain phase and frequency lock for wide ranges of VIN, VOUT and RT-programmed switching frequency f: tON ≈ VOUT VIN • f As the on-time is a function of the switching regulator’s output voltage, this output is measured by the SENSE– pin to set the required on-time. The SENSE– pin is tied to the regulator’s local output point to the IC for most applications, as the remotely regulated output point could be significantly different from the local output point due to line losses, and local output versus local ground is typically the VOUT required for the calculation of tON. However, there could be circumstances where this VOUT programmed on-time differs significantly different from the on-time required in order to maintain frequency and phase lock. For example, lower efficiencies in the switching regulator can cause the required on-time to be substantially higher than the internally set on-time (see Efficiency Considerations). If a regulated VOUT is relatively low, proportionally there could be significant error caused by the difference between the local ground and remote ground, due to other currents flowing through the shared ground plane. If necessary, the RT resistor value, voltage on the VIN pin, or even the common mode voltage of the SENSE pins may be programmed externally to correct for such systematic errors. The goal is to set the on-time programmed by VIN, VOUT and RT close to the steady-state on-time so that the system will have sufficient range to correct for component and operating condition variations, or to synchronize to the external clock. Note that there is an internal 500k resistor on each SENSE– pin to SGND, but not on the SENSE+ pin. During dynamic transient conditions either in the line voltage or load current (e.g., load step or release), the top switch will turn on more or less frequently in response to achieve faster transient response. This is the benefit of the LTC3838-2’s controlled on-time, valley current mode architecture. However, this process may understandably lose phase and even frequency lock momentarily. For relatively slow changes, phase and frequency lock can ILOAD CLOCK INPUT PHASE AND FREQUENCY LOCKED PHASE AND FREQUENCY LOCK LOST DUE TO FAST LOAD STEP FREQUENCY RESTORED QUICKLY PHASE LOCK RESUMED PHASE AND FREQUENCY LOCK LOST DUE TO FAST LOAD STEP FREQUENCY RESTORED QUICKLY SW VOUT 38382 F10 Figure 10. Phase and Frequency Locking Behavior During Transient Conditions 38382fa 32 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 Applications Information still be maintained. For large load current steps with fast slew rates, phase lock will be lost until the system returns back to a steady-state condition (see Figure 10). It may take up to several hundred microseconds to fully resume the phase lock, but the frequency lock generally recovers quickly, long before phase lock does. For light load conditions, the phase and frequency synchronization depends on the MODE/PLLIN pin setting. If the external clock is applied, synchronization will be active and switching in continuous mode. If MODE/PLLIN is tied to INTVCC, it will operate in forced continuous mode at the RT-programmed frequency. If the MODE/PLLIN pin is tied to SGND, the LTC3838-2 will operate in discontinuous mode at light load and switch into continuous conduction at the RT programmed frequency as load increases. The TG on-time during discontinuous conduction is intentionally slightly extended (approximately 1.2 times the continuous conduction on-time as calculated from VIN, VOUT and f) to create hysteresis at the load-current boundary of continuous/discontinuous conduction. architecture allows low on-time, making the LTC3838-2 suitable for high step-down ratio applications. The effective on-time, as determined by the SW node pulse width, can be different from this TG on-time, as it also depends on external components, as well as loading conditions of the switching regulator. One of the factors that contributes to this discrepancy is the characteristics of the power MOSFETs. For example, if the top power MOSFET’s turn-on delay is much smaller than the turn-off delay, the effective on-time will be longer than the TG on-time, limiting the effective minimum on-time to a larger value. If an application requires very low (approaching minimum) on-time, the system may not be able to maintain its full frequency synchronization range. Getting closer to minimum on-time, it may even lose phase/frequency lock at no load or light load conditions, under which the SW on-time is effectively longer than TG on-time due to TG/BG dead times. This is discussed further under Minimum On-Time, Minimum Off-Time and Dropout Operation. Light-load operation, in forced continuous mode, will further elongate the effective on-time due to the dead times between the “on” states of TG and BG, as shown in Figure 11. During the dead time from BG turn-off to TG turn-on, the inductor current flows in the reverse direction, charging the SW node high before the TG actually turns on. The reverse current is typically small, causing a slow rising edge. On the falling edge, after the top FET turns off and before the bottom FET turns on, the SW node lingers high for a longer duration due to a smaller peak inductor current available in light load to pull the SW node low. As a result of the sluggish SW node rising and falling edges, the effective on-time is extended and not fully controlled by the TG on-time. Closer to minimum on-time, this may cause some phase jitter to appear at light load. As load current increase, the edges become sharper, and the phase locking behavior improves. Minimum On-Time, Minimum Off-Time and Dropout Operation In continuous mode operation, the minimum on-time limit imposes a minimum duty cycle of: The minimum on-time is the smallest duration that LTC3838-2’s TG (top gate) pin can be in high or “on” state. It has dependency on the operating conditions of the switching regulator, and is a function of voltages on the VIN and VOUT pins, as well as the value of external resistor RT. As shown by the tON(MIN) curves in the Typical Performance Characteristics section, a minimum on-time of 30ns can be achieved when VOUT, sensed by the SENSE­– pin, is at 0.6V or lower, while the VIN is tied to its maximum value of 38V. For larger values of VOUT, smaller values of VIN and/or larger values of RT (i.e. lower f), the minimum achievable on-time will be longer. The valley mode control where tON(MIN) is the effective minimum on-time for the switching regulator. As the equation shows, reducing the operating frequency will alleviate the minimum duty cycle constraint. If the minimum on-time that LTC3838-2 can provide is longer than the on-time required by the duty cycle to maintain the switching frequency, the switching frequency will have to decrease to maintain the duty cycle, but the output voltage will still remain in regulation. This is generally more preferable to skipping cycles and causing larger ripple at the output, which is typically seen in fixed frequency switching regulators. DMIN = f • tON(MIN) 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 33 LTC3838-2 Applications Information TG-SW (VGS OF TOP MOSFET) The minimum off-time is the smallest duration of time that the TG pin can be turned low and then immediately turned back high. This minimum off-time includes the time to turn on the BG (bottom gate) and turn it back off, plus the dead-time delays from TG off to BG on and from BG off to TG on. The minimum off-time that the LTC3838-2 can achieve is 90ns. DEAD-TIME DELAYS BG (VGS OF BOTTOM MOSFET) IL 0 NEGATIVE INDUCTOR CURRENT IN FCM VIN SW DURING BG-TG DEAD TIME, NEGATIVE INDUCTOR CURRENT WILL FLOW THROUGH TOP MOSFET’S BODY DIODE TO PRECHARGE SW NODE IL SW + – DURING TG-BG DEAD TIME, THE RATE OF SW NODE DISCHARGE WILL DEPEND ON THE CAPACITANCE ON THE SW NODE AND INDUCTOR CURRENT MAGNITUDE VIN L L The effective minimum off-time of the switching regulator, or the shortest period of time that the SW node can stay low, can be different from this minimum off-time. The main factor impacting the effective minimum off-time is the top and bottom power MOSFETs’ electrical characteristics, such as Qg and turn-on/off delays. These characteristics can either extend or shorten the SW nodes’ effective minimum off-time. Large size (high Qg) power MOSFETs generally tend to increase the effective minimum off-time due to longer gate charging and discharging times. On the other hand, imbalances in turn-on and turn-off delays could reduce the effective minimum off-time. The minimum off-time limit imposes a maximum duty cycle of: IL TOTAL CAPACITANCE ON THE SW NODE 38382 F11 Figure 11. Light Loading On-Time Extension for Forced Continuous Mode Operation The tON(MIN) curves in the Typical Performance Characteristics are measured with minimum load on TG and BG, at extreme cases of VIN = 38V, and/or VOUT = 0.6V, and/or programmed f = 2MHz (i.e., RT = 18k). In applications with different VIN, VOUT and/or f, the tON(MIN) that can be achieved will generally be larger. Also, to guarantee frequency and phase locking at light load, sufficient margin needs to be added to account for the dead times (tD(TG/BG) + tD(TG/BG) in the Electrical Characteristics). For applications that require relatively low on-time, proper caution has to be taken when choosing the power MOSFET. If the gate of the MOSFET is not able to fully turn on due to insufficient on-time, there could be significant heat dissipation and efficiency loss as a result of larger RDS(ON). This may even cause early failure of the power MOSFET. DMAX = 1 – f • tOFF(MIN) where tOFF(MIN) is the effective minimum off-time of the switching regulator. Reducing the operating frequency can alleviate the maximum duty cycle constraint. If the maximum duty cycle is reached, due to a drooping input voltage for example, the output will drop out of regulation. The minimum input voltage to avoid dropout is: VIN(MIN) = VOUT DMAX At the onset of drop-out, there is a region of VIN of about 500mV that generates two discrete off-times, one being the minimum off time and the other being an off-time that is about 40ns to 60ns longer than the minimum off-time. This secondary off-time is due to the extra delay in tripping the internal current comparator. The two off-times average out to the required duty cycle to keep the output in regulation. There may be higher SW node jitter, apparent especially when synchronized to an external clock, but the output voltage ripple remains relatively small. 38382fa 34 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 Applications Information Fault Conditions: Current Limiting and Overvoltage OPTI-LOOP® Compensation The maximum inductor current is inherently limited in a current mode controller by the maximum sense voltage. In the LTC3838-2, the maximum sense voltage is controlled by the voltage on the VRNG pin. With valley current mode control, the maximum sense voltage and the sense resistance determine the maximum allowed inductor valley current. The corresponding output current limit is: OPTI-LOOP compensation, through the availability of the ITH pin, allows the transient response to be optimized for a wide range of loads and output capacitors. The ITH pin not only allows optimization of the 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 2nd order system, phase margin and/or damping factor can be estimated using the percentage of overshoot seen at this pin. ILIMIT = VSENSE(MAX) RSENSE 1 + • ∆IL 2 The current limit value should be checked to ensure that ILIMIT(MIN) > IOUT(MAX). The current limit value should be greater than the inductor current required to produce maximum output power at the worst-case efficiency. Worst-case efficiency typically occurs at the highest VIN and highest ambient temperature. It is important to check for consistency between the assumed MOSFET junction temperatures and the resulting value of ILIMIT which heats the MOSFET switches. To further limit current in the event of a short circuit to ground, the LTC3838-2 includes foldback current limiting. If the output falls by more than 50%, the maximum sense voltage is progressively lowered, to about one-fourth of its full value as the feedback voltage reaches 0V. A feedback voltage exceeding 7.5% of the regulated target of 0.6V is considered as overvoltage (OV). In such an OV condition, the top MOSFET is immediately turned off and the bottom MOSFET is turned on indefinitely until the OV condition is removed, i.e., the feedback voltage falling back below the 7.5% threshold by more than a hysteresis of around 15mV (on the same scale as each channel’s reference and internal feedback voltages VFB1,2). Current limiting is not active during an OV. If the OV persists, and the BG turns on for a longer time, the current through the inductor and the bottom MOSFET may exceed their maximum ratings, sacrificing themselves to protect the load. The external series RITH-CITH1 filter at the ITH pin sets the dominant pole-zero loop compensation. The values can be adjusted to optimize transient response once the final PCB layout is done and the particular output capacitor type and value have been determined. The output capacitors need to be selected first because their various types and values determine the loop feedback factor gain and phase. An additional small capacitor, CITH2, can be placed from the ITH pin to SGND to attenuate high frequency noise. Note this CITH2 contributes an additional pole in the loop gain therefore can affect system stability if too large. It should be chosen so that the added pole is higher than the loop bandwidth by a significant margin. The regulator loop response can also be checked by looking at the load transient response. An output current pulse of 20% to 100% of full-load current having a rise time of 1µs to 10µs will produce VOUT and ITH voltage transient-response waveforms that can give a sense of the overall loop stability without breaking the feedback loop. For a detailed explanation of OPTI-LOOP compensation, refer to Application Note 76. Switching regulators take several cycles to respond to a step in load current. When a load step occurs, VOUT immediately 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 a feedback error signal used by the regulator to return VOUT to its steady-state value. During this recovery time, VOUT can be monitored for overshoot or ringing that would indicate a stability problem. 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 35 LTC3838-2 Applications Information Connecting a resistive load in series with a power MOSFET, then placing the two directly across the output capacitor and driving the gate with an appropriate signal generator is a practical way to produce a realistic load step condition. The initial output voltage step resulting from the step change in load current may not be within the bandwidth of the feedback loop, so it cannot be used to determine phase margin. The output voltage settling behavior is more related to the stability of the closed-loop system. However, it is better to look at the filtered and compensated feedback loop response at the ITH pin. The gain of the loop increases with the RITH and the bandwidth of the loop increases with decreasing CITH1. If RITH is increased by the same factor that CITH1 is decreased, the zero frequency will be kept the same, thereby keeping the phase the same in the most critical frequency range of the feedback loop. In addition, a feedforward capacitor, CFF , can be added to improve the high frequency response, as used in the typical application at the last page of this data sheet. Feedforward capacitor CFF provides phase lead by creating a high frequency zero with RFB2 which improves the phase margin. A more severe transient can be caused by switching in loads with large supply bypass capacitors. The discharged bypass capacitors of the load are effectively put in parallel with the converter’s COUT , causing a rapid drop in VOUT . No regulator can deliver current quick enough to prevent this sudden step change in output voltage, if the switch connecting the COUT to the load has low resistance and is driven quickly. The solution is to limit the turn-on speed of the load switch driver. Hot swap controllers are designed specifically for this purpose and usually incorporate current limiting, short-circuit protection and soft starting. Load-Release Transient Detection As the output voltage requirement of step-down switching regulators becomes lower, VIN to VOUT step-down ratio increases, and load transients become faster, a major challenge is to limit the overshoot in VOUT during a fast load current drop, or “load-release” transient. Inductor current slew rate diL/dt = VL/L is proportional to voltage across the inductor VL = VSW – VOUT. When the top MOSFET is turned on, VL = VIN – VOUT, inductor current ramps up. When bottom MOSFET turns on, VL = VSW – VOUT = –VOUT, inductor current ramps down. At very low VOUT, the low differential voltage, VL, across the inductor during the ramp down makes the slew rate of the inductor current much slower than needed to follow the load current change. The excess inductor current charges up the output capacitor, which causes overshoot at VOUT. If the bottom MOSFET could be turned off during the loadrelease transient, the inductor current would flow through the body diode of the bottom MOSFET, and the equation can be modified to include the bottom MOSFET body diode drop to become VL = –(VOUT + VBD). Obviously the benefit increases as the output voltage gets lower, since VBD would increase the sum significantly, compared to a single VOUT only. The load-release overshoot at VOUT causes the error amplifier output, ITH, to drop quickly. ITH voltage is proportional to the inductor current setpoint. A load transient will result in a quick change of this load current setpoint, i.e., a negative spike of the first derivative of the ITH voltage. The LTC3838-2 uses a detect transient (DTR) pin to monitor the first derivative of the ITH voltage, and detect the load-release transient. Referring to the Functional Diagram, the DTR pin is the input of a DTR comparator, and the internal reference voltage for the DTR comparator is half of INTVCC. To use this pin for transient detection, ITH compensation needs an additional RITH resistor tied to INTVCC, and connects the junction point of ITH compensation components CITH1, RITH1 and RITH2 to the DTR pin as shown in the Functional Diagram. The DTR pin is now proportional to the first derivative of the inductor current setpoint, through the highpass filter of CITH1 and (RITH1//RITH2). The two RITH resistors establish a voltage divider from INTVCC to SGND, and bias the DC voltage on DTR pin (at steady-state load or ITH voltage) slightly above half of INTVCC. Compensation performance will be identical by 38382fa 36 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 Applications Information using the same CITH1 and make RITH1//RITH2 equal the RITH as used in conventional single resistor OPTI-LOOP compensation. This will also provide the R-C time constant needed for the DTR duration. The DTR sensitivity can be adjusted by the DC bias voltage difference between DTR and half INTVCC. This difference could be set as low as 200mV, as long as the ITH ripple voltage with DC load current does not trigger the DTR. Note the internal 2.5µA pull-up current from the DTR pin will generate an additional offset on top of the resistor divider itself, making the total difference between the DC bias voltage on the DTR pin and half INTVCC:   RITH1 VDTR – 0.5VINTVCC =  – 0.5 • 5.3V (RITH1+RITH2)  + 2.5µA • (RITH1// RITH2) As illustrated in Figure 12, when load current suddenly drops, VOUT overshoots, and ITH drops quickly. The voltage on the DTR pin will also drop quickly, since it is coupled to the ITH pin through a capacitor. If the load transient is fast enough that the DTR voltage drops below half of INTVCC, a load release event is detected. The bottom gate (BG) will be turned off, so that the inductor current flows through the body diode in the bottom MOSFET. This allows the SW node to drop below PGND by a voltage of a forward-conducted silicon diode. This creates a more negative differential voltage (VSW – VOUT) across the inductor, allowing the inductor current to drop at a faster rate to zero, therefore creating less overshoot on VOUT. The DTR comparator output is overridden by reverse inductor current detection (IREV) and overvoltage (OV) condition. This means BG will be turned off when SENSE+ is higher than SENSE– (i.e., inductor current is positive), as long as the OV condition is not present. When inductor current drops to zero and starts to reverse, BG will turn back on in forced continuous mode (e.g., the MODE/ PLLIN pin tied to INTVCC, or an input clock is present), even if DTR is still below half INTVCC. This is to allow the inductor current to go negative to quickly pull down the VOUT overshoot. Of course, if the MODE/PLLIN pin is set to discontinuous mode (i.e., tied to SGND), BG will stay off as inductor current reverse, as it would with the DTR feature disabled. Also, if VOUT gets higher than the OV window (7.5% typical), the DTR function is defeated and BG will turn on regardless. Therefore, in order for the DTR feature to reduce VOUT overshoot effectively,sufficient output capacitance needs to be used in the application so that OV is not triggered with the amount of load step desired to have its overshoot suppressed. Experimenting with a 0.6V output application (modified from the design example circuit by setting VOUT to 0.6V and ITH compensation adjusted accordingly) shows this detect transient feature significantly reduces the overshoot peak voltage, as well as time to resume regulation during load release steps (see application examples in Typical Performance Characteristics). SW 5V/DIV SW 5V/DIV BG 5V/DIV BG 5V/DIV DTR 1V/DIV BG TURNS BACK ON, INDUCTOR CURRENT (IL) GOES NEGATIVE IL 10A/DIV DTR DETECTS LOAD RELEASE, TURNS OFF BG FOR FASTER INDUCTOR CURRENT (IL) DECAY 5µs/DIV LOAD RELEASE = 15A TO 0A VIN = 5V VOUT = 0.6V BG REMAINS ON DURING THE LOAD RELEASE EVENT ITH 1V/DIV IL 10A/DIV LOAD RELEASE = 15A TO 0A VIN = 5V VOUT = 0.6V (12a) DTR Enabled 5µs/DIV 38382 F12 (12b) DTR Disabled Figure 12. Comparison of VOUT Overshoot with Detect Transient (DTR) Feature Enabled and Disabled 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 37 LTC3838-2 Applications Information Note that it is expected that this DTR feature will cause additional loss on the bottom MOSFET, due to its body diode conduction. The bottom MOSFET temperature may be higher with a load of frequent and large load steps. This is an important design consideration. Experiments on the demo board show a 20°C increase when a continuous 100% to 50% load step pulse train with 50% duty cycle and 100kHz frequency is applied to the output. If not needed, this DTR feature can be disabled by tying the DTR pin to INTVCC, or simply leave the DTR pin open so that an internal 2.5µA current source will pull itself up to INTVCC. 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. Percentage efficiency can be expressed as: %Efficiency = 100% – (L1% + L2% + L3% + ...) where L1%, L2%, etc. are the individual losses as a percentage of input power. Although all dissipative elements in the circuit produce power losses, several main sources usually account for most of the losses: 1. I2R loss. These arise from the DC resistances of the MOSFETs, inductor, current sense resistor and is the majority of power loss at high output currents. In continuous mode the average output current flows though the inductor L, but is chopped between the top and bottom MOSFETs. If the two MOSFETs have approximately the same RDS(ON), then the resistance of one MOSFET can simply be summed with the inductor’s DC resistances (DCR) and the board traces to obtain the I2R loss. For example, if each RDS(ON) = 8mΩ, RL = 5mΩ, and RSENSE = 2mΩ the loss will range from 15mW to 1.5W as the output current varies from 1A to 10A. This results in loss from 0.3% to 3% a 5V output, or 1% to 10% for a 1.5V output. Efficiency varies as the inverse square of VOUT for the same external components and output power level. The combined effects of lower output voltages and higher currents load demands greater importance of this loss term in the switching regulator system. 38 2. Transition loss. This loss mostly arises from the brief amount of time the top MOSFET spends in the saturation (Miller) region during switch node transitions. It depends upon the input voltage, load current, driver strength and MOSFET capacitance, among other factors, and can be significant at higher input voltages or higher switching frequencies. 3. DRVCC current. This is the sum of the MOSFET driver and INTVCC control currents. The MOSFET driver currents result from switching the gate capacitance of the power MOSFETs. Each time a MOSFET gate is switched from low to high to low again, a packet of charge dQ moves from DRVCC to ground. The resulting dQ/dt is a current out of DRVCC that is typically much larger than the controller IQ current. In continuous mode, IGATECHG = f • (Qg(TOP) + Qg(BOT)), where Qg(TOP) and Qg(BOT) are the gate charges of the top and bottom MOSFETs, respectively. Supplying DRVCC power through EXTVCC could increase efficiency by several percent, especially for high VIN applications. Connecting EXTVCC to an output-derived source will scale the VIN current required for the driver and controller circuits by a factor of (Duty Cycle)/(Efficiency). For example, in a 20V to 5V application, 10mA of DRVCC current results in approximately 2.5mA of VIN current. This reduces the mid-current loss from 10% or more (if the driver was powered directly from VIN) to only a few percent. 4. CIN loss. The input capacitor filters large square-wave input current drawn by the regulator into an averaged DC current from the supply. The capacitor itself has a zero average DC current, but square-wave-like AC current flows through it. Therefore the input capacitor must have a very low ESR to minimize the RMS current loss on ESR. It must also have sufficient capacitance to filter out the AC component of the input current to prevent additional RMS losses in upstream cabling, fuses or batteries. The LTC3838-2’s 2-phase architecture improves the ESR loss. For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 38382fa LTC3838-2 Applications Information “Hidden” copper trace, fuse and battery resistance, even at DC current, can cause a significant amount of efficiency degradation, so it is important to consider them during the design phase. Other losses, which include the COUT ESR loss, bottom MOSFET ’s body diode reverse-recovery loss, and inductor core loss generally account for less than 2% additional loss. Power losses in the switching regulator will reflect as a higher than ideal duty cycle, or a longer on-time for a constant frequency. This efficiency accounted on-time can be calculated as: tON ≈ tON(IDEAL)/Efficiency When making adjustments to improve efficiency, the input current is the best indicator of changes in efficiency. If you make a change and the input current decreases, then the efficiency has increased. Design Example Consider a channel of step-down converter from VIN = 4.5V to 26V to VOUT = 1.2V, with IOUT(MAX) = 15A, and f = 350kHz (see Figure 13, channel 1). The regulated output voltage of channel 1 is determined by:  R  VOUT1 = 0.6V • 1+ FB2   RFB1  Using a 10k resistor for RFB1, RFB2 is also 10k. Channel 2 uses an external reference and requires an additional resistor to the remote ground of the external reference (See Output Voltage Programming section). The value of the additional resistor is equal to the parallel of the two feedback resistors. If such an exact resistor value is not available, simply use two additional resistors in parallel for the best accuracy. The frequency is programmed by: RT [kΩ] = 41550 41550 – 2.2 = – 2.2 ≈ 116.5 f [kHz ] 350 The minimum on-time occurs for maximum VIN. Using the tON(MIN) curves in the Typical Performance Characteristics as references, make sure that the tON(MIN) at maximum VIN is greater than that the LTC3838-2 can achieve, and allow sufficient margin to account for the extension of effective on-time at light load due to the dead times (tD(TG/BG) + tD(TG/BG) in the Electrical Characteristics). The minimum on-time for this application is: tON(MIN) = VOUT VIN(MAX) • f = 1.2V = 143ns 24V • 350kHz Set the inductor value to give 40% ripple current at maximum VIN using the adjusted operating frequency:   1.2V  1.2V L = 1–  = 0.54µH     350kHz • 40% • 15A 24V Select 0.56µH which is the nearest standard value. The resulting maximum ripple current is:   1.2V  1.2V ∆IL =   = 5.8A 1–  350kHz • 0.56µH  24V  Often in a high current application, DCR current sensing is preferred over RSENSE in order to maximize efficiency. In order to determine the DCR filter values, first the inductor manufacturer has to be chosen. For this design, the Vishay IHLP-4040DZ-01 model is chosen with a value of 0.56µH and a DCRMAX =1.8mΩ. This implies that: VSENSE(MAX) = 1.8mΩ • [1 + (100°C – 25°C) • 0.4%/°C] • (15A – 5.8A/2) = 28mV The maximum sense voltage, VSENSE(MAX), is within the range that LTC3838-2 can handle without any additional scaling. Therefore, the DCR filter can use a simple RC filter across the inductor. If the C is chosen to be 0.1µF, then the R can be calculated as: RDCR = L 0.56µH = = 3.1kΩ DCR • CDCR 1.8mΩ • 0.1µF Use the nearest 1% resistor standard value of 115k. 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 39 LTC3838-2 Applications Information + CIN1 220µF CIN2 10µF ×3 2.2Ω 1µF VIN 0.1µF 3.57k VOUT1 1.2V 15A + COUT2 330µF ×2 SENSE2– SENSE1+ SENSE2+ BOOST1 BOOST2 0.1µF TG1 MT1 4.7µF DRVCC1 INTVCC DRVCC2 EXTVCC BG1 MB1 BG2 PGND EXTVREF2 VOUTSENSE1+ 100k PGOOD1 0.01µF PGOOD1 220pF 82.5k 115k ITH1 DTR1 RT SGND RUN1 FORCED CONTINUOUS MODE DISCONTINUOUS MODE EFFICIENCY (%) 40 1.0 VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.2V 0.1 1 LOAD CURRENT (A) 10 DTR2 CIN1: PANASONIC EEEFK1V221P CIN2: TAIYO YUDEN GMK325BJ106MN-T COUT2, COUT4: SANYO 2R5TPE330M9 COUT1, COUT3: MURATA GRM31CR60J107ME39L DB1, DB2: CENTRAL SEMI CMDSH-4ETR L1, L2: VISHAY IHLP4040DZERR56M01 MT1, MT2: RENESAS RJK0305DPB MB1, MB2: RENESAS RJK0330DPB 22pF 220pF 90.9k 82.5k 38382 F13a PHASMD MODE/PLLIN CLKOUT RUN2 2.5 2.0 80 EFFICIENCY 70 50 0 40 1.5 POWER LOSS 60 0.5 38382 F13b 3.0 FORCED CONTINUOUS MODE DISCONTINUOUS MODE 1.0 VIN = 12V VOUT = 1.5V 0.1 1 LOAD CURRENT (A) 10 POWER LOSS (W) 50 ITH2 100k 0.01µF 90 POWER LOSS (W) 60 PGOOD2 2.5 1.5 POWER LOSS PGOOD2 VREF2– 100 EFFICIENCY 70 VDFB2– COUT3 100µF ×2 10k 3.0 2.0 80 VOUT2 0.8V TO 2.5V 15A 20k VDFB2+ 20k VOUTSENSE1– COUT4 + 330µF ×2 MB2 VREF2+ 0.4V TO 1.25V TRACK/SS1 TRACK/SS2 22pF 90.9k L2 0.56µH SW2 10k 90 MT2 DB2 10k 100 3.57k TG2 SW1 1µF 15k 0.1µF DB1 2.2Ω COUT1 100µF ×2 SENSE1– 0.1µF 15k L1 0.56µH LTC3838-2 EFFICIENCY (%) VIN 4.5V TO 26V 0.5 0 38382 F13c Figure 13. Design Example: 4.5V to 26V Input, 1.2V/15A and 0.8V to 2.5V/15A (VOUT2: EXTVREF2 = 2:1) Dual Outputs, 350kHz, DCR Sense, DTR Enabled, Step-Down Converter 38382fa 40 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 Applications Information Use an additional resistor in the DCR filter, as discussed in DCR Inductor Current Sensing, to scale the VSENSE(MAX) down by a comfortable margin below the lower limit of the LTC3838-2’s own VSENSE(MAX) specification, so that the maximum output current can be guaranteed. In this design example, a 3.57k and 15k resistor divider is used. The previously calculated VSENSE(MAX) is scaled down from 28mV to 22.6mV, which is close to the lower limit of LTC3838-2’s VSENSE(MAX) specification. Note the equivalent RDCR = 3.57k//15k = 2.9k, slightly lower than the 3.1k calculated above for a matched RDCR-CDCR and L-DCR network. The resulted mismatch allows for a slightly higher ripple in VSENSE. Remember to check the maximum possible peak inductor current, considering the upper spec limit of VSENSE(MAX) and the DCR(MIN) at lowest operating temperature, as well as the maximum ∆IL, is not going to saturate the inductor or exceed the rating of power MOSFETs: IL(PEAK) = VSENSE(MAX)(UpperSpecLimit) + ∆IL(MAX) DCRMIN 1+ ( TMIN – 25°C) • 0.4% / °C For the external N-channel MOSFETs, Renesas RJK0305DBP (R DS(ON) = 13mΩ max, C MILLER = 150pF, VGS = 4.5V, θJA = 40°C/W, TJ(MAX) = 150°C) is chosen for the top MOSFET (main switch). RJK0330DBP (RDS(ON) = 3.9mΩ max, VGS = 4.5V, θJA = 40°C/W, TJ(MAX) = 150°C) is chosen for the bottom MOSFET (synchronous switch). The power dissipation for each MOSFET can be calculated for VIN = 24V and typical TJ = 125°C:  1.2V  2 PTOP =   (15A ) (13mΩ) 1+ 0.4% (125°C – 25°C)  24V   2.5Ω 1.2Ω  2  15A  + (24V )  +  (150pF )  (350kHz )  5.3V – 3V 3V   2  = 0.54W  24V – 1.2V  2 PBOT =   (15A ) (3.9mΩ) 1+ 0.4% (125°C – 25°C)  24V  = 1.2W The resulted junction temperatures at an ambient temperature TA = 75°C are: TJ(TOP) = 75°C + (0.54W)(40°C/W) = 97°C TJ(BOT) = 75°C + (1.2W)(40°C/W) = 123°C These numbers show that careful attention should be paid to proper heat sinking when operating at higher ambient temperatures. Select the CIN capacitors to give ample capacitance and RMS ripple current rating. Consider worst-case duty cycles per Figure 6: If operated at steady-state with SW nodes fully interleaved, the two channels would generate not more than 7.5A RMS at full load. In this design example, 3 × 10µF 35V X5R ceramic capacitors are put in parallel to take the RMS ripple current, with a 220µF aluminum-electrolytic bulk capacitor for stability. For 10µF 1210 X5R ceramic capacitors, try to keep the ripple current less than 3A RMS through each device. The bulk capacitor is chosen for RMS rating per simulation with the circuit model provided. The output capacitor COUT is chosen for a low ESR of 4.5mΩ to minimize output voltage changes due to inductor ripple current and load steps. The output voltage ripple is given as: ∆VOUT(RIPPLE) = ∆IL(MAX) • ESR = 5.85A • 4.5mΩ = 26mV However, a 10A load step will cause an output change of up to: ∆VOUT(STEP) = ∆ILOAD • ESR = 10A • 4.5mΩ = 45mV Optional 2 × 100µF ceramic output capacitors are included to minimize the effect of ESR and ESL in the output ripple and to improve load step response. The ITH compensation resistor RITH of 40k and a CITH of 220pF are chosen empirically for fast transient response, and an additional CITH2 = 22pF is added directly from ITH pin to SGND, to roll off the system gain at switching frequency and attenuate high frequency noise. For less aggressive transient response but more stability, lower-valued RITH and higher-valued CITH and CITH2 can be used (such as the various combinations used in Figures 16, 17, 18, 19, 20), which typically results in lower bandwidth but more phase margin. 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 41 LTC3838-2 Applications Information To set up the detect transient (DTR) feature, pick resistors for an equivalent RITH = RITH1//RITH2 close to 40k. Here, 1% resistors RITH1 = 90.9k (low side) and RITH2 = 82.5k (high side) are used, which yields an equivalent RITH of 43.2k, and a DC-bias threshold of 236mV typical above one-half of INTVCC (including the 2.5µA pull-up current from the DTR pin, see the Load-Release Transient Detection section). Note that even though the accuracy of the equivalent compensation resistance RITH is not as important, always use 1% or better resistors for the resistor divider from INTVCC to SGND to guarantee the relative accuracy of this DC-bias threshold. To disable the DTR feature, simply use a single RITH resistor to SGND, and tie the DTR pin to INTVCC. If channel 2 uses an external reference voltage with a ratio of VOUT2: VEXTVREF2 = 2:1, as in this design example, it would have the same ratio and overall system gain as channel 1 (VOUT1: VINTVREF = 1.2V: 0.6V = 2:1), therefore the same values (as channel 1) of compensation components can be used on ITH2 pin. If another ratio is needed, the ITH compensation may need to be adjusted. Figure 17 shows an RSENSE and DTR-disabled version of this design with a channel 2 that has VOUT2: VEXTVREF2 = 1:1. Note that as EXTVREF2 is getting closer to its higher limit , the lower end of the VIN range may require a higher value to guarantee the INTVCC required at the EXTVREF2 applied (see the Electrical Characteristics section) and assure TRACK/SS2 settles well above EXTVREF2 when no external pull-up is used. PCB Layout Checklist The printed circuit board layout is illustrated graphically in Figure 14. Figure 15 illustrates the current waveforms present in the various branches of 2-phase synchronous regulators operating in continuous mode. Use the following checklist to ensure proper operation: • A multilayer printed circuit board with dedicated ground planes is generally preferred to reduce noise coupling and improve heat sinking. The ground plane layer should be immediately next to the routing layer for the power components, e.g., MOSFETs, inductors, sense resistors, input and output capacitors etc. • Keep SGND and PGND separate. Upon finishing the layout, connect SGND and PGND together with a single PCB trace underneath the IC from the SGND pin through the exposed PGND pad to the PGND pin. • All power train components should be referenced to PGND; all components connected to noise-sensitive pins, e.g., ITH, RT, TRACK/SS, etc., should return to the SGND pin. Keep PGND ample, but SGND area compact. Use a modified “star ground” technique: a low impedance, large copper area central PCB point on the same side of the as the input and output capacitors. • Place power components, such as CIN, COUT , MOSFETs, DB and inductors, in one compact area. Use wide but shortest possible traces for high current paths (e.g., VIN, VOUT , PGND etc.) to this area to minimize copper loss. • Keep the switch nodes (SW1,2), top gates (TG1,2) and boost nodes (BOOST1,2) away from noise-sensitive small-signal nodes, especially from the opposite channel’s voltage and current sensing feedback pins. These nodes have very large and fast moving signals and therefore should be kept on the “output side” of the LTC3838-2 (power-related pins are toward the right hand side of the IC), and occupy minimum PC trace area. Use compact switch node (SW) planes to improve cooling of the MOSFETs and to keep EMI down. If DCR sensing is used, place the top filter resistor (R1 only in Figure 5) close to the switch node. 38382fa 42 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 Applications Information • The top N-channel MOSFETs of the two channels have to be located within a short distance from (preferably EXTVREF2 AFTER SOFT-START) Figure 20. 4.5V to 14V Input, 0.4V to 2.5V/50A (VOUT: EXTVREF2 = 1:1) 2-Phase Single Output, 300kHz, DCR Sense, Step-Down Converter 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 51 LTC3838-2 Typical Applications + CIN2 10µF ×3 CIN1 220µF 2.2Ω 1µF VIN 20Ω L1 2.2µH MT1 + COUT2 150µF ×2 SENSE1+ SENSE2+ BOOST1 BOOST2 TG1 MT2 TG2 SW1 4.7µF 1µF MB1 DRVCC1 INTVCC DRVCC2 EXTVCC EXTVREF2 VOUTSENSE1+ VDFB2+ PGOOD1 0.01µF PGOOD1 VDFB2– PGOOD2 TRACK/SS1 TRACK/SS2 22pF 220pF 137k MB2 ITH1 DTR1 RT SGND RUN1 ITH2 + VOUT2 2.5V TO 5V 12A COUT4 100µF VREF2+ 1.25V TO 2.5V 20k 10k 20k VOUTSENSE1– RS2 0.002Ω COUT3 150µF ×2 VOUT1 BG2 PGND 10k 53.6k L2 1.3µH SW2 BG1 100k 20Ω 0.1µF DB2 73.2k VREF2– 100k PGOOD2 0.01µF CIN1: PANASONIC EEEFK1V221P CIN2: TAIYO YUDEN GMK325BJ106MN-T COUT1, COUT4: MURATA GRM31CR60J107ME39L COUT2, COUT3:SANYO 6TPE150MIC2 DB1, DB2: DIODES INC. SDM10K45 L1: WÜRTH 7443320220 L2: WÜRTH 7443551130 MT1, MT2: INFINEON BSC093N04LSG MB1, MB2: INFINEON BSC035N04LSG 47pF 470pF 15k DTR2 38382 F21a PHASMD MODE/PLLIN CLKOUT RUN2 100 3.0 100 3.0 90 2.5 90 2.5 EFFICIENCY 70 60 50 40 1.5 POWER LOSS 1.0 VIN = 12V VOUT = 5V 0.1 1 LOAD CURRENT (A) 10 2.0 80 EFFICIENCY 70 60 0.5 50 0 40 38382 F21b FORCED CONTINUOUS MODE DISCONTINUOUS MODE 1.5 POWER LOSS 1.0 VIN = 12V VOUT = 3.3V 0.1 1 LOAD CURRENT (A) 10 POWER LOSS (W) 2.0 80 POWER LOSS (W) EFFICIENCY (%) 20Ω DB1 2.2Ω COUT1 100µF SENSE2– 1nF 0.1µF RS1 0.002Ω SENSE1– 1nF 20Ω VOUT1 5V 12A LTC3838-2 EFFICIENCY (%) VIN 6.5V TO 34V 0.5 0 38382 F21c FORCED CONTINUOUS MODE DISCONTINUOUS MODE Figure 21. 6.5V to 34V Input, 5V/12A and 2.5V to 5V/12A (VOUT2: EXTVREF2 = 2:1)/12A Dual Output, 300kHz, RSENSE, 5V Output Tied to EXTVCC, Step-Down Converter 38382fa 52 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 LTC3838-2 Typical Applications VIN 4.5V TO 14V CIN1 180µF + CIN2 22µF ×4 2.2Ω 1µF VIN 10Ω SENSE2– SENSE1+ SENSE2+ BOOST1 BOOST2 10Ω 1nF 0.1µF MT1 L1 0.3µH TG1 MT2 TG2 MB1 L2 0.3µH DB2 SW1 4.7µF 1µF 10Ω 0.1µF DB1 2.2Ω COUT1 100µF ×3 SENSE1– 1nF 10Ω RS1 0.002Ω LTC3838-2 SW2 DRVCC1 INTVCC DRVCC2 EXTVCC BG1 EXTVREF2 VOUTSENSE1+ VREF2+ 1V TO 2.5V PGOOD1 VDFB2– PGOOD2 10k PGOOD VREF2– 100k 0.01µF TRACK/SS1 TRACK/SS2 ITH1 220pF ITH2 DTR1 20k VDFB2+ 20k VOUTSENSE1– 16.2k DTR2 PHASMD MODE/PLLIN CLKOUT RUN2 RT SGND RUN1 38382 F22a CIN1: SANYO 16SVP180MX CIN2: MURATA GRM32ER61C226KE20L COUT1, COUT2: MURATA GRM31CR60J107ME39L DB1, DB2: CENTRAL CMDSH-3 MT1, MT1: INFINEON BSC050NE2LS MB1, MB2: INFINEON BSC032NE2LS L1, L2: WÜRTH 7443340030/WÜRTH 7443340047 8 FORCED CONTINUOUS MODE 70 60 50 LOSS FORCED CM 0.1 LOSS DCM 1 10 LOAD CURRENT (A) 4 6 4 70 60 0 100 50 10 LOSS FORCED CM 0.1 1 10 LOAD CURRENT (A) 5 DO NOT USE L1, L2: WÜRTH 7443340047 (0.47µH) 8 FORCED CONTINUOUS MODE 80 2 38382 F22b VIN = 5V VOUT 3.3V POWER LOSS (W) 6 80 90 DISCONTINUOUS MODE 4 VOUT (V) DISCONTINUOUS MODE 100 POWER LOSS (W) EFFICIENCY (%) 90 10 VIN = 12V VOUT = 3.3V EFFICIENCY (%) 100 VOUT 2V TO 5V 25A COUT2 100µF ×3 MB2 BG2 PGND 18.7k RS2 0.002Ω 3 L1, L2: WÜRTH 7443340030 (0.3µH) 2 LOSS DCM 0 100 2 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 VIN (V) 38382 F22c 38382 F22d Figure 22. 4.5V to 14V Input, 2V to 5V/25A (VOUT2: EXTVREF2 = 2:1) Output, 2MHz, RSENSE, Step-Down Converter 38382fa For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 53 LTC3838-2 Package Description Please refer to http://www.linear.com/product/LTC3838-2#packaging for the most recent package drawings. UHF Package 38-Lead Plastic QFN (5mm × 7mm) (Reference LTC DWG # 05-08-1701 Rev C) 0.70 ± 0.05 5.50 ± 0.05 5.15 ± 0.05 4.10 ± 0.05 3.00 REF 3.15 ± 0.05 PACKAGE OUTLINE 0.25 ± 0.05 0.50 BSC 5.5 REF 6.10 ± 0.05 7.50 ± 0.05 RECOMMENDED SOLDER PAD LAYOUT APPLY SOLDER MASK TO AREAS THAT ARE NOT SOLDERED 5.00 ± 0.10 0.75 ± 0.05 PIN 1 NOTCH R = 0.30 TYP OR 0.35 × 45° CHAMFER 3.00 REF 37 0.00 – 0.05 38 0.40 ±0.10 PIN 1 TOP MARK (SEE NOTE 6) 1 2 5.15 ± 0.10 5.50 REF 7.00 ± 0.10 3.15 ± 0.10 (UH) QFN REF C 1107 0.200 REF 0.25 ± 0.05 0.50 BSC R = 0.125 TYP R = 0.10 TYP BOTTOM VIEW—EXPOSED PAD NOTE: 1. DRAWING CONFORMS TO JEDEC PACKAGE OUTLINE M0-220 VARIATION WHKD 2. DRAWING NOT TO SCALE 3. ALL DIMENSIONS ARE IN MILLIMETERS 54 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 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 38382fa LTC3838-2 Revision History REV DATE DESCRIPTION A 03/16 Modified Table 1 PAGE NUMBER 2 38382fa 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 representaFor more information www.linear.com/3838-2 tion that the interconnection of its circuits as described herein will not infringe on existing patent rights. 55 LTC3838-2 Typical Application 7V to 14V Input, 5V/5A and 2.5V to 5V/5A (VOUT2: EXTVREF2 = 2:1)/5A Dual Output, 2MHz, RSENSE, Step-Down Converter with EXTVCC Tied to 5V Output VIN 7V TO 14V + CIN1 39µF CIN2 10µF ×3 2.2Ω 1µF VIN 10Ω VOUT1 5V 7A MT1 SENSE1+ SENSE2+ BOOST1 BOOST2 TG1 10Ω 1µF MT2 TG2 DB2 SW1 4.7µF MB1 SW2 DRVCC1 INTVCC DRVCC2 EXTVCC BG1 EXTVREF2 0.01µF VOUTSENSE1– PGOOD1 VDFB2– PGOOD2 330pF 18.7k ITH1 ITH2 DTR1 RT SGND RUN1 L2 0.8µH RS2 0.004Ω VOUT2 2.5V TO 5V 7A COUT2 47µF ×2 20k 10k VREF2– CFF2 150pF 100k PGOOD2 0.01µF TRACK/SS1 TRACK/SS2 22pF 24.9k VREF2+ 1.25V TO 2.5V 20k 10k PGOOD1 MB2 VDFB2+ VOUTSENSE1+ 100k VOUT1 BG2 PGND 73.2k CFF1 47pF 10Ω 0.1µF DB1 2.2Ω COUT1 47µF ×2 SENSE2– 1nF 0.1µF L1 0.8µH SENSE1– 1nF 10Ω RS1 0.004Ω LTC3838-2 68pF 900pF CIN1: SANYO 16SVP180MX CIN2: MURATA GRM32ER61C226KE20L COUT1, COUT2: MURATA GRM43ER60J476ME01L DB1, DB2: CENTRAL CMDSH-3 L1, L2: COILCRAFT XAL5030-801MEB MT1, MB1, MT2, MB2: VISHAY SI7114ADN 13k DTR2 38382 TA02 PHASMD MODE/PLLIN CLKOUT RUN2 Related Parts PART NUMBER DESCRIPTION COMMENTS LTC3838/ LTC3838-1 (Table 1) Dual or Single Output, Controlled On-Time, Synchronous StepDown Controller, with Differential VOUT Sense LTC3839 Single Output, 2-Phase, Controlled On-Time, Synchronous Step- PLL, 200kHz to 2MHz Operating Frequency, 4.5V ≤ VIN ≤ 38V, Down Controller with Differential VOUT Sense 0.6V ≤ VOUT ≤ 5.5V, 5mm × 5mm QFN-32 LTM4650 Dual 25A or Single 50A DC/DC μModule® Regulator with Multiphase Operation and Differential VOUT Sense 4.5V ≤ VIN ≤ 15V, 0.6V ≤ VOUT ≤ 14V 16mm × 16mm × 5mm Package LTM4630A Dual 18A or Single 36A DC/DC μModule Regulator with Multiphase Operation and Differential VOUT Sense 4.5V ≤ VIN ≤ 15V, 0.6V ≤ VOUT ≤ 5.3V 16mm × 16mm × 4.41mm Package LTC7851/ LTC7851-1 Quad Output, Multiphase Step-Down Voltage Mode DC/DC Controller with Accurate Current Sharing Operates with DrMOS, Power Blocks or External Drivers/MOSFETs, 3V ≤ VIN ≤ 27V LTC3774 Dual, Multiphase Current Mode Synchronous Step-Down Controller with Sub-Milliohm DCR Sensing, Up to 12 Phases Operates with DrMOS, Power Blocks or External Drivers/MOSFETs, 4.5V ≤ VIN ≤ 38V, 0.6V ≤ VOUT ≤ 3.5V with Remote VOUT Sense LTC3855 Dual, Multiphase, Synchronous Step-Down DC/DC Controller with Diff Amp and DCR Temperature Compensation Phase-Lockable Fixed Frequency 250kHz to 770kHz, 4.5V ≤ VIN ≤ 38V, 0.8V ≤ VOUT ≤ 12V LTC3869/ LTC3869-2 Dual Output, 2-Phase Synchronous Step-Down DC/DC Controller, with Accurate Current Share 4V ≤ VIN ≤ 38V, VOUT3 Up to 12.5V PLL Fixed 250kHz to 750kHz Frequency LTC3861/ LTC3861-1 Dual, Multiphase Synchronous Step-Down DC/DC Controller with Multiphase Operation and Differential VOUT Sense Operates with Power Blocks, DR MOS or External Drivers/MOSFETs 3V ≤ VIN ≤ 24V, 5mm × 6mm QFN-36 PLL, 200kHz to 2MHz Operating Frequency, 4.5V ≤ VIN ≤ 38V, 0.6V ≤ VOUT ≤ 5.5V, 5mm × 7mm QFN-38, TSSOP-38 38382fa 56 Linear Technology Corporation 1630 McCarthy Blvd., Milpitas, CA 95035-7417 For more information www.linear.com/3838-2 (408) 432-1900 ● FAX: (408) 434-0507 ● www.linear.com/3838-2 LT 0316 REV A • PRINTED IN USA  LINEAR TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION 2013
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LTC3838EUHF-2#PBF
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    • 1040+36.10200

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