User’s Guide
TPS40003 Based 5–A Converter in
Less Than One Square Inch
User’s Guide
DYNAMIC WARNINGS AND RESTRICTIONS
It is important to operate this EVM within the input voltage range of 0 V to 5.5 V.
Exceeding the specified input range may cause unexpected operation and/or irreversible damage to the EVM.
If there are questions concerning the input range, please contact a TI field representative prior to connecting
the input power.
Applying loads outside of the specified output range may result in unintended operation and/or possible
permanent damage to the EVM. Please consult the EVM User’s Guide prior to connecting any load to the EVM
output. If there is uncertainty as to the load specification, please contact a TI field representative.
During normal operation, some circuit components may have case temperatures greater than 50°C. The EVM
is designed to operate properly with certain components above 50°C as long as the input and output ranges are
maintained. These components include but are not limited to linear regulators, switching transistors, pass
transistors, and current sense resistors. These types of devices can be identified using the EVM schematic
located in the EVM User’s Guide. When placing measurement probes near these devices during operation,
please be aware that these devices may be very warm to the touch.
Mailing Address:
Texas Instruments
Post Office Box 655303
Dallas, Texas 75265
Copyright 2003, Texas Instruments Incorporated
3
SLUU130A – September 2002 – Revised February 2003
TPS40003-Based 5-A Converter in Less Than One Square
Inch
Mark Dennis
Systems Power
Contents
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Features . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Schematic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Design Procedure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
PowerPAD Packaging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Test Results/Performance Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
PCB Layout . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
List of Material . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
1
Introduction
The TPS40002 and the TPS40003 are voltage-mode, synchronous buck PWM controllers that utilize TI’s
proprietary Predictive Gate Drive technology to wring maximum efficiency from step-down converters. These
controllers provide a bootstrap charging circuit to allow the use of an N-channel MOSFET as the topside buck
switch to reduce conduction losses and increase silicon device utilization. Predictive Gate Drive technology
controls the delay from main switch turn-off to synchronous rectifier turn-on and also the delay from rectifier
turn-off to main switch turn-on. This allows minimization of the losses in the MOSFET body diodes by reducing
conduction and reverse recovery time. This user’s guide provides details on a 5-A buck converter that converts
3.3 V down to a 1.2-V level utilizing the TPS40003 controller, with less than one square inch board area.
A schematic for the board is shown in Figure 1. A list of material is provided in the final section.
2
Features
The specification for this board is as follows:
D
D
D
D
D
D
V
V
= 3.0 V to 3.6 V
IN
= 1.2 V ± 3%
OUT
0 A ≤ I
≤ 5 A
OUT
Efficiency > 90% with a load of 2 A
Output voltage ripple < 2% V
OUT
Physical size < 1 square inch circuit area
4
TPS40003-Based 5-A Converter in Less Than One Square Inch
SLUU130A – September 2002 – Revised February 2003
3
Schematic
Figure 1. Application Diagram for the TPS40002/3
TPS40003-Based 5-A Converter in Less Than One Square Inch
5
SLUU130A – September 2002 – Revised February 2003
4
Design Procedure
4.1 TPS4000X Family Device Selection
The TPS4000X family of devices offers four selections to encompass the frequency and output current mode
choices. The TPS40003 is selected for the following reasons. First, the internal oscillator components set a fixed
switching frequency of 600 kHz. This allows minimally sized filter components in this compact design. The other
choice related to the TPS4000X family involves the selection of Discontinuous Current Mode (DCM) operation
or Continuous Current Mode (CCM) operation at lighter loads. In this design the TPS40003 is selected to keep
the current continuous all the way to zero load, to provide robust control characteristics.
4.2 Inductance Value
The output inductor value is selected to set the ripple current to a value most suited to overall circuit functionality.
The inductor value is calculated in equation (1).
V
V
ȡ1 *
ȣ+
ȧ
OUT
OUT
1.2 V
600 kHz 1.25 A
1.2 V
3.6 V
(1)
ǒ1 * Ǔ + 1.07 mH
L +
ȧ
f I
V
RIPPLEȢ
ꢀ
IN(max)
where I
is chosen to be 25% of I
, or 1.25 A. A common value of 1 µH is selected.
RIPPLE
OUT
4.3 Input Capacitor Selection
Bulk input capacitor selection is based on allowable input voltage ripple and required RMS current carrying
capability. In typical buck converter applications, the converter is fed from an upstream power converter with
its own output capacitance. In this converter, onboard capacitance is provided to supply the current required
during the top MOSFET on-time while keeping ripple within acceptable limits. For this power level, input voltage
ripple of 150 mV is reasonable, and a conservative minimum value of capacitance is calculated in equation (2).
I Dt
DV
5 A 606 ns
(2)
C +
+
+ 20 mF
0.15 V
To meet this requirement with the lowest size and cost, a single 22 µF, X5R ceramic capacitor might be
considered. Although these capacitors have an extremely small resistance a typical datasheet indicates that
the part undergoes a 30°C temperature rise with 2 A
current at 500 kHz. With V = 3.0 V our circuit requires
of current, so for a conservative design two capacitors are selected to allow for conservative
RMS
IN
nearly 2 A
RMS
current derating. These capacitors function as power bypass components and should be located near the
MOSFET package, to keep the high frequency current flow in a tight loop. The low impedance characteristics
of the dual ceramic capacitors help to reduce noise on the V
MOSFET current sense is referenced to this point, so noise at the device must be kept to a low level.
supply of the device. Specifically, the high side
DD
6
TPS40003-Based 5-A Converter in Less Than One Square Inch
SLUU130A – September 2002 – Revised February 2003
4.4 Output Capacitor Selection
Selection of the output capacitor is based on many application variables, including function, cost, size, and
availability. The minimum allowable output capacitance is determined by the amount of inductor ripple current
and the allowable output ripple in equation (3).
I
1.25 A
8 600 kHz 12 mV
RIPPLE
(3)
C
+
+
+ 22 mF
OUT(min)
8 f V
RIPPLE
In this design, C
is 22 µF with V
= 12 mV to allow for some margin. However, this only affects the
RIPPLE
OUT(min)
capacitive component of the ripple voltage. In addition, the voltage component due to the capacitor ESR must
be considered in equation (4).
V
0.012 V
1.25 A
RIPPLE
RIPPLE
(4)
ESR
v
+
+ 9.6 mW
Cout
I
For compactness while maintaining transient response capability, two 22-µF ceramic capacitors are fitted in
parallel. The total ESR of these capacitors is below 3 mΩ, and contributes only a few mV to the output voltage
ripple.
4.5 MOSFET Selection
The small physical size of this design requires the use of a single SO-8 package which contains dual N-channel
MOSFETs. MOSFETs with an R
amount at full load.
of 18 mΩ are selected to keep the conduction losses to a manageable
DS(on)
4.6 Short Circuit Protection
The TPS40003 implements short circuit protection by comparing the voltage across the topside MOSFET while
it is on to a voltage dropped from VDD by R
due to an internal current source of 15 µA inside pin 1. Due to
LIM
tolerances in the current source and variations in the power MOSFET on-voltage versus temperature, the short
circuit level can protect against gross overcurrent conditions only, and should be set higher than rated load. In
this particular case, R
is selected as:
LIM
2.5 I
0.018 W
OUT
(5)
R
+ R1 +
+ 15 kW
LIM
15 mA
For this design, R
= 15 kΩ, and the factor of 2.5 in the equation accounts for the variations in component
LIM
tolerances over temperature and output current ripple. The high currents that are switched under short circuit
conditions may cause SW pin 8 to be driven below ground several volts, possibly injecting substrate current
which can cause improper operation of the device. A 3.3-Ω resistor has been placed in series with this pin to
limit its excursion to safe levels.
TPS40003-Based 5-A Converter in Less Than One Square Inch
7
SLUU130A – September 2002 – Revised February 2003
4.7 Compensation Design
The TPS40003 uses voltage mode control in conjunction with a high frequency error amplifier. For the fastest
transient response, the loop crossover frequency is set at 1/10 f , or 60 kHz. The power circuit L-C double pole
S
corner frequency f is situated at 24 kHz, and the output capacitor ESR zero is far higher at approximately 1MHz.
C
The feedback compensation network is implemented to provide two zeroes and three poles. The first pole is
placed at the origin to improve dc regulation.
The first zero is placed at approximately 2/3 f , 18 kHz,
C
1
(6)
(7)
f
+
z1
2 p R C
2
4
The second zero is selected at f ,
C
1
f
+
z2
2 p ǒR ) R
Ǔ
C
12
4
5
The two poles are placed at approximately 300 kHz, which is one-half the switching frequency,
1
f
+
p1
C C
(8)
(9)
4
8
ǒ Ǔ
2 p R
2
C )C
4
8
and
f
1
+
p2
2 p R C
5
12
8
TPS40003-Based 5-A Converter in Less Than One Square Inch
SLUU130A – September 2002 – Revised February 2003
Figure 2 shows the plots for the closed loop gain and phase with V = 3.3 V and I
IN
frequency of 60 kHz the phase margin is approximately 51 degrees.
= 4.4 A. At the crossover
OUT
GAIN AND PHASE MARGIN
vs
FREQUENCY
40
30
150
100
50
Phase
20
10
0
0
–10
–20
–30
–40
–50
–100
–150
Gain
I
= 4.4 A
LOAD
I
V = 3.3 V
100
1000
10000
100000
1000000
Frequency – Hz
Figure 2.
4.8 Snubber Component Selection
The switch node where Q1 and L1 come together is very noisy. An R–C network fitted between this node and
ground can help reduce ringing and voltage overshoot on Q1:B. This ringing noise should be minimized to
prevent it from confusing the control circuitry which is monitoring this node for current limit and Predictive Gate
Drive .
As a starting point, the snubber capacitor, C9, is generally chosen to be 5 to 8 times larger than the parasitic
capacitance at the node, which is primarily C
of Q1:B. Since C
is 440 pF for Q1:B, C9 is chosen to be 3.3 nF.
OS
OS
R3 is empirically determined to be 2.2 Ω, which minimizes the ringing and overshoot at the switch node. With
2
low input voltages the power loss, 1/2×C×V ×f , is relatively small at 24 mW.
TPS40003-Based 5-A Converter in Less Than One Square Inch
9
SLUU130A – September 2002 – Revised February 2003
5
PowerPAD Packaging
The TPS4000X family is available in the DGQ version of TI’s PowerPAD thermally enhanced package. In the
PowerPAD , a thermally conductive epoxy is utilized to attach the integrated circuit die to the leadframe die
pad, which is exposed on the bottom of the completed package. The leadframe die pad can be soldered to the
PCB using standard solder flow techniques when maximum heat dissipation is required. However, depending
on power dissipation requirements, the PowerPAD may not need to soldered to the PCB.
The PowerPAD package helps to keep the junction temperature rise relatively low even with the power
dissipation inherent in the onboard MOSFET drivers. This power loss is proportional to switching frequency,
drive voltage, and the gate charge needed to enhance the N-channel MOSFETs. Effective heat removal allows
the use of ultra small packaging while maintaining high component reliability.
To effectively remove heat from the PowerPAD package, a thermal land should be provided directly
underneath the package whether the package needs to be soldered or not. This thermal land usually has vias
that help to spread heat to internal copper layers and/or the opposite side of the PCB. The vias should not have
thermal reliefs that are often used on ground planes, because this reduces the copper area which transfers heat.
Additionally, the vias should be small enough so that the holes are effectively plugged when plated. This
prevents the solder from wicking away from the connection between the PCB surface and the bottom of the part.
A typical construction utilizes a few vias of 0.013” diameter plated with 1 ounce copper in the land under the
TPS40003. A typical layout pattern is shown in Figure 2, but does not show the copper land which would
encompass the vias above and below the device.
2.92mm
(0.115”)
0.5mm
(0.0197”)
Minimum
PowerPad ”Y”
1.7mm
(0.068”)
1.40mm
(0.055”)
0.28mm
(0.011”)
Via Dia.
0.33mm
(0.013”)
Miminum
PowerPad ”X”
1.3mm
(0.050”)
Figure 3. PowerPAD PCB Layout Guidelines
The Texas Instrument document, PowerPAD Thermally Enhanced Package Application Report (SLMA002)
should be consulted for more information on the PowerPAD package. This report offers in-depth information
on the package, assembly and rework techniques, and illustrative examples of the thermal performance of the
PowerPAD package.
10
TPS40003-Based 5-A Converter in Less Than One Square Inch
SLUU130A – September 2002 – Revised February 2003
6
Test Results/Performance Data
The test setup is shown in figure 4
DC Power
Supply
Input wires 18 gauge
or larger short as feasible
C
DVM1
IN
+
CIN = 470 µF or larger, 6.3 V or higher,
low ESR AIEA or OSCON capacitor.
Place within 2 inches of J1.
(+)
(–)
J1
TP2
TP1
VIN
GND
TP3
SCOPE
TP5
VOUT
SLUP182
GND
J2
DVM2
TP4
TP6
(+)
(–)
Output wires 18 gauge
or larger short as feasible
LOAD
(+)
(–)
Resistive load: 0.5 Ω, ≥ 5 W
Active Load: set for 2.4 A
Figure 4.
TPS40003-Based 5-A Converter in Less Than One Square Inch
11
SLUU130A – September 2002 – Revised February 2003
Typical efficiency curves are shown in Figure 5 for an input of 3.3 V.
EFFICIENCY
vs
OUTPUT CURRENT
100
95
90
85
80
75
70
65
60
55
50
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
I
– Output Current – A
OUT
Figure 5.
Figure 6 shows the switch node during typical operation at full load. Note that there is very minimal body diode
conduction in the bottom MOSFET. This is a result of using the predictive delay control implementation. This
technique is able to dynamically change the delays in the MOSFET drive circuit to account for variations in line,
load, and between devices.
TYPICAL SWITCH NODE WAVEFORM
2 V/div
t – Time – 250 ns/div
Figure 6.
12
TPS40003-Based 5-A Converter in Less Than One Square Inch
SLUU130A – September 2002 – Revised February 2003
Circuit operation with an output short circuit is shown in Figure 7. After each restart into a short circuit the pulses
terminate for a period of approximately 6 ms. This causes the input power to collapse to minuscule levels, and
the circuit is protected.
SHORT CIRCUIT OPERATION
2 V/div
t – Time – 1 ms/div
Figure 7.
Figure 8 shows the output voltage ripple which is approximately half the 24-mV limit.
OUTPUT VOLTAGE RIPPLE
10 mV/div
t – Time – 500 ns/div
Figure 8.
TPS40003-Based 5-A Converter in Less Than One Square Inch
13
SLUU130A – September 2002 – Revised February 2003
Figure 9 shows the startup waveforms with an input voltage of 3.3 V and a load of 0.3 Ω. Note that the output
is held low until V
softstart control.
(pin 4) goes above 0.12 V, and then the output comes up smoothly under closed loop
SS
STARTUP WAVEFORM
1 V/div
500 mV/div
500 mV/div
t – Time – 200 µs/div
Figure 9.
Figure 10 shows the transient response for a fast load step from 1 A to 2 A.
TRANSIENT RESPONSE
50 mV/div
t – Time – 20 µs/div
Figure 10.
14
TPS40003-Based 5-A Converter in Less Than One Square Inch
SLUU130A – September 2002 – Revised February 2003
7
PCB Layout
Figures 11 through13 show the top copper layer, the bottom copper layer, and top assembly layer, of SLUP182.
Figure 12
Figure 13
TPS40003-Based 5-A Converter in Less Than One Square Inch
15
SLUU130A – September 2002 – Revised February 2003
8
List of Material
Table 1 lists the components used in this design. With minor component tweaks this design could be modified
to meet a wide range of applications.
Reference
Qty
4
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
5
2
1
1
Description
Ceramic, 22 µF, 6.3 V, X5R, 20%, 1210
Ceramic, 0.001 µF, 10 V, X5R, 10%, 805
Ceramic, 0.0047 µF, 50 V, X7R, 10%
Ceramic, 470 pF, 50 V, X7R, 10%
Ceramic, 0.1 µF, 50 V, X5R, 10%
Ceramic, 0.001 µF, 50 V, X7R, 10%
Ceramic, 68 pF, 50 V, NPO, 10%
Ceramic, 0.0033 µF, 50 V, X7R, 10%
2 pin, 15 A, 5.1 mm
Manufacturer
Panasonic
Panasonic
Vishay
Vishay
Vishay
Vishay
Vishay
Vishay
OST
Part Number
ECJ–4YB0J226M
ECJ–2YB1A105K
VJ0603Y472KXAAT
VJ0603Y471KXAAT
VJ0805Y104KXAAT
VJ0603Y102KXAAT
VJ0603A680KXAAT
VJ0805Y332KXAAT
ED1609
Capacitor
C1, C2, C5, C6
C10
C11
C12
C3
C4
C8
C9
Terminal Block
Inductor
J1, J2
L1
SMT, 1.0 µH, 8.5 A, 10 mΩ
Vishay
Fairchild
Std
IHLP–2525CZ–01
FDS6898A
MOSFET
Resistor
Q1
Dual N–channel, 20 V, 9.4 A, 18 mΩ
Chip, 15 kΩ, 1/16W, 1%
R1
Std
R2
Chip, 8.66 kΩ, 1/16 W, 1%
Std
Std
R3
Chip, 2.2 Ω, 1/10 W, 5%
Std
Std
R4
Chip, 12.1 kΩ, 1/16 W, 1%
Std
Std
R5
Chip, 1 kΩ, 1/16 W, 1%
Std
Std
R6
Chip, 16.9 Ω, 1/16 W, 1%
Std
Std
R7
Chip, 3.3 Ω, 1/16 W, 5%, 603
Test point, red
Std
Std
JACK
JACK
TP1, TP3, TP4,
TP2, TP6
TP5
Farnell
Farnell
Tektronix
TI
240–345
Test point, black
240–333
Adaptor
Device
3.5-mm probe clip (or 131–5031–00)
Syncronous buck controller, 600 kHz
131–4244–00
TPS40003DGQ
U1
16
TPS40003-Based 5-A Converter in Less Than One Square Inch
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Post Office Box 655303
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Copyright 2003, Texas Instruments Incorporated
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