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  1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9   high performance zero voltage switch resonant mode controllers pin connections order this document by mc34067/d p suffix plastic package case 648 dw suffix plastic package case 751g (so16l) 16 1 (top view) v ref osc charge osc rc osc control current gnd error amp out inverting input noninverting input oneshot rc v cc drive output b c softstart enable/uvlo adjust drive output a power gnd fault input device operating temperature range package t a = 0 to + 70 c t a = 40 to + 85 c ordering information mc34067dw so16l mc34067p plastic dip mc33067dw so16l MC33067P plastic dip semiconductor technical data 16 1 1 motorola analog ic device data 
       the mc34067/mc33067 are high performance zero voltage switch resonant mode controllers designed for offline and dctodc converter applications that utilize frequency modulated constant offtime or constant deadtime control. these integrated circuits feature a variable frequency oscillator, a precise retriggerable oneshot timer, temperature compensated reference, high gain wide bandwidth error amplifier, steering flipflop, and dual high current totem pole outputs ideally suited for driving power mosfets. also included are protective features consisting of a high speed fault comparator and latch, programmable softstart circuitry, input undervoltage lockout with selectable thresholds, and reference undervoltage lockout. these devices are available in dualinline and surface mount packages. ? zero voltage switch resonant mode operation ? variable frequency oscillator with a control range exceeding 1000:1 ? precision oneshot timer for controlled offtime ? internally trimmed bandgap reference ? 4.0 mhz error amplifier ? dual high current totem pole outputs ? selectable undervoltage lockout thresholds with hysteresis ? enable input ? programmable softstart circuitry ? low startup current for offline operation simplified block diagram noninverting input 11 8 6 16 3 2 1 osc charge enable / uvlo adjust v cc 15 5 14 12 13 v ref uvlo error amp v cc uvlo / enable fault detector / latch 2.5 v clamp softstart oneshot output b inverting input softstart 7 error amp output oneshot oscillator control current osc rc 9 ground 4 fault input 10 pwr gnd output a v ref variable frequency oscillator steering flipflop 5.0 v reference ? motorola, inc. 1996 rev 0
mc34067 mc33067 2 motorola analog ic device data maximum ratings rating symbol value unit power supply voltage v cc 20 v drive output current, source or sink (note 1) continuous pulsed (0.5 m s, 25% duty cycle i o 0.3 1.5 a error amplifier, fault, oneshot, oscillator and softstart inputs v in 1.0 to + 6.0 v uvlo adjust input v in(uvlo) 1.0 to v cc v power dissipation and thermal characteristics dw suffix, plastic package, case 751g t a = 25 c thermal resistance, junctiontoair p suffix, plastic package, case 648 t a = 25 c thermal resistance, junctiontoair p d r q ja p d r q ja 862 145 1.25 100 mw c/w w c/w operating junction temperature t j + 150 c operating ambient temperature mc34067 mc33067 t a 0 to + 70 40 to + 85 c storage temperature t stg 55 to + 150 c electrical characteristics (v cc = 12 v [note 2], r osc = 18.2 k, r vfo = 2940, c osc = 300 pf, r t = 2370 k, c t = 300 pf, c l = 1.0 nf. for typical values t a = 25 c, for min/max values t a is the operating ambient temperature range that applies [note 3], unless otherwise noted.) characteristic symbol min typ max unit reference section reference output voltage (i o = 0 ma, t j = 25 c) v ref 5.0 5.1 5.2 v line regulation (v cc = 10 to 18 v) reg line 1.0 20 mv load regulation (i o = 0 ma to 10 ma) reg load 1.0 20 mv total output variation over line, load, and temperature v ref 4.9 5.3 v output short circuit current i o 25 100 190 ma reference undervoltage lockout threshold v th 3.8 4.3 4.8 v error amplifier input offset voltage (v cm = 1.5 v) v io 1.0 10 mv input bias current (v cm = 1.5 v) i ib 0.2 1.0 m a input offset current (v cm = 1.5 v) i io 0 0.5 m a open loop voltage gain (v cm = 1.5 v, v o = 2.0 v) a vol 70 100 db gain bandwidth product (f = 100 khz) gbw 3.0 5.0 mhz input common mode rejection ratio (v cm = 1.5 to 5.0 v) cmr 70 95 db power supply rejection ratio (v cc = 10 to 18 v, f = 120 hz) psr 80 100 db output voltage swing high state low state v oh v ol 2.8 3.2 0.6 0.8 v notes: 1. maximum package power dissipation limits must be observed. 2. adjust v cc above the startup threshold before setting to 12 v. 3. low duty cycle pulse techniques are used during test to maintain junction temperature as close to ambient as possible. t low =0 c for the mc34067 t high = + 70 c for mc34067 =40 c for the mc33067 t high = + 85 c for mc33067
mc34067 mc33067 3 motorola analog ic device data electrical characteristics (v cc = 12 v [note 2], r osc = 18.2 k, r vfo = 2940, c osc = 300 pf, r t = 2370 k, c t = 300 pf, c l = 1.0 nf. for typical values t a = 25 c, for min/max values t a is the operating ambient temperature range that applies [note 3], unless otherwise noted.) characteristic symbol min typ max unit oscillator frequency (error amp output low) t a = 25 c total variation (v cc = 10 to 18 v, t a = t low to t high f osc(low) 500 490 525 540 550 khz frequency (error amp output high) t a = 25 c total variation (v cc = 10 to 18 v, t a = t low to t high f osc(high) 1900 1850 2050 2150 2200 khz oscillator control input voltage, pin 3 @ 25 c v in 2.5 v oneshot drive output offtime t a = 25 c total variation (v cc = 10 to 18 v, t a = t low to t high t blank 235 225 250 270 280 ns drive outputs output voltage low state (i sink = 20 ma) low state (i sink = 200 ma) high state (i source = 20 ma) high state (i source = 200 ma) v ol v oh 9.5 9.0 0.8 1.5 10.3 9.7 1.2 2.0 v output voltage with uvlo activated (v cc = 6.0 v, i sink = 1.0 ma) v ol(uvlo) 0.8 1.2 v output voltage rise time (c l = 1.0 nf) t r 20 50 ns output voltage fall time (c l = 1.0 nf) t f 15 50 ns fault comparator input threshold v th 0.93 1.0 1.07 v input bias current (v pin 10 = 0 v) i ib 2.0 10 m a propagation delay to drive outputs (100 mv overdrive) t plh(in/out) 60 100 ns softstart capacitor charge current (v pin 11 = 2.5 v) i chg 4.5 9.0 14 m a capacitor discharge current (v pin 11 = 2.5 v) i dischg 3.0 8.0 ma undervoltage lockout startup threshold, v cc increasing enable/uvlo adjust pin open enable/uvlo adjust pin connected to v cc v th(uvlo) 14.8 8.0 16 9.0 17.2 10 v minimum operating voltage after turnon enable/uvlo adjust pin open enable/uvlo adjust pin connected to v cc v cc(min) 8.0 7.6 9.0 8.6 10 9.6 v enable/uvlo adjust shutdown threshold voltage v th(enable) 6.0 7.0 v enable/uvlo adjust input current (pin 9 = 0 v) i in(enable) 0.2 1.0 ma total device power supply current (enable/uvlo adjust pin open) startup (v cc = 13.5 v) operating (f osc = 500 khz) (note 2) i cc 0.5 27 0.8 35 ma notes: 1. maximum package power dissipation limits must be observed. 2. adjust v cc above the startup threshold before setting to 12 v. 3. low duty cycle pulse techniques are used during test to maintain junction temperature as close to ambient as possible. t low =0 c for the mc34067 t high = + 70 c for mc34067 =40 c for the mc33067 t high = + 85 c for mc33067
mc34067 mc33067 4 motorola analog ic device data a vol , open loop voltage gain (db) r t w , timing resistor (k ) r osc w , oscillator timing resistor (k ) oneshot period is measured at the drive outputs. oscillator discharge time is measured at the drive outputs. f osc c osc = 200 pf 60 30 20 10 400 3.0 500 0 v sat , output saturation voltage (v) , oscillator frequency (khz) t dischg , oscillator discharge time ( m s) 3500 3000 2500 2000 1500 1000 i osc , oscillator control current (ma) 0.35 0.30 0.25 0.20 0.15 0.10 i osc , oscillator control current (ma) t os , oneshot period ( m s) 0 0.05 200 v cc = 12 v t a = 25 c r osc = 18.2 k 400 300 100 500 c osc = 300 pf 0 10 20 30 40 50 50 40 30 20 10 0 f, frequency (hz) , reference output voltage change (mv) t a , ambient temperature ( c) 20 ? 10 gain v ref 50 60 70 80 90 100 120 110 0, excess phase (degrees) c osc = 500 pf c osc = 300 pf v cc = 12 v r vfo = r t = c t = 500 pf t a = 25 c figure 1. oscillator timing resistor versus discharge time figure 2. oscillator frequency versus oscillator control current figure 3. error amp output saturation voltage versus oscillator control current figure 4. oneshot timing resistor versus period figure 5. open loop voltage gain and phase versus frequency figure 6. reference output voltage change versus temperature 0 400 800 1200 1600 2000 0 20406080100 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 0.1 0.3 0.6 1.0 3.0 6.0 10 10 k 100 k 1.0m 10m 55 25 0 25 50 75 125 100 v cc = 12 v v o = 2.0 v r l = 100 k t a = 25 c v cc = 12 v r l = *v ref at t a = 25 c v cc = 12 v c osc = 500 pf r osc = 100 k t a = 25 c phase margin = 64 *v ref = 5.0 v c t = 200 pf c t = 300 pf c t = 500 pf phase *v ref = 5.0 v *v ref = 5.0 v
mc34067 mc33067 5 motorola analog ic device data 24 2.0 , reference output voltage change (mv) ? v ref v sat 3.2 2.4 1.6 0.8 0 0 50 , output saturation voltage (v) figure 7. reference voltage change versus source current i ref , reference source current (ma) figure 8. drive output saturation voltage versus load current 0 1.0 2.0 3.0 3.0 i o , output load current (a) figure 9. drive output waveform 90% 10% 20 ns/div v , softstart saturation voltage (v) figure 10. softstart saturation voltage versus capacitor discharge current i dchg , capacitor discharge current (ma) 0 30 10 20 40 1.0 2000 1600 1200 800 400 0 f, frequency (khz) figure 11. operating frequency versus supply current i cc , input supply current (ma) source saturation (load to ground) source saturation (load to v cc ) ol gnd t a = 40 c t a = 25 c figure 12. supply current versus supply voltage t a = 25 c t a = 40 c v cc , supply voltage (v) 20 12 4.0 0 i , supply current (ma) cc 16 8.0 enable/uvlo adjust pin open enable/uvlo adjust pin to v cc v cc = 12 v 80 m s pulsed load 120 hz rate t a = 40 c c l = 1.0 nf t a = 25 c 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 0 20 40 60 80 100 0 2.0 4.0 6.0 8.0 10 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 0 4.0 8.0 12 16 20 v cc = 12 v c l = 1.0 nf t a = 25 c v cc = 12 v pin 10 = v ref t a = 25 c t a = 20 c t a = 125 c v cc = 12 v v cc t a = 25 c
mc34067 mc33067 6 motorola analog ic device data 3 figure 13. mc34067 representative block diagram 12 output b 13 14 8 7 inverting input oscillator control current 16 9 8.0v q2 r r t c t r osc c osc r vfo v ref 4.9v/3.6v 15 v cc enable / uvlo adjust osc charge osc rc oneshot rc error amp output noninverting input softstart ground 4 fault input power ground output a v ref d1 q1 i osc oscillator oneshot error amp clamp 3.1v error amp 9.0 m a 1.0v fault latch s r q q q t steering flipflop 4.2/4.0v v ref uvlo v cc uvlo 7.0k 50k 7.0k 50k 4.9v/3.6v v ref 5.1v reference 1 2 6 11 i oso 5 10 timing diagram 5.1 v 3. 6 v c osc 5.1 v 3.6 v oneshot output a output b t os t os t os t os t os t os error amp output high, minimum i osc current occurring at minimum input voltage, maximum load. error amp output low, maximum i osc current occurring at maximum input voltage, minimum load.
mc34067 mc33067 7 motorola analog ic device data operating description introduction as power supply designers have strived to increase power conversion efficiency and reduce passive component size, high frequency resonant mode power converters have emerged as attractive alternatives to conventional pulsewidth modulated control. when compared to pulsewidth modulated converters, resonant mode control offers several benefits including lower switching losses, higher efficiency, lower emi emission, and smaller size. a new integrated circuit has been developed to support this trend in power supply design. the mc34067 resonant mode controller is a high performance bipolar ic dedicated to variable frequency power control at frequencies exceeding 1.0 mhz. this integrated circuit provides the features and performance specifically for zero voltage switching resonant mode power supply applications. the primary purpose of the control chip is to provide a fixed offtime to the gates of external power mosfets at a repetition rate regulated by a feedback control loop. additional features of the ic ensure that system startup and fault conditions are administered in a safe, controlled manner. a simplified block diagram of the ic is shown on the front page, which identifies the main functional blocks and the blocktoblock interconnects. figure 13 is a detailed functional diagram which accurately represents the internal circuitry. the various functions can be divided into two sections. the first section includes the primary control path which produces precise output pulses at the desired frequency. included in this section are a variable frequency oscillator, a oneshot, a pulse steering flipflop, a pair of power mosfet drivers, and a wide bandwidth error amplifier. the second section provides several peripheral support functions including a voltage reference, undervoltage lockout, softstart circuit, and a fault detector. primary control path the output pulse width and repetition rate are regulated through the interaction of the variable frequency oscillator, oneshot timer and error amplifier. the oscillator triggers the oneshot which generates a pulse that is alternately steered to a pair of totem pole output drivers by a toggle flipflop. the error amplifier monitors the output of the regulator and modulates the frequency of the oscillator. high speed schottky logic is used throughout the primary control channel to minimize delays and enhance high frequency characteristics. oscillator the characteristics of the variable frequency oscillator are crucial for precise controller performance at high operating frequencies. in addition to triggering the oneshot timer and initiating the output deadtime, the oscillator also determines the initial voltage for the oneshot capacitor. the oscillator is designed to operate at frequencies exceeding 1.0 mhz. the error amplifier can control the oscillator frequency over a 1000:1 frequency range, and both the minimum and maximum frequencies are easily and accurately programmed by the proper selection of external components. the functional diagram of the oscillator and oneshot timer is shown in figure 14. the oscillator capacitor (c osc ) is initially charged by transistor q1. when c osc exceeds the 4.9 v upper threshold of the oscillator comparator, the base of q1 is pulled low allowing c osc to discharge through the external resistor, (r osc ) , and the oscillator control current, (i osc ). when the voltage on c osc falls below the comparator's 3.6 v lower threshold, q1 turns on and again charges c osc . c osc charges from 3.6 v to 5.1 v in less than 50 ns. the high slew rate of c osc and the propagation delay of the comparator make it difficult to control the peak voltage. this accuracy issue is overcome by clamping the base of q1 through a diode to a voltage reference. the peak voltage of the oscillator waveform is thereby precisely set at 5.1 v. figure 14. oscillator and oneshot timer v oe oscillator control current c osc r t ct r osc i oso 4.9v/3.6v 1 2 10 3 osc charge osc rc oneshot rc d1 q1 i osc oscillator oneshot 3.1v 4.9v/3.6v v ref error amp output 6 v oe + + error amp charge r vfo the frequency of the oscillator is modulated by varying the current flowing out of the oscillator control current (i osc ) pin. the i osc pin is the output of a voltage regulator. the input of the voltage regulator is tied to the variable frequency oscillator. the discharge current of the oscillator increases by increasing the current out of the i osc pin. resistor r vfo is used in conjunction with the error amp output to change the i osc current. maximum frequency occurs when the error amplifier output is at its low state with a saturation voltage of 0.1 v at 1.0 ma. the minimum oscillator frequency will result when the i osc current is zero, and c osc is discharged through the external resistor (r osc ). this occurs when the error amplifier output is at its high state of 2.5 v. the minimum and maximum oscillator frequencies are programmed by the proper selection of resistor r osc and r vfo . the minimum frequency is programmed by r osc using equation 1:   c osc where t pd is the internal propagation delay. (1) r 1 ? t pd n c t 70 ns 0.348 = = osc (min) (max) osc 5.1 3.6
mc34067 mc33067 8 motorola analog ic device data the maximum oscillator frequency is set by the current through resistor r vfo . the current required to discharge c osc at the maximum oscillator frequency can be calculated by equation 2: c osc 1.5c (2) osc i 1 ? 5.1 3.6 = = (max) (max) ? (max) the discharge current through r osc must also be known and can be calculated by equation 3: ? (min) c osc r osc 1.5 e i 1 ? 5.1 3.6 = (min) r r osc c osc r osc = r osc e 1 (3)   osc resistor r vfo can now be calculated by equation 4: (4) r= vfo i (max) i r 2.5 v easat osc oneshot timer the oneshot is designed to disable both outputs simultaneously providing a deadtime before either output is enabled. the oneshot capacitor (c t ) is charged concurrently with the oscillator capacitor by transistor q1, as shown in figure 14. the oneshot period begins when the oscillator comparator turns off q1, allowing c t to discharge. the period ends when resistor r t discharges c t to the threshold of the oneshot comparator. the lower threshold of the oneshot is 3.6 v. by choosing c t , r t can by solved by equation 5:  5.1 3.6 (5) c t r t os c 0.348 = = t t t os  n errors in the threshold voltage and propagation delays through the output drivers will affect the oneshot period. to guarantee accuracy, the output pulse of the control chip is trimmed to within 5% of 250 ns with nominal values of r t and c t . the outputs of the oscillator and oneshot comparators are or'd together to produce the pulse t os , which drives the flipflop and output drivers. the output pulse (t os ) is initiated by the oscillator and terminated by the oneshot comparator. with zerovoltage resonant mode converters, the oscillator discharge time should never be set less than the oneshot period. error amplifier a fully accessible high performance error amplifier is provided for feedback control of the power supply system. the error amplifier is internally compensated and features dc open loop gain greater than 70 db, input offset voltage of less than 10 mv and a guaranteed minimum gainbandwidth product of 2.5 mhz. the input common mode range extends from 1.5 v to 5.1 v, which includes the reference voltage. figure 15. error amplifier and clamp r vfo oscillator control current 3.1v error amp output noninverting input inverting input error amp i osc 7 8 6 3 error amp charge when the error amplifier output is coupled to the i osc pin by r vfo , as illustrated in figure 15, it provides the oscillator control current, i osc . the output swing of the error amplifier is restricted by a clamp circuit to improve its transient recovery time. output section the pulse(t os ), generated by the oscillator and oneshot timer is gated to dual totempole output drives by the steering flipflop shown in figure 16. positive transitions of t os toggle the flipflop, which causes the pulses to alternate between output a and output b. the flipflop is reset by the undervoltage lockout circuit during startup to guarantee that the first pulse appears at output a. figure 16. steering flipflop and output drivers output a r 12 13 14 output b power ground q q t steering flipflop pwr gnd v oe v oe pwr gnd the totempole output drivers are ideally suited for driving power mosfets and are capable of sourcing and sinking 1.5 a. rise and fall times are typically 20 ns when driving a 1.0 nf load. high source/sink capability in a totempole driver normally increases the risk of high cross conduction current during output transitions. the mc34067 utilizes a unique design that virtually eliminates cross conduction, thus controlling the chip power dissipation at high frequencies. a separate power ground pin is provided to isolate the sensitive analog circuitry from large transient currents.
mc34067 mc33067 9 motorola analog ic device data figure 17. undervoltage lockout and reference 8.0v v ref 15 9 v cc 5 v ref 4.2/4.0v v ref uvlo v cc uvlo 7.0k 50k 7.0k 50k 5.1v reference enable / uvlo adjust uvlo peripheral support functions the mc34067 resonant controller provides a number of support and protection functions including a precision voltage reference, undervoltage lockout comparators, softstart circuitry, and a fault detector. these peripheral circuits ensure that the power supply can be turned on and off in a controlled manner and that the system will be quickly disabled when a fault condition occurs. undervoltage lockout and voltage reference separate undervoltage lockout comparators sense the input v cc voltage and the regulated reference voltage as illustrated in figure 17. when v cc increases to the upper threshold voltage, the v cc uvlo comparator enables the reference regulator. after the v ref output of the reference regulator rises to 4.2 v, the v ref uvlo comparator switches the uvlo signal to a logic zero state enabling the primary control path. reducing v cc to the lower threshold voltage causes the v cc uvlo comparator to disable the reference regulator. the v ref uvlo comparator then switches the uvlo output to a logic one state disabling the controller. the enable/uvlo adjust pin allows the power supply designer to select the v cc uvlo threshold voltages. when this pin is open, the comparator switches the controller on at 16 v and off at 9.0 v. if this pin is connected to the v cc terminal, the upper and lower thresholds are reduced to 9.0 v and 8.6 v, respectively. forcing the enable/uvlo adjust pin low will pull the v cc uvlo comparator input low (through an internal diode) turning off the controller. the reference regulator provides a precise 5.1 v reference to internal circuitry and can deliver up to 10 ma to external loads. the reference is trimmed to better than 2% initial accuracy and includes active short circuit protection. fault detector the high speed fault comparator and latch illustrated in figure 18 can protect a power supply from destruction under fault conditions. the fault input pin connects to the input of the fault comparator. if this input exceeds the 1.0 v threshold of the comparator, the fault latch is set and two logic signals simultaneously disable the primary control path. the signal labeled afaulto at the output of the fault comparator is connected directly to the output drivers. this direct path reduces the propagation delay from the fault input to the a and b outputs to typically 70 ns. the fault latch output is or'd with the uvlo output from the v ref uvlo comparator to produce the logic output labeled auvlo+faulto. this signal disables the oscillator and oneshot by forcing both the c osc and c t capacitors to be continually charged. figure 18. fault detector and softstart c softstart fault input 10 9.0 m a 1.0v fault latch s r q 11 6 ground softstart buffer ea clamp uvlo + fault uvlo fault fault comparator the fault latch is reset during startup by a logic a1o at the uvlo output of the v ref uvlo comparator. the latch can also be reset after startup by pulling the enable/uvlo adjust pin momentarily low to disable the reference regulator. softstart circuit the softstart circuit shown in figure 18 forces the variable frequency oscillator to start at the maximum frequency and ramp downward until regulated by the feedback control loop. the external capacitor at the c softstart terminal is initially discharged by the uvlo+fault signal. the low voltage on the capacitor passes through the softstart buffer to hold the error amplifier output low. after uvlo+fault switches to a l ogic zero, the softstart capacitor is charged by a 9.0 m a current source. the buffer allows the error amplifier output to follow the softstart capacitor until it is regulated by the error amplifier inputs. the softstart function is generally applicable to controllers operating below resonance and can be disabled by simply opening the c softstart terminal.
mc34067 mc33067 10 motorola analog ic device data applications information the mc34067 is specifically designed for zero voltage switching (zvs) quasiresonant converter (qrc) applications. the ic is optimized for doubleended pushpull or bridge type converters operating in continuous conduction mode. operation of this type of zvs with resonant properties is similar to standard pushpull or bridge circuits in that the energy is transferred during the transistor ontime. the difference is that a series resonant tank is usually introduced to shape the voltage across the power transistor prior to turnon. the resonant tank in this topology is not used to deliver energy to the output as is the case with zero current switch topologies. when the power transistor is enabled the voltage across it should already be zero, yielding minimal switching loss. figure 19 shows a timing diagram for a halfbridge zvs qrc. an application circuit is shown in figure 20. the circuit built is a dc to dc halfbridge converter delivering 75 w to the output from a 48 v source. when building a zero voltage switch (zvs) circuit, the objective is to waveshape the power transistor's voltage waveform so that the voltage across the transistor is zero when the device is turned on. the purpose of the control ic is to allow a resonant tank to waveshape the voltage across the power transistor while still maintaining regulation. this is accomplished by maintaining a fixed deadtime and by varying the frequency; thus the effective duty cycle is changed. primary side resonance can be used with zvs circuits. in the application circuit, the elements that make the resonant tank are the primary leakage inductance of the transformer (l l ) and the average output capacitance (c oss ) of a power mosfet (c r ). the desired resonant fr equency for the application circuit is calculated by equation 6: l l 2c r (6) 1 = p 2 ? r in the application circuit, the operating voltage is low and the value of c oss versus drain voltage is known. because the c oss of a mosfet changes with drain voltage, the value of the c r is approximated as the average c oss of the mosfet. for the application circuit the average c oss can be calculated by equation 7: measured at (7) c r 1 2 2 * c oss = in v the mosfet chosen fixes c r and that l l is adjusted to achieve the desired resonant frequency. however, the desired resonant frequency is less critical than the leakage inductance. figure 19 shows the primary current ramping toward its peak value during the resonant transition. during this time, there is circulating current flowing through the secondary inductance, which effectively makes the primary inductance appear shorted. therefore, the current through the primary will ramp to its peak value at a rate controlled by the leakage inductance and the applied voltage. energy is not transferred to the secondary during this stage, because the primary current has not overcome the circulating current in the secondary. the larger the leakage inductance, the longer it takes for the primary current to slew. the practical effect of this is to lower the duty cycle, thus reducing the operating range. the maximum duty cycle is controlled by the leakage inductance, not by the mc34067. the oneshot in the mc34067 only assures that the power switch is turned on under a zero voltage condition. adjust the oneshot period so that the output switch is activated while the primary current is slewing but before the current changes polarity. the resonant stage should then be designed to be as long as the time for the primary current to go to zero amps.
mc34067 mc33067 11 motorola analog ic device data figure 19. application timing diagram 0 a + i primary i primary v in /turns ratio output diode voltage 0 v 1/2 v in v in output b output a oneshot 3.6 v 5.1 v c osc 3.6 v 5.1 v
mc34067 mc33067 12 motorola analog ic device data inductance = 1.8 h m mbr2535 330pf 100pf v fb 16k 1.6k 330pf 1500pf 220pf 0.01 10k 1.1k 2.7k 18k 10 v cc 15 9 1 2 10 3 6 8 7 11 4 reference regulator 5 14 13 12 10 470pf 470 3.9k 1n5819 t2 mtp33n10e 100 1.0 1.0 t3 1.0k 1.0k 100 1n5819 x 4 v in = 36 56v 500pf 51, 0.5w v fb ctl 2 30 v out = 5.0v l1 = 1.8 m l2 = 100ns figure 20. application circuit line regulation load regulation output ripple efficiency test conditions results v in = 40 v to 56 v, i o =15 a v in = 48 v, i o = 10 a to 15 a v in o = 48 v, i = 15 a, f 20 mv = switch = 1.0 mhz v in o = 48 v, i = 10 a, f switch = 1.7 mhz v in o = 48 v, i = 15 a, f switch = 1.0 mhz 0.198% 4.0 mv = 0.039% 25 mv pp 83.5% 84.2% t1 = primary: 12 turns #48 awg (1300 strands litz wire) secondary: 6 turns center tapped #48 awg (1300 strands litz wire) core: philips 3f3 4312 020 4124 bobbin: philips 4322 021 3525 primary leakage inductance = 1.0 h m t2 = all windings: 8 turns #36 awg core: philips 3f3 ep73f3 bobbin: philips ep7pcb16 t3 = coilcraft d1870 (100 turns) l1 = 2 turns #48 awg (1300 strands litz wire) core: philips 3f3 ep103f3 bobbin: philips ep10pcb18 l2 = 5 turns #48 awg (1300 strands litz wire) core: 0.5 inductance = 100 nh diameter air code heatsinks = aavid engineering inc. 533402b02552 with clip mc340675803 insulators = berquist silpad 1500
mc34067 mc33067 13 motorola analog ic device data 5.0 3.875 (bottom view) figure 21. printed circuit board and component layout (top view)
mc34067 mc33067 14 motorola analog ic device data outline dimensions p suffix plastic package case 64808 issue r dw suffix plastic package case 751g02 (so16l) issue a notes: 1. dimensioning and tolerancing per ansi y14.5m, 1982. 2. controlling dimension: inch. 3. dimension l to center of leads when formed parallel. 4. dimension b does not include mold flash. 5. rounded corners optional. a b f c s h g d j l m 16 pl seating 18 9 16 k plane t m a m 0.25 (0.010) t dim min max min max millimeters inches a 0.740 0.770 18.80 19.55 b 0.250 0.270 6.35 6.85 c 0.145 0.175 3.69 4.44 d 0.015 0.021 0.39 0.53 f 0.040 0.70 1.02 1.77 g 0.100 bsc 2.54 bsc h 0.050 bsc 1.27 bsc j 0.008 0.015 0.21 0.38 k 0.110 0.130 2.80 3.30 l 0.295 0.305 7.50 7.74 m 0 10 0 10 s 0.020 0.040 0.51 1.01     dim min max min max inches millimeters a 10.15 10.45 0.400 0.411 b 7.40 7.60 0.292 0.299 c 2.35 2.65 0.093 0.104 d 0.35 0.49 0.014 0.019 f 0.50 0.90 0.020 0.035 g 1.27 bsc 0.050 bsc j 0.25 0.32 0.010 0.012 k 0.10 0.25 0.004 0.009 m 0 7 0 7 p 10.05 10.55 0.395 0.415 r 0.25 0.75 0.010 0.029 m b m 0.010 (0.25) notes: 1. dimensioning and tolerancing per ansi y14.5m, 1982. 2. controlling dimension: millimeter. 3. dimensions a and b do not include mold protrusion. 4. maximum mold protrusion 0.15 (0.006) per side. 5. dimension d does not include dambar protrusion. allowable dambar protrusion shall be 0.13 (0.005) total in excess of d dimension at maximum material condition. a b p 8x g 14x d 16x seating plane t s a m 0.010 (0.25) b s t 16 9 8 1 f j r x 45   m c k
mc34067 mc33067 15 motorola analog ic device data motorola reserves the right to make changes without further notice to any products herein. motorola makes no warranty, representation or guarantee regarding the suitability of its products for any particular purpose, nor does motorola assume any liability arising out of the application or use of any product or circuit, and specifically disclaims any and all liability, including without limitation consequential or incidental damages. atypicalo parameters which may be provided in motorola data sheets and/or specifications can and do vary in different applications and actual performance may vary over time. all operating parameters, including atypicalso must be validated for each customer application by customer's technical experts. motorola does not convey any license under its patent rights nor the rights of others. motorola products are not designed, intended, or authorized for use as components in systems intended for surgical implant into the body, or other applications intended to support or sustain life, or for any other application in which the failure of the motorola product could create a situation where personal injury or death may occur. should buyer purchase or use motorola products for any such unintended or unauthorized application, buyer shall indemnify and hold motorola and its officers, employees, subsidiaries, affiliates, and distributors harmless against all claims, costs, damages, and expenses, and reasonable attorney fees arising out of, directly or indirectly, any claim of personal injury or death associated with such unintended or unauthorized use, even if such claim alleges that motorola was negligent regarding the design or manufacture of the part. motorola and are registered trademarks of motorola, inc. motorola, inc. is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer.
mc34067 mc33067 16 motorola analog ic device data mfax is a trademark of motorola, inc. how to reach us: usa / europe / locations not listed : motorola literature distribution; japan : nippon motorola ltd.: spd, strategic planning office, 4321, p.o. box 5405, denver, colorado 80217. 3036752140 or 18004412447 nishigotanda, shinagawaku, tokyo 141, japan. 81354878488 mfax ? : rmfax0@email.sps.mot.com touchtone 6 022446609 asia / pacific : motorola semiconductors h.k. ltd.; 8b tai ping industrial park, us & canada only 18007741848 51 ting kok road, tai po, n.t., hong kong. 85226629298 internet : http://motorola.com/sps mc34067/d ?


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