Datasheet NB671GQ Datasheet (MPS) [ru]

Page 1
NB671
A
f
DESCRIPTION
The NB671 is a fully integrated high frequency synchronous rectified step-down switch mode converter. It offers very compact solutions to achieve 6A continuous output current and 9A peak current over a wide input supply range with excellent load and line regulation. The NB671 operates at high efficiency over a wide output current load range.
Constant-On-Time (COT) control mode provides fast transient response and eases loop stabilization.
Under voltage lockout is internally set as 4.6V, An open drain power good signal indicates the output is within its nominal voltage range.
Full protection features include OCP, OVP, and thermal shut down.
The converter requires minimum number of external components and is available in QFN16 (3mmx3mm) package.
24V, High Current
Synchronous Step-down Converter
FEATURES
Wide 5V to 24V Operating Input Range
6A Continuous Output Current
9A Peak Output Current
Low R
(ON) Internal Power MOSFETs
DS
Proprietary Switching Loss Reduction
Technique
1% Reference Voltage
1.7ms Internal Soft Start
Output Discharge
500kHZ Switching Frequency
OCP, OVP, UVP Protection and Thermal
Shutdown
Latch off Reset via EN or Power Cycle.
Output Adjustable from 0.604V to 5.5V
APPLICATIONS
Laptop Computer
Tablet PC
Networking Systems
Personal Video Recorders
Flat Panel Television and Monitors
Distributed Power Systems
TYPICAL APPLICATION
ll MPS parts are lead-free and adhere to the RoHS directive. For MPS green
status, please visit MPS website under Products, Quality Assurance page.
“MPS” and “The Future of Analog IC Technology” are registered trademarks o Monolithic Power Systems, Inc.
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 1 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 2
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
ORDERING INFORMATION
Part Number* Package Top Marking
NB671GQ QFN-16 (3mmx3mm) AEA
* For Tape & Reel, add suffix –Z (e.g. NB671GQ–Z)
PACKAGE REFERENCE
TOP VIEW
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
(1)
Supply Voltage VIN ....................................... 24V
............................................. -0.3V to 24.3V
V
SW
V
(30ns) ........................................ -3V to 28V
SW
V
(5ns) .......................................... -6V to 28V
SW
.................................................. VSW + 5.5V
V
BST
V
............................................................... 12V
EN
Enable Current I
(2)
................................ 2.5mA
EN
All Other Pins ............................. –0.3V to +5.5V
Continuous Power Dissipation (T
=+25°)
A
(3)
QFN16...……………………….…..…………1.8W
Junction Temperature .............................. 150°C
Lead Temperature ................................... 260°C
Storage Temperature ............... -65°C to +150°C
Recommended Operating Conditions
(4)
Supply Voltage VIN ............................. 5V to 22V
Output Voltage V Enable Current I Operating Junction Temp. (T
................... 0.604V to 5.5V
OUT
...................................... 1mA
EN
). -40°C to +125°C
J
Thermal Resistance
(5)
θ
JA
θJC
QFN-16 (3mmx3mm) .............. 70 ...... 15 ... °C/W
Notes:
1) Exceeding these ratings may damage the device.
2) Refer to “Configuring the EN Control”.
3) The maximum allowable power dissipation is a function of the maximum junction temperature T ambient thermal resistance
. The maximum allowable continuous power dissipation at
T
A
any ambient temperature is calculated by P
)/JA. Exceeding the maximum allowable power dissipation
T
A
will cause excessive die temperature, and the regulator will go into thermal shutdown. Internal thermal shutdown circuitry protects the device from permanent damage.
4) The device is not guaranteed to function outside of its operating conditions.
5) Measured on JESD51-7, 4-layer PCB.
(MAX), the junction-to-
J
, and the ambient temperature
JA
(MAX)=(TJ(MAX)-
D
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 2 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 3
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
(6)
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
VIN = 12V, TJ = 25°C, unless otherwise noted.
Parameters Symbol Condition Min Typ Max Units
Supply Current
= 0V
Supply Current (Shutdown) IIN
Supply Current (Quiescent) IIN
MOSFET
High-side Switch On Resistance HS
Low-side Switch On Resistance LS
RDS-ON
RDS-ON
Switch Leakage SW
Current Limit
V
EN
= 2V, VFB = 0.65V
V
EN
30 m
15 m
VEN = 0V, VSW = 0V 0 1 A
LKG
0 1 A
100 160 200 A
Low-side Valley Current Limit I
8 8.5 9.5 A
LIMIT
Switching frequency and minimum off timer
Switching frequency FS 400 500 600 kHz
Minimum Off Time
T
250 300 350 ns
OFF
Over-voltage and Under-voltage Protection
OVP Threshold V
OVP Delay T
UVP Threshold V
UVP Delay T
OVP
OVPDEL
UVP
UVPDEL
125% 130% 135% V
2.5 s
55% 60% 65% V
12 s
REF
REF
Reference And Soft Start
Reference Voltage V
598 604 610 mV
REF
Feedback Current IFB VFB = 0.604V 10 50 nA
Soft Start Time TSS 1.5 1.7 1.95 ms
Enable And UVLO
Enable Input Low Voltage VILEN 1.15 1.25 1.35 V
Enable Hysteresis V
Enable Input Current IEN
VCC Under Voltage Lockout Threshold Rising
VCC Under Voltage Lockout Threshold Hysteresis
VCC
VCC
100 mV
EN-HYS
V
= 2V 5
EN
VEN = 0V 0
4.6 4.85 V
Vth
480 mV
HYS
A
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 3 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 4
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
(6)
(6)
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
VIN = 12V, TJ = 25°C, unless otherwise noted.
Parameters Symbol Condition Min Typ Max Units
VCC Regulator
VCC Regulator V
VCC Load Regulation
CC
4.8 5.1 5.3 V
Icc=5mA
5
%
Power Good
FB Rising (Good) PG
FB Falling (Fault) PG
FB Rising (Fault) PG
FB Falling (Good) PG
95
Vth-Hi
85
Vth-Lo
115
Vth-Hi
105
Vth-Lo
%V
REF
Power Good Lower to High Delay PGTd 0.5 ms
Power Good Sink Current Capability
Power Good Leakage Current I
V
Sink 4mA 0.4 V
PG
PG LEAK
VPG = 3.3V 12 A
Thermal Protection
Thermal Shutdown
Thermal Shutdown Hysteresis
Note:
6) Guaranteed by design.
T
135 150 °C
SD
25 °C
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 4 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 5
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
PIN FUNCTIONS
PIN # Name Description
Supply Voltage. The IN pin supplies power for internal MOSFET and regulator. The
1 VIN
2 PGND Power Ground. Use wide PCB traces and multiple vias to make the connection
4 PG
3, 5, 6 NC
7 VOUT
8,9
Exposed
Pad 15, 16
10 BST
11 VCC
12 FB
13 EN
14 AGND
SW
NB671 operate from a +5V to +22V input rail. An input capacitor is needed to decouple the input rail. Use wide PCB traces and multiple vias to make the connection.
Power good output, the output of this pin is an open drain signal and is high if the output voltage is higher than 95% of the nominal voltage. There is a delay from FB 95% to PGOOD goes high.
VOUT pin is used to sense the output voltage of the Buck regulator, connect this pin to the output capacitor of the regulator directly.
Switch Output. Connect this pin to the inductor and bootstrap capacitor. This pin is driven up to the VIN voltage by the high-side switch during the on-time of the PWM duty cycle. The inductor current drives the SW pin negative during the off-time. The on-resistance of the low-side switch and the internal diode fixes the negative voltage. Use wide and short PCB traces to make the connection. Try to minimize the area of the SW pattern.
Bootstrap. A capacitor connected between SW and BS pins is required to form a floating supply across the high-side switch driver.
Internal 5V LDO output. The driver and control circuits are powered from this voltage. Decouple with a minimum 1µF ceramic capacitor as close to the pin as possible. X7R or X5R grade dielectric ceramic capacitors are recommended for their stable temperature characteristics.
Feedback. An external resistor divider from the output to GND, tapped to the FB pin, sets the output voltage. It is recommended to place the resistor divider as close to FB pin as possible. Vias should be avoided on the FB traces. It is recommended to set the current through FB resistors around 10uA.
Enable pin. EN is a digital input that turns the regulator on or off. Drive EN high to turn on the regulator, drive it low to turn it off. Connect EN with VIN through a pull-up resistor or a resistive voltage divider for automatic startup. Do not float this pin.
Analog ground. The internal reference is referred to AGND. Connect the GND of the FB divider resistor to AGND for better load regulation.
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 5 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 6
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS
Performance waveforms are tested on the evaluation board of the Design Example section. VIN=19V, V
=1.05V, L=1.2µH, TJ=+25°C, unless otherwise noted.
OUT
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 6 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 7
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
Performance waveforms are tested on the evaluation board of the Design Example section. VIN=19V, V
=1.05V, L=1.2µH, TJ=+25°C, unless otherwise noted.
OUT
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 7 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 8
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
Performance waveforms are tested on the evaluation board of the Design Example section. VIN=19V, V
=1.05V, L=1.2µH, TJ=+25°C, unless otherwise noted.
OUT
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 8 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 9
BLOCK DIAGRAM
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
Figure 1—Functional Block Diagram
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 9 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 10
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
OPERATION
PWM Operation
The NB671 is fully integrated synchronous rectified step-down switch mode converter. Constant-on-time (COT) control is employed to provide fast transient response and easy loop stabilization. At the beginning of each cycle, the high-side MOSFET (HS-FET) is turned ON when the feedback voltage (VFB) is below the reference voltage (VREF), which indicates insufficient output voltage. The ON period is determined by both the output voltage and input voltage to make the switching frequency fairy constant over input voltage range.
After the ON period elapses, the HS-FET is turned off, or becomes OFF state. It is turned ON again when VFB drops below VREF. By repeating operation this way, the converter regulates the output voltage. The integrated low­side MOSFET (LS-FET) is turned on when the HS-FET is in its OFF state to minimize the conduction loss. There will be a dead short between input and GND if both HS-FET and LS­FET are turned on at the same time. It’s called shoot-through. In order to avoid shoot-through, a dead-time (DT) is internally generated between HS-FET off and LS-FET on, or LS-FET off and HS-FET on.
An internal compensation is applied for COT control to make a more stable operation even when ceramic capacitors are used as output capacitors, this internal compensation will then improve the jitter performance without affect the line or load regulation.
Heavy-Load Operation
When the output current is high and the inductor current is always above zero amps, it is called continuous-conduction-mode (CCM). The CCM mode operation is shown in Figure 2 shown. When V
is below V
FB
, HS-MOSFET is turned
REF
on for a fixed interval which is determined by one- shot on-timer as equation 1 shown. When the HS-MOSFET is turned off, the LS-MOSFET is turned on until next period.
In CCM mode operation, the switching frequency is fairly constant and it is called PWM mode.
Light-Load Operation
With the load decrease, the inductor current decrease too. Once the inductor current touch zero, the operation is transition from continuous­conduction-mode (CCM) to discontinuous­conduction-mode (DCM).
The light load operation is shown in Figure 3. When V
is below V
FB
, HS-MOSFET is turned
REF
on for a fixed interval which is determined by one- shot on-timer as equation 1 shown. When the HS-MOSFET is turned off, the LS-MOSFET is turned on until the inductor current reaches zero. In DCM operation, the V V
when the inductor current is approaching
REF
does not reach
FB
zero. The LS-FET driver turns into tri-state (high Z) whenever the inductor current reaches zero. A current modulator takes over the control of LS­FET and limits the inductor current to less than ­1mA. Hence, the output capacitors discharge slowly to GND through LS-FET. As a result, the efficiency at light load condition is greatly improved. At light load condition, the HS-FET is not turned ON as frequently as at heavy load condition. This is called skip mode.
At light load or no load condition, the output drops very slowly and the NB671 reduces the switching frequency naturally and then high efficiency is achieved at light load.
Figure 2—Heavy Load Operation
Figure 3—Light Load Operation
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 10 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 11
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
As the output current increases from the light load condition, the time period within which the current modulator regulates becomes shorter. The HS-FET is turned ON more frequently. Hence, the switching frequency increases correspondingly. The output current reaches the critical level when the current modulator time is zero. The critical level of the output current is determined as follows:
I
OUT
−×
=
2LF V
×× ×
SW IN
(1)
IN OUT OUT
(V V ) V
It turns into PWM mode once the output current exceeds the critical level. After that, the switching frequency stays fairly constant over the output current range.
Jitter and FB Ramp Slope
Jitter occurs in both PWM and skip modes when noise in the VFB ripple propagates a delay to the HS-FET driver, as shown in Figures 4 and 5. Jitter can affect system stability, with noise immunity proportional to the steepness of VFB’s downward slope. However, VFB ripple does not directly affect noise immunity.
V
V
NOISE
S LO PE1
V
FB
V
RE
F
resistor. Ceramic capacitors usually can not be used as output capacitor.
To realize the stability, the ESR value should be
R
ESR
TT
SW ON
×π
C
+
OUT
0.7 2
(2)
chosen as follow:
T
is the switching period.
SW
The NB671 has built in internal ramp compensation to make sure the system is stable even without the help of output capacitor’s ESR; and thus the pure ceramic capacitor solution can be applicant. The pure ceramic capacitor solution can significantly reduce the output ripple, total BOM cost and the board area.
Figure 6 shows a typical output circuit in PWM mode without an external ramp circuit. Turn to application information section for design steps without external compensation.
SW
FB
L
R1
R2
ESR
CAP
Vo
J itter
Figure 4—Jitter in PWM Mode
V
V
NOISE
SLOPE2
HS Driver
V
FB
Figure 6—Simplified Circuit in PWM Mode without External Ramp Compensation
When using a large-ESR capacitor on the output, add a ceramic capacitor with a value of 10uF or less to in parallel to minimize the effect of ESL.
V
REF
Operating with external ramp compensation
The NB671 is usually able to support ceramic
HS Driver
Jitter
Figure 5—Jitter in Skip Mode
Operating without external ramp
output capacitors without external ramp, however, in some of the cases, the internal ramp may not be enough to stabilize the system, and external ramp compensation is needed. Skip to application information section for design steps with external ramp compensation.
The traditional constant-on-time control scheme is intrinsically unstable if output capacitor’s ESR is not large enough as an effective current-sense
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 11 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 12
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
Figure 7—Simplified Circuit in PWM Mode with External Ramp Compensation
Figure 7 shows a simplified external ramp compensation (R4 and C4) for PWM mode, with HS-FET off. Chose R1, R2, R9 and C4 of the external ramp to meet the following condition:
⎛⎞
RR
11
2F C 5RR
π× × +
SW 4 1 2
+
×
12
⎜⎟
R
(3)
9
⎝⎠
Where:
IIII=+≈
R4 C4 FB C4
And the Vramp on the V
can then be estimated
FB
(4)
as:
VV
VT
RAMP ON
IN OUT
×
RC R//RR
×+
44 129
The downward slope of the V
R//R
12
ripple then
FB
(5)
follows
==
V
SLOPE1
V
RAMP
TRC
off 4 4
V
OUT
(6)
×
As can be seen from equation 6, if there is instability in PWM mode, we can reduce either R4 or C4. If C4 can not be reduced further due to limitation from equation 3, then we can only reduce R4. For a stable PWM operation, the V
should be design follow equation 7.
slope1
TT
SW ON
0.7 2
+-RC
-V V +
slope1 OUT
×
2LC T -T
××
ESR OUT
OUT SW on
Io 10
×
-3
(7)
Io is the load current.
In skip mode, the downward slope of the V
FB
ripple is the same whether the external ramp is used or not. Figure 8 shows the simplified circuit of the skip mode when both the HS-FET and LS­FET are off.
Figure 8—Simplified Circuit in skip Mode
The downward slope of the VFB ripple in skip mode can be determined as follow:
V
SLOPE2
=
(R R //Ro) C
()
12 OUT
REF
(8)
V
Where Ro is the equivalent load resistor.
As described in Figure 5, VSLOPE2 in the skip mode is lower than that is in the PWM mode, so it is reasonable that the jitter in the skip mode is larger. If one wants a system with less jitter during light load condition, the values of the VFB resistors should not be too big, however, that will decrease the light load efficiency.
Configuring the EN Control
EN is used to enable or disable the whole chip. Pull En high to turn on the regulator and pull EN low to turn it off. Do not float the pin.
For automatic start-up the EN pin can be pulled up to input voltage through a resistive voltage divider. Choose the values of the pull-up resistor (Rup from Vin pin to EN pin) and the pull-down resistor (Rdown from EN pin to GND) to determine the automatic start-up voltage:
(R R )
+
V1.25 (V)
IN START
up down
R
down
(9)
For example, for Rup=150k and Rdown=51k,the
V is set at 4.93V.
IN START
To avoid noise, a 10nF ceramic capacitor from EN to GND is recommended.
There is an internal Zener diode on the EN pin, which clamps the EN pin voltage to prevent it from running away. The maximum pull up current assuming a worst case 12V internal Zener clamp should be less than 1mA.
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 12 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 13
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
Therefore, when EN is driven by an external logic signal, the EN voltage should be lower than 12V; when EN is connected with VIN through a pull-up resistor or a resistive voltage divider, the resistance selection should ensure the maximum pull up current less than 1mA.
If using a resistive voltage divider and VIN higher than 12V, the allowed minimum pull-up resistor Rup should meet the following equation:
V -12V
IN
RR
12V
-=1mA
up down
(10)
Especially, just using the pull-up resistor Rup(the pull-down resistor is not connected), the
V is determined by input UVLO, and the
IN-START
minimum resistor value is:
V-12V
R= (W)
IN
up
1mA
(11)
A typical pull-up resistor is 499k.
Soft Start
The NB671 employs soft start (SS) mechanism to ensure smooth output during power-up. When the EN pin becomes high, the internal reference voltage ramps up gradually; hence, the output voltage ramps up smoothly, as well. Once the reference voltage reaches the target value, the soft start finishes and it enters into steady state operation.
If the output is pre-biased to a certain voltage during startup, the IC will disable the switching of both high-side and low-side switches until the voltage on the internal reference exceeds the sensed output voltage at the FB node.
Power Good (PGOOD)
The NB671 has power-good (PGOOD) output used to indicate whether the output voltage of the Buck regulator is ready or not. The PGOOD pin is the open drain of a MOSFET. It should be connected to V
or other voltage source through
CC
a resistor (e.g. 100k). After the input voltage is applied, the MOSFET is turned on so that the PGOOD pin is pulled to GND before SS is ready. After FB voltage reaches 95% of REF voltage, the PGOOD pin is pulled high after a delay. The PGOOD delay time is 0.5ms.
When the FB voltage drops to 85% of REF voltage, the PGOOD pin will be pulled low.
Over Current Protection
NB671 has cycle-by-cycle over current limiting control. The current-limit circuit employs a "valley" current-sensing algorithm. The part uses the Rds(on) of the low side MOSFET as a current-sensing element. If the magnitude of the current-sense signal is above the current-limit threshold, the PWM is not allowed to initiate a new cycle.
The trip level is fixed internally. The inductor current is monitored by the voltage between GND pin and SW pin. GND is used as the positive current sensing node so that GND should be connected to the source terminal of the bottom MOSFET.
Since the comparison is done during the high side MOSFET OFF and low side MOSFET ON state, the OC trip level sets the valley level of the inductor current. Thus, the load current at over­current threshold, I
, can be calculated as
OC
follows:
Δ
I
=+
I I _ limit
OC
inductor
2
(12)
In an over-current condition, the current to the load exceeds the current to the output capacitor; thus the output voltage tends to fall off. Eventually, it will end up with crossing the under voltage protection threshold and shutdown.And fault latching can be reset by EN going low or Power-cycling of VIN.
Over/Under-Voltage Protection (OVP/UVP)
NB671 monitors a resistor divided feedback voltage to detect over and under voltage. When the feedback voltage becomes higher than 115% of the target voltage, the controller will enter Dynamic Regulation Period. During this period, the LS will off when the LS current goes to -1A, this will then discharge the output and try to keep it within the normal range. If the dynamic regulation can not limit the increasing of the Vo, once the feedback voltage becomes higher than 130% of the feedback voltage, the OVP comparator output goes high and the circuit latches as the high-side MOSFET driver OFF and the low-side MOSFET turns on acting as an ­1A current source.
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 13 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 14
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
When the feedback voltage becomes lower than 60% of the target voltage, the UVP comparator output goes high if the UV still occurs after typical 12s delay; then the fault latch will be triggered--­latches HS off and LS on; the LS FET keeps on until the inductor current goes zero. Also fault latching can be reset by EN going low or Power­cycling of VIN.
UVLO Protection
The NB671 has under-voltage lock-out protection (UVLO). When the VCC voltage is higher than the UVLO rising threshold voltage, the part will be powered up. It shuts off when the VIN voltage is lower than the UVLO falling threshold voltage. This is non-latch protection. The part is disabled when the VCC voltage falls below 4.6V. Besides fault latching can be reset by EN going low or Power-cycling of VIN. If an application requires a higher under-voltage lockout (UVLO), use the EN pin as shown in Figure 9 to adjust the input voltage UVLO by using two external resistors. It is recommended to use the enable resistors to set the UVLO falling threshold (VSTOP) above
4.6V. The rising threshold (VSTART) should be set to provide enough hysteresis to allow for any input supply variations.
Thermal Shutdown
Thermal shutdown is employed in the NB671. The junction temperature of the IC is internally monitored. If the junction temperature exceeds the threshold value (typical 150ºC), the converter shuts off. This is a non-latch protection. There is about 25ºC hysteresis. Once the junction temperature drops to about 125ºC, it initiates a SS.
Output Discharge
NB671 discharges the output when EN is low, or the controller is turned off by the protection functions (UVP & OCP, OCP, OVP, UVLO, and thermal shutdown). The part discharges outputs using an internal 6 MOSFET which is connected to VOUT and GND. The external low­side MOSFET is not turned on for the output discharge operation to avoid the possibility of causing negative voltage at the output.
Figure 9—Adjustable UVLO
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 14 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 15
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
APPLICATION INFORMATION
Setting the Output Voltage---without external compensation
For applications that electrolytic capacitor or POS capacitor with a controlled output of ESR is set as output capacitors, or the internal compensation is enough for a stable operation when ceramic capacitors is used, then the external compensation is not need.. The output voltage is set by feedback resistors R1 and R2. As Figure 10 shows.
Figure10—Simplified Circuit of POS Capacitor
First, choose a value for R2. R2 should be chosen reasonably, a small R2 will lead to considerable quiescent current loss while too large R2 makes the FB noise sensitive. It is recommended to choose a value within 5k- 100k for R2,.Typically, set the current through R2 between 5-30uA will make a good balance between system stability and also the no load loss. Then R1 is determined as follow with the output ripple considered:
VVV
RR
=⋅
12
VΔ is the output ripple.
OUT
Setting the Output Voltage---with external compensation
1
−Δ
OUT OUT REF
2
V
REF
(13)
external voltage ramp should be added to FB through resistor R4 and capacitor C4.The output voltage is influenced by ramp voltage V
RAMP
besides R divider as shown in Figure 11. The
can be calculated as shown in equation 7.
V
RAMP
R2 should be chosen reasonably, a small R2 will lead to considerable quiescent current loss while too large R2 makes the FB noise sensitive. It is recommended to choose a value within 5k- 100k for R2.Typically, set the current through R2 between 5-30uA will make a good balance between system stability and also the no load loss. And the value of R1 then is determined as follow:
The V V
FB(AVG)
R
R=
FB(AVG)
1
V
(V -V ) R +R
OUT FB(AVG) 4 9
is the average value on the FB,
FB(AVG)
2
-
varies with the Vin, Vo, and load
(14)
R
2
condition, etc., its value on the skip mode would be lower than that of the PWM mode, which means the load regulation is strictly related to the V V
. Also the line regulation is related to the
FB(AVG)
. If one wants to gets a better load or line
FB(AVG)
regulation, a lower Vramp is suggested, as long as the criterion shown in equation 8 can be met.
For PWM operation, V
value can be
FB(AVG)
deduced from the equation below.
VVV
FB( AVG) REF RAMP
=+ ×
1 2R//RR
R//R
12
12 9
(15)
+
Usually, R9 is set to 0, and it can also be set following equation 14 for a better noise immunity. It should also set to be 5 times smaller than R1//R2 to minimize its influence on Vramp.
R
=
9
2C2F
π× ×
1
4SW
(16)
Using equation 13 to calculate the R1 can be complicated. To simplify the calculation, a DC­blocking capacitor Cdc can be added to filter the DC influence from R4 and R9. Figure 12 shows a simplified circuit with external ramp
Figure11—Simplified Circuit of Ceramic
compensation and a DC-blocking capacitor. With this capacitor, R1 can easily be obtained by
Capacitor
If the system is not stable enough when low ESR ceramic capacitor is used in the output, an
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 15 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 16
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
using the simplified equation for PWM mode operation:
(V V V )
−−
RR
OUT R EF RAMP
=
12
VV
REF RAMP
1
2
1
+
(17)
2
Cdc is suggested to be at least 10 times larger than C4 for better DC blocking performance, and should also not larger than 0.47uF considering start up performance. In case one wants to use larger Cdc for a better FB noise immunity, combined with reduced R1 and R2 to limit the Cdc in a reasonable value without affecting the system start up. Be noted that even when the Cdc is applied, the load and line regulation are still Vramp related.
SW
R4
FB
C4
Cdc
R1
R2
VoL
Ceramic
Figure12—Simplified Circuit of Ceramic
Capacitor with DC blocking capacitor
Input Capacitor
The input current to the step-down converter is discontinuous and therefore requires a capacitor to supply the AC current to the step-down converter while maintaining the DC input voltage. Ceramic capacitors are recommended for best performance and should be placed as close to the VIN pin as possible. Capacitors with X5R and X7R ceramic dielectrics are recommended because they are fairly stable with temperature fluctuations.
The capacitors must also have a ripple current rating greater than the maximum input ripple current of the converter. The input ripple current can be estimated as follows:
VV
II (1 )
×
CIN OUT
OUT OUT
VV
IN IN
The worst-case condition occurs at V
(18)
= 2V
IN
OUT
,
where:
I
CIN
OUT
(19)
I2=
For simplification, choose the input capacitor with an RMS current rating greater than half of the maximum load current.
The input capacitance value determines the input voltage ripple of the converter. If there is an input voltage ripple requirement in the system, choose the input capacitor that meets the specification.
The input voltage ripple can be estimated as follows:
IV V
V(1)
Δ= × ×−
IN
OUT OUT OUT
FC V V
×
SW IN IN IN
Under worst-case conditions where V
1
V
Δ=×
IN
4F C
I
OUT
×
SW IN
(20)
= 2V
IN
OUT
(21)
:
Output Capacitor
The output capacitor is required to maintain the DC output voltage. Ceramic or POSCAP capacitors are recommended. The output voltage ripple can be estimated as:
VV
V(1)(R )
Δ= ×− × +
OUT ESR
OUT OUT
FL V 8FC
×××
SW IN SW OUT
1
(22)
In the case of ceramic capacitors, the impedance at the switching frequency is dominated by the capacitance. The output voltage ripple is mainly caused by the capacitance. For simplification, the output voltage ripple can be estimated as:
VV
V(1)
Δ= ×
OUT
8F LC V
OUT OUT
2
×××
SW OUT IN
(23)
The output voltage ripple caused by ESR is very small. Therefore, an external ramp is needed to stabilize the system. The external ramp can be generated through resistor R4 and capacitor C4.
In the case of POSCAP capacitors, the ESR dominates the impedance at the switching frequency. The ramp voltage generated from the ESR is high enough to stabilize the system. Therefore, an external ramp is not needed. A minimum ESR value around 12m is required to ensure stable operation of the converter. For
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 16 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 17
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
simplification, the output ripple can be approximated as:
VV
V(1)R
Δ= ×− ×
OUT ESR
OUT OUT
FL V
×
SW IN
(24)
Maximum output capacitor limitation should be also considered in design application. NB671 has an around 1.7ms soft-start time period. If the output capacitor value is too high, the output voltage can’t reach the design value during the soft-start time, and then it will fail to regulate. The maximum output capacitor value C
o_max
can be
limited approximately by:
C(I I)T/V=−× (25)
O _ MAX LIM _ AVG OUT ss OUT
Where, I during soft-start period. T
is the average start-up current
LIM_AVG
is the soft-start time.
ss
Inductor
The inductor is necessary to supply constant current to the output load while being driven by the switched input voltage. A larger-value inductor will result in less ripple current that will result in lower output ripple voltage. However, a larger-value inductor will have a larger physical footprint, higher series resistance, and/or lower saturation current. A good rule for determining the inductance value is to design the peak-to­peak ripple current in the inductor to be in the range of 30% to 40% of the maximum output current, and that the peak inductor current is below the maximum switch current limit. The inductance value can be calculated by:
PCB Layout Guide
1. The high current paths (GND, IN, and SW)
should be placed very close to the device with short, direct and wide traces.
2. Put the input capacitors as close to the IN
and GND pins as possible.
3. Put the decoupling capacitor as close to the
VCC and GND pins as possible. Place the Cap close to AGND if the distance is long. And place >3 Vias if via is required to reduce the leakage inductance.
4. Keep the switching node SW short and away
from the feedback network.
5. The external feedback resistors should be
placed next to the FB pin. Make sure that there is no via on the FB trace.
6. Keep the BST voltage path (BST, C3, and
SW) as short as possible.
7. Keep the IN and GND pads connected with
large copper and use at least two layers for IN and GND trace to achieve better thermal performance. Also, add several Vias with 10mil_drill/18mil_copper_width close to the IN and GND pads to help on thermal dissipation.
8. Four-layer layout is strongly recommended to
achieve better thermal performance.
Note:
Please refer to the PCB Layout Application Note for more details.
VV
Where I
L(1)
is the peak-to-peak inductor ripple
L
OUT OUT
FI V
×Δ
SW L IN
(26)
current.
The inductor should not saturate under the maximum inductor peak current, where the peak inductor current can be calculated by:
VV
II (1 )
=+ ×
LP OUT
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 17 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
OUT OUT
2F L V
×
SW IN
(27)
Page 18
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
V
Figure 13—Recommend Layout
Recommend Design Example
Two design examples are provided below when the ceramic capacitors are applied:
Table 1—Design Example
OUT
(V)
1.05 22x2+47 1.2 1M 220p 499 63.4 82
5.0 22x3 2 1M 220p 499 150 18
Cout
(F)
L
(μH)
R4
()
C4
R9
(F)
() R1(kΩ)R2(kΩ)
The detailed application schematic is shown in Figure 14 when low ESR caps are used. The typical performance and circuit waveforms have been shown in the Typical Performance Characteristics section. For more possible applications of this device, please refer to related Evaluation Board Data Sheets.
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 18 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 19
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
TYPICAL APPLICATION
Figure 14 — Typical Application Circuit with Low ESR Ceramic Output Capacitor
=6.5-22V, V
V
IN
=1.05V, I
OUT
OUT
=6A
Figure 15 — Typical Application Circuit with Low ESR Ceramic Output Capacitor
=7-22V, V
V
IN
OUT
=5V, I
OUT
=6A
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 19 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 20
NB671, 24V, HIGH CURRENT SYNCHRONOUS STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
PACKAGE INFORMATION
PIN 1 ID MARKING
PIN 1 ID INDEX AREA
QFN16 (3X3mm)
PIN 1 ID
0.10x45
YP.
0.10x45°
TOP VIEW
SIDE VIEW
BOTTOM VIEW
NOTE:
1) ALL DIMENSIONS ARE IN MILLIMETERS.
2) EXPOSED PADDLE SIZE DOES NOT INCLUDE MOLD FLASH.
3) LEAD COPLANARITY SHALL BE 0.10 MILLIMETERS MAX.
4) JEDEC REFERENCE IS MO-220.
5) DRAWING IS NOT TO SCALE.
RECOMMENDED LAND PATTERN
NOTICE: The information in this document is subject to change without notice. Users should warrant and guarantee that third party Intellectual Property rights are not infringed upon when integrating MPS products into any application. MPS will not assume any legal responsibility for any said applications.
NB671 Rev. 1.02 www.MonolithicPower.com 20 8/27/2014 MPS Proprietary Information. Patent Protected. Unauthorized Photocopy and Duplication Prohibited. © 2014 MPS. All Rights Reserved.
Page 21
Loading...