A5973AD Up to 1.5 A step-down switching regulator for automotive applications Datasheet - production data Applications Dedicated to automotive applications Description HSOP8 - exposed pad Features Qualified following the AEC-Q100 requirements (see PPAP for more details) 1.5 A DC output current Operating input voltage from 4 V to 36 V 3.3 V / ( 2%) reference voltage Output voltage adjustable from 1.235 V to VIN Low dropout operation: 100% duty cycle 500 kHz internally fixed frequency Voltage feed-forward Zero load current operation Internal current limiting Inhibit for zero current consumption Synchronization Protection against feedback disconnection The A5973AD is a step-down monolithic power switching regulator with a minimum switch current limit of 1.8 A, so it is able to deliver up to 1.5 A DC current to the load depending on the application conditions. The output voltage can be set from 1.235 V to VIN. The high current level is also achieved thanks to an HSOP8 package with an exposed frame, that allows to reduce the Rth(JA) down to approximately 40 C/W. The device uses an internal P-channel DMOS transistor (with a typical RDS(on) of 250 m) as a switching element to minimize the size of the external components. An internal oscillator fixes the switching frequency at 500 kHz. Having a minimum input voltage of 4 V only it fits the automotive applications requiring the device operation even in cold crank conditions. A pulseby-pulse current limit with the internal frequency modulation offers an effective constant current short-circuit protection. Thermal shutdown Figure 1. Application schematic A5973AD August 2014 This is information on a product in full production. DocID13958 Rev 9 1/40 www.st.com Contents A5973AD Contents 1 2 Pin settings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 1.1 Pin connection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 1.2 Pin description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Electrical data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 2.1 Maximum ratings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 2.2 Thermal data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 3 Electrical characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 4 Datasheet parameters over the temperature range . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 5 Functional description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 6 7 2/40 5.1 Power supply and voltage reference . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 5.2 Voltages monitor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 5.3 Oscillator and synchronization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 5.4 Current protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11 5.5 Error amplifier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 5.6 PWM comparator and power stage . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 5.7 Inhibit function . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 5.8 Thermal shutdown . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Additional features and protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 6.1 Feedback disconnection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 6.2 Output overvoltage protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 6.3 Zero load . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Closing the loop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 7.1 Error amplifier and compensation network . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 7.2 LC filter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 7.3 PWM comparator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD 8 Contents Application information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 8.1 Component selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 8.2 Layout considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 8.3 Thermal considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 8.4 Short-circuit protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 8.5 Application circuit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 8.6 Positive buck-boost regulator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 8.7 Negative buck-boost regulator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 8.8 Synchronization example . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 8.9 Compensation network with MLCC at the output . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 8.10 External SOFT_START network . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 9 Typical characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 10 Package information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 11 Ordering information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 12 Revision history . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 DocID13958 Rev 9 3/40 40 Pin settings A5973AD 1 Pin settings 1.1 Pin connection Figure 2. Pin connection (top view) 1.2 Pin description Table 1. Pin description 4/40 No. Pin Description 1 OUT 2 SYNCH 3 INH 4 COMP 5 FB 6 VREF 3.3 V VREF. No cap is requested for stability. 7 GND Ground. 8 VCC Unregulated DC input voltage. Regulator output. Master/slave synchronization. A logical signal (active high) disables the device. If INH not used the pin must be grounded. When it is open an internal pull-up disables the device. E/A output for frequency compensation. Feedback input. Connecting directly to this pin results in an output voltage of 1.23 V. An external resistive divider is required for higher output voltages. DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD Electrical data 2 Electrical data 2.1 Maximum ratings Table 2. Absolute maximum ratings Symbol Value Unit 40 V V V V8 Input voltage V1 OUT pin DC voltage OUT pin peak voltage at t = 0.1 s -1 to 40 -5 to 40 I1 Maximum output current Int. limit. V4, V5 Analog pins 4 V -0.3 to VCC V -0.3 to 4 V 2 W Operating junction temperature range -40 to 150 C Storage temperature range -55 to 150 C Value Unit 40(1) C/W V3 INH V2 SYNCH PTOT TJ TSTG 2.2 Parameter Power dissipation at TA 70 C Thermal data Table 3. Thermal data Symbol RthJA Parameter Maximum thermal resistance junction ambient 1. Package mounted on the evaluation board. DocID13958 Rev 9 5/40 40 Electrical characteristics 3 A5973AD Electrical characteristics TJ = -40 C to 125 C, VCC = 12 V, unless otherwise specified. Table 4. Electrical characteristics Symbol VCC RDS(on) IL fSW Parameter Test condition Operating input voltage range Min. 4 MOSFET on resistance Maximum limiting current(1) Typ. 0.250 VCC = 5 V VCC = 5 V, TJ = 25 C Switching frequency Duty cycle 1.8 2.3 2 2.3 425 500 0 Max. Unit 36 V 0.5 A 575 kHz 100 % 1.272 V Dynamic characteristics V5 Voltage feedback 4.4 V < VCC < 36 V h Efficiency V0 = 5 V, VCC = 12 V 1.198 1.235 90 % DC characteristics Iqop Iq Iqst-by Total operating quiescent current 5 Quiescent current Duty cycle = 0; VFB = 1.5 V Total standby quiescent current Vinh > 2.2 V 50 7 mA 2.7 mA 100 A 0.8 V Inhibit INH threshold voltage Device ON Device OFF 2.2 V 3.5 V Error amplifier VOH High level output voltage VFB = 1 V VOL Low level output voltage VFB = 1.5 V Source output current VCOMP = 1.9 V; VFB = 1 V Io sink Sink output current VCOMP = 1.9 V; VFB = 1.5 V Ib Source bias current Io source gm 0.4 190 300 A 1 1.5 mA 2.5 DC open loop gain RL = Transconductance ICOMP = -0.1 mA to 0.1 mA; VCOMP = 1.9 V V 50 4 A 57 dB 2.3 mS Synch function 6/40 High input voltage VCC = 4.4 to 36 V Low input voltage VCC = 4.4 to 36 V Slave synch current(2) Vsynch = 0.74 V, Vsynch = 2.33 V DocID13958 Rev 9 2.5 0.11 0.21 VREF V 0.74 V 0.25 0.45 mA A5973AD Electrical characteristics Table 4. Electrical characteristics (continued) Symbol Parameter Test condition Min. Typ. Max. Unit Master output amplitude Isource = 3 mA 2.75 3 V Output pulse width no load, Vsynch = 1.65 V 0.20 0.35 s Reference voltage IREF = 0 to 5 mA VCC = 4.4 V to 36 V 3.2 3.3 3.399 V Line regulation IREF = 0 mA VCC = 4.4 V to 36 V 5 10 mV Load regulation IREF = 0 mA 8 15 mV 18 35 mA Reference section short-circuit current 5 1. With TJ = 85 C, Ilim_min = 2 A, assured by design, characterization and statistical correlation. 2. Guaranteed by design. DocID13958 Rev 9 7/40 40 Datasheet parameters over the temperature range 4 A5973AD Datasheet parameters over the temperature range The 100% of the population in the production flow is tested at three different ambient temperatures (-40 C; +25 C, +125 C) to guarantee the datasheet parameters inside the junction temperature range (-40 C; +125 C). The device operation is so guaranteed when the junction temperature is inside the (-40 C; +150 C) temperature range. The designer can estimate the silicon temperature increase respect to the ambient temperature evaluating the internal power losses generated during the device operation (please refer to Section 2.2). However the embedded thermal protection disables the switching activity to protect the device in case the junction temperature reaches the TSHTDWN (+150 C 10 C) temperature. All the datasheet parameters can be guaranteed to a maximum junction temperature of +125 C to avoid triggering the thermal shutdown protection during the testing phase because of self-heating. 8/40 DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD 5 Functional description Functional description The main internal blocks are shown in the device block diagram in Figure 3. They are: A voltage regulator supplying the internal circuitry. From this regulator, a 3.3 V reference voltage is externally available. A voltage monitor circuit which checks the input and the internal voltages. A fully integrated sawtooth oscillator with a frequency of 500 kHz 15%, including also the voltage feed-forward function and an input/output synchronization pin. Two embedded current limitation circuits which control the current that flows through the power switch. The pulse-by-pulse current limit forces the power switch OFF cycleby-cycle if the current reaches an internal threshold, while the frequency shifter reduces the switching frequency in order to significantly reduce the duty cycle. A transconductance error amplifier. A pulse width modulator (PWM) comparator and the relative logic circuitry necessary to drive the internal power. A high-side driver for the internal P-MOS switch. An inhibit block for standby operation. A circuit to implement the thermal protection function. Figure 3. Block diagram 5.1 Power supply and voltage reference The internal regulator circuit (shown in Figure 4) consists of a start-up circuit, an internal voltage pre-regulator, the bandgap voltage reference and the bias block that provides current to all the blocks. The starter supplies the start-up currents to the entire device when the input voltage goes high and the device is enabled (inhibit pin connected to ground). The pre-regulator block supplies the bandgap cell with a pre-regulated voltage VREG that has a very low supply voltage noise sensitivity. DocID13958 Rev 9 9/40 40 Functional description 5.2 A5973AD Voltages monitor An internal block continuously senses the Vcc, Vref and Vbg. If the voltages go higher than their thresholds, the regulator begins operating. There is also a hysteresis on the VCC (UVLO). Figure 4. Internal circuit 5.3 Oscillator and synchronization Figure 5 shows the block diagram of the oscillator circuit. The clock generator provides the switching frequency of the device, which is internally fixed at 500 kHz. The frequency shifter block acts to reduce the switching frequency in case of strong overcurrent or short-circuit. The clock signal is then used in the internal logic circuitry and is the input of the ramp generator and synchronizer blocks. The ramp generator circuit provides the sawtooth signal, used for PWM control and the internal voltage feed-forward, while the synchronizer circuit generates the synchronization signal. The device also has a synchronization pin which can work both as master and slave. Beating frequency noise is an issue when more than one voltage rail is on the same board. A simple way to avoid this issue is to operate all the regulators at the same switching frequency. The synchronization feature of a set of the A5973AD is simply get connecting together their SYNCH pin. The device with highest switching frequency will be the MASTER and it provides the synchronization signal to the others. Therefore the SYNCH is a I/O pin to deliver or recognize a frequency signal. The synchronization circuitry is powered by the internal reference (VREF) so a small filtering capacitor (100 nF) connected between VREF pin and the signal ground of the master device is suggested for its proper operation. However when a set of synchronized devices populates a board it is not possible to know in advance the one working as a master, so the filtering capacitor have to be designed for whole set of devices. When one or more devices are synchronized to an external signal, its amplitude have to be in comply with specifications given in Table 4 on page 6. The frequency of the synchronization signal must be, at a minimum, higher than the maximum guaranteed natural switching frequency of the device (575 kHz, see Table 4) while the duty cycle of the synchronization signal can vary from approximately 10% to 90%. The small capacitor under the VREF pin is required for this operation. 10/40 DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD Functional description Figure 5. Oscillator circuit block diagram Figure 6. Synchronization example SYNCH OUT A5973AD A5973D FB OUT SYNCH A5973AD A5973D FB COMP COMP SS/INH SS/INH GND OUT SYNCH A5973AD A5973D GND OUT SYNCH A5973AD A5973D FB FB COMP SS/INH 5.4 COMP SS/INH GND GND Current protection The A5973AD device features two types of current limit protection: pulse-by-pulse and frequency foldback. The schematic of the current limitation circuitry for the pulse-by-pulse protection is shown in Figure 7. The output power PDMOS transistor is split into two parallel PDMOS transistors. The smallest one includes a resistor in series, RSENSE. The current is sensed through RSENSE and if it reaches the threshold, the mirror becomes unbalanced and the PDMOS is switched off until the next falling edge of the internal clock pulse. Due to this reduction of the ON time, the output voltage decreases. Since the minimum switch ON time necessary to sense the current in order to avoid a false overcurrent signal is too short to obtain a sufficiently low duty cycle at 500 kHz (see Section 8.4 on page 26), the output current in DocID13958 Rev 9 11/40 40 Functional description A5973AD strong overcurrent or short-circuit conditions could be not properly limited. For this reason the switching frequency is also reduced, thus keeping the inductor current under its maximum threshold. The frequency shifter (Figure 5) functions based on the feedback voltage. As the feedback voltage decreases (due to the reduced duty cycle), the switching frequency decreases also. Figure 7. Current limitation circuitry 5.5 Error amplifier The voltage error amplifier is the core of the loop regulation. It is a transconductance operational amplifier whose non inverting input is connected to the internal voltage reference (1.235 V), while the inverting input (FB) is connected to the external divider or directly to the output voltage. The output (COMP) is connected to the external compensation network. The uncompensated error amplifier has the following characteristics: Table 5. Uncompensated error amplifier characteristics Description Values Transconductance 2300 S Low frequency gain 65 dB Minimum sink/source voltage 1500 A/300 A Output voltage swing 0.4 V/3.65 V Input bias current 2.5 A The error amplifier output is compared to the oscillator sawtooth to perform PWM control. 5.6 PWM comparator and power stage This block compares the oscillator sawtooth and the error amplifier output signals to generate the PWM signal for the driving stage. The power stage is a highly critical block, as it functions to guarantee a correct turn ON and turn OFF of the PDMOS. The turn ON of the power element, or more accurately, the rise 12/40 DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD Functional description time of the current at turn ON, is a very critical parameter. At a first approach, it appears that the faster the rise time, the lower the turn ON losses. However, there is a limit introduced by the recovery time of the recirculation diode. In fact, when the current of the power element is equal to the inductor current, the diode turns OFF and the drain of the power is able to go high. But during its recovery time, the diode can be considered a high value capacitor and this produces a very high peak current, responsible for numerous problems: Spikes on the device supply voltage that cause oscillations (and thus noise) due to the board parasites. Turn ON overcurrent leads to a decrease in the efficiency and system reliability. Major EMI problems. Shorter freewheeling diode life. The fall time of the current during turn OFF is also critical, as it produces voltage spikes (due to the parasites elements of the board) that increase the voltage drop across the PDMOS. In order to minimize these problems, a new driving circuit topology has been used and the block diagram is shown in Figure 8. The basic idea is to change the current levels used to turn the power switch ON and OFF, based on the PDMOS and the gate clamp status. This circuitry allows the power switch to be turned OFF and ON quickly and addresses the freewheeling diode recovery time problem. The gate clamp is necessary to ensure that VGS of the internal switch does not go higher than VGSmax. The ON/OFF control block protects against any cross conduction between the supply line and ground. Figure 8. Driving circuitry DocID13958 Rev 9 13/40 40 Functional description 5.7 A5973AD Inhibit function The inhibit feature is used to put the device into standby mode. With the INH pin higher than 2.2 V, the device is disabled and the power consumption is reduced to less than 100 A. With the INH pin lower than 0.8 V, the device is enabled. If the INH pin is left floating, an internal pull up ensures that the voltage at the pin reaches the inhibit threshold and the device is disabled. The pin is also Vcc compatible. 5.8 Thermal shutdown The shutdown block generates a signal that turns OFF the power stage if the temperature of the chip goes higher than a fixed internal threshold (150 10 C). The sensing element of the chip is very close to the PDMOS area, ensuring fast and accurate temperature detection. A hysteresis of approximately 20 C keeps the device from turning ON and OFF continuously. 14/40 DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD Additional features and protection 6 Additional features and protection 6.1 Feedback disconnection If the feedback is disconnected, the duty cycle increases towards the maximum allowed value, bringing the output voltage close to the input supply. This condition could destroy the load. To avoid this hazardous condition, the device is turned OFF if the feedback pin is left floating. 6.2 Output overvoltage protection Overvoltage protection, or OVP, is achieved by using an internal comparator connected to the feedback, which turns OFF the power stage when the OVP threshold is reached. This threshold is typically 30% higher than the feedback voltage. When a voltage divider is required to adjust the output voltage (Figure 15 on page 27), the OVP intervention will be set at: Equation 1 R1 + R2 V OVP = 1.3 -------------------- V FB R2 Where R1 is the resistor connected between the output voltage and the feedback pin, and R2 is between the feedback pin and ground. 6.3 Zero load Due to the fact that the internal power is a PDMOS, no boostrap capacitor is required and so the device works properly even with no load at the output. In this case it works in burst mode, with a random burst repetition rate. DocID13958 Rev 9 15/40 40 Closing the loop 7 A5973AD Closing the loop Figure 9. Block diagram of the loop 7.1 Error amplifier and compensation network The output L-C filter of a step-down converter contributes with 180 degrees phase shift in the control loop. For this reason a compensation network between the COMP pin and GROUND is added. The simplest compensation network together with the equivalent circuit of the error amplifier are shown in Figure 10. RC and CC introduce a pole and a zero in the open loop gain. CP does not significantly affect system stability but it is useful to reduce the noise of the COMP pin. The transfer function of the error amplifier and its compensation network is: Equation 2 A V0 1 + s R c C c A 0 s = --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------2 s R0 C0 + Cp Rc Cc + s R0 Cc + R0 C0 + Cp + Rc Cc + 1 Where Avo = Gm * Ro 16/40 DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD Closing the loop Figure 10. Error amplifier equivalent circuit and compensation network The poles of this transfer function are (if Cc >> C0 + CP): Equation 3 1 F P1 = ------------------------------------2 R0 Cc Equation 4 1 F P2 = -------------------------------------------------------2 Rc C0 + Cp whereas the zero is defined as: Equation 5 1 F Z1 = ------------------------------------2 Rc Cc FP1 is the low frequency which sets the bandwidth, while the zero FZ1 is usually put near to the frequency of the double pole of the L-C filter (see Section 7.2). FP2 is usually at a very high frequency. DocID13958 Rev 9 17/40 40 Closing the loop 7.2 A5973AD LC filter The transfer function of the L-C filter is given by: Equation 6 R LOAD 1 + ESR C OUT s A LC s = ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------2 s L C OUT ESR + R LOAD + s ESR C OUT R LOAD + L + R LOAD where RLOAD is defined as the ratio between VOUT and IOUT. If RLOAD >> ESR, the previous expression of ALC can be simplified and becomes: Equation 7 1 + ESR C OUT s A LC s = --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------2 L C OUT s + ESR C OUT s + 1 The zero of this transfer function is given by: Equation 8 1 F O = ---------------------------------------------------2 ESR C OUT F0 is the zero introduced by the ESR of the output capacitor and it is very important to increase the phase margin of the loop. The poles of the transfer function can be calculated through the following expression: Equation 9 2 - ESR C OUT ESR C OUT - 4 L C OUT F PLC1 2 = -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------2 L C OUT In the denominator of ALC the typical second order system equation can be recognized: Equation 10 2 s + 2 n s + 2 n If the damping coefficient is very close to zero, the roots of the equation become a double root whose value is n. Similarly for ALC the poles can usually be defined as a double pole whose value is: Equation 11 1 F PLC = ---------------------------------------------2 L C OUT 18/40 DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD 7.3 Closing the loop PWM comparator The PWM gain is given by the following formula: Equation 12 V cc G PWM s = ------------------------------------------------------------ V OSCMAX - V OSCMIN where VOSCMAX is the maximum value of a sawtooth waveform and VOSCMIN is the minimum value. A voltage feed-forward is implemented to ensure a constant GPWM. This is obtained by generating a sawtooth waveform directly proportional to the input voltage VCC. Equation 13 V OSCMAX - V OSCMIN = K V CC Where K is equal to 0.038. Therefore the PWM gain is also equal to: Equation 14 1 G PWM s = ---- = const K This means that even if the input voltage changes, the error amplifier does not change its value to keep the loop in regulation, thus ensuring a better line regulation and line transient response. In summary, the open loop gain can be expressed as: Equation 15 R2 G s = G PWM s -------------------- A O s A LC s R1 + R2 Example 1 Considering RC = 1.8 k, CC = 68 nF and CP = 330 pF, the poles and zeroes of A0 are: FP1 = 2.9 Hz FP2 = 265 kHz FZ1 = 1.3 kHz If L = 12 H, COUT = 330 F and ESR = 55 m, the poles and zeroes of ALC become: FPLC = 2.5 kHz FZESR = 8.7 kHz Finally R1 = 5.6 k and R2 = 3.3 k. DocID13958 Rev 9 19/40 40 Closing the loop A5973AD The gain and phase bode diagrams are plotted respectively in Figure 11 and Figure 12. Figure 11. Module plot Figure 12. Phase plot The cut-off frequency and the phase margin are: Equation 16 F C = 30KHz 20/40 Phase margin = 66.8 DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD Application information 8 Application information 8.1 Component selection Input capacitor The input capacitor must be able to support the maximum input operating voltage and the maximum RMS input current. Since step-down converters draw current from the input in pulses, the input current is squared and the height of each pulse is equal to the output current. The input capacitor has to absorb all this switching current, which can be up to the load current divided by two (worst case, with duty cycle of 50%). For this reason, the quality of these capacitors has to be very high to minimize the power dissipation generated by the internal ESR, thereby improving system reliability and efficiency. The critical parameter is usually the RMS current rating, which must be higher than the RMS input current. The maximum RMS input current (flowing through the input capacitor) is: Equation 17 2 2 2D D I RMS = I O D - ---------------- + ------2 Where is the expected system efficiency, D is the duty cycle and IO is the output DC current. This function reaches its maximum value at D = 0.5 and the equivalent RMS current is equal to IO divided by 2 (considering = 1). The maximum and minimum duty cycles are: Equation 18 V OUT + V F D MAX = ------------------------------------V INMIN - V SW and Equation 19 V OUT + V F D MIN = -------------------------------------V INMAX - V SW Where VF is the freewheeling diode forward voltage and VSW the voltage drop across the internal PDMOS. Considering the range DMIN to DMAX, it is possible to determine the max. IRMS going through the input capacitor. Capacitors that can be considered are: Electrolytic capacitors: These are widely used due to their low price and their availability in a wide range of RMS current ratings. The only drawback is that, considering ripple current rating requirements, they are physically larger than other capacitors. Ceramic capacitors: If available for the required value and voltage rating, these capacitors usually have a higher RMS current rating for a given physical dimension (due to very low ESR). The drawback is the considerably high cost. DocID13958 Rev 9 21/40 40 Application information A5973AD Tantalum capacitors: Very good, small tantalum capacitors with very low ESR are becoming more available. However, they can occasionally burn if subjected to very high current during charge. Therefore, it is better to avoid this type of capacitor for the input filter of the device. They can, however, be subjected to high surge current when connected to the power supply. Table 6. List of ceramic capacitors for the A5973AD Manufacturer Series Capacitor value (F) Rated voltage (V) TAIYO YUDEN UMK325BJ106MM-T 10 50 MURATA GRM42-2 X7R 475K 50 4.7 50 High dv/dt voltage spikes on the input side can be critical for DC/DC converters. A good power layout and input voltage filtering help to minimize this issue. In addition to the above considerations, a 1 F/50 V ceramic capacitor as close as possible to the VCC and GND pins is always suggested to adequately filter VCC spikes. Output capacitor The output capacitor is very important to meet the output voltage ripple requirement. Using a small inductor value is useful to reduce the size of the choke but it increases the current ripple. So, to reduce the output voltage ripple, a low ESR capacitor is required. Nevertheless, the ESR of the output capacitor introduces a zero in the open loop gain, which helps to increase the phase margin of the system. If the zero goes to a very high frequency, its effect is negligible. For this reason, ceramic capacitors and very low ESR capacitors in general should be avoided. Tantalum and electrolytic capacitors are usually a good choice for this purpose. A list of some tantalum capacitor manufacturers is provided in Table 7. Table 7. Output capacitor selection Manufacturer Series Cap value (F) Rated voltage (V) ESR (m) TAE 100 to 470 4 to 16 25 to 35 THB/C/E 100 to 470 4 to 16 25 to 55 AVX TPS 100 to 470 4 to 35 50 to 200 KEMET T494/5 100 to 470 4 to 20 30 to 200 Sprague 595D 220 to 390 4 to 20 160 to 650 Sanyo POSCAP(1) 1. POSCAP capacitors have some characteristics which are very similar to tantalum. 22/40 DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD Application information Inductor The inductor value is very important as it fixes the ripple current flowing through the output capacitor. The ripple current is usually fixed at 20 - 40% of Iomax, which is 0.3 - 0.6 A with IOmax = 1.5 A. The approximate inductor value is obtained using the following formula: Equation 20 V IN - V OUT L = ---------------------------------- T ON I where TON is the ON time of the internal switch, given by D * T. For example, with VOUT = 3.3 V, VIN = 12 V and IO = 0.45 A, the inductor value is about 12 H. The peak current through the inductor is given by: Equation 21 I I PK = I O + ----2 and it can be observed that if the inductor value decreases, the peak current (which must be lower than the current limit of the device) increases. So, when the peak current is fixed, a higher inductor value allows a higher value for the output current. In Table 8, some inductor manufacturers are listed. Table 8. Inductor selection 8.2 Manufacturer Series Inductor value (H) Saturation current (A) Coilcraft DO3316T 15 to 33 2.0 to 3.0 Coiltronics UP1B 22 to 33 2.0 to 2.4 BI HM76-3 15 to 33 2.5 to 3.3 Epcos B82476 15 to 33 2 to 3 Wurth Elektronik 74456115 15 to 33 2.5 to 3 Layout considerations The layout of switching DC-DC converters is very important to minimize noise and interference. Power-generating portions of the layout are the main cause of noise and so high switching current loop areas should be kept as small as possible and lead lengths as short as possible. High impedance paths (in particular the feedback connections) are susceptible to interference, so they should be as far as possible from the high current paths. A layout example is provided in Figure 13. The input and output loops are minimized to avoid radiation and high frequency resonance problems. The feedback pin connections to the external divider are very close to the device to avoid pickup noise. Another important issue is the ground plane of the board. Since the package has an exposed pad, it is very important to connect it to an extended ground plane in order to reduce the thermal resistance junction to ambient. DocID13958 Rev 9 23/40 40 Application information A5973AD Figure 13. Layout example A5973AD 8.3 Thermal considerations The dissipated power of the device is tied to three different sources: Conduction losses due to the not insignificant RDSON, which are equal to: Equation 22 2 P ON = R DSON I OUT D Where D is the duty cycle of the application. Note that the duty cycle is theoretically given by the ratio between VOUT and VIN, but in practice it is substantially higher than this value to compensate for the losses in the overall application. For this reason, the switching losses related to the RDSON increases compared to an ideal case. Switching losses due to turning ON and OFF. These are derived using the following equation: Equation 23 T ON + T OFF P SW = V IN I OUT ------------------------------------ F SW = V IN I OUT T SW F SW 2 Where TRISE and TFALL represent the switching times of the power element that cause the switching losses when driving an inductive load (see Figure 14). TSW is the equivalent switching time. 24/40 DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD Application information Figure 14. Switching losses Quiescent current losses. Equation 24 P Q = V IN I Q Where IQ is the quiescent current. Example 2 VIN = 12 V VOUT = 3.3 V IOUT = 1.5 A RDS(on) has a typical value of 0.25 at 25 C and increases up to a maximum value of 0.5. at 150 C. We can consider a value of 0.4 . TSW is approximately 70 ns. IQ has a typical value of 2.7 mA at VIN = 12 V. The overall losses are: Equation 25 2 P TOT = R DSON I OUT D + V IN I OUT T SW F SW + V IN I Q = 2 = 0.4 1.5 0.3 + 12 1.5 70 10 -9 3 500 10 + 12 2.7 10 -3 0.93W The junction temperature of device will be: Equation 26 T J = T A + Rth J - A P TOT Where TA is the ambient temperature and RthJ-A is the thermal resistance junction to ambient. Considering that the device is mounted on the board with a good ground plane, that it has a thermal resistance junction to ambient (RthJ-A) of about 40 C/W, and an ambient temperature of about 70 C: Equation 27 T J = 70 + 0.93 42 110C DocID13958 Rev 9 25/40 40 Application information 8.4 A5973AD Short-circuit protection In overcurrent protection mode, when the peak current reaches the current limit, the device reduces the TON down to its minimum value (approximately 250 nsec) and the switching frequency to approximately one third of its nominal value even when synchronized to an external signal (see Section 5.4: Current protection on page 11). In these conditions, the duty cycle is strongly reduced and, in most applications, this is enough to limit the current to ILIM. In any event, in case of heavy short-circuit at the output (VO = 0 V) and depending on the application conditions (Vcc value and parasitic effect of external components) the current peak could reach values higher than ILIM. This can be understood considering the inductor current ripple during the ON and OFF phases: ON phase Equation 28 V IN - V out - DCR L + R DSON I I L TON = ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ T ON L OFF phase Equation 29 - V D + V out + DCR L I I L TOFF = --------------------------------------------------------------- T OFF L where VD is the voltage drop across the diode, DCRL is the series resistance of the inductor. In short-circuit conditions VOUT is negligible so during TOFF the voltage across the inductor is very small as equal to the voltage drop across parasitic components (typically the DCR of the inductor and the VFW of the free wheeling diode) while during TON the voltage applied the inductor is instead maximized as approximately equal to VIN. So the Equation 28 and the Equation 29 in overcurrent conditions can be simplified to: Equation 30 V IN - DCR L + R DSON I V IN I L TON = ---------------------------------------------------------------- T ON MIN --------- 250ns L L considering TON that has been already reduced to its minimum. Equation 31 - V D + V out + DCR L I - V D + V out + DCR L I I L TOFF = --------------------------------------------------------------- 3 TSW --------------------------------------------------------------- 6s L L considering that fSW has been already reduced to one third of the nominal. In case a short-circuit at the output is applied and VIN = 12 V the inductor current is controlled in most of the applications (see Figure 15). When the application must sustain the short-circuit condition for an extended period, the external components (mainly the inductor and diode) must be selected based on this value. In case the VIN is very high, it could occur that the ripple current during TOFF (Equation 31) does not compensate the current increase during TON(Equation 30). Figure 17 shows an example of a power-up phase with VIN = VIN MAX = 36 V whereIL TON > IL TOFF, so the current escalates and the balance between Equation 30 and Equation 31 occurs at a current slightly higher than the current limit. This must be taken into account in particular to avoid the risk of an abrupt inductor saturation. 26/40 DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD Application information Figure 15. Short-circuit current VIN = 12 V Figure 16. Short-circuit current VIN = 24 V Figure 17. Short-circuit current VIN = 36 V DocID13958 Rev 9 27/40 40 Application information 8.5 A5973AD Application circuit Figure 18 shows the evaluation board application circuit, where the input supply voltage, VCC, can range from 4 V to 36 V and the output voltage is adjustable from 1.235 V to 6.3 V due to the voltage rating of the output capacitor,. Figure 18. Evaluation board application circuit A5973AD Table 9. Component list 28/40 Reference Part number Description Manufacturer C1 GRM42-2 X7R 475K 50 4.7 F, 50 V Murata C2 POSCAP 6TAE330ML 330 F, 6.3 V Sanyo C3 C1206C221J5GAC 47 pF, 5%, 50 V KEMET C4 C1206C223K5RAC 22 nF, 10%, 50 V KEMET R1 5.6 k, 1%, 0.1 W 0603 Neohm R2 3.3 k, 1%, 0.1 W 0603 Neohm R3 12 k, 1%, 0.1 W 0603 Neohm D1 STPS3L40U 2 A, 40 V STMicroelectronics L1 DO3316T-153MLD 15 H, 3.1 A Coilcraft DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD Application information Figure 19. PCB layout (component side) Figure 20. PCB layout (bottom side) SL Figure 21. PCB layout (front side) LC DocID13958 Rev 9 29/40 40 Application information 8.6 A5973AD Positive buck-boost regulator The device can be used to implement a step-up/down converter with a positive output voltage. The output voltage is given by: Equation 32 D V OUT = V IN ------------1-D where the ideal duty cycle D for the buck boost converter is: Equation 33 V OUT D = -----------------------------V IN + V OUT However, due to power losses in the passive elements, the real duty cycle is always higher than this. The real value (that can be measured in the application) should be used in the following formulas. The peak current flowing in the embedded switch is: Equation 34 I LOAD I RIPPLE I LOAD V IN D I SW = --------------- + -------------------- = --------------- + ----------- --------1-D 2 1 - D 2 L f SW while its average current is equal to: Equation 35 I LOAD I SW = --------------1-D This is due to the fact that the current flowing through the internal power switch is delivered to the output only during the OFF phase. The switch peak current must be lower than the minimum current limit of the overcurrent protection (see Table 4 on page 6 for details) while the average current must be lower than the rated DC current of the device. As a consequence, the maximum output current is: Equation 36 I OUT MAX I SW MAX 1 - D where ISW MAX represents the rated current of the device. The current capability is reduced by the term (1 - D) and so, for example, with a duty cycle of 0.5, and considering an average current through the switch of 1.5 A, the maximum output current deliverable to the load is 0.75 A. 30/40 DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD Application information Figure 22 shows the schematic circuit of this topology for a 12 V output voltage and 5 V input. Figure 22. Positive buck-boost regulator A5973AD 8.7 Negative buck-boost regulator In Figure 23, the schematic circuit for a standard buck-boost topology is shown. The output voltage is: Equation 37 D V OUT = - V IN ------------1-D where the ideal duty cycle D for the buck boost converter is: Equation 38 - V OUT D = -----------------------------V IN - V OUT The considerations given in Section 8.6 for the real duty cycle are still valid here. Also the Equation 34 till Equation 36 can be used to calculate the maximum output current. So, as an example, considering the conversion VIN = 12 V to VOUT = -5 V, ILOAD = 0.4 A: Equation 39 5 D = ---------------- = 0.706 5 + 12 Equation 40 I LOAD 0.5 I SW = --------------- = ------------------------ = 1.3A 1-D 1 - 0.706 An important thing to take into account is that the ground pin of the device is connected to the negative output voltage. Therefore, the device is subjected to a voltage equal to VIN - VO, which must be lower than 36 V (the maximum operating input voltage). DocID13958 Rev 9 31/40 40 Application information A5973AD Figure 23. Negative buck-boost regulator A5973AD 8.8 Synchronization example See Section 5.3 on page 10 for details. Figure 24. Synchronization example A5973AD 32/40 DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD A5973AD 8.9 Application information Compensation network with MLCC at the output MLCCs (multiple layer ceramic capacitor) with values in the range of 10 F - 22 F and rated voltages in the range of 10 V-25 V are available today at relatively low cost from many manufacturers. These capacitors have very low ESR values (a few m) and thus are occasionally used for the output filter in order to reduce the voltage ripple and the overall size of the application. However, a very low ESR value affects the compensation of the loop (see Section 7 on page 16) and in order to keep the system stable, a more complicated compensation network may be required. However, due to the architecture of the internal error amplifier the bandwidth with this compensation is limited. That is why output capacitors with a not negligible ESR are suggested. The selection of the output capacitor have to guarantee that the zero introduced by this component is inside the designed system bandwidth and close to the frequency of the double pole introduced by the LC filter. A general rule for the selection of this compound for the system stability is provided in Equation 41. Equation 41 1 f Z ESR = ------------------------------------------------ bandwidth 2 ESR C OUT f LC f Z ESR 10 f LC Figure 25 shows an example of a compensation network stabilizing the system with ceramic capacitors at the output (the optimum component value depends on the application). Figure 25. MLCC compensation network example A5973AD DocID13958 Rev 9 33/40 40 Application information 8.10 A5973AD External SOFT_START network At the start-up the device can quickly increase the current up to the current limit in order to charge the output capacitor. If soft ramp up of the output voltage is required, an external soft-start network can be implemented as shown in Figure 26. The capacitor C is charged up to an external reference through R and the BJT clamps the COMP pin. This clamps the duty cycle, limiting the slew rate of the output voltage. Figure 26. Soft-start network example A5973AD 34/40 DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD 9 Typical characteristics Typical characteristics Figure 27. Junction temperature vs. output current - VIN = 5 V Figure 28. Junction temperature vs. output current - VIN = 12 V Figure 29. Load regulation Figure 30. Line regulation Vo (V) Vo (V) 3.312 3.312 Vcc = 12V Vo = 3.3V 3.308 3.304 3.304 Tj = 25C 3.3 3.296 3.292 3.292 3.288 3.288 3.28 3.28 3.276 3.276 0.5 Tj = 125C 3.284 Tj = 125C 0 Tj = 25C 3.3 3.296 3.284 Vcc = 12V Vo = 3.3V 3.308 1 1.5 0 10 Io (A) Figure 31. Output voltage vs. junction temperature Vo (V) 1.25 20 Vcc (V) 30 40 Figure 32. Shutdown current vs. junction temperature Ishd (A) 70 1.24 60 Vcc = 12V 1.23 50 1.22 Vcc = 12V 1.21 40 Vcc=12V 1.2 -50 30 0 50 Tj (C) 100 150 DocID13958 Rev 9 -50 0 50 Tj (C) 100 150 35/40 40 Typical characteristics A5973AD Figure 33. Efficiency vs. output current VIN = 12 V 36/40 Figure 34. Efficiency vs. output current VIN = 5 V DocID13958 Rev 9 A5973AD 10 Package information Package information In order to meet environmental requirements, ST offers these devices in different grades of ECOPACK(R) packages, depending on their level of environmental compliance. ECOPACK specifications, grade definitions and product status are available at: www.st.com. ECOPACK is an ST trademark. Figure 35. HSOP8 package outline DocID13958 Rev 9 37/40 40 Package information A5973AD Table 10. HSOP8 package mechanical data Dimensions Symbol mm Min. Typ. A Max. Min. Typ. 1.70 Max. 0.0669 A1 0.00 A2 1.25 b 0.31 0.51 0.0122 0.0201 c 0.17 0.25 0.0067 0.0098 D 4.80 4.90 5.00 0.1890 0.1929 0.1969 D1 3 3.1 3.2 0.118 0.122 0.126 E 5.80 6.00 6.20 0.2283 0.2441 E1 3.80 3.90 4.00 0.1496 0.1575 E2 2.31 2.41 2.51 0.091 e 0.10 0.00 0.0039 0.0492 0.095 0.099 1.27 h 0.25 0.50 0.0098 0.0197 L 0.40 1.27 0.0157 0.0500 k ccc 38/40 inch 0 (min.), 8 (max.) 0.10 DocID13958 Rev 9 0.0039 A5973AD 11 Ordering information Ordering information Table 11. Ordering information Order code Package A5973AD Tube HSOP8 A5973ADTR 12 Packaging Tape and reel Revision history Table 12. Document revision history Date Revision Changes 07-Aug-2007 1 Initial release 31-Oct-2007 2 Updated: Table 4 on page 6, Table 5 on page 12 14-Jan-2008 3 Updated Table 5 on page 12 02-May-2008 4 Updated Table 4 on page 6 27-Aug-2008 5 Updated Table 4 on page 6 22-Apr-2009 6 Updated Chapter 7 on page 16 04-Nov-2009 7 Updated Figure 29, Figure 30, Figure 31, Figure 32 on page 35 and Table 4 on page 6 27-May-2014 8 Updated Section 8.1: Component selection on page 21 (added text below Table 6). Updated titles of Figure 27 on page 35, Figure 28 on page 35, Figure 33 on page 36, and Figure 34 on page 36 (added VIN values). Updated Section 10: Package information on page 37 (updated titles, reversed order of Figure 35 and Table 10, updated header of Table 10 ). Added Section 11: Ordering information. Updated cross-references throughout document Minor modifications throughout document. 12-Aug-2014 9 Updated unit in Table 4 on page 6 (replaced "W" by "" in row of RDS(on) symbol). 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