Part Number Hot Search : 
EVALZ P6KE18CA PDI1394L MH202 C4060 12003 TISP3 ALVC16
Product Description
Full Text Search
 

To Download MAX15003 Datasheet File

  If you can't view the Datasheet, Please click here to try to view without PDF Reader .  
 
 


  Datasheet File OCR Text:
 19-1048; Rev 0; 10/07
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing
General Description
The MAX15003 is a triple-output, pulse-width-modulated (PWM), step-down DC-DC controller with tracking and sequencing capability. The device operates over the input voltage range of 5.5V to 23V or 5V 10%. Each PWM controller provides an adjustable output down to 0.6V and delivers up to 15A for each output with excellent load and line regulation. The MAX15003 is optimized for high-performance, small-size power management solutions. The options of coincident tracking, ratiometric tracking, and output sequencing allow the tailoring of the powerup/power-down sequence depending on the system requirements. Each of the MAX15003 PWM sections utilizes a voltage-mode control scheme with external compensation allowing for good noise immunity and maximum flexibility with a wide selection of inductor values and capacitor types. Each PWM section operates at the same, fixed switching frequency that is programmable from 200kHz to 2.2MHz and can be synchronized to an external clock signal using the SYNC input. Each converter operating at up to 2.2MHz with 120 out-of-phase, increases the input capacitor ripple frequency up to 6.6MHz, thereby reducing the RMS input ripple current and the size of the input bypass capacitor requirement significantly. The MAX15003 includes internal input undervoltage lockout with hysteresis, digital soft-start/soft-stop for glitch-free power-up and power-down of each converter. The power-on reset (RESET) with an adjustable timeout period monitors all three outputs and provides a RESET signal to the processor when all outputs are within regulation. Protection features include lossless valley-mode current limit and hiccup mode output short-circuit protection. The MAX15003 is available in a space-saving, 7mm x 7mm, 48-pin TQFN-EP package and is specified for operation over the -40C to +125C automotive temperature range. See the MAX15002 data sheet for a dual version of the MAX15003.
Features
o 5.5V to 23V or 5V 10% Input Voltage Range o Triple-Output Synchronous Buck Controller o Selectable In-Phase or 120 Out-of-Phase Operation o Output Voltages Adjustable from 0.6V to 0.85VIN o Lossless Valley-Mode Current Sensing or Accurate Valley Current Sensing Using RSENSE o External Compensation for Maximum Flexibility o Digital Soft-Start and Soft-Stop o Sequencing or Coincident/Ratiometric VOUT Tracking o Individual PGOOD Outputs o RESET Output with a Programmable Timeout Period o 200kHz to 2.2MHz Programmable Switching Frequency o External Frequency Synchronization o Hiccup Mode Short-Circuit Protection o Space-Saving (7mm x 7mm) 48-Pin TQFN Package
MAX15003
Ordering Information
PART MAX15003ATM+ TEMP RANGE -40C to +125C PINPACKAGE 48 TQFN-EP* (7mm x 7mm) PKG CODE T4877-3
+Denotes a lead-free package. *EP = Exposed pad.
Applications
PCI Express(R) Host Bus Adapter Power Supplies Networking/Server Power Supplies Point-of-Load DC-DC Converters
Add a "T" after "+" for tape and reel. Tape-and-reel orders are available in 2.5k increments.
Pin Configuration appears at end of data sheet.
PCI Express is a registered trademark of PCI-SIG Corp.
________________________________________________________________ Maxim Integrated Products 1
For pricing, delivery, and ordering information, please contact Maxim Direct at 1-888-629-4642, or visit Maxim's website at www.maxim-ic.com.
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing MAX15003
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
IN, LX_, CSN_ to SGND..........................................-0.3V to +30V BST_ to SGND ........................................................-0.3V to +30V BST_ to LX_ ..............................................................-0.3V to +6V REG, DREG_, SYNC, EN_, RT, CT, RESET, PHASE, SEL to SGND ...............................-0.3V to +6V ILIM_, PGOOD_, FB_, COMP_, CSP_ to SGND .......-0.3V to +6V DL_ to PGND_.......................................-0.3V to (VDREG_ + 0.3V) DH_ to LX_ ...............................................-0.3V to (VBST_ + 0.3V) PGND_ to SGND, PGND_ to Any Other PGND_.......-0.3V to +0.3V Continuous Power Dissipation (TA = +70C) 48-Pin TQFN (derate 38.5mW/C above +70C) .......3076.9mW* JA ..................................................................................26C/W JC .................................................................................1.3C/W Operating Junction Temperature Range ...........-40C to +125C Junction Temperature ......................................................+150C Storage Temperature Range .............................-60C to +150C Lead Temperature (soldering, 10s) .................................+300C *As per JEDEC51 standard (multilayer board).
Stresses beyond those listed under "Absolute Maximum Ratings" may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only, and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond those indicated in the operational sections of the specifications is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability.
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
(VIN = 5.5V to 23V or VIN = VREG = 4.5V to 5.5V, VDREG_ = VREG, VPGND_ = VSYNC = VPHASE = VSEL = 0V, CREG = 2.2F, RRT = 100k, CCT = 0.1F, RILIM_ = 60k, TA = TJ = -40C to +125C, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at VIN = 12V and TA = TJ = +25C, unless otherwise noted.) (Note 1)
PARAMETER SYSTEM SPECIFICATIONS Input Voltage Range Input Undervoltage Lockout Threshold Input Undervoltage Lockout Hysteresis Operating Supply Current Shutdown Supply Current REG VOLTAGE REGULATOR Output-Voltage Setpoint Load Regulation DIGITAL SOFT-START/SOFT-STOP Soft-Start/Soft-Stop Duration Reference Voltage Steps ERROR TRANSCONDUCTANCE AMPLIFIER FB_, TRACK_ Input Bias Current FB_ Voltage Setpoint FB_ to COMP_ Transconductance COMP_ Output Swing Open-Loop Gain Unity-Gain Bandwidth 0.75 80 10 VFB TA = TJ = 0C to +85C TA = TJ = -40C to +125C -250 0.5945 0.590 0.6 0.6 2.1 3.50 +250 0.6065 0.608 nA V V mS V dB MHz 2048 64 Clocks Steps VREG VIN = 5.5V to 23V IREG = 0 to 120mA, VIN = 12V 4.9 5.2 0.2 V V VIN = 12V, VFB_ = 0.8V, no switching VIN = 12V, EN_ = 0V, PGOOD_ unconnected VIN VUVLO 5.5 VIN = VREG = VDREG_ (Note 2) VIN rising 4.5 3.95 4.05 0.35 5 150 8 300 23.0 5.5 4.15 V V V V mA A SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS
2
_______________________________________________________________________________________
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
(VIN = 5.5V to 23V or VIN = VREG = 4.5V to 5.5V, VDREG_ = VREG, VPGND_ = VSYNC = VPHASE = VSEL = 0V, CREG = 2.2F, RRT = 100k, CCT = 0.1F, RILIM_ = 60k, TA = TJ = -40C to +125C, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at VIN = 12V and TA = TJ = +25C, unless otherwise noted.) (Note 1)
PARAMETER DRIVERS DL_, DH_ Break-Before-Make Time DH1 On-Resistance DH2 On-Resistance DH3 On-Resistance DL1 On-Resistance DL2 On-Resistance DL3 On Resistance LX_ to PGND_ On-Resistance CURRENT-LIMIT AND HICCUP MODE Cycle-By-Cycle Valley CurrentLimit Adjustment Range Cycle-By-Cycle Valley CurrentLimit Threshold Tolerance ILIM_ Reference Current ILIM_ Reference Current Temperature Coefficient CSP_, CSN_ Input Bias Current Number of Cumulative CurrentLimit Events to Hiccup Number of Consecutive NonCurrent-Limit Cycles to Clear NCL Hiccup Timeout ENABLE/PHASE/SEL EN_ Threshold EN_ Threshold Hysteresis EN_ Input Bias Current PHASE Input Logic High PHASE Input Logic Low PHASE Input Bias Current -1 -1 2 0.8 +1 VEN-TH EN_ rising 1.19 1.215 0.12 +1 1.24 V V A V V A NCL NCLR VCSP_ = 0V, VCSN_ = -0.3V -20 8 3 4096 Clock periods VCL VCL_ = VILIM_ / 10 VILIM_ = 0.5V VILIM_ = 3V VILIM_ = 0 to 3V, TA = TJ = +25C 50 44 290 20 3333 +20 300 54 310 mV mV A ppm/C A CLOAD = 5nF Low, sinking 100mA High, sourcing 100mA Low, sinking 100mA High, sourcing 100mA Low, sinking 100mA High, sourcing 100mA Low, sinking 100mA High, sourcing 100mA Low, sinking 100mA High, sourcing 100mA Low, sinking 100mA High, sourcing 100mA Sinking 10mA 20 0.9 1.3 0.9 0.3 0.9 1.3 0.9 1.3 0.9 1.3 0.9 1.3 8 ns SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS
MAX15003
_______________________________________________________________________________________
3
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing MAX15003
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)
(VIN = 5.5V to 23V or VIN = VREG = 4.5V to 5.5V, VDREG_ = VREG, VPGND_ = VSYNC = VPHASE = VSEL = 0V, CREG = 2.2F, RRT = 100k, CCT = 0.1F, RILIM_ = 60k, TA = TJ = -40C to +125C, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at VIN = 12V and TA = TJ = +25C, unless otherwise noted.) (Note 1)
PARAMETER SEL High Threshold SEL Low Threshold SEL Input Bias Current PGOOD, RESET OUTPUTS FB_ For Threshold PGOOD_ RESET, PGOOD_ Output Low Level RESET, PGOOD_ Leakage CT Charging Current CT Pulldown Resistance CT Threshold for RESET Delay OSCILLATOR Switching Frequency Range (Each Converter) Switching Frequency Accuracy (Each Converter) fSW VSYNC = 0V, fCLK = 1011 / (RRT + 1.75k) fSW 1500kHz fSW 1500kHz VPHASE = 0V (DH1 rising to DH2 rising and DH2 rising to DH3 rising) Phase Delay VPHASE = VREG (DH1 rising to DH2 rising and DH2 rising to DH3 rising) RT Voltage Minimum Controllable On-Time Minimum Off-Time SYNC High-Level Voltage SYNC Low-Level Voltage SYNC Internal Pulldown Resistor SYNC Frequency Range SYNC Minimum On-Time SYNC Minimum Off-Time PWM Ramp Amplitude (Peak-to-Peak) PWM Ramp Valley (Note 3) 50 0.6 30 30 2 1 100 VRT tON(MIN) tOFF(MIN) 2 0.8 200 6.9 40k < RRT < 500k 0 2 75 150 degrees V ns ns V V k MHz ns ns V V 200 -5 -7 120 2200 +5 +7 % degrees kHz Sinking 3mA CT rising CT failling 1.8 1.2 FB_ falling Sinking 3mA -1 1.8 2.0 0.540 0.555 0.570 0.1 +1 2.2 33 2.6 V V A A V Present only during startup -100 SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN 80 20 +100 TYP MAX UNITS %VREG %VREG A
Note 1: 100% production tested at TA = TJ = +25C and TA = TJ = +125C. Limits at other temperature are guaranteed by design. Note 2: For 5V applications, connect REG directly to IN. Note 3: The switching frequency is 1/3 of the SYNC frequency.
4
_______________________________________________________________________________________
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing
Typical Operating Characteristics
(Figure 8, VIN = 12V, CREG = 2.2F, TA = +25C, unless otherwise noted.)
MAX15003
CONVERTER 1 EFFICIENCY vs. LOAD CURRENT
VIN = 6V 90 EFFICIENCY (%) 80 70 60 50 40 0.1 1 LOAD CURRENT (A) VIN = 12V VIN = 16V
MAX15003 toc01
CONVERTER 2 EFFICIENCY vs. LOAD CURRENT
90 80 EFFICIENCY (%) 70 60 50 40 30 20 VIN = 16V VIN = 12V VIN = 6V
MAX15003 toc02
CONVERTER 3 EFFICIENCY vs. LOAD CURRENT
90 80 EFFICIENCY (%) 70 60 50 40 30 20 VIN = 16V VIN = 12V VIN = 6V
MAX15003 toc03
100
100
100
VOUT1 = 3.3V fSW = 600kHz 10
10 0 0.1 1 LOAD CURRENT (A)
VOUT2 = 2.5V fSW = 600kHz 10
10 0 0.1 1
VOUT3 = 1.2V fSW = 600kHz 10
LOAD CURRENT (mA)
CONVERTER 1 LOAD REGULATION
MAX15003 toc04
CONVERTER 2 LOAD REGULATION
MAX15003 toc05
CONVERTER 3 LOAD REGULATION
0.75 0.50 0.25 0 -0.25 -0.50 -0.75
MAX15003 toc06
1.00 OUTPUT VOLTAGE ACCURACY (%) 0.75 0.50 0.25 0 -0.25 -0.50 -0.75 -1.00 0 500 1000 1500 VOUT1 = 3.3V 2000 2500
1.00 OUTPUT VOLTAGE ACCURACY (%) 0.75 0.50 0.25 0 -0.25 -0.50 -0.75 -1.00 0 1000 2000 3000 VOUT2 = 2.5V 4000 5000
1.00 OUTPUT VOLTAGE ACCURACY (%)
-1.00 0 2000 4000 6000
VOUT3 = 1.2V 8000 10,000
3000
6000
LOAD CURRENT (mA)
LOAD CURRENT (mA)
LOAD CURRENT (mA)
INTERNAL VOLTAGE REGULATION (REG)
MAX15003 toc07
CONVERTER_ SWITCHING FREQUENCY vs. RRT
MAX15003 toc08
5.00 4.99 4.98 4.97 VREG (V) 4.96 4.95 4.94 4.93 4.92 4.91 4.90 0 20 40 60 IREG (mA) VIN = 12V CREG = 2.2F 80
10,000
SWITCHING FREQUENCY (kHz)
1000
100
0 0 100 200 300 RRT (k) 400 500 600
100
_______________________________________________________________________________________
5
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing MAX15003
Typical Operating Characteristics (continued)
(Figure 8, VIN = 12V, CREG = 2.2F, TA = +25C, unless otherwise noted.)
SWITCHING FREQUENCY ACCURACY vs. TEMPERATURE
MAX15003 toc09
VALLEY CURRENT-LIMIT THRESHOLD vs. VILIM
MAX15003 toc10
VALLEY CURRENT-LIMIT THRESHOLD vs. TEMPERATURE
VALLEY CURRENT-LIMIT THRESHOLD (mV) 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 TEMPERATURE COEFFICIENT (NOM.) = 3,333ppm/C -50 -25 0 25 50 75 100 125 150 RILIM = 25.5k
MAX15003 toc11
10 SWITCHING FREQUENCY ACCURACY (kHz) 8 6 4 2 0 -2 -4 -6 -8 -10 -50 -25 0 25 50 75 fSW = 600kHz
350 VALLEY CURRENT-LIMIT THRESHOLD (mV) 300 250 200 150 100 50 500 1000 1500 2000 VILIM (mV) 2500 3000
100
100 125 150
3500
TEMPERATURE (C)
TEMPERATURE (C)
SWITCHING CURRENT vs. FREQUENCY
20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 200 700 1200 FREQUENCY (kHz) 1700
MAX15003 toc12
RATIOMETRIC STARTUP
MAX15003 toc13
RATIOMETRIC SHUTDOWN
MAX15003 toc14
10V/div VIN 0V
VOUT1 VOUT2
500mV/div
SWITCHING CURRENT (mA)
1V/div 1V/div 1V/div VOUT1, 2, 3 VOUT1, 2, 3 VEN2 = VEN3 = 0V, SEL = REG 400s/div 0V VOUT3 500mV/div
VEN2 = VEN3 = 0V, SEL = REG 1ms/div
2200
CHANNEL 2 SHORT CIRCUIT (RATIOMETRIC MODE)
MAX15003 toc15
CHANNEL 1 SHORT CIRCUIT (RATIOMETRIC MODE)
MAX15003 toc16
VOUT2
1V/div
VOUT1
1V/div
VOUT1 VOUT2 VOUT3 1V/div 0V VEN2 = VEN3 = 0V, SEL = REG 400s/div VEN2 = VEN3 = 0V, SEL = REG 400s/div VOUT3
0V 1V/div 1V/div 0V
6
_______________________________________________________________________________________
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing
Typical Operating Characteristics (continued)
(Figure 8, VIN = 12V, CREG = 2.2F, TA = +25C, unless otherwise noted.)
MAX15003
COINCIDENT STARTUP
MAX15003 toc17
COINCIDENT SHUTDOWN
MAX15003 toc18
10V/div VIN 0V VOUT1 VOUT2 1V/div 1V/div 1V/div VOUT1, 2, 3 CIRCUIT OF FIGURE 8, SEL = REG 1ms/div 400s/div 0V 0V VOUT3 500mV/div 500mV/div
500mV/div
CHANNEL 2 SHORT CIRCUIT (COINCIDENT MODE)
MAX15003 toc19
CHANNEL 1 SHORT CIRCUIT (COINCIDENT MODE)
MAX15003 toc20
VIN VOUT2
10V/div 1V/div
VIN VOUT1
10V/div 1V/div
VOUT1
0V 1V/div 0V VOUT2 1V/div
VOUT3
1V/div 0V 400s/div
VOUT3
1V/div 0V 400s/div
SEQUENCING STARTUP
MAX15003 toc21
SEQUENCING SHUTDOWN
MAX15003 toc22
10V/div VIN 0V
VOUT1 VOUT2
500mV/div
500mV/div
1V/div 1V/div 1V/div VOUT1, 2, 3 SEL = REG 1ms/div 0V SEL = REG 400s/div 0V VOUT3 500mV/div
_______________________________________________________________________________________
7
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing MAX15003
Typical Operating Characteristics (continued)
(Figure 8, VIN = 12V, CREG = 2.2F, TA = +25C, unless otherwise noted.)
CHANNEL 1 OUTPUT SHORT CIRCUIT (SEQUENCING MODE)
MAX15003 toc23
RESET AT STARTUP (SEQUENCING MODE)
MAX15003 toc24
VIN VOUT1
10V/div 2V/div 0V 0V 1V/div VRESET
5V/div 0V
VOUT2
1V/div 1V/div
VOUT3
0V 1V/div 0V 400s/div SEL = GND EN/TRACK2 = PGOOD1 EN/TRACK3 = PGOOD2
1V/div VOUT1, 2, 3 SEL = GND 20ms/div EN/TRACK2 = PGOOD1 EN/TRACK3 = PGOOD2 0V
RESET AT SHUTDOWN (SEQUENCING MODE)
MAX15003 toc25
CONVERTER 1 SHORT-CIRCUIT CONDITION (HICCUP MODE)
MAX15003 toc26
VRESET
5V/div 0V
VOUT1 IOUT1
500mV/div 10A/div
VOUT1 VOUT2 VOUT3
1V/div 1V/div 1V/div 0V SEL = GND 400s/div EN/TRACK2 = PGOOD1 EN/TRACK3 = PGOOD2
VLX1
10V/div
VDL1 VPGOOD1 1ms/div
5V/div 1V/div
CONVERTER 1 OUTPUT SHORT-CIRCUIT (SEQUENCING MODE)
MAX15003 toc27
CONVERTER 2 OUTPUT SHORT-CIRCUIT (SEQUENCING MODE)
MAX15003 toc28
VIN VOUT1
10V/div SEL = GND 2V/div 0V
VIN VOUT2 SEL = GND
10V/div 0V 2V/div 0V
VOUT2 1V/div VOUT1 2V/div
0V VOUT3 1V/div 0V 400s/div EN/TRACK2 = PGOOD1 EN/TRACK3 = PGOOD2 400s/div EN/TRACK2 = PGOOD1 EN/TRACK3 = PGOOD2 VOUT3 1V/div 0V
8
_______________________________________________________________________________________
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing
Typical Operating Characteristics (continued)
(Figure 8, VIN = 12V, CREG = 2.2F, TA = +25C, unless otherwise noted.)
CONVERTER 3 OUTPUT SHORT-CIRCUIT (SEQUENCING MODE)
MAX15003 toc29
MAX15003
120 OUT-OF-PHASE OPERATION
MAX15003 toc30
VIN VOUT3
10V/div 0V 1V/div 0V VSYNC VLX1
SEL = GND 5V/div 0V 10V/div 0V
VOUT1 VOUT2
2V/div 1V/div
VLX2
10V/div 0V
VLX3 SEL = GND 0V 400s/div EN/TRACK2 = PGOOD1 EN/TRACK3 = PGOOD2 400ns/div
10V/div 0V
IN-PHASE OPERATION
MAX15003 toc31
BREAK-BEFORE-MAKE TIMING
MAX15003 toc32
SEL = GND 5V/div VSYNC 0V 10V/div VLX1 0V 10V/div 0V VLX3 400ns/div 10V/div 0V
VLX1
5V/div
0V VDL1
VLX2
2V/div
0V 20ns/div
LOAD-TRANSIENT RESPONSE (IOUT3 = 100mA TO 10A)
MAX15003 toc33
LOAD-TRANSIENT RESPONSE (IOUT3 = 5A TO 10A)
MAX15003 toc34
VOUT3
100mV/div (AC-COUPLED)
VOUT3
100mV/div (AC-COUPLED)
5A/div IOUT3 0A 200s/div
IOUT3
5A/div
0A 200s/div
_______________________________________________________________________________________
9
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing MAX15003
Pin Description
PIN 1 NAME CT FUNCTION RESET Timeout Capacitor Connection. Connect a timing capacitor from CT to SGND to set the RESET delay. CT sources 2A into the timing capacitor. When the voltage at CT passes 2V, open-drain RESET goes high impedance. Supply Input Connection. Connect to an external voltage source from 5.5V to 23V. For 4.5V to 5.5V input application, connect IN and REG together. 5V Regulator Output. Bypass with a 2.2F ceramic capacitor to SGND. Track/Sequence Select Input. Connect SEL to REG to configure as a triple tracker at startup or connect SEL to SGND to configure as a triple sequencer or leave SEL unconnected to configure as a dual tracker and independent sequencer. Note: When configured as a triple sequencer, each rail is independently enabled using the EN_. Controller 1 Power-Ground Connection. Connect the input filter capacitor's negative terminal, the source of the synchronous MOSFET, and the output filter capacitor's return to PGND1. Connect externally to SGND at a single point near the input capacitor return terminal. Controller 1 Low-Side Gate Driver Output. DL1 is the gate driver output for the synchronous MOSFET. Controller 1 Low-Side Gate Driver Supply. Connect externally to REG and the anode of the boost diode. Connect a minimum of 0.1F ceramic capacitor from DREG1 to PGND1. Controller 1 High-Side MOSFET Source Connection/Synchronous MOSFET Drain Connection. Connect the inductor and the negative side of the boost capacitor to LX1. Controller 1 High-Side Gate Driver Output. DH1 drives the gate of the high-side MOSFET. Controller 1 High-Side Gate Driver Supply. Connect BST1 to the cathode of the boost diode and to the positive terminal of the boost capacitor. Controller 1 Negative Current-Sense Input. Connect CSN1 to the synchronous MOSFET drain (connected to LX1). When using a current-sense resistor, connect CSN1 to the junction of a low-side MOSFET's source and the current-sense resistor. See Figure 11. Controller 1 Positive Current-Sense Input. Connect CSP1 to the synchronous MOSFET source (connected to PGND1). When using a current-sense resistor, connect CSP1 to the PGND1 end of the current-sense resistor. Controller 1 Valley Current-Limit Set Output. Connect a 25k to 150k resistor, RILIM1, from ILIM1 to SGND to program the valley current-limit threshold from 50mV to 300mV. ILIM1 sources 20A out to RILIM1. The resulting voltage divided by 10 is the valley current-limit threshold. When using a precision current-sense resistor, connect a resistive divider from REG to ILIM1 to SGND to set the valley current limit. See Figure 11. Controller1 Error Transconductance Amplifier Output. Connect COMP1 to the compensation feedback network. Controller 1 Enable Input. EN1 must be above 1.24V, VEN-TH, for the PWM controller to start Output 1. Controller 1 is the master. Use the master as the highest output voltage in a coincident tracking configuration.
2 3
IN REG
4
SEL
5 6 7 8 9 10
PGND1 DL1 DREG1 LX1 DH1 BST1
11
CSN1
12
CSP1
13
ILIM1
14
COMP1
15
EN1
10
______________________________________________________________________________________
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing
Pin Description (continued)
PIN 16 17 NAME FB1 PGOOD1 FUNCTION Controller 1 Feedback Regulation Point. Connect to the center tap of a resistive divider from the converter output to SGND to set the output voltage. The FB1 voltage regulates to VFB (0.6V). Controller 1 Power-Good Output. Open-drain PGOOD1 output goes high impedance (releases) when FB1 is above 0.925 x VFB = 0.555V. Controller 2 Power Ground Connection. Connect the input filter capacitor's negative terminal, the source of the synchronous MOSFET, and the output filter capacitor's return to PGND2. Connect externally to SGND at a single point near the input capacitor return terminal. Controller 2 Low-Side Gate Driver Output. DL2 is the gate driver output for the synchronous MOSFET. Controller 2 Low-Side Gate Driver Supply. Connect externally to REG and the anode of the boost diode. Connect at minimum, a 0.1F ceramic capacitor from DREG2 to PGND2. Controller 2 High-Side MOSFET Source Connection/Synchronous MOSFET Drain Connection. Connect the inductor and the negative side of the boost capacitor to LX2. Controller 2 High-Side Gate Driver Output. DH2 drives the gate of the high-side MOSFET. Controller 2 High-Side Gate Driver Supply. Connect BST2 to the cathode of the boost diode and to the positive terminal of the boost capacitor. Controller 2 Negative Current-Sense Input. Connect CSN2 to the synchronous MOSFET drain (connected to LX2). When using a current-sense resistor, connect CSN2 to the junction of the low-side MOSFET's source and the current-sense resistor. See Figure 11. Controller 2 Positive Current-Sense Input. Connect CSP2 to the synchronous MOSFET source (connected to PGND2). When using a current-sense resistor, connect CSP2 to the PGND2 end of the current-sense resistor. Controller 2 Valley Current-Limit Set Output. Connect a 25k to 150k resistor, RILIM2, from ILIM2 to SGND to program the valley current-limit threshold from 50mV to 300mV. ILIM2 sources 20A out to RILIM2. The resulting voltage divided by 10 is the valley current-limit threshold. When using a precision current-sense resistor, connect a resistive divider from REG to ILIM2 to SGND to set the valley current limit. See Figure 11. Controller 2 Error Transconductance Amplifier Output. Connect COMP2 to the compensation feedback network. Controller 2 Enable/Tracking Input. See Figure 2. When sequencing, EN/TRACK2 must be above 1.24V for the PWM controller 2 to start. Coincident tracking--connect the same resistive divider used for FB2, from Output 1 to EN/TRACK2 to SGND. Ratiometric tracking--connect EN/TRACK2 to analog ground. Controller 2 Feedback Regulation Point. Connect to the center tap of a resistive divider from the converter output to SGND to set the output voltage. The FB2 voltage regulates to VFB (0.6V). Controller 2 Power-Good Output. Open-drain PGOOD2 output goes high impedance (releases) when FB2 is above 0.925 x VFB = 0.555V. Controller 3 Power-Good Output. Open-drain PGOOD3 output goes high impedance (releases) when FB3 is above 0.925 x VFB = 0.555V. Controller 3 Feedback Regulation Point. Connect to the center tap of a resistive divider from the converter output to SGND to set the output voltage. The FB3 voltage regulates to VFB (0.6V).
MAX15003
18 19 20 21 22 23
PGND2 DL2 DREG2 LX2 DH2 BST2
24
CSN2
25
CSP2
26
ILIM2
27
COMP2
28
EN/TRACK2
29 30 31 32
FB2 PGOOD2 PGOOD3 FB3
______________________________________________________________________________________
11
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing MAX15003
Pin Description (continued)
PIN NAME FUNCTION Controller 3 Enable/Tracking Input. See Figure 2. When sequencing, EN/TRACK3 must be above 1.24V for the PWM controller 3 to start. Coincident tracking--connect the same resistive divider used for FB3, from Output 1 to EN/TRACK3 to SGND. Ratiometric tracking--connect EN/TRACK3 to analog ground. Controller 3 Error Transconductance Amplifier Output. Connect COMP3 to the compensation feedback network. Controller 3 Valley Current-Limit Set Output. Connect a 25k to 150k resistor, RILIM3, from ILIM3 to SGND to program the valley current-limit threshold from 50mV to 300mV. ILIM3 sources 20A out to RILIM3. The resulting voltage divided by 10 is the valley current-limit threshold. When using a precision current-sense resistor, connect a resistive divider from REG to ILIM3 to SGND to set the valley current limit. See Figure 11. Controller 3 Positive Current-Sense Input. Connect CSP3 to the synchronous MOSFET source (connected to PGND3). When using a current-sense resistor, connect CSP3 to the PGND3 end of the current-sense resistor. Controller 3 Negative Current-Sense Input. Connect CSN3 to the synchronous MOSFET drain (connected to LX3). When using a current-sense resistor, connect CSN3 to the junction of low-side MOSFET's source and the current-sense resistor. See Figure 11. Controller 3 High-Side Gate Driver Supply. Connect BST3 to the cathode of the boost diode and to the positive terminal of the boost capacitor. Controller 3 High-Side Gate Driver Output. DH3 drives the gate of the high-side MOSFET. Controller 3 High-Side MOSFET Source Connection/Synchronous MOSFET Drain Connection. Connect the inductor and the negative side of the boost capacitor to LX3. Controller 3 Low-Side Gate Driver Supply. Connect externally to REG and anode of the boost diode. Connect a minimum of 0.1F ceramic capacitor from DREG3 to PGND3. Controller 3 Low-Side Gate Driver Output. DL3 is the gate driver output for the synchronous MOSFET. Controller 3 Power-Ground Connection. Connect the input filter capacitor's negative terminal, the source of the synchronous MOSFET, and the output filter capacitor's return to PGND3. Connect externally to SGND at a single point near the input capacitor return terminal. Synchronization Input. Drive with a frequency at least 20% higher than three times the frequency programmed using the RT pin. The switching frequency is 1/3 the SYNC frequency. Connect SYNC to SGND when not used. Analog Ground Connection. Connect SGND and PGND_ together at one point near the input bypass capacitor return terminal. Oscillator Timing Resistor Connection. Connect a 500k to 45k resistor from RT to SGND to program the switching frequency from 200kHz to 2.2MHz. Phase Select Input. Connect PHASE to SGND for 120 out-of-phase operation between the controllers. Connect to REG for in phase operation. RESET Output. Open-drain RESET output releases after all PGOODs are released and timeout programmed by CT finishes. Exposed Pad. Solder the exposed pad to a large SGND plane.
33
EN/TRACK3
34
COMP3
35
ILIM3
36
CSP3
37
CSN3
38 39 40 41 42 43
BST3 DH3 LX3 DREG3 DL3 PGND3
44
SYNC
45 46 47 48 --
SGND RT PHASE RESET EP
12
______________________________________________________________________________________
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing
Functional Diagrams
PWM CONTROLLER 1
IN SEL EN1 1.24VON 1.12VOFF CONFIG SELECTOR RESET TIMEOUT CT RESET
MAX15003
LDO REG EN 1.24V
MAX15003
SEQ_ PGPD_ SGND
SHDN 0.6V REF VREF DOWN1 DIGITAL SOFT-START AND SOFT-STOP CLK1 FB1 VREGOK EN1
SHDN SEQ_
CSP1
CSN1 OVL CONFIG RES OVERLOAD MANAGEMENT OVL_ CURRENTLIMIT SET CLK1 ILIM1
VR1 E/A
OVL1 IMAX1
BST1 DH1
R COMP1 SYNC RT PHASE EN OSC RAMP LEVEL CLK1 SHIFT 0.925 x VREF FB1 CPWM
Q
LX1
SET DOMINANT S
DREG1 DL1 PGND1
CLK2
CLK3
PGPD1
PGOOD1
______________________________________________________________________________________
13
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing MAX15003
Functional Diagrams (continued)
PWM CONTROLLERS 2 AND 3
EN1 1.24VON 1.12VOFF
MAX15003
SEQ_ SEQ_ VREF DOWN2/3 CLK2/3 SEL_ VREF VR2/3 E/A RES OVERLOAD IMAX2/3 MANAGEMENT OVL2/3 EN CONFIG EN_ SHDN EN2/3
CSP2/3
CSN2/3 OVL CONFIG OVL_ CURRENTLIMIT SET CLK2/3 ILIM2/3
DIGITAL SOFT-START AND SOFT-STOP EN/ TRACK2/3 FB2/3
BST2/3 DH2/3
R COMP2/3 CPWM CLK2/3 RAMP LEVEL SHIFT CLK2/3 0.925 x VREF FB2/3
Q
LX2/3 DREG2/3 DL2/3 PGND2/3
SET DOMINANT S
PGPD2/3
PGOOD2/3
Detailed Description
The MAX15003 is a triple-output, pulse-width-modulated (PWM), step-down, DC-DC controller with tracking and sequencing options. The device operates over the input voltage range of 5.5V to 23V or 5V 10%. Each PWM controller provides an adjustable output down to 0.6V and delivers up to 15A load current with excellent load and line regulation. Each of the MAX15003 PWM sections utilizes a voltage-mode control scheme for good noise immunity and offers external compensation allowing for maximum flexibility with a wide selection of inductor values and capacitor types. The device operates at a fixed switching frequency that is programmable from 200kHz to 2.2MHz and can be synchronized to an external clock signal using the SYNC input. Each converter, operating at up to 2.2MHz with 120 out-of-phase, increases the input capacitor ripple frequency up to 6.6MHz, reducing the RMS input ripple current and the size of the input bypass capacitor requirement significantly.
The MAX15003 provides either coincident tracking, ratiometric tracking, or sequencing. This allows tailoring of the power-up/power-down sequence depending on the system requirements. The MAX15003 features lossless valley-mode currentlimit protection by monitoring the voltage drop across the synchronous MOSFET's on-resistance to sense the inductor current. The MAX15003's internal current source exhibits a positive temperature coefficient to help compensate for the MOSFET's temperature coefficient. Use an external voltage-divider when a more precise current limit is desired. This divider along with a precision shunt resistor allows for more accurate current limit. The MAX15003 includes internal undervoltage lockout with hysteresis, digital soft-start/soft-stop for glitch-free power-up and power-down of the converters. The power-on reset (RESET) with adjustable timeout period monitors all three outputs and provides a RESET signal to a system controller/processor indicating when all outputs are within regulation. Protection features include lossless valley-mode current limit and hiccup mode output short-circuit protection.
14
______________________________________________________________________________________
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing
Internal Undervoltage Lockout (UVLO)
VIN must exceed the default UVLO threshold before any operation can commence. The UVLO circuitry keeps the MOSFET drivers, oscillator, and all the internal circuitry shut down to reduce current consumption. The UVLO rising threshold is 4.05V with 350mV hysteresis. an RC filter (1 to 3.3 and 2.2F in parallel to 0.1F ceramic capacitors are typical) from REG to DREG_ filters out high-peak currents. Alternatively, DREG can be connected to an external source (VDREG-EXT). Note that the DREG voltage should be high enough to fully enhance the low-side MOSFET. To avoid partial enhancing of the MOSFETs, use the VDREG-EXT to set the UVLO externally using EN1. BST_ supplies the power for the high-side MOSFET drivers. Connect the bootstrap diode from BST_ to DREG_ (anode at DREG_ and cathode at BST_). Connect a bootstrap 0.1F or higher ceramic capacitor between BST_ and LX_. Though not always necessary, it may be useful to insert a small resistor (4.7 to 22) in series with the BST_ pin and the cathode of the bootstrap diode for additional noise immunity. The high-side (DH_) and low-side (DL_) drivers drive the gates of the external n-channel MOSFETs. The drivers' 2A peak source- and sink-current capability provides ample drive for the fast rise and fall times of the switching MOSFETs. Faster rise and fall times result in reduced switching losses. The gate driver circuitry also provides a break-beforemake time (20ns typ) to prevent shoot-through currents during transition.
MAX15003
Digital Soft-Start/Soft-Stop
The MAX15003 soft-start feature allows the load voltage to ramp up in a controlled manner, eliminating outputvoltage overshoot. Soft-start begins after VIN exceeds the undervoltage lockout threshold and the enable input is above 1.24V. The soft-start circuitry gradually ramps up the reference voltage. This controls the rate of rise of the output voltage and reduces input surge currents during startup. The soft-start duration is 2048 clock cycles. The output voltage is incremented through 64 equal steps. The output reaches regulation when soft-start is completed, regardless of output capacitance and load. Soft-stop commences when the enable input falls below 1.12V. The soft-stop circuitry ramps down the reference voltage controlling the output voltage rate of fall. The output voltage is decremented through 64 equal steps in 2048 clock cycles.
Internal Linear Regulator (REG)
REG is the output terminal of a 5V LDO powered from IN that provides power to the IC. Connect REG externally to DREG to provide power for the low-side MOSFET gate driver. Bypass REG to SGND with a minimum 2.2F ceramic capacitor. Place the capacitor physically close to the MAX15003 to provide good bypassing. REG is intended for powering only the internal circuitry and should not be used to supply power to external loads. REG can source up to 120mA. This current, I REG , includes quiescent current (IQ) and gate drive current (IDREG): IREG = IQ + [fSW x (QGHS_ + QGLS_)] where QGHS_ to QGLS_ are the total gate charge of each of the respective high- and low-side external MOSFETs at VGATE = 5V. fSW is the switching frequency of the converter and IQ is the quiescent current of the device at the switching frequency.
Oscillator/Synchronization Input/Phase Staggering (RT, SYNC, PHASE)
Use an external resistor at RT to program the MAX15003 switching frequency from 200kHz to 2.2MHz. Choose the appropriate resistor at RT to calculate the desired output switching frequency (fSW): fSW (Hz) = 1011/(RRT + 1750) () Connect an external clock at SYNC for external clock synchronization. A rising clock edge on SYNC is interpreted as a synchronization input. If the SYNC signal is lost, the internal oscillator takes control of the switching rate, returning the switching frequency to that set by RRT. This maintains output regulation even with intermittent SYNC signals. For proper synchronization, the external frequency must be at least 20% higher than three times the frequency programmed through the RT input. The switching frequency is 1/3 the SYNC frequency. Connect SYNC to SGND when not used. Connect PHASE to SGND for 120 out-of-phase operation between the controllers. Connect PHASE to REG for in-phase operation.
MOSFET Gate Drivers
DREG_ is the supply input for the low-side MOSFET driver. Connect DREG_ to REG externally. Everytime the low-side MOSFET switches on, high peak current is drawn from DREG for a short amount of time. Adding
______________________________________________________________________________________
15
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing MAX15003
Coincident/Ratiometric Tracking (SEL, EN/TRACK_)
The enable/tracking input in conjunction with digital softstart and soft-stop provides coincident/ratiometric tracking (see Figure 1). Track an output voltage by connecting a resistive divider from the output being tracked to the enable/tracking input. For example, for VOUT2 to coincidentally track VOUT1, connect the same resistive divider used for FB2, from OUT1 to EN/TRACK2 to SGND. See Figure 2 and the Coincident Startup and Coincident Shutdown graphs in the Typical Operating Characteristics. Track ratiometrically by connecting EN/TRACK_ to SGND. This synchonizes the soft-start and soft-stop of all the controllers' references, and hence their respective output voltages track ratiometrically. See Figure 2 and the Typical Operating Characteristics (Ratiometric Startup and Ratiometric Shutdown graphs). Connect SEL to REG to configure as a triple tracker. When the MAX15003 converter is configured as a tracker, the output short-circuit fault situations at master or slave outputs are handled carefully so that either the master or slave output does not stay on when the other outputs are shorted to the ground. When the slave is shorted and enters in hiccup mode, both the master and the other slave soft-stop. When the master is shorted and the part enters in hiccup mode, the slaves ratiometrically soft-stop. Coming out of the hiccup, all outputs soft-start coincidently or ratiometrically depending on their initial configuration. See the Typical Operating Characteristics for the output behaviour during the fault conditions. During power-off, when the input falls below its UVLO, the output voltages fall down at the rate depending on the respective output capacitor and load.
VOUT1 VOUT2 VOUT3
SOFT-START
SOFT-STOP
A) COINCIDENT TRACKING OUTPUTS
VOUT1 VOUT2 VOUT3
SOFT-START
SOFT-STOP
B) RATIOMETRIC TRACKING OUTPUTS
VOUT1 VOUT2 VOUT3 SOFTSTART
SOFT-STOP C) SEQUENCED OUTPUTS
Output-Voltage Sequencing (SEL, EN/TRACK_, PGOOD)
Referring to Figure 1c, when sequencing, the enable/tracking input must be above 1.24V for each PWM controller to start. The PGOOD_ outputs and EN/TRACK_ inputs can be daisy-chained to generate power sequencing. Open-drain PGOOD_ outputs go high impedance
Figure 1. Graphical Representation of Coincident Tracking, Ratiometric Tracking, or PGOOD Sequencing
when FB_ is above the PGOOD_ threshold (555mV typ). Connect a resistive divider from the power-good output to the enable/tracking input to SGND to set when each controller will start. See Figure 2. Connect SEL to SGND to configure as a triple sequencer.
16
______________________________________________________________________________________
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing MAX15003
RATIOMETRIC TRACKING VIN COINCIDENT TRACKING VIN PGOOD SEQUENCING VIN
EN1
EN1
EN1
VOUT1 EN/TRACK2 RA EN/TRACK3 EN/TRACK2 RB SEL REG EN/TRACK3 VOUT2 VOUT3 RA FB2 RB FB3 RD RC RD PGOOD2 EN/TRACK3 SEL RC PGOOD1 EN/TRACK2 REG REG
SEL
REG
Figure 2. Ratiometric Tracking, Coincident Tracking, PGOOD Sequencing Configurations
Error Amplifier
The output of the internal error transconductance amplifier (COMP_) is provided for frequency compensation (see the Compensation Design Guidelines section). The inverting input is FB_ and the output COMP_. The error transamplifier has an 80dB open-loop gain and a 10MHz GBW product.
Output Short-Circuit Protection (Hiccup Mode)
The current-limit circuit employs a valley current-limiting algorithm that either uses a shunt or the synchronous MOSFET's on-resistance as the current-sensing element. Once the high-side MOSFET turns off, the voltage across the current-sensing element is monitored. If this voltage does not exceed the current-limit threshold,
the high-side MOSFET turns on normally at the start of the next cycle. If the voltage exceeds the current-limit threshold just before the beginning of a new PWM cycle, the controller skips that cycle. During severe overload or short-circuit conditions, the switching frequency of the device appears to decrease because the on-time of the low-side MOSFET extends beyond a clock cycle. If the current-limit threshold is exceeded for more than eight cumulative clock cycles (NCL), the device shuts down (both DH and DL are pulled low) for 4096 clock cycles (hiccup timeout) and then restarts with a softstart sequence. If three consecutive cycles pass without a current-limit event, the count of NCL is cleared (see Figure 3). Hiccup mode protects against a continuous output short circuit.
______________________________________________________________________________________
17
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing MAX15003
INITIATE HICCUP TIMEOUT NHT
The minimum input voltage is limited by the maximum duty cycle and is calculated using the following equation: VIN(MIN)
CURRENT LIMIT
IN COUNT OF 8 NCL CLR
1 - t OFF(MIN) x fSW
(
VOUT
)
where tOFF(MIN) typically is equal to 150ns.
Inductor Selection
IN COUNT OF 3 NCLR CLR
Figure 3. Hiccup-Mode Block Diagram
PWM Controller Design Procedures
Setting the Switching Frequency
Connect a 500k to 45k resistor from RT to SGND to program the switching frequency from 200kHz to 2.2MHz. Calculate the switching frequency using the following equation: fSW = 1011/(RRT + 1750) Higher frequencies allow designs with lower inductor values and less output capacitance. Consequently, peak currents and I 2 R losses are lower at higher switching frequencies, but core losses, gate-charge currents, and switching losses increase.
Three key inductor parameters must be specified for operation with the MAX15003: inductance value (L), peak inductor current (IPEAK), and inductor saturation current (ISAT). The minimum required inductance is a function of operating frequency, input-to-output voltage differential, and the peak-to-peak inductor current (IP-P). Higher IP-P allows for a lower inductor value. A lower inductance value minimizes size and cost and improves large-signal and transient response. However, efficiency is reduced due to higher peak currents and higher peak-to-peak output voltage ripple for the same output capacitor. A higher inductance increases efficiency by reducing the ripple current, however resistive losses due to extra wire turns can exceed the benefit gained from lower ripple current levels especially when the inductance is increased without also allowing for larger inductor dimensions. A good rule of thumb is to choose IP-P equal to 30% of the full load current. Calculate the inductance using the following equation:
L=
VOUT (VIN - VOUT ) VIN x fSW x IP -P
Effective Input Voltage Range
Although the MAX15003 converters can operate from input supplies ranging from 5.5V to 23V, the input voltage range can be effectively limited by the MAX15003 duty-cycle limitations for a given output voltage. The maximum input voltage is limited by the minimum ontime (tON(MIN)): VIN(MAX) where tON(MIN) is 75ns. VOUT t ON(MIN) x fSW
VIN and VOUT are typical values so that efficiency is optimum for typical conditions. The switching frequency is programmable between 200kHz and 2.2MHz (see Oscillator/Synchronization Input/Phase Staggering (RT, SYNC, PHASE) section). The peak-to-peak inductor current, which reflects the peak-to-peak output ripple, is worst at the maximum input voltage. See the Output Capacitor Selection section to verify that the worst-case output current ripple is acceptable. The inductor saturation current (ISAT) is also important to avoid runaway current during continuous output short-circuit conditions. Select an inductor with an ISAT specification higher than the maximum peak current.
18
______________________________________________________________________________________
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing
Input Capacitor Selection
The discontinuous input current of the buck converter causes large input ripple currents, and therefore, the input capacitor must be carefully chosen to withstand the input ripple current and keep the input voltage ripple within design requirements. The 120 ripple phase operation increases the frequency of the input capacitor ripple current to thrice the individual converter switching frequency. When using ripple phasing, the worst-case input capacitor ripple current is when the one converter with the highest output current is on. The input voltage ripple comprises VQ (caused by the capacitor discharge) and VESR (caused by the ESR of the input capacitor). The total voltage ripple is the sum of VQ and VESR which peaks at the end of the on-cycle. Calculate the input capacitance and ESR required for a specified ripple using the following equations:
ESR =
the required output capacitance and its ESR. The output ripple is mainly composed of VQ (caused by the capacitor discharge) and VESR (caused by the voltage drop across the equivalent series resistance of the output capacitor). The equations for calculating the output capacitance and its ESR are: COUT =
ESR =
MAX15003
IP -P 8 x VQ x fSW
2 x VESR IP -P
VESR IP -P ILOAD(MAX) + 2
V ILOAD(MAX) x OUT VIN CIN = VQ x fSW where: IP -P =
(VIN - VOUT ) x VOUT
VIN x fSW x L
ILOAD(MAX) is the maximum output current, IP-P is the peak-to-peak inductor current, and fSW is the switching frequency. For the condition with only one converter is on, calculate the input ripple current using the following equation: ICIN(RMS) =ILOAD(MAX) x VOUT x ( VIN - VOUT ) VIN
VESR and VQ are not directly additive because they are out of phase from each other. If using ceramic capacitors, which generally have low ESR, VQ dominates. If using electrolytic capacitors, V ESR dominates. The allowable deviation of the output voltage during fast load transients also affects the output capacitance, its ESR, and its equivalent series inductance (ESL). The output capacitor supplies the load current during a load step until the controller responds with a greater duty cycle. The response time (tRESPONSE) depends on the gain bandwidth of the converter (see the Compensation Design Guidelines section). The resistive drop across the output capacitor's ESR, the drop across the capacitor's ESL, and the capacitor discharge cause a voltage droop during the load-step (ISTEP). Use a combination of low-ESR tantalum/aluminum electrolytic and ceramic capacitors for better load-transient and voltage-ripple performance. Surfacemount capacitors and capacitors in parallel help reduce the ESL. Keep the maximum output voltage deviation below the tolerable limits of the electronics being powered. Use the following equations to calculate the required ESR, ESL, and capacitance value during a load step: VESR ISTEP xt I COUT = STEP RESPONSE VQ
ESR = ESL =
The MAX15003 includes UVLO hysteresis to avoid possible unintentional chattering during turn-on. Use additional bulk capacitance if the input source impedance is high. At lower input voltage, additional input capacitance helps avoid possible undershoot below the undervoltage lockout threshold during transient loading.
VESL x t STEP ISTEP
Output Capacitor Selection
The allowed output voltage ripple and the maximum deviation of the output voltage during load steps determine
where ISTEP is the load step, tSTEP is the rise time of the load step, and tRESPONSE is the response time of the controller.
______________________________________________________________________________________
19
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing MAX15003
Setting the Current Limit
Connect a 25k to 150k resistor, RILIM, from ILIM to SGND to program the valley current-limit threshold (VCL) from 50mV to 300mV. ILIM sources 20A out to RILIM. The resulting voltage divided by 10 is the valley current-limit threshold. The MAX15003 uses a valley current-sense method for current limiting. The voltage drop across the low-side MOSFET due to its on-resistance is used to sense the inductor current. The voltage drop (VVALLEY) across the low-side MOSFET at the valley point and at ILOAD is: VVALLEY = RDS(ON) x ILOAD
-
VALLEY CURRENT-LIMIT THRESHOLD AND RDS(ON) vs. TEMPERATURE
1.4 VILIM AND RDS(ON) (NORMALIZED) 1.3 1.2 1.1 1.0 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 RILIM = 25.5k -50 -30 -10 10 30 50 70 90 110 130 150 TEMPERATURE (C) VILIM RDS(ON)
MAX15003 fig04
1.5
IP - P 2
RDS(ON) is the on-resistance of the low-side MOSFET, ILOAD is the rated load current, and IP-P is the peakto-peak inductor current. The RDS(ON) of the MOSFET varies with temperature. Calculate the RDS(ON) of the MOSFET at its operating junction temperature at full load using the MOSFET datasheet. To compensate for this temperature variation, the 20A ILIM reference current has a temperature coefficient of 3333ppm/C. This allows the valley current-limit threshold (VCL) to track and partially compensate for the increase in the synchronous MOSFET's RDS(ON) with increasing temperature. Use the following equation to calculate RILIM:
I RDS(ON) x ICL(MAX) - P -P x10 2 RILIM = 20 x10 -6 1+ 3.333 x10 -3 (T - 25C)
Figure 4. Current-Limit Trip Point and VRDS(ON) vs. Temperature
Compensation Design Guidelines
The MAX15003 uses a fixed-frequency, voltage-mode control scheme that regulates the output voltage by differentially comparing the "sampled" output voltage against a fixed reference. The subsequent error voltage that appears at the error amplifier output (COMP) is compared against an internal ramp voltage to generate the required duty cycle of the pulse-width modulator. A second order lowpass LC filter removes the switching harmonics and passes the DC component of the pulsewidth-modulated signal to the output. The LC filter, which has an attenuation slope of -40dB/decade, introduces 180 of phase shift at frequencies above the LC resonant frequency. This phase shift, in addition to the inherent 180 of phase shift of the regulator's self-governing (negative) feedback system, poses the potential for positive feedback. The error amplifier and its associated circuitry are designed to compensate for this instability to achieve a stable closed-loop system. The basic regulator loop consists of a power modulator (comprises the regulator's pulse-width modulator, associated circuitry, and LC filter), an output feedback divider, and an error amplifier. The power modulator has a DC gain set by VIN / VRAMP, with a double pole and a single zero set by the output inductance (L), the output capacitance (COUT), and its equivalent series resistance (ESR). A second, higher frequency zero also exists, which is a function of the output capacitor's ESR and ESL); though only taken into account when using very high-quality filter components and/or frequencies of operation.
Figure 4 illustrates the effect of the MAX15003 ILIM reference current temperature coefficient to compensate for the variation of the MOSFET RDS(ON) over the operating junction temperature range.
Power MOSFET Selection
When choosing the MOSFETs, consider the total gate charge, RDS(ON), power dissipation, the maximum drainto-source voltage and package thermal impedance. The product of the MOSFET gate charge and on-resistance is a figure of merit, with a lower number signifying better performance. Choose MOSFETs that are optimized for high-frequency switching applications. The average gatedrive current from the MAX15003's output is proportional to the frequency and gate charge required to drive the MOSFET. The power dissipated in the MAX15003 is proportional to the input voltage and the average drive current (see the Power Dissipation section).
20
______________________________________________________________________________________
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing
Below are equations that define the power modulator: GMOD(DC) = fLC =
VIN VRAMP 1
2 x L x COUT 1 fZERO,ESR = 2 xESRx COUT
First, select the passive and active power components that meet the application's output ripple, component size, and component cost requirements. Second, choose the small-signal compensation components to achieve the desired closed-loop frequency response and phase margin as outlined below.
MAX15003
fZERO,ESL =
ESR 2 xESL
The switching frequency is programmable between 200kHz and 2.2MHz using an external resistor at RT. Typically, the crossover frequency (fCO), which is the frequency when the system's closed-loop gain is equal to unity crosses the 0dB axis--should be set at or below one-tenth the switching frequency (fSW/10) for stable, closed-loop response. The MAX15003 provides an internal transconductance amplifier with its inverting input and its output available to the user for external frequency compensation. The flexibility of external compensation for each converter offers wide selection of output filtering components, especially the output capacitor. For cost-sensitive applications, use aluminum electrolytic capacitors and for space-sensitive applications, use low-ESR tantalum or multilayer ceramic chip (MLCC) capacitors at the output. The higher switching frequencies of the MAX15003 allow the use of MLCC as the primary filter capacitor(s).
Closed-Loop Response and Compensation of Voltage-Mode Regulators The power modulator's LC lowpass filter exhibits a variety of responses, depending on the value of the L and C (and their parasitics). One such response is shown in Figure 5a. In this example the power modulator's uncompensated crossover is approximately 1/6th the desired crossover frequency, fCO. Note also, the uncompensated roll-off through the 0dB plane follows the double-pole, -40dB/decade slope and approaches 180 of phase shift, indicative of a potentially unstable system. Together with the inherent 180 of phase delay in the negative feedback system, this may lead to near 360 or positive feedback--an unstable system. The desired (compensated) roll-off follows a -20dB/decade slope (and commensurate 90 of phase shift), and, in this example, occurs at approximately 6x the uncompensated crossover frequency, fCO. In this example, a Type II compensator provides for stable closed-loop operation, leveraging the +20dB/decade slope of the capacitor's ESR zero (see Figure 5b).
POWER MODULATOR (LARGE, BULK OUTPUT CAPACITOR(S)) GAIN (REAL, ASYMPTOTIC/ PHASE RESPONSE vs. FREQUENCY
40 20 |GMOD| MAGNITUDE (dB) 0 -20 -40 fZERO,ESL -60 -80 10 100 1k 10k 100k 1M FREQUENCY (Hz) -135 < GMOD |GMOD| PHASE (DEGREES) MAGNITUDE (dB) 0 -45 -90
MAX15003 fig05a
POWER MODULATOR (LARGE, BULK OUTPUT CAPACITOR(S)) AND TYPE II COMPENSATION GAIN (ASYMPTOTIC)/PHASE RESPONSE vs. FREQUENCY
80 MAX15003 fig05b
fLC
90 45
180 135 90 45 0 -45 -90 -135 PHASE (DEGREES)
fZERO,ESR
fLC
-180 10M
-80 10 100 1k 10k 100k 1M FREQUENCY (Hz)
-180 10M
Figure 5a. Power Modulator Gain and Phase Response (Large, Bulk COUT)
Figure 5b. Power Modulator (Large, Bulk COUT) and Type II Compensator Responses
21
______________________________________________________________________________________
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing
The Type II compensator's mid-frequency gain (approximately 18dB shown here) is designed to compensate for the power modulator's attenuation at the desired crossover frequency, fCO (GE/A + GMOD = 0dB at fCO). In this example, the power modulator's inherent -20dB/decade roll-off above the ESR zero (fZERO, ESR) is leveraged to extend the active regulation gain-bandwidth of the voltage regulator. As shown in Figure 5b, the net result is a 6x increase in the regulator's gain bandwidth while providing greater than 75 of phase margin (the difference between G E/A and G MOD respective phases at crossover, fCO). Other filter schemes pose their own problems. For instance, when choosing high-quality filter capacitor(s), e.g., MLCCs, and an inductor with minimal parasitics, the inherent ESR zero may occur at a much higher frequency, as shown in Figure 5c. As with the previous example, the actual gain and phase response is overlaid on the power modulator's asymptotic gain response. One readily observes the more dramatic gain and phase transition at or near the power modulator's resonant frequency, fLC, versus the gentler response of the previous example. This is due to the component's lower parasitics leading to the higher frequency of the inherent ESR zero of the output
MAX15003
capacitor. In this example, the desired crossover frequency occurs below the ESR zero frequency. In this example, a compensator with an inherent midfrequency double-zero response is required to mitigate the effects of the filter's double-pole. Such is available with the Type III topology. As demonstrated in Figure 5d, the Type III's midfrequency double-zero gain (exhibiting a +20dB/ decade slope, noting the compensator's pole at the origin) is designed to compensate for the power modulator's double-pole -40dB/decade attenuation at the desired crossover frequency, fCO (again, GE/A + GMOD = 0dB at fCO). (See Figure 5d). In the above example, the power modulator's inherent (mid-frequency) -40dB/decade roll-off is mitigated by the mid-frequency double zero's +20dB/decade gain to extend the active regulation gain-bandwidth of the voltage regulator. As shown in Figure 5d, the net result is an approximate doubling in the regulator's gain bandwidth while providing greater than 60 of phase margin (the difference between GE/A and GMOD respective phases at crossover, fCO). Design procedures for both Type II and Type III compensators are shown below.
POWER MODULATOR (HIGH-QUALITY OUTPUT CAPACITORS (S)) GAIN (REAL, ASYMPTOTIC)/ PHASE RESPONSE vs. FREQUENCY
40 |GMOD| 20 |GMOD| MAGNITUDE (dB) 0 -20 |GMOD| -40 -60 -80 10 100 1k 10k 100k 1M FREQUENCY (Hz) fZEROES fZEROES -90 -135 -180 10M fLC 45 PHASE (DEGREES)
MAX15003 fig05c
POWER MODULATOR (HIGH-QUALITY OUTPUT CAPACITOR(S)) AND TYPE III COMPENSATOR GAIN (ASYMPTOTIC)/ PHASE RESPONSE vs. FREQUENCY
80 60 |GEA| 40 MAGNITUDE (dB) 20 0 -20 -40 -60 -80 10 100 1k 10k 100k 1M FREQUENCY (Hz) |GMOD| < GMOD fZEROES 68 0 -68 -135 fCO -203 fZEROES -270 10M PHASE (DEGREES) fLC 135 < GEA
MAX15003 fig05d
90
270 203
0 -45
Figure 5c. Power Modulator Gain and Phase Response (HighQuality COUT)
Figure 5d. Power Modulator (High-Quality COUT) and Type III Compensator Responses
22
______________________________________________________________________________________
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing
Type II: Compensation When fCO > fZERO, ESR
VOUT R1 gM
1) Calculate the fZERO,ESR and LC double pole, fLC: fZERO,ESR = fLC =
1 2 xESRx COUT 1 2 x L x COUT
MAX15003
COMP RF CF CCF
2) Calculate the unity-gain crossover frequency as:
f fCO SW 10
R2
VREF
+
3) Determine RF from the following:
V (2 x fCO xL)VOUT RF = RAMP VFB x VIN x gm xESR
Figure 6a. Type II Compensation Network
GAIN (dB)
Note: RF is derived by setting the total loop gain at crossover frequency to unity, e.g., GEA(fCO) x GM(fCO) = 1V/V. The transconductance error amplifier gain is GEA(fCO) = gM x RF while the modulator gain is: GMOD (fCO ) =
VIN V ESR x x FB VRAMP 2 x fCO xL VOUT
1ST ASYMPTOTE GMODVREFVOUT-1(CF)-1 3RD ASYMPTOTE GMODVREFVOUT-1(CCF)-1
The total loop gain can be expressed logarithmically as follows:
20log10 gmRF +
[
]
2ND ASYMPTOTE GMODVREFVOUT-1RF
ESRx VIN x VFB = 0 dB 20log10 2 x fCO xL ) x VOUT x VRAMP (
(rad/s)
1ST POLE (AT ORIGIN)
1ST ZERO (RFCF)-1
2ND POLE (RFCCF)-1
where V RAMP is the peak-to-peak ramp amplitude equal to 2V. 4) Place a zero at or below the LC double pole, fLC: CF =
1 2 xRF x fLC
Figure 6b. Type II Compensation Network Response
When the fZERO,ESR is lower than fCO and close to fLC, a Type II compensation network provides the necessary closed-loop response. The Type II compensation network provides a mid-band compensating zero and high-frequency pole (see Figures 6a and 6b). R F C F provides the mid-band zero f MID,ZERO , and RFCCF provides the high-frequency pole. Use the following procedure to calculate the compensation network components.
5) Place a high-frequency pole at or below fP = 0.5 x fSW: CCF =
1 xRF x fSW
6) Choose an appropriately sized R1 (connected from OUT_ to FB_, start with a 10k). Once R1 is selected, calculate R2 using the following equation:
FB R2 = R1 x VOUT - VFB V
where VFB = 0.6V.
______________________________________________________________________________________
23
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing MAX15003
Type III: Compensation When fCO < fZERO, ESR As indicated above, the position of the output capacitor's inherent ESR zero is critical in designing an appropriate compensation network. When low-ESR ceramic output capacitors are used, the ESR zero frequency (f ZERO, ESR ) is usually much higher than unity crossover frequency (fCO). In this case, a Type III compensation network is recommended (see Figure 7a).
VOUT CCF RI CI R2 gM VREF + COMP R1 RF CF
Use the following procedure to calculate the compensation network components. 1) Select a crossover frequency, fCO:
f fCO SW 10 1 2x L x COUT
2) Calculate the LC double-pole frequency, fLC : fLC = 3) Select RF 10k. 4) Place a zero fZ1 =
1 at 0.75 x fLC where 2 x RF x CF
1 2 xRF x 0.75 x fLC
CF =
5) Calculate CI for a target unity-gain crossover frequency, fC: CI =
2 x fCO xL x COUT x VRAMP VIN xRF
Figure 7a. Type III Compensation Network
GAIN (dB)
Note: CI is derived by setting the total loop gain at crossover frequency to unity, e.g., G EA (f CO ) x G MOD (f CO ) = 1V/V. The total loop gain can be expressed logarithmically as follows:
4TH ASYMPTOTE RFRI-1 3RD ASYMPTOTE RFCI 1ST ASYMPTOTE (RICF)-1 2ND ASYMPTOTE (RFRI)-1 1ST POLE (AT ORIGIN) 1ST ZERO 2ND POLE (RFCF)-1 (RICI)-1 2ND ZERO (RICI)-1 3RD POLE (rad/sec) (RFCCF)-1 5TH ASYMPTOTE (RICCF)-1
20 x log10 [2 x fCO x RF x CI ] + GMOD(DC) = 0dB 20 x log10 2 2 x f CO ) x L x C OUT ( 6) Place a second zero, fZ2, at or below fLC thereby determining R1. R1 =
1 2 x fZ2 x CI
Figure 7b. Type III Compensation Network Response
1 ), at or below fZERO,ESR. 7) Place a pole (fP1 = (2 x R1 x CI) R1 =
1 2 x fZERO,ESR x CI
As shown in Figure 7b, a Type III compensation network introduces two zeros and three poles into the control loop. The error amplifier has a low-frequency pole at the origin, two zeros, and higher frequency poles. The locations of the zeros and poles should be such that the phase margin peaks at fCO. Set the ratios of fCO-to-fZ and fP-to-fCO equal to one another, e.g., fCO fP = is a good number to get about = 5 fZ fCO 60 of phase margin at fCO. Whichever technique, it is important to place the two zeros at or below the double pole to avoid the conditional stability issue.
24
8) Place a second pole (fP2 =
1 ) at or below 2 x RF x CCF one-half the switching frequency. CCF =
1 x fSW xRF
9) Calculate R2 using the following equation: R2 = R1 x where VFB = 0.6V.
VFB VOUT - VFB
______________________________________________________________________________________
150F/16V
IN
CIN VOUT2 19.1k 6.04k 1nF 750 10k
PGND
SGND
100F 2.2F 11k 47pF 25.5k (1/2) IRF7904 1.8F
2.2 0.1F IN LX2 BST2 DH2 DL2 CSP2 FB2 DREG2 CSN2 PGND2 COMP2 ILIM2 PGOOD2 0.1F 2.2 EN/TRACK2 0.1F
DREG3 22F BST3 100nF IRF7807Z DH3 EP LX1 CSN1 DL1 CSP1 PGND1 EN1 FB1 1800pF COMP3 COMP1 47pF 13k (1/2) FDS6982A5 LX3 CSN3 NTMFS4835N DL3 CSP3 DH1 (1/2) FDS6982A5 470nF BST1
DREG1 22F
SEL
PHASE
SYNC
RT
REG
SGND
CT
MAX15003
______________________________________________________________________________________
3.3F VOUT1 100F 10k 750k 19.1k
Typical Operating Circuits
165k
2.2F
0.022F
10k
RESET
Figure 8. Coincident Triple Tracker with Lossless Current Sense
MAX15003
PGND3 EN/TRACK3 FB3 11k 47pF 1.2nF 1200nF 4.22k ILIM3 25.5k PGOOD3 PGOOD1 ILIM1 25.5k
VOUT3
34k
1.15k
10k
COUT 120F (2)
470pF
34k
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing
25
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing MAX15003
Typical Operating Circuits (continued)
VOUT1
ILIM1
PGOOD1 PGOOD3 RESET CT SGND REG RT SYNC PHASE SEL
PGND1
EP
VOUT2
MAX15003
EN/TRACK3
CSN3
COMP3
PGND3
DREG3
COMP1
DREG1
CSN1
BST1
CSP1
DH1
LX1
DL1
EN1
FB1
BST3
DH3
LX3
IN
CIN
SGND
Figure 9. Triple Sequencer with Lossless Current Sense
26 ______________________________________________________________________________________
VOUT3
PGND
COUT
ILIM3
CSP3
DL3
FB3
EN/TRACK2
PGOOD2 COMP2 PGND2 DREG2 CSN2 ILIM2 CSP2 BST2 DH2 DL2 FB2 LX2 IN
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing
Typical Operating Circuits (continued)
VOUT1
MAX15003
ILIM1
PGOOD1 PGOOD3 RESET CT SGND REG RT SYNC PHASE SEL
PGND1
EP
VOUT2
MAX15003
EN/TRACK3
CSN3
COMP3
PGND3
DREG3
COMP1
DREG1
CSN1
BST1
CSP1
DH1
LX1
DL1
EN1
FB1
BST3
DH3
LX3
IN
CIN
SGND
Figure 10. Coincident Dual Tracker and a Sequencer with Lossless Current Sense
______________________________________________________________________________________ 27
VOUT3
PGND
COUT
ILIM3
CSP3
DL3
FB3
EN/TRACK2
PGOOD2 COMP2 PGND2 DREG2 CSN2 ILIM2 CSP2 BST2 DH2 DL2 FB2 LX2 IN
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing MAX15003
Typical Operating Circuits (continued)
VOUT1
ILIM1
PGOOD1 PGOOD3 RESET CT SGND REG RT SYNC PHASE SEL
PGND1
EP
VOUT2
MAX15003
EN/TRACK3
COMP3
PGND3
DREG3
CSN3
COMP1
DREG1
CSN1
BST1
CSP1
DH1
LX1
DL1
EN1
FB1
BST3
DH3
DL3
LX3
IN
CIN
SGND
Figure 11. Ratiometric Triple Tracker with Accurate Valley-Mode Current Sense
28 ______________________________________________________________________________________
VOUT3
PGND
COUT
ILIM3
CSP3
FB3
EN/TRACK2
PGOOD2 COMP2 PGND2 DREG2 CSN2 ILIM2 CSP2 BST2 DH2 DL2 FB2 LX2 IN
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing
PWM Controller Applications Information
Power Dissipation
The 48-pin TQFN thermally enhanced package can dissipate up to 3.08W. Calculate power dissipation in the MAX15003 as a product of the input voltage and the total REG output current (IREG). IREG includes quiescent current (I Q ) and the total gate drive current (IDREG): PD = VIN x IREG IREG = IQ + [fSW x (QG1 + QG2 + QG3 + QG4 + QG5 + QG6)] where QG1 to QG6 are the total gate charge of the lowside and high-side external MOSFETs. f SW is the switching frequency of the converter and IQ is the quiescent current of the device at the switching frequency. Use the following equation to calculate the maximum power dissipation (PDMAX) in the chip at a given ambient temperature (TA): PDMAX = 38.5 x (150 - TA)..........mW 3) Keep the current loop formed by the lower switching MOSFET, inductor, and output capacitor short. 4) Keep SGND and PGND isolated and connect them at one single point close to the negative terminal of the input filter capacitor. 5) Run the current-sense lines CSP_ and CSN_ close to each other to minimize the loop area. 6) Avoid long traces between the DREG_ bypass capacitor, low-side driver outputs of the MAX15003, MOSFET gate, and PGND. Minimize the loop formed by the DREG_ bypass capacitor, bootstrap diode, bootstrap capacitor, high-side driver output of the MAX15003, and upper MOSFET gates. 7) Place the bank of output capacitors close to the load. 8) Distribute the power components evenly across the board for proper heat dissipation. 9) Provide enough copper area at and around the switching MOSFETs, and inductor to aid in thermal dissipation. 10) Connect the MAX15003 exposed paddle to a large copper plane to maximize its power dissipation capability. Connect the exposed paddle to SGND. Do not connect the exposed paddle to the SGND pin (pin 45) directly underneath the IC. 11) Use 2oz copper to keep the trace inductance and resistance to a minimum. Thin copper PCBs compromise efficiency because high currents are involved in the application. Also, thicker copper conducts heat more effectively, thereby reducing thermal impedance.
MAX15003
PCB Layout Guidelines
Use the following guidelines to layout the switching voltage regulator. 1) Place the IN, REG, and DREG_ bypass capacitors close to the MAX15003. 2) Minimize the area and length of the high-current loops from the input capacitor, upper switching MOSFET, inductor, and output capacitor back to the input capacitor negative terminal.
______________________________________________________________________________________
29
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing MAX15003
Pin Configuration
TOP VIEW
COMP3 ILIM3 CSP3
EN/TRACK3
EN/TRACK2
PGOOD3
PGOOD2
COMP2
ILIM2
36 35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 CSN3 BST3 DH3 LX3 DREG3 DL3 PGND3 SYNC SGND RT PHASE RESET 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 1 CT 2 IN 3 REG 4 SEL 5 PGND1 6 DL1 7 DREG1 8 LX1 9 DH1 10 11 12 BST1 CSN1 CSP1 24 23 22 21 20 19 CSN2 BST2 DH2 LX2 DREG2 DL2 PGND2 PGOOD1 FB1 EN1 COMP1 ILIM1
MAX15003
CSP2 18 17 16 15 14 13
FB3
+
THIN QFN (7mm x 7mm)
FB2
Chip Information
PROCESS: BiCMOS
30
______________________________________________________________________________________
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing
Package Information
(The package drawing(s) in this data sheet may not reflect the most current specifications. For the latest package outline information go to www.maxim-ic.com/packages.)
MAX15003
E E/2
DETAIL A
(NE-1) X e
k e D/2
D
(ND-1) X e
C L
D2
D2/2
b L E2/2 k
C L
E2
C L
C L
L e e
L
A1
A2
A
PACKAGE OUTLINE 32, 44, 48, 56L THIN QFN, 7x7x0.8mm
21-0144
F
1
2
______________________________________________________________________________________
32, 44, 48L QFN.EPS
31
Triple-Output Buck Controller with Tracking/Sequencing MAX15003
Package Information (continued)
(The package drawing(s) in this data sheet may not reflect the most current specifications. For the latest package outline information go to www.maxim-ic.com/packages.)
PACKAGE OUTLINE 32, 44, 48, 56L THIN QFN, 7x7x0.8mm
21-0144
F
2
2
Maxim cannot assume responsibility for use of any circuitry other than circuitry entirely embodied in a Maxim product. No circuit patent licenses are implied. Maxim reserves the right to change the circuitry and specifications without notice at any time.
32 ____________________Maxim Integrated Products, 120 San Gabriel Drive, Sunnyvale, CA 94086 408-737-7600 (c) 2007 Maxim Integrated Products is a registered trademark of Maxim Integrated Products, Inc.


▲Up To Search▲   

 
Price & Availability of MAX15003

All Rights Reserved © IC-ON-LINE 2003 - 2022  

[Add Bookmark] [Contact Us] [Link exchange] [Privacy policy]
Mirror Sites :  [www.datasheet.hk]   [www.maxim4u.com]  [www.ic-on-line.cn] [www.ic-on-line.com] [www.ic-on-line.net] [www.alldatasheet.com.cn] [www.gdcy.com]  [www.gdcy.net]


 . . . . .
  We use cookies to deliver the best possible web experience and assist with our advertising efforts. By continuing to use this site, you consent to the use of cookies. For more information on cookies, please take a look at our Privacy Policy. X