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  ? semiconductor components industries, llc, 2009 november, 2009 ? rev. 2 1 publication order number: adp3211/d adp3211, adp3211a 7-bit, programmable, single-phase, synchronous buck controller the adp3211 is a highly efficient, single ? phase, synchronous buck switching regulator controller. with its integrated driver, the adp3211 is optimized for converting the notebook battery voltage to the supply voltage required by high performance intel chipsets. an internal 7 ? bit dac is used to read a vid code directly from the chip ? set or the cpu and to set the gmch render voltage or the cpu core voltage to a value within the range of 0 v to 1.5 v. the adp3211 uses a multi ? mode architecture. it provides programmable switching frequency that can be optimized for efficiency depending on the output current requirement. in addition, the adp3211 includes a programmable load line slope function to adjust the output voltage as a function of the load current so that the core voltage is always optimally positioned for a load transient. the adp3211 also provides accurate and reliable current overload protection and a delayed power ? good output. the ic supports on ? the ? fly (otf) output voltage changes requested by the chip ? set. the adp3211 has a boot voltage of 1.1 v for imvp ? 6.5 applications in cpu mode. the adp3211a has a boot voltage of 1.2 v in cpu mode. the adp3211 is specified over the extended commercial temperature range of ? 40 c to 100 c and is available in a 32 ? lead qfn. features ? single ? chip solution ? fully compatible with the intel ? imvp ? 6.5  cpu and gmch chipset voltage regulator specifications integrated mosfet drivers ? input voltage range of 3.3 v to 22 v ? 7 mv worst ? case differentially sensed core voltage error overtemperature ? automatic power ? saving modes maximize efficiency during light load operation ? soft transient control reduces inrush current and audio noise ? independent current limit and load line setting inputs for additional design flexibility ? built ? in power ? good masking supports voltage identification (vid) otf transients ? 7 ? bit, digitally programmable dac with 0 v to 1.5 v output ? short ? circuit protection ? current monitor output signal ? this is a pb ? free device ? fully rohs compliant ? 32 ? lead qfn applications ? notebook power supplies for next generation intel chipsets ? intel netbook atom processors http://onsemi.com qfn32 mn suffix case 488am see detailed ordering and shipping information in the package dimensions section on page 31 of this data sheet. ordering information 32 1 adp3211(a) awlyyww   1 (a) = adp3211a device only a = assembly location wl = wafer lot yy = year ww = work week  = pb ? free package pin assignment marking diagram vcc bst drvh sw pvcc drvl pgnd gnd en vid0 vid1 vid2 vid3 vid4 vid5 vid6 pwrgd imon clken fbrtn fb comp gpu ilim iref rpm rt ramp lline csref csfb cscomp 1 adp3211 adp3211a (top view) (note: microdot may be in either location)
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 2 vid dac vid6 vid5 vid4 vid3 vid2 vid1 vid0 precision reference fbrtn start up delay open drain pwrgd pwrgd open drain + ? + ? csref dac + 200mv dac ? 300 mv dac ? + csref csfb cscomp ilim + ? ovp csref 1.55v + ? _ + lline ref ref + + vea fb comp uvlo shutdown and bias vcc gnd oscillator rpm rt mosfet driver imon current monitor iref pgnd drvl gpu soft start and soft transient control ocp shutdown delay pvcc delay disable soft transient delay current limit circuit pwrgd startup delay figure 1. functional block diagram en clken clken clken ramp bst drvh sw  
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 3 absolute maximum ratings parameter rating unit v cc ? 0.3 to +6.0 v fbrtn, pgnd ? 0.3 to +0.3 v bst, drvh dc t < 200 ns ? 0.3 to +28 ? 0.3 to +33 v bst to pv cc dc t < 200 ns ? 0.3 to +22 ? 0.3 to +28 v bst to sw ? 0.3 to +6.0 v sw dc t < 200 ns ? 1.0 to +22 ? 6.0 to +28 v drvh to sw ? 0.3 to +6.0 v drvl to pgnd dc t < 200 ns ? 0.3 to +6.0 ? 5.0 to +6.0 v ramp (in shutdown) dc t < 200 ns ? 0.3 to +22 ? 0.3 to +26 v all other inputs and outputs ? 0.3 to +6.0 v storage temperature range ? 65 to +150 c operating ambient temperature range ? 40 to 100 c operating junction temperature 125 c thermal impedance (  ja ) 2 ? layer board 32.6 c/w lead t emperature soldering (10 sec) infrared (15 sec) 300 260 c stresses exceeding maximum ratings may damage the device. maximum ratings are stress ratings only. functional operation above t he recommended operating conditions is not implied. extended exposure to stresses above the recommended operating conditions may af fect device reliability. note: this device is esd sensitive. use standard esd precautions when handling.
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 4 pin function descriptions pin no. mnemonic description 1 pwrgd power ? good output. open ? drain output. a low logic state means that the output voltage is outside of the vid dac defined range. 2 imon current monitor output. this pin sources current proportional to the output load current. a resistor connected to fbrtn sets the current monitor gain. 3 clken clock enable output. open drain output. the pull ? high voltage on this pin cannot be higher than vcc. 4 fbrtn feedback return input/output. this pin remotely senses the gmch voltage. it is also used as the ground return for the vid dac and the voltage error amplifier blocks. 5 fb voltage error amplifier feedback input. the inverting input of the voltage error amplifier. 6 comp voltage error amplifier output and frequency compensation point. 7 gpu gmch/cpu select pin. connect to ground when powering the cpu. connect to 5.0 v when powering the gmch. when gpu is connected to ground, the boot voltage is 1.1 v for the adp3211 and 1.2 v for the adp321 1a. when gpu is connected to 5.0 v, there is no boot voltage. 8 ilim current limit set pin. connect a resistor between ilim and cscomp to the current limit threshold. 9 iref this pin sets the internal bias currents. a 80 k  is connected from iref to ground. 10 rpm rpm mode timing control input. a resistor is connected from rpm to ground sets the rpm mode turn ? on threshold voltage. 11 rt pwm oscillator frequency setting input. an external resistor from this pin to gnd sets the pwm oscillator frequency. 12 ramp pwm ramp slope setting input. an external resistor from the converter input voltage node to this pin sets the slope of the internal pwm stabilizing ramp. 13 lline load line programming input. the center point of a resistor divider connected between csref and cscomp tied to this pin sets the load line slope. 14 csref current sense reference input. this pin must be connected to the opposite side of the output inductor. 15 csfb non ? inverting input of the current sense amplifier. the combination of a resistor from the switch node to this pin and the feedback network from this pin to the cscomp pin sets the gain of the current sense amplifier. 16 cscomp current sense amplifier output and frequency compensation point. 17 gnd analog and digital signal ground. 18 pgnd low ? side driver power ground. this pin should be connected close to the source of the lower mosfet(s). 19 drvl low ? side gate drive output. 20 pvcc power supply input/output of low ? side gate driver. 21 sw current return for high ? side gate drive. 22 drvh high ? side gate drive output. 23 bst high ? side bootstrap supply. a capacitor from this pin to sw holds the bootstrapped voltage while the high ? side mosfet is on. 24 vcc power supply input/output of the controller. 25 to 31 vid6 to vid0 voltage identification dac inputs. a 7 ? bit word (the vid code) programs the dac output voltage, the reference voltage of the voltage error amplifier without a load (see the vid code table, table no tag). in normal operation mode, the vid dac output programs the output voltage to a value within the 0 v to 1.5 v range. the input is actively pulled down. 32 en enable input. driving this pin low shuts down the chip, disables the driver outputs, and pulls pwrgd low.
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 5 electrical characteristics (v cc = pv cc = 5.0 v, fbrtn = gnd = pgnd = 0 v, h = 5.0 v, l = 0 v, v vid = v dac = 1.2 v, t a = ? 40 c to 100 c, unless otherwise noted. (note 1) current entering a pin (sunk by the device) has a positive sign. parameter symbol conditions min typ max units voltage control ? voltage error amplifier (veamp) fb, lline voltage range (note 2) v fb , v lline relative to csref = v dac ? 200 +200 mv fb, lline of fset voltage (note 2) v osvea relative to csref = v dac ? 0.5 +0.5 mv fb bias current i fb ? 1.0 +1.0  a lline bias current i ll ? 50 +50 na lline positioning accuracy v fb ? v dac measured on fb relative to nominal v dac lline forced 80 mv below csref ? 10 c to 100 c ? 40 c to 100 c ? 78 ? 77 ? 80 ? 80 ? 82 ? 83 mv comp v oltage range v comp voltage range of interest 0.85 4.0 v comp current i comp comp = 2.0 v, csref = v dac fb forced 200 mv below csref fb forced 200 mv above csref ? 650 2.0  a ma comp slew rate sr comp c comp = 10 pf, csref = v dac , open loop configuration fb forced 200 mv below csref fb forced 200 mv above csref 10 ? 10 v/  s gain bandwidth (note 2) gbw non ? inverting unit gain configuration, r fb = 1 k  20 mhz vid dac voltage reference v dac voltage range (note 2) see vid code t able 0 1.5 v v dac accuracy v fb ? v dac measured on fb (includes offset), relative to nominal v dac v dac = 0.3000 v to 1.2000 v, ? 10 c to 100 c v dac = 0.3000 v to 1.2000 v, ? 40 c to 100 c v dac = 1.2125 v to 1.5000 v, ? 40 c to 100 c ? 7.0 ? 9.0 ? 9.0 +7.0 +9.0 +9.0 mv v dac differential non ? linearity (note 2) ? 1.0 +1.0 lsb v dac line regulation v fb v cc = 4.75 v to 5.25 v 0.05 % v dac boot voltage v bootfb measured during boot delay period, gpu = 0 v adp3211 adp3211a 1.100 1.200 v soft ? start delay (note 2) t dss measured from en pos edge to fb = 50 mv 200  s soft ? start time t ss measured from en pos edge to fb settles to v boot = 1.1 v within ? 5% 1.4 ms boot delay t boot measured from fb settling to vboot = 1.1 v within ? 5% to clken neg edge 100  s v dac slew rate soft ? start arbitrary vid step 0.0625 1.0 lsb/  s fbrtn current i fbrtn 70 200  a voltage monitoring and protection ? power good csref undervoltage threshold v uvcsref ? v dac relative to nominal v dac voltage ? 360 ? 300 ? 240 mv csref overvoltage threshold v ovcsref ? v dac relative to nominal v dac voltage 150 200 250 mv csref crowbar voltage threshold v cbcsref relative to fbrtn 1.5 1.55 1.6 v csref reverse voltage threshold v rvcsref relative to fbrtn, latchoff mode csref is falling csref is rising ? 350 ? 300 ? 75 ? 5.0 mv 1. all limits at temperature extremes are guaranteed via correlation using standard statistical quality control (sqc). 2. guaranteed by design or bench characterization, not production tested.
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 6 electrical characteristics (v cc = pv cc = 5.0 v, fbrtn = gnd = pgnd = 0 v, h = 5.0 v, l = 0 v, v vid = v dac = 1.2 v, t a = ? 40 c to 100 c, unless otherwise noted. (note 1) current entering a pin (sunk by the device) has a positive sign. parameter units max typ min conditions symbol voltage monitoring and protection ? power good pwrgd low voltage v pwrgd i pwrgd(sink) = 4 ma 75 200 mv pwrgd high leakage current i pwrgd v pwrdg = 5.0 v 1.0  a pwrgd startup delay t sspwrgd measured from clken neg edge to pwrgd pos edge 8.0 ms pwrgd latchoff delay t loffpwrgd measured from out ? off ? good ? window event to latchoff (switching stops) 8.0 ms pwrgd propagation delay (note 2) t pdpwrgd measured from out ? off ? good ? window event to pwrgd neg edge 200 ns crowbar latchoff delay (note 2) t loffcb measured from crowbar event to latchoff (switching stops) 200 ns pwrgd masking time t mskpwrgd triggered by any vid change 100  s csref soft ? stop resistance en = l or latchoff condition 60  current control ? current sense amplifier (csamp) csfb, csref common ? mode range (note 2) voltage range of interest 0 2.0 v csfb, csref of fset voltage v oscsa csref ? cssum, t a = ? 40 c to 85 c t a = 25 c ? 1.5 ? 0.4 +1.5 +0.4 mv csfb bias current i bcsfb ? 50 +50 na csref bias current i bcsref ? 2.0 2.0  a cscomp v oltage range (note 2) voltage range of interest 0.05 2.0 v cscomp current i cscompsource i cscompsink cscomp = 2.0 v csfb forced 200 mv below csref csfb forced 200 mv above csref ? 650 1.0  a ma cscomp slew rate (note 2) c cscomp = 10 pf, csref = v dac , open loop configuration csfb forced 200 mv below csref csfb forced 200 mv above csref 10 ? 10 v/  s gain bandwidth (note 2) gbw csa non ? inverting unit gain configuration r fb = 1 k  20 mhz current monitoring and protection ? current reference i ref voltage v ref r ref = 80 k  to set i ref = 20  a 1.55 1.6 1.65 v current limiter (ocp) current limit (ocp) threshold v limth measured from cscomp to csref r lim = 4.5 k  ? 11 5 ? 90 ? 70 mv current limit latchoff delay measured from ocp event to pwrgd de ? assertion 8.0 ms current monitor current gain accuracy i mon /i lim measured from i lim to i mon i lim = ? 20  a i lim = ? 10  a i lim = ? 5  a 9.5 9.4 9.0 10 10 10 10.6 10.8 11 i mon clamp v oltage v maxmon relative to fbrtn, i lim = ? 30  a r imon = 8 k  1.0 1.15 v 1. all limits at temperature extremes are guaranteed via correlation using standard statistical quality control (sqc). 2. guaranteed by design or bench characterization, not production tested.
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 7 electrical characteristics (v cc = pv cc = 5.0 v, fbrtn = gnd = pgnd = 0 v, h = 5.0 v, l = 0 v, v vid = v dac = 1.2 v, t a = ? 40 c to 100 c, unless otherwise noted. (note 1) current entering a pin (sunk by the device) has a positive sign. parameter units max typ min conditions symbol pulse width modulator ? clock oscillator r t voltage v rt r t = 243 k  , v vid = 1.2 v see also v rt (v vid ) formula 1.08 1.2 1.35 v pwm clock frequency range (note 2) f clk operation of interest 0.3 3.0 mhz ramp generator ramp v oltage v ramp en = h, i ramp = 60  a en = l 0.9 1.0 v in 1.1 v ramp current range (note 2) i ramp en = h en = l, ramp = 19 v 1.0 ? 0.5 100 +0.5  a pwm comparator pwm comparator of fset (note 2) v osrpm ? 3.0 +3.0 mv rpm comparator rpm current i rpm v vid = 1.2 v, r t = 243 k  see also i rpm (r t ) formula ? 6.0  a rpm comparator of fset (note 2) v osrpm v comp ? (1 + v rpm ) ? 3.0 +3.0 mv switch amplifier sw input resistance r sw measured from sw to pgnd 1.3 k  zero current switching comparator sw zcs threshold v zcssw dcm mode, dprslp = 3.3 v ? 4.0 mv masked off ? time t offmskd measured from drvh neg edge to drvh pos edge at max frequency of operation 700 ns system i/o buffers ? en and vid[6:0] inputs input v oltage v en,vid[6:0] refers to driving signal level logic low, i sink = 1  a logic high, i source = ? 5  a 0.7 0.3 v input current i en,vid[6:0] v en,vid[6:0] = 0 v 0.2 v < v en,vid[6:0] v cc 10 1.0 na  a vid delay time (note 2) any vid edge to 10% of fb change 200 ns gpu input input v oltage v gpu refers to driving signal level logic low, i sink = 1  a logic high, i source = ? 5  a 4.0 0.3 v input current i gpu gpu = l or gpu = h (static) 0.8 v < en < 1.6 v (during transition) 10 70 na  a clken output output low voltage v clken logic low, i clken = 4 ma 30 300 mv output high, leakage current i clken logic high, v clken = v cc 3.0  a supply supply voltage range v cc 4.5 5.5 v supply current en = h en = l 6.0 60 10 200 ma  a v cc ok threshold v ccok v cc is rising 4.4 4.5 v v cc uvlo threshold v ccuvlo v cc is falling 4.0 4.15 v v cc hysteresis (note 2) 150 mv 1. all limits at temperature extremes are guaranteed via correlation using standard statistical quality control (sqc). 2. guaranteed by design or bench characterization, not production tested.
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 8 electrical characteristics (v cc = pv cc = 5.0 v, fbrtn = gnd = pgnd = 0 v, h = 5.0 v, l = 0 v, v vid = v dac = 1.2 v, t a = ? 40 c to 100 c, unless otherwise noted. (note 1) current entering a pin (sunk by the device) has a positive sign. parameter units max typ min conditions symbol high ? side mosfet driver pullup resistance, sourcing current pulldown resistance, sinking current bst = pv cc 2.0 1.0 3.3 2.8  transition times tr drvh, tf drvh bst = pv cc , c l = 3 nf, figure 2 15 13 35 31 ns dead delay times tpdh drvh bst = pv cc , figure 2 10 45 ns bst quiescent current en = l (shutdown) en = h, no switching 5.0 200 15  a low ? side mosfet driver pullup resistance, sourcing current pulldown resistance, sinking current 1.8 0.9 3.0 2.7  transition times tr drvl, tf drvl c l = 3 nf, figure 2 15 14 35 35 ns propagation delay t imes tpdh drvl c l = 3 nf, figure 2 15 30 ns sw transition timeout t swto drvh = l, sw = 2.5 v 150 250 450 ns sw off threshold v offsw 2.2 v pv cc quiescent current en = l (shutdown) en = h, no switching 14 200 50  a bootstrap rectifier switch on ? resistance en = l or en = h and drvl = h 4 7 11  1. all limits at temperature extremes are guaranteed via correlation using standard statistical quality control (sqc). 2. guaranteed by design or bench characterization, not production tested. 3. timing is referenced to the 90% and 10% points, unless otherwise noted. drvh (with respect to sw) drvl sw 1.0 v figure 2. timing diagram v th v th tf drvl tpdh drvh tr drvh tf drvh tr drvl tpdh drvl
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 9 typical performance characteristics v vid = 1.5 v, t a = 20 c to 100 c, unless otherwise noted. 1 2 3 1: 200mv/div 2: 2v/div 3 : 10v/div input = 12v, 1a load vid step 0.7v to 1.2v figure 3. vid change soft transient 1 2 3 1: 200mv/div 2: 2v/div 3: 10v/div input = 12v, 1a load vid step 1.2v to 0.7v figure 4. vid change soft transient 20  s/div output v oltage vid5 switch node 20  s/div vid5 switch node output v oltage figure 5. switching frequency vs. load current in rpm mode figure 6. i mon voltage vs. load current load current (a) load current (a) 15 10 5 0 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 25 20 15 10 5 0 0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 1.2 figure 7. load line accuracy figure 8. v cc current vs. v cc voltage with enable low load current (a) v cc voltage (v) 15 10 5 0 1.15 1.20 1.25 1.30 1.35 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 0 10 20 30 50 60 70 80 switching frequency (khz) i mon (v) vid voltage (v) v cc current (  a) output ripple s w itching frequency output ripple (mv) 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 +2% ? 2% specified load line measured load line 40
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 10 typical performance characteristics en 1 2 3 4 1: 0.5v/div 2: 5v/div 3: 5v/div 4: 5v/div 2ms/div gpu = 0v figure 9. startup waveforms cpu mode en 1 2 3 4 1: 0.5v/div 2: 5v/div 3: 5v/div 4: 5v/div 4ms/div gpu = 5v figure 10. startup waveforms gpu mode 1 2 3 4 1 : 100mv/div 2 : 10v/div 3 : 5a/div 4 : 5v/div low side gate drive figure 11. dcm waveforms, 1 a load current 1 2 3 4 1 : 100mv/div 2 : 10v/div 3 : 5a/div 4 : 5v/div figure 12. ccm waveforms, 10 a load current 1 2 1 : 50mv/div 2 : 10v/div output v oltage switch node input = 12v output = 1.2v 3a to 15a step figure 13. load transient figure 14. load transient 1 2 1: 50mv/div 2: 10v/div output v oltage switch node input = 12v output = 1.2v 3a to 15a step output v oltage clken pwrgd 40  s/div 40  s/div 2  s/div low side gate drive output v oltage inductor current switch node 4  s/div inductor current output v oltage switch node pwrgd output v oltage clken
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 11 typical performance characteristics figure 15. load transient 1 2 1: 50mv/div 2: 10v/div input = 12v output = 1.2v 15a to 3a step figure 16. vid on the fly 1 2 1: 100mv/div 2: 10v/div input = 12v no load dvid = 250mv figure 17. vid on the fly 1 2 1: 100mv/div 2: 10v/div input = 12v 10a load dvid = 250mv figure 18. over current protection 1 2 3 4 1 : 500mv/div 2 : 10v/div 3 : 5v/div 4 : 2v/div 2ms/div output v oltage switch node pwrgd clken 40  s/div switch node output v oltage 200  s/div switch node output v oltage 200  s/div switch node output v oltage
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 12 theory of operation the adp3211 is a ramp pulse modulated (rpm) controller for synchronous buck intel gmch and cpu core power supply. the internal 7 ? bit vid dac conforms to the intel imvp ? 6.5 specifications. the adp3211 is a stable, high performance architecture that includes ? high speed response at the lowest possible switching frequency and minimal count of output decoupling capacitors ? minimized thermal switching losses due to lower frequency operation ? high accuracy load line regulation ? high power conversion efficiency with a light load by automatically switching to dcm operation operation modes the adp3211 runs in rpm mode for the purpose of fast transient response and high light load efficiency. during the following transients, the adp321 1 runs in pwm mode: ? soft ? start ? soft transient: the period of 110  s following any vid change ? current overload q s rd 1.0 v s rd flip ? flop vdc drvh drvl gate driver sw vcc l load comp fb fbrtn cscomp csfb csref drvl sw drvh vrmp bst bst 5.0 v 400ns r2 r1 r1 r2 1.0 v 30mv in dcm lline + ? + + figure 19. rpm mode operation c fb r b c b v cs c a r a q q q flip ? flop c r c cs r cs r ph r i i r = a r x i ramp
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 13 figure 20. pwm mode operation 0.2 v clock oscillator q s rd flip ? flop vcc l load drvh drvl gate sw vcc drvl sw drvh bst bst 5.0 v in ramp vdc comp fb fbrtn csfb cssum csref lline + + ? + i r = a r x i ramp a d c r r ph r i driver c cs r cs r a c a c b r b c fb v cs setting switch frequency master clock frequency in pwm mode when the adp3211 runs in pwm, the clock frequency is set by an external resistor connected from the rt pin to gnd. the frequency varies with the vid voltage: the lower the vid voltage, the lower the clock frequency. the variation of clock frequency with vid voltage maintains constant v ccgfx ripple and improves power conversion efficiency at lower vid voltages. switching frequency in rpm mode when the adp3211 operates in rpm mode, its switching frequency is controlled by the ripple voltage on the comp pin. each time the comp pin voltage exceeds the rpm pin voltage threshold level determined by the vid voltage and the external resistor connected between rpm and ground, an internal ramp signal is started and drvh is driven high. the slew rate of the internal ramp is programmed by the current entering the ramp pin. one ? third of the ramp current charges an internal ramp capacitor (5 pf typical) and creates a ramp. when the internal ramp signal intercepts the comp voltage, the drvh pin is reset low. in continuous current mode, the switching frequency of rpm operation is almost constant. while in discontinuous current conduction mode, the switching frequency is reduced as a function of the load current. differential sensing of output voltage the adp3211 combines dif ferential sensing with a high accuracy vid dac, referenced by a precision band gap source and a low of fset error amplifier, to meet the rigorous accuracy requirement of the intel imvp ? 6.5 specification. in steady ? state mode, the combination of the vid dac and error amplifier maintain the output voltage for a worst ? case scenario within 7 mv of the full operating output voltage and temperature range. the v ccgfx output voltage is sensed between the fb and fbrtn pins. fb should be connected through a resistor to the positive regulation point, the v cc remote sensing pin of the gmch or cpu. fbrtn should be connected directly to the negative remote sensing point, the v ss sensing point of the gmch or cpu. the internal vid dac and precision voltage reference are referenced to fbrtn and have a typical current of 70  a for guaranteed accurate remote sensing. output current sensing the adp3211 includes a dedicated current sense amplifier (csa) to monitor the total output current of the converter for proper voltage positioning vs. load current and for overcurrent detection. sensing the current delivered to the load is an inherently more accurate method than detecting peak current or sampling the current across
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 14 a sense element, such as the low ? side mosfet. the current sense amplifier can be configured several ways, depending on system optimization objectives, and the current information can be obtained by: ? output inductor esr sensing without the use of a thermistor for the lowest cost ? output inductor esr sensing with the use of a thermistor that tracks inductor temperature to improve accuracy ? discrete resistor sensing for the highest accuracy at the positive input of the csa, the csref pin is connected to the output voltage. at the negative input (that is, the csfb pin of the csa), signals from the sensing element (in the case of inductor dcr sensing, signals from the switch node side of the output inductors) are connected with a resistor. the feedback resistor between the cscomp and csfb pins sets the gain of the current sense amplifier, and a filter capacitor is placed in parallel with this resistor. the current information is then given as the voltage dif ference between the cscomp and csref pins. this signal is used internally as a differential input for the current limit comparator. an additional resistor divider connected between the cscomp and csref pins with the midpoint connected to the lline pin can be used to set the load line required by the gmch specification. the current information to set the load line is then given as the voltage dif ference between the lline and csref pins. this configuration allows the load line slope to be set independent from the current limit threshold. if the current limit threshold and load line do not have to be set independently, the resistor divider between the cscomp and csref pins can be omitted and the cscomp pin can be connected directly to lline. to disable voltage positioning entirely (that is, to set no load line), lline should be tied to csref. to provide the best accuracy for current sensing, the csa has a low offset input voltage and the sensing gain is set by an external resistor ratio. active impedance control mode to control the dynamic output voltage droop as a function of the output current, the signal that is proportional to the total output current, converted from the voltage difference between lline and csref, can be scaled to be equal to the required droop voltage. this droop voltage is calculated by multiplying the droop impedance of the regulator by the output current. this value is used as the control voltage of the pwm regulator. the droop voltage is subtracted from the dac reference output voltage, and the resulting voltage is used as the voltage positioning set ? point. the arrangement results in an enhanced feed ? forward response. voltage control mode a high ? gain bandwidth error amplifier is used for the voltage mode control loop. the non ? inverting input voltage is set via the 7 ? bit vid dac. the vid codes are listed in table no tag. the non ? inverting input voltage is offset by the droop voltage as a function of current, commonly known as active voltage positioning. the output of the error amplifier is the comp pin, which sets the termination voltage of the internal pwm ramps. at the negative input, the fb pin is tied to the output sense location using r fb , a resistor for sensing and controlling the output voltage at the remote sensing point. the main loop compensation is incorporated in the feedback network connected between the fb and comp pins. power ? good monitoring the power ? good comparator monitors the output voltage via the csref pin. the pwrgd pin is an open ? drain output that can be pulled up through an external resistor to a voltage rail, not necessarily the same v cc voltage rail that is running the controller. a logic high level indicates that the output voltage is within the voltage limits defined by a range around the vid voltage setting. pwrgd goes low when the output voltage is outside of this range. following the gmch and cpu specification, the pwrgd range is defined to be 300 mv less than and 200 mv greater than the actual vid dac output voltage. to prevent a false alarm, the power ? good circuit is masked during any vid change and during soft ? start. the duration of the pwrgd mask is set to approximately 130  s by an internal timer. in addition, for a vid change from high to low, there is an additional period of pwrgd masking before the internal dac voltage drops within 200 mv of the new lower vid dac output voltage, as shown in figure 21. figure 21. pwrgd masking for vid change vid signal change internal dac voltage pwrgd mask 100  s 100  s powerup sequence and soft ? start the power ? on ramp ? up time of the output voltage is set internally. with gpu pulled to ground, the adp3211 steps sequentially through each vid code until it reaches the boot voltage. w ith gpu pulled to 5.0 v, the adp3211 steps sequentially through each vid code until it reaches the set vid code voltage. the powerup sequence is illustrated in figure 22 for gpu connected to ground and figure 23 for gpu connected to 5.0 v. when gpu is connected to ground, the adp3211 has a boot voltage of 1.1 v for imvp ? 6.5 cpu applications. when gpu is connected to ground, the adp3211a has a boot voltage of 1.2 v. the boot voltage is the only difference between the adp3211 and adp3211a.
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 15 vcc = 5.0 v en pwrgd gpu = 0 v figure 22. adp3211 powerup sequence for cpu t boot clken dac and v core t cpu_pwrgd v boot = 1.1 v pwrgd v5_s en pgdelay gpu = 5.0 v figure 23. powerup sequence for gpu v ccgfx vid change and soft transient with gpu connected to 5.0 v for gpu operation, when a vid input changes, the adp3211 detects the change but ignores new code for a minimum of 400 ns. this delay is required to prevent the device from reacting to digital signal skew while the 7 ? bit vid input code is in transition. additionally, the vid change triggers a pwrgd masking timer to prevent a pwrgd failure. each vid change resets and re ? triggers the internal pwrgd masking timer. the adp3211 provides a soft transient function to reduce inrush current during vid transitions. reducing the inrush current helps decrease the acoustic noise generated by the mlcc input capacitors and inductors. the soft transient feature is implemented internally. when a new vid code is detected, the adp3211 steps sequentially through each vid voltage to the final vid voltage. current limit, short ? circuit, and latchoff protection the adp3211 has an adjustable current limit set by the r clim resistor. the adp3211 compares a programmable current limit set point to the voltage from the output of the current sense amplifier. the level of current limit is set with the resistor from the ilim pin to cscomp. during operation, the voltage on ilim is equal to the voltage on csref. the current through the external resistor connected between i lim and cscomp is then compared to the internal current limit current i cl. if the current generated through this resistor into the ilim pin (ilim) exceeds the internal current limit threshold current (i cl) , the internal current limit amplifier controls the internal comp voltage to maintain the average output current at the limit. normally, the adp3211 operates in rpm mode. during a current overload, the adp3211 switches to pwm mode. with low impedance loads, the adp3211 operates in a constant current mode to ensure that the external mosfets and inductor function properly and to protect the gpu or cpu. with a low constant impedance load, the output voltage decreases to supply only the set current limit. if the output voltage drops below the power ? good limit, the pwrgd signal transitions. after the pwrgd single transitions, internal waits 8 ms before latching off the adp3211. figure 24 shows how the adp3211 reacts to a current overload.
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 16 current limit applied latched off figure 24. current overload 2  s/div switch node 10 v/div output voltage 0.5 v/div pwrgd 5.0 v/div 2.0 v/div clken the latchoff fun ction can be reset either by removing and reapplying v cc or by briefly pulling the en pin low. during startup, when the output voltage is below 200 mv, a secondary current limit is active. this is necessary because the voltage swing of cscomp cannot extend below ground. this secondary current limit clamp controls the minimum internal comp voltage to the pwm comparators to 1.5 v. this limits the voltage drop across the low ? side mosfets through the current balance circuitry. light load rpm dcm operation the adp3211 operates in r pm mode. w ith higher loads, the adp3211 operates in continuous conduction mode (ccm), and the upper and lower mosfets run synchronously and in complementary phase. see figure 25 for the typical waveforms of the adp3211 running in ccm with a 10 a load current. figure 25. single ? phase waveforms in ccm 2  s/div low side gate 5.0 v/div csref to cscomp 50mv/div switch node 5.0 v/div with lighter loads, the adp3211 enters discontinuous conduction mode (dcm). figure 26 shows a typical single ? phase buck with one upper fet, one lower fet, an output inductor, an output capacitor, and a load resistor. figure 27 shows the path of the inductor current with the upper fet on and the lower fet off. in figure 28 the high ? side fet is off and the low ? side fet is on. in ccm, if one fet is on, its complementary fet must be off; however, in dcm, both high ? and low ? side fets are off and no current flows into the inductor (see figure 29). figure 30 shows the inductor current and switch node voltage in dcm. in dcm with a light load, the adp3211 monitors the switch node voltage to determine when to turn off the low ? side fet. figure 31 shows a typical waveform in dcm with a 1 a load current. between t1 and t2, the inductor current ramps down. the current flows through the source drain of the low ? side fet and creates a voltage drop across the fet with a slightly negative switch node. as the inductor current ramps down to 0 a, the switch voltage approaches 0 v, as seen just before t2. when the switch voltage is approximately ? 4 mv, the low ? side fet is turned off. figure 30 shows a small, dampened ringing at t2. this is caused by the lc created from capacitance on the switch node, including the cds of the fets and the output inductor. this ringing is normal. the adp3211 automatically goes into dcm with a light load. figure 31 shows the typical dcm waveform of the adp3211 with a 1 a load current. as the load increases, the adp3211 enters into ccm. in dcm, frequency decreases with load current, and switching frequency is a function of the inductor, load current, input voltage, and output voltage. figure 26. buck topology switch node l drvl drvh q1 q2 c output voltage load voltage input l c on off load figure 27. buck topology inductor current during t 0 and t 1 figure 28. buck topology inductor current during t 1 and t 2 l c on off load figure 29. buck topology inductor current during t 2 and t 3 l c off off load
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 17 figure 30. inductor current and switch node in dcm inductor current switch node voltage t 0 t 1 t 2 t 3 t 4 figure 31. single ? phase waveforms in dcm with 1 a load current 4  s/div csref to cscomp 50mv/div low side gate 5v/div switch node 5.0 v/div output crowbar to protect the load and output components of the supply, the drvl output is driven high (turning the low ? side mosfets on) and drvh is driven low (turning the high ? side mosfets off) when the output voltage exceeds the cpu or gmch ovp threshold. turning on the low ? side mosfets forces the output capacitor to discharge and the current to reverse due to current build up in the inductors. if the output overvoltage is due to a drain ? source short of the high ? side mosfet, turning on the low ? side mosfet results in a crowbar across the input voltage rail. the crowbar action blows the fuse of the input rail, breaking the circuit and thus protecting the cpu or gmch chip ? set from destruction. when the ovp feature is triggered, the adp3211 is latched off. the latchoff function can be reset by removing and reapplying v cc to the adp3211 or by briefly pulling the en pin low. reverse voltage protection very large reverse current in inductors can cause negative v ccgfx voltage, which is harmful to the chip ? set and other output components. the adp3211 provides a reverse voltage protection (rvp) function without additional system cost. the v ccgfx voltage is monitored through the csref pin. when the csref pin voltage drops to less than ? 300 mv, the adp3211 triggers the rvp function by setting both drvh and drvl low, thus turning off all mosfets. the reverse inductor currents can be quickly reset to 0 by discharging the built ? up energy in the inductor into the input dc voltage source via the forward ? biased body diode of the high ? side mosfets. the rvp function is terminated when the csref pin voltage returns to greater than ? 100 mv. sometimes the crowbar feature inadvertently results in negative v ccgfx voltage because turning on the low ? side mosfets results in a very large reverse inductor current. to prevent damage to the chip ? set caused from negative voltage, the adp3211 maintains its rvp monitoring function even after ovp latchoff. during ovp latchoff, if the csref pin voltage drops to less than ? 300 mv, the low ? side mosfets is turned off by setting drvl low. drvl will be set high again when the csref voltage recovers to greater than ? 100 mv. figure 32 shows the reverse voltage protection function of the adp3211. the csref pin is disconnected from the output voltage and pulled negative. as the csref pin drops to less than ? 300 mv, the low ? side and high ? side fets turn off. ovp rvp figure 32. adp3211 rvp function 20  s/div low side gate 5.0 v/div output voltage 0.5 v/div pwrgd 5.0 v/div switch node 10 v/div output enable and uvlo for the adp3211 to begin switching, the v cc supply voltage to the controller must be greater than the v ccok threshold and the en pin must be driven high. if the v cc voltage is less than the v ccuvlo threshold or the en pin is logic low, the adp3211 shuts of f. in shutdown mode, the controller holds drvh and drvl low and drives pwrgd to low. the user must adhere to proper power ? supply sequencing during startup and shutdown of the adp3211. all input pins must be at ground prior to removing or applying v cc , and all output pins should be left in high impedance state while v cc is off.
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 18 overlay protection circuit the overlap protection circuit prevents both main power switches, the high side mosfet q1 and the low side mosfet q2, from being on at the same time. this is done to prevent shoot ? through currents from flowing through both power switches and the associated losses that can occur during their on ? off transitions. the overlap protection circuit accomplishes this by adaptively controlling the delay from q1?s turn ? off to q2?s turn ? on, and the delay from q2?s turn ? off to q1?s turn ? on. to prevent the overlap of the gate drives during q1?s turn ? off and q2?s turn ? on, the overlap circuit monitors the voltage at the sw pin and drvh pin. when the internal pwm signal goes low, q1 begins to turn off. the overlap protection circuit waits for the voltage at the sw and drvh pins to both fall below 2.2 v. once both of these conditions are met, q2 begins to turn on. using this method, the overlap protection circuit ensures that q1 is off before q2 turns on, regardless of variations in temperature, supply voltage, gate charge, and drive current. there is, however, a timeout circuit that overrides the waiting period for the sw and drvh pins to reach 2.2 v. after the timeout period has expired, drvl is asserted high regardless of the sw and drvh voltages. the timeout period is approximately 250 ns. in the opposite case, when the internal pwm signal goes high, q2 begins to turn off after a propagation delay. the overlap protection circuit waits for the voltage at drvl to fall below 2.2 v, after which drvh is asserted high and q1 turns on. output current monitor the adp3211 includes an output current monitor function. the i mon pin outputs an accurate current that is directly proportional to the output current. this current is then run through a parallel rc connected from the i mon pin to the fbrtn pin to generate an accurately scaled and filtered voltage. the maximum voltage on i mon is internally clamped by the adp3211 at 1.15.v. table 1. vid code table vid6 vid5 vid4 vid3 vid2 vid1 vid0 output (v) 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.5000 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1.4875 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1.4750 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1.4625 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1.4500 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1.4375 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1.4250 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1.4125 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1.4000 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 1.3875 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1.3750 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 1.3625 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 1.3500 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1.3375 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 1.3250 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1.3125 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1.3000 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 1.2875 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1.2750 0 0 1 0 0 1 1 1.2625 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 1.2500 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1.2375 0 0 1 0 1 1 0 1.2250 0 0 1 0 1 1 1 1.2125 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1.2000 0 0 1 1 0 0 1 1.1875 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 1.1750 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 1.1625 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1.1500 0 0 1 1 1 0 1 1.1375 0 0 1 1 1 1 0 1.1250 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 1.1125
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 19 table 1. vid code table vid6 output (v) vid0 vid1 vid2 vid3 vid4 vid5 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1.1000 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 1.0875 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 1.0750 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 1.0625 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 1.0500 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 1.0375 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1.0250 0 1 0 0 1 1 1 1.0125 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1.0000 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0.9875 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 0.9750 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0.9625 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0.9500 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0.9375 0 1 0 1 1 1 0 0.9250 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 0.9125 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0.9000 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0.8875 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0.8750 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0.8625 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 0.8500 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 0.8375 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0.8250 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 0.8125 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 0.8000 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 0.7875 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 0.7750 0 1 1 1 0 1 1 0.7625 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0.7500 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 0.7375 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0.7250 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 0.7125 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.7000 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0.6875 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0.6750 1 0 0 0 0 1 1 0.6625 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0.6500 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0.6375 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 0.6250 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 0.6125 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0.6000 1 0 0 1 0 0 1 0.5875 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0.5750 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0.5625 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0.5500 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0.5375 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0.5250 1 0 0 1 1 1 1 0.5125 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0.5000 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0.4875
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 20 table 1. vid code table vid6 output (v) vid0 vid1 vid2 vid3 vid4 vid5 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0.4750 1 0 1 0 0 1 1 0.4625 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 0.4500 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0.4375 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0.4250 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 0.4125 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0.4000 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0.3875 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0.3750 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0.3625 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 0.3500 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0.3375 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 0.3250 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 0.3125 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0.3000 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0.2875 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0.2750 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0.2625 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 0.2500 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 0.2375 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0.2250 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0.2125 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0.2000 1 1 0 1 0 0 1 0.1875 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 0.1750 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 0.1625 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0.1500 1 1 0 1 1 0 1 0.1375 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 0.1250 1 1 0 1 1 1 1 0.1125 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0.1000 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0.0875 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0.0750 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 0.0625 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0.0500 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0.0375 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 0.0250 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 0.0125 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0.0000 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0.0000 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 0.0000 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 0.0000 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0.0000 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 0.0000 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0.0000 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0.0000
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 21 figure 33. t ypical application circuit vid6 vid5 vid4 vid1 vid2 vid3 vid0 pwrgd imon fbrtn fb comp gpu ilim vcc bst drvh sw pvcc drvl pgnd iref rpm rt lline csref csfb cscomp 32 en vid0 vid1 vid2 vid3 vid4 vid5 vid6 adp3211 ramp 1 clken clken agnd vr_on pwrgd r16 10 k? v3.3v vccsense v3.3v r2 10 ? ra1 20 k? r18 4.53 k? cb1 220 pf ca1 470 pf cfb1 22 pf r20 r25 7.68 k? vsssense r17 0 ? c8 4.7  f q2 ntms4846n q3 ntmfs4846n q1 ntmfs4821n c1 10  f 25v c2 10  f 25v c3 10  f 25v vdc l1, 560nh/ 1.3m? c21, 0.33  f gnd vdc gnd rth1, 220k? 8% ntc r23 0 ? r21 0 ? c28 1 nf c27 100 pf 1nf rph1 53.6 k? rph2 dnp tp8 sw tp11 drvh r55 0 ? tp12 drvl c9 22  f 6.3v c10 22  f 6.3v c11 0.22  f c12 0.1  f c13 0.1  f c14 1nf c15 dnp vgfx_core_rtn c22 220  f 2.5v c23 220  f 2.5v c30 dnp c31 dnp vgfx_core v5s imon 5v r13 100 r53 100 vgfx_core vgfx_core_rtn r14 200 k? r15 340 k? vdc dnp r24 dnp r54 dnp c18, 0.1  f
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 22 application information the adp3211 application circuit should be fine ? tuned in the final design. the equations in the application information section are used as a starting point for a new design. the design parameters for a typical imvp ? 6.5 ? compliant gpu core vr application are as follows: ? maximum input voltage (v inmax ) = 19 v ? minimum input voltage (v inmin ) = 8.0 v ? output voltage by vid setting (v vid ) = 1.1 v ? maximum output current (i o ) = 10 a ? droop resistance (r o ) = 8 m  ? nominal output voltage at 10 a load (v ofl ) = 1.02 v ? static output voltage drop from no load to full load (  v) = v onl ? v ofl = 1.1 v ? 1.02 v = 80 mv ? maximum output current step (  i o ) = 8 a ? switching frequency (f sw ) = 400 khz ? duty cycle at maximum input voltage (d max ) = 0.14 ? duty cycle at minimum input voltage (d min ) = 0.054 setting the clock frequency for pwm the adp3211 operates in fixed frequency pwm mode during startup, for 100  s after a vid change, and in current limit. in pwm operation, the adp3211 uses a fixed ? frequency control architecture. the frequency is set by an external timing resistor (r t ). the clock frequency determines the switching frequency, which relates directly to the switching losses and the sizes of the inductors and input and output capacitors. for example, a clock frequency of 400 khz sets the switching frequency to 400 khz. this selection represents the trade ? off between the switching losses and the minimum sizes of the output f ilter components. to achieve a 400 khz oscillator frequency at a vid voltage of 1.1 v, r t must be 274 k  . alternatively, the value for r t can be calculated by using the following equation: r t  v vid  1.0 v 2  f sw  9pf  16 k  (eq. 1) where: 9 pf and 16 k  are internal ic component values. v vid is the vid voltage in volts. f sw is the switching frequency in hertz. for good initial accuracy and frequency stability, it is recommended to use a 1% resistor. ramp resistor selection the ramp resistor (r r ) is used for setting the size of the internal pwm ramp. the value of this resistor is chosen to provide the best combination of thermal balance, stability, and transient response. use this equation to determine a starting value: r r  a r  l 3  a d  r ds  c r (eq. 2) r r  0.5  560 nh 3  5  5.2 m   5pf  718 k  where: a r is the internal ramp amplifier gain. a d is the current balancing amplifier gain. r ds is the total low ? side mosfet on ? resistance, c r is the internal ramp capacitor value. setting the switching frequency for rpm operation during the rpm operation, the adp3211 runs in pseudo ? constant frequency if the load current is high enough for continuous current mode. while in dcm, the switching frequency is reduced with the load current in a linear manner. to save power with light loads, lower switching frequency is usually preferred during rpm operation. however, the v ccgfx ripple specification of imvp ? 6.5 sets a limitation for the lowest switching frequency. therefore, depending on the inductor and output capacitors, the switching frequency in rpm can be equal to, greater than, or less than its counterpart in pwm. a resistor from rpm to gnd sets the pseudo constant frequency as following: r rpm  2  r t v vid  1.0 v  a r  (1  d)  v vid r r  c r  f sw  0.5 k  (eq. 3) where: a r is the internal ramp amplifier gain. c r is the internal ramp capacitor value. r r is an external resistor on the rampadj pin to set the internal ramp magnitude. because r r = 718 k  , the following resistance sets up 400 khz switching frequency in rpm operation. 2  274 k  1.1 v  1.0 v  0.5  (1  0.054)  1.1 v 718 k   5pf  400 khz  500   93.1 k  (eq. 4) r rpm  inductor selection the choice of inductance determines the ripple current of the inductor. less inductance results in more ripple current, which increases the output ripple voltage and the conduction losses in the mosfets. however, this allows the use of smaller ? size inductors, and for a specified peak ? to ? peak transient deviation, it allows less total output capacitance. conversely, a higher inductance results in lower ripple current and reduced conduction losses, but it requires larger ? size inductors and more output capacitance for the same peak ? to ? peak transient deviation. for a buck converter, the practical value for peak ? to ? peak inductor ripple current is less than 50% of the maximum dc current of that inductor. equation 5 shows the relationship between the inductance, oscillator frequency, and peak ? to ? peak ripple current. equation 6 can be used to determine the minimum inductance based on a given output ripple voltage.
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 23 i r  v vid  (1  d min ) f sw  l (eq. 5) l  v vid  r o  (1  d min ) f sw  v ripple (eq. 6) in this example, r o is assumed to be the esr of the output capacitance, which results in an optimal transient response. solving equation 6 for a 16 mv peak ? to ? peak output ripple voltage yields: l  1.1 v  8m   (1  0.054) 400 khz  16 mv  1.4  h (eq. 7) if the resultant ripple voltage is less than the initially selected value, the inductor can be changed to a smaller value until the ripple value is met. this iteration allows optimal transient response and minimum output decoupling. in this example, the iteration showed that a 560 nh inductor was sufficient to achieve a good ripple. the smallest possible inductor should be used to minimize the number of output capacitors. choosing a 560 nh inductor is a good choice for a starting point, and it provides a calculated ripple current of 6.6 a. the inductor should not saturate at the peak current of 18.3 a, and it should be able to handle the sum of the power dissipation caused by the winding?s average current (10 a) plus the ac core loss. another important factor in the inductor design is the dcr, which is used for measuring the inductor current. too large of a dcr causes excessive power losses, whereas too small of a value leads to increased measurement error. for this example, an inductor with a dcr of 1.3 m  is used. selecting a standard inductor after the inductance and dcr are known, select a standard inductor that best meets the overall design goals. it is also important to specify the inductance and dcr tolerance to maintain the accuracy of the system. using 10% tolerance for the inductance and 7% for the dcr at room temperature are reasonable values that most manufacturers can meet. power inductor manufacturers the following companies provide surface ? mount power inductors optimized for high power applications upon request. vishay dale electronics, inc. (605) 665 ? 9301 panasonic (714) 373 ? 7334 sumida electric company (847) 545 ? 6700 nec tokin corporation (510) 324 ? 4110 output droop resistance the design requires that the regulator output voltage measured at the chip ? set pins decreases when the output current increases. the specified voltage drop corresponds to the droop resistance (r o ). the output current is measured by low ? pass filtering the voltage across the inductor or current sense resistor. the filter is implemented by the cs amplifier that is configured with r ph , r cs , and c cs . the output resistance of the regulator is set by the following equations: r o  r cs r ph  r sense (eq. 8) c cs  l r sense  r cs (eq. 9) where r sense is the dcr of the output inductors. either r cs or r ph can be chosen for added flexibility. due to the current drive ability of the cscomp pin, the r cs resistance should be greater than 100 k  . for example, initially select r cs to be equal to 200 k  , and then use equation 9 to solve for c cs : c cs  560 nh 1.3 m   200 k   2.2 nf (eq. 10) if c cs is not a standard capacitance, r cs can be tuned. in this case, the required c cs is a standard value and no tuning is required. for best accuracy, c cs should be a 5% npo capacitor. next, solve for r ph by rearranging equation 8 as follows: r ph  1.3 m  8m   200 k   32.5 k  (eq. 11) the standard 1% resistor for r ph is 32.4 k  . inductor dcr temperature correction if the dcr of the inductor is used as a sense element and copper wire is the source of the dcr, the temperature changes associated with the inductor?s winding must be compensated for. fortunately, copper has a well ? known temperature coefficient (tc) of 0.39%/ c. if r cs is designed to have an opposite but equal percentage of change in resistance, it cancels the temperature variation of the inductor?s dcr. due to the nonlinear nature of ntc thermistors, series resistors r cs1 and r cs2 (see figure 34) are needed to linearize the ntc and produce the desired temperature coefficient tracking.
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 24 adp3211 16 15 14 cscomp csfb csref + ? place as close as possible to nearest inductor to switch node keep this path as short as possible and w ell away from switch node lines figure 34. temperature ? compensation circuit values c cs1 r cs1 r cs2 r th r ph to v out sense the following procedure and expressions yield values for r cs1 , r cs2 , and r th (the thermistor value at 25 c) for a given r cs value. 1. select an ntc to be used based on its type and value. because the value needed is not yet determined, start with a thermistor with a value close to r cs and an ntc with an initial tolerance of better than 5%. 2. find the relative resistance value of the ntc at two temperatures. the appropriate temperatures will depend on the type of ntc, but 50 c and 90 c have been shown to work well for most types of ntcs. the resistance values are called a (a is r th (50 c)/r th (25 c)) and b (b is r th (90 c)/r th (25 c)). note that the relative value of the ntc is always 1 at 25 c. 3. find the relative value of r cs required for each of the two temperatures. the relative value of r cs is based on the percentage of change needed, which is initially assumed to be 0.39%/ c in this example. the relative values are called r 1 (r 1 is 1/(1+ tc (t 1 ? 25))) and r 2 (r 2 is 1/(1 + tc (t 2 ? 25))), where tc is 0.0039, t 1 is 50 c, and t 2 is 90 c. 4. compute the relative values for r cs1 , r cs2 , and r th by using the following equations: r cs2 (a  b)  r 1  r 2  a  (1  b)  r 2  b  (1  a)  r 1 a  (1  b)  r 1  b  (1  a)  r 2  (a  b) (eq. 12) r cs1  (1  a) 1 1  r cs2  a r 1  r cs2 r th  1 1 1  r cs2  1 r cs1 5. calculate r th = r th r cs , and then select a thermistor of the closest value available. in addition, compute a scaling factor k based on the ratio of the actual thermistor value used relative to the computed one: k  r th(actual) r th(calculated) (eq. 13) 6. calculate values for r cs1 and r cs2 by using the following equations: r cs1  r cs  k  r cs1 (eq. 14) r cs2  r cs   (1  k)  (k  r cs2 )  for example, if a thermistor value of 100 k  is selected in step 1, an available 0603 ? size thermistor with a value close to r cs is the v ishay nths0603n04 ntc thermistor, which has resistance values of a = 0.3359 and b = 0.0771. using the equations in step 4, r cs1 is 0.359, r cs2 is 0.729, and r th is 1.094. solving for r th yields 219 k  , so a thermistor of 220 k  would be a reasonable selection, making k equal to 1.005. finally, r cs1 and r cs2 are found to be 72.2 k  and 146 k  . choosing the closest 1% resistor values yields a choice of 71.5 k  and 147 k  . c out selection the required output decoupling for processors and platforms is typically recommended by intel. for systems containing both bulk and ceramic capacitors, however, the following guidelines can be a helpful supplement. select the number of ceramics and determine the total ceramic capacitance (c z ). this is based on the number and type of capacitors used. keep in mind that the best location to place ceramic capacitors is inside the socket; however, the physical limit is twenty 0805 ? size pieces inside the socket. additional ceramic capacitors can be placed along the outer edge of the socket. a combined ceramic capacitor value of 40  f to 50  f is recommended and is usually composed of multiple 10  f or 22  f capacitors. ensure that the total amount of bulk capacitance (c x ) is within its limits. the upper limit is dependent on the vid otf output voltage stepping (voltage step, v v , in time, t v , with error of v err ); the lower limit is based on meeting the critical capacitance for load release at a given maximum load step,  i o . the current version of the imvp ? 6.5 specification allows a maximum v ccgfx overshoot (v osmax ) of 10 mv more than the vid voltage for a step ? off load current.
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 25 c x(min) 
l   i o  r o  v osmax  i o   v vid  c z (eq. 15) c x(max)  l k 2  r o 2  v v v vid 
1   t v v vid v v  k  r o l  2   1  c z (eq. 16) where k  ? 1n  v err v v  to meet the conditions of these expressions and the transient response, the esr of the bulk capacitor bank (r x ) should be less than two times the droop resistance, r o . if the c x(min) is greater than c x(max) , the system does not meet the vid otf specifications and may require less inductance. in addition, the switching frequency may have to be increased to maintain the output ripple. for example, if two pieces of 22  f, 0805 ? size mlc capacitors (c z = 44  f) are used during a vid voltage change, the v ccgfx change is 220 mv in 22  s with a setting error of 10 mv. if k = 3.1, solving for the bulk capacitance yields: c x(min) 
560 nh  8a  5.1 m   10 mv 8a   1.174 v ? 44  f  256  f c x(max)  560 nh  220 mv 3.1 2  (5.1 m  ) 2  1.174 v 
1   22  s  1.174 v  3.1  5.1 m  220 mv  560 nh  2  ? 1 ? 44  f  992  f (eq. 17) using two 220  f panasonic sp capacitors with a typical esr of 7 m  each yields c x = 440  f and r x = 3.5 m  . ensure that the esl of the bulk capacitors (l x ) is low enough to limit the high frequency ringing during a load change. this is tested using: l x  c z  r o 2  q 2 (eq. 18) l x  44  f  (5.1 m  ) 2  2  2.3 nh where: q is limited to the square root of 2 to ensure a critically damped system. l x is about 450 ph for the two sp capacitors, which is low enough to avoid ringing during a load change. if the l x of the chosen bulk capacitor bank is too large, the number of ceramic capacitors may need to be increased to prevent excessive ringing. for this multi ? mode control technique, an all ceramic capacitor design can be used if the conditions of equations 15, 16, and 18 are satisfied. power mosfets for typical 15 a applications, the n ? channel power mosfets are selected for one high ? side switch and two low ? side switch. the main selection parameters for the power mosfets are v gs(th) , q g , c iss , c rss , and r ds(on) . because the voltage of the gate driver is 5.0 v, logic ? level threshold mosfets must be used. the maximum output current, i o , determines the r ds(on) requirement for the low ? side (synchronous) mosfets. with conduction losses being dominant, the following expression shows the total power that is dissipated in each synchronous mosfet in terms of the ripple current per phase (i r ) and the average total output current (i o ): p sf  (1  d)    i o n sf  2  1 12   i r n sf  2   r ds(sf) (eq. 19) where: d is the duty cycle and is approximately the output voltage divided by the input voltage. i r is the inductor peak ? to ? peak ripple current and is approximately: i r  (1  d)  v out l  f sw (eq. 20) knowing the maximum output current and the maximum allowed power dissipation, the user can calculate the required r ds(on) for the mosfet. for an 8 ? lead soic or 8 ? lead soic ? compatible mosfet, the junction to ambient (pcb) thermal impedance is 50 c/w. in the worst case, the pcb temperature is 70 c to 80 c during heavy load operation of the notebook, and a safe limit for p sf is about 0.8 w to 1.0 w at 120 c junction temperature. therefore, for this example (15 a maximum), the r ds(sf) per mosfet is less than 18.8 m  for the low ? side mosfet. this r ds(sf) is also at a junction temperature of
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 26 about 120 c; therefore, the r ds(sf) per mosfet should be less than 13.3 m  at room temperature, or 18.8 m  at high temperature. another important factor for the synchronous mosfet is the input capacitance and feedback capacitance. the ratio of the feedback to input must be small (less than 10% is recommended) to prevent accidentally turning on the synchronous mosfets when the switch node goes high. the high ? side (main) mosfet must be able to handle two main power dissipation components: conduction losses and switching losses. switching loss is related to the time for the main mosfet to turn on and off and to the current and voltage that are being switched. basing the switching speed on the rise and fall times of the gate driver impedance and mosfet input capacitance, the following expression provides an approximate value for the switching loss per main mosfet: p s(mf)  2  f sw  v dc  i o n mf  r g  n mf  c iss (eq. 21) where: n mf is the total number of main mosfets. r g is the total gate resistance. c iss is the input capacitance of the main mosfet. the most effective way to reduce switching loss is to use lower gate capacitance devices. the conduction loss of the main mosfet is given by the following equation: p c(mf)  d    i o n mf  2  1 12   i r n mf  2   r ds(mf) (eq. 22) where r ds(mf) is the on resistance of the mosfet. typically, a user wants the highest speed (low c iss ) device for a main mosfet, but such a device usually has higher on resistance. therefore, the user must select a device that meets the total power dissipation (about 0.8 w to 1.0 w for an 8 ? lead soic) when combining the switching and conduction losses. for example, an ntmfs4821n device can be selected as the main mosfet (one in total; that is, n mf = 1), with approximately c iss = 1400 pf (maximum) and r ds(mf) = 8.6 m  (maximum at t j = 120 c), and an ntmfs4846n device can be selected as the synchronous mosfet (two in total; that is, n sf = 2), with r ds(sf) = 3.8 m  (maximum at t j = 120 c). solving for the power dissipation per mosfet at i o = 15 a and i r = 5.0 a yields 178 mw for each synchronous mosfet and 446 mw for each main mosfet. a third synchronous mosfet is an option to further increase the conversion efficiency and reduce thermal stress. finally, consider the power dissipation in the driver. this is best described in terms of the q g for the mosfets and is given by the following equation:  f sw 2  (n mf  q gmf  n sf  q gsf )  i cc   vcc (eq. 23) p drv  where q gmf is the total gate charge for each main mosfet, and q gsf is the total gate charge for each synchronous mosfet. the previous equation also shows the standby dissipation (i cc times the v cc ) of the driver. current limit set ? point to select the current limit set point, we need to find the resistor value for r lim . the current limit threshold for the adp3211 is set when the current in r lim is equal to the internal reference current of 20  a. the current in r lim is equal to the inductor current times r o . r lim can be found using the following equation: r lim  i lim  r o 20  a (eq. 24) where: r lim is the current limit resistor. r lim is connected from the i lim pin to the cscomp pin. r o is the output load line resistance. i lim is the current limit set point. this is the peak inductor current that will trip current limit. in this example, if choosing 20 a for i lim , r lim is 6.9 k  , which is close to a standard 1% resistance of 6.98 k  . the per phase current limit described earlier has its limit determined by the following: i phlim  v comp(max)  v r  v bias a d  r ds(max)  i r 2 (eq. 25) for the adp3211, the maximum comp voltage (v comp(max) ) is 3.3 v, the comp pin bias voltage (v bias ) is 1.0 v, and the current balancing amplifier gain (a d ) is 5. using a v r of 0.55 v, and a r ds(max) of 3.8 m  (low ? side on ? resistance at 150 c) results in a per phase limit of 85 a. although this number seems high, this current level can only be reached with a absolute short at the output and the current limit latchoff function shutting down the regulator before overheating occurs. this limit can be adjusted by changing the ramp voltage v r . however, users should not set the per phase limit lower than the average per phase current (i lim /n). there is also a per phase initial duty ? cycle limit at maximum input voltage: d lim  d min  v comp(max)  v bias v r (eq. 26) rc snubber it is important in any buck topology to use a resistor ? capacitor snubber across the low side power mosfet. the rc snubber dampens ringing on the switch
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 27 node when the high side mosfet turns on. the switch node ringing could cause emi system failures and increased stress on the power components and controller. the rc snubber should be placed as close as possible to the low side mosfet. typical values for the resistor range from 1  to 10  . typical values for the capacitor range from 330 pf to 4.7 nf. the exact value of the rc snubber depends on the pcb layout and mosfet selection. some fine tuning must be done to find the best values. the equation below is used to find the starting values for the rc snubber. r snubber  1 2    f ringing  c oss (eq. 27) c snubber  1   f ringing  r snubber (eq. 28) p snubber  c snubber  v 2 input  f switching (eq. 29) where r snubber is the snubber resistor. c snubber is the snubber capacitor. f ringing is the frequency of the ringing on the switch node when the high side mosfet turns on. c oss is the low side mosfet output capacitance at v input . this is taken from the low side mosfet data sheet. v input is the input voltage. f switching is the switching frequency. p snubber is the power dissipated in r snubber . current monitor the adp3211 has an output current monitor. the i mon pin sources a current proportional to the total inductor current. a resistor, r mon , from i mon to fbrtn sets the gain of the output current monitor. a 0.1  f is placed in parallel with r mon to filter the inductor current ripple and high frequency load transients. since the i mon pin is connected directly to the cpu, it is clamped to prevent it from going above 1.15 v. the i mon pin current is equal to the r lim times a fixed gain of 10. r mon can be found using the following equation: r mon  1.15 v  r lim 10  r o  i fs (eq. 30) where: r mon is the current monitor resistor. r mon is connected from i mon pin to fbrtn. r lim is the current limit resistor. r o is the output load line resistance. i fs is the output current when the voltage on i mon is at full scale. feedback loop compensation design optimized compensation of the adp3211 allows the best possible response of the regulator?s output to a load change. the basis for determining the optimum compensation is to make the regulator and output decoupling appear as an output impedance that is entirely resistive over the widest possible frequency range, including dc, and that is equal to the droop resistance (r o ). with the resistive output impedance, the output voltage droops in proportion with the load current at any load current slew rate, ensuring the optimal position and allowing the minimization of the output decoupling. with the multi ? mode feedback structure of the adp3211, it is necessary to set the feedback compensation so that the converter?s output impedance works in parallel with the output decoupling. in addition, it is necessary to compensate for the several poles and zeros created by the output inductor and decoupling capacitors (output filter). a type iii compensator on the voltage feedback is adequate for proper compensation of the output filter. figure 35 shows the type iii amplifier used in the adp3211. figure 36 shows the locations of the two poles and two zeros created by this amplifier. comp fb reference voltage voltage error amplifier adp3211 output voltage figure 35. v oltage error amplifier r a c a c b c fb r b figure 36. poles and zeros of voltage error amplifier gain 0db frequency ?20db/dec f p1 f z2 f z1 f p2 ?20db/dec the following equations give the locations of the poles and zeros shown in figure 36: f z1  1 2   c a  r a (eq. 31) f z2  1 2   c b  r b (eq. 32) f p1  1 2  (c a  c fb )  r b (eq. 33) f p2  c a  c fb 2   r a  c fb  c a (eq. 34)
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 28 the expressions that follow compute the time constants for the poles and zeros in the system and are intended to yield an optimal starting point for the design; some adjustments may be necessary to account for pcb and component parasitic effects (see the tuning procedure for adp3211 section): r e  r o  a d  r ds  r dcr  v rt v vid  (eq. 35) 2  l  (1  d)  v rt c x  r o  v vid t a  c x  (r o  r  )  l x r o  r o  r  r x (eq. 36) t b  (r x  r  r o )  c x (eq. 37) t c  v rt   l  a d  r ds 2  f sw  v vid  r e (eq. 38) t d  c x  c z  r o 2 c x  (r o  r  )  c z  r o (eq. 39) where: r? is the pcb resistance from the bulk capacitors to the ceramics and is approximately 0.4 m  (assuming an 8 ? layer motherboard). r ds is the total low ? side mosfet for on resistance. a d is 5. v rt is 1.25 v. l x is the esl of the bulk capacitors (450 ph for the two panasonic sp capacitors). the compensation values can be calculated as follows: c a  r o  t a r e  r fb (eq. 40) r a  t c c a (eq. 41) c fb  t b r fb (eq. 42) c b  t d r a (eq. 43) the standard values for these components are subject to the tuning procedure described in the tuning procedure for adp3211 section. c in selection and input current d i /d t reduction in continuous inductor ? current mode, the source current of the high ? side mosfet is approximately a square wave with a duty ratio equal to v out /v in . to prevent large voltage transients, use a low esr input capacitor sized for the maximum rms current. the maximum rms capacitor current occurs at the lowest input voltage and is given by: i crms  d  i o  1 d  1  (eq. 44) i crms  0.15  15 a  1 0.15  1   5.36 a where i o is the output current. in a typical notebook system, the battery rail decoupling is achieved by using mlc capacitors or a mixture of mlc capacitors and bulk capacitors. in this example, the input capacitor bank is formed by four pieces of 10  f, 25 v mlc capacitors, with a ripple current rating of about 1.5 a each. tuning procedure for adp3211 set up and test the circuit 1. build a circuit based on the compensation values computed from the design spreadsheet. 2. connect a dc load to the circuit. 3. turn on the adp3211 and verify that it operates properly. 4. check for jitter with no load and full load conditions. set the dc load line 1. measure the output voltage with no load (v nl ) and verify that this voltage is within the specified tolerance range. 2. measure the output voltage with a full load when the device is cold (v flcold ). allow the board to run for ~10 minutes with a full load and then measure the output when the device is hot (v flhot ). if the difference between the two measured voltages is more than a few millivolts, adjust r cs2 using equation 45. r cs2(new)  r cs2(old)  v nl  v flcold v nl  v flhot (eq. 45) 3. repeat step 2 until no adjustment of r cs2 is needed. 4. compare the output voltage with no load to that with a full load using 5 a steps. compute the load line slope for each change and then find the average to determine the overall load line slope (r omeas ). 5. if the difference between r omeas and r o is more than 0.05 m  , use the following equation to adjust the r ph values: r ph(new)  r ph(old)  r omeas r o (eq. 46) 6. repeat steps 4 and 5 until no adjustment of r ph is needed. once this is achieved, do not change r ph , r cs1 , r cs2 , or r th for the rest of the procedure.
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 29 7. measure the output ripple with no load and with a full load with scope, making sure both are within the specifications. set the ac load line 1. remove the dc load from the circuit and connect a dynamic load. 2. connect the scope to the output voltage and set it to dc coupling mode with a time scale of 100  s/div. 3. set the dynamic load for a transient step of about 40 a at 1 khz with 50% duty cycle. 4. measure the output waveform (note that use of a dc offset on the scope may be necessary to see the waveform). try to use a vertical scale of 100 mv/div or finer. 5. the resulting waveform will be similar to that shown in figure 37. use the horizontal cursors to measure v acdrp and v dcdrp , as shown in figure 37. do not measure the undershoot or overshoot that occurs immediately after the step. figure 37. ac load line waveform v dcdrp v acdrp 6. if the difference between v acdrp and v dcdrp is more than a couple of millivolts, use equation 47 to adjust c cs . it may be necessary to try several parallel values to obtain an adequate one because there are limited standard capacitor values available (it is a good idea to have locations for two capacitors in the layout for this reason). c cs(new)  c cs(old)  v acdrp v dcdrp (eq. 47) 7. repeat steps 5 and 6 until no adjustment of c cs is needed. once this is achieved, do not change c cs for the rest of the procedure. 8. set the dynamic load step to its maximum step size (but do not use a step size that is larger than needed) and verify that the output waveform is square, meaning v acdrp and v dcdrp are equal. 9. ensure that the load step slew rate and the powerup slew rate are set to ~150 a/  s to 250 a/  s (for example, a load step of 10 a should take 50 ns to 100 ns) with no overshoot. some dynamic loads have an excessive overshoot at powerup if a minimum current is incorrectly set (this is an issue if a vtt tool is in use). set the initial t ransient 1. with the dynamic load set at its maximum step size, expand the scope time scale to 2  s/div to 5  s/div. this results in a waveform that may have two overshoots and one minor undershoot before achieving the final desired value after v droop (see figure 38). figure 38. transient setting waveform, load step v tran1 v droop v tran2 2. if both overshoots are larger than desired, try the following adjustments in the order shown. a. increase the resistance of the ramp resistor (r ramp ) by 25%. b. for v tran1 , increase c b or increase the switching frequency. c. for v tran2 , increase r a by 25% and decrease c a by 25%. if these adjustments do not change the response, it is because the system is limited by the output decoupling. check the output response and the switching nodes each time a change is made to ensure that the output decoupling is stable. 3. for load release (see figure 39), if v tranrel is larger than the value specified by imvp ? 6.5, a greater percentage of output capacitance is needed. either increase the capacitance directly or decrease the inductor values. (if inductors are changed, however, it will be necessary to redesign the circuit using the information from the spreadsheet and to repeat all tuning guide procedures).
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 30 figure 39. transient setting waveform, load release v tranrel v droop layout and component placement the following guidelines are recommended for optimal performance of a switching regulator in a pc system. general recommendations 1. for best results, use a pcb of four or more layers. this should provide the needed versatility for control circuitry interconnections with optimal placement; power planes for ground, input, and output; and wide interconnection traces in the rest of the power delivery current paths. keep in mind that each square unit of 1 oz copper trace has a resistance of ~0.53 m  at room temperature. 2. when high currents must be routed between pcb layers, vias should be used liberally to create several parallel current paths so that the resistance and inductance introduced by these current paths is minimized and the via current rating is not exceeded. 3. if critical signal lines (including the output voltage sense lines of the adp3211) must cross through power circuitry, it is best if a signal ground plane can be interposed between those signal lines and the traces of the power circuitry. this serves as a shield to minimize noise injection into the signals at the expense of increasing signal ground noise. 4. an analog ground plane should be used around and under the adp3211 for referencing the components associated with the controller. this plane should be tied to the nearest ground of the output decoupling capacitor, but should not be tied to any other power circuitry to prevent power currents from flowing into the plane. 5. the components around the adp3211 should be located close to the controller with short traces. the most important traces to keep short and away from other traces are those to the fb and csfb pins. refer to figure 34 for more details on the layout for the csfb node. 6. the output capacitors should be connected as close as possible to the load (or connector) that receives the power (for example, a microprocessor core). if the load is distributed, the capacitors should also be distributed and generally placed in greater proportion where the load is more dynamic. 7. avoid crossing signal lines over the switching power path loop, as described in the power circuitry section. 8. connect a 1  f decoupling ceramic capacitor from v cc to agnd. place this capacitor as close as possible to the controller. connect a 4.7  f decoupling ceramic capacitor from pv cc to pgnd. place this capacitor as close as possible to the controller. power circuitry 1. the switching power path on the pcb should be routed to encompass the shortest possible length to minimize radiated switching noise energy (that is, emi) and conduction losses in the board. failure to take proper precautions often results in emi problems for the entire pc system as well as noise ? related operational problems in the power ? converter control circuitry. the switching power path is the loop formed by the current path through the input capacitors and the power mosfets, including all interconnecting pcb traces and planes. the use of short, wide interconnection traces is especially critical in this path for two reasons: it minimizes the inductance in the switching loop, which can cause high energy ringing, and it accommodates the high current demand with minimal voltage loss. 2. when a power ? dissipating component (for example, a power mosfet) is soldered to a pcb, the liberal use of vias, both directly on the mounting pad and immediately surrounding it, is recommended. two important reasons for this are improved current rating through the vias and improved thermal performance from vias extended to the opposite side of the pcb, where a plane can more readily transfer heat to the surrounding air. to achieve optimal thermal dissipation, mirror the pad configurations used to heat sink the mosfets on the opposite side of the pcb. in addition, improvements in thermal performance can be obtained using the largest possible pad area. 3. the output power path should also be routed to encompass a short distance. the output power path is formed by the current path through the inductor, the output capacitors, and the load. 4. for best emi containment, a solid power ground plane should be used as one of the inner layers and extended under all power components.
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 31 signal circuitry 1. the output voltage is sensed and regulated between the fb and fbrtn pins, and the traces of these pins should be connected to the signal ground of the load. to avoid differential mode noise pickup in the sensed signal, the loop area should be as small as possible. therefore, the fb and fbrtn traces should be routed adjacent to each other, atop the power ground plane, and back to the controller. 2. the feedback traces from the switch nodes should be connected as close as possible to the inductor. the csref signal should be kelvin connected to the center point of the copper bar, which is the v ccgfx common node for the inductor. 3. on the back of the adp3211 package, there is a metal pad that can be used to heat sink the device. therefore, running vias under the adp3211 is not recommended because the metal pad may cause shorting between vias. ordering information device number* temperature range package package option shipping ? adp3211mnr2g ? 40 c to 100 c 32 ? lead qfn imvp ? 6.5 1.1 v boot v oltage 5000 / tape & reel adp3211amnr2g ? 40 c to 100 c 32 ? lead qfn 1.2 v boot v oltage 5000 / tape & reel ?for information on tape and reel specifications, including part orientation and tape sizes, please refer to our tape and reel packaging specification brochure, brd801 1/d. *the ?g?? suffix indicates pb ? free package.
adp3211, adp3211a http://onsemi.com 32 package dimensions qfn32 5*5*1 0.5 p case 488am ? 01 issue o seating 32 x k 0.15 c (a3) a a1 d2 b 1 9 16 17 32 2 x 2 x e2 32 x 8 24 32 x l 32 x bottom view exposed pad top view side view d a b e 0.15 c pin one location 0.10 c 0.08 c c 25 e a 0.10 b c 0.05 c notes: 1. dimensions and tolerancing per asme y14.5m, 1994. 2. controlling dimension: millimeters. 3. dimension b applies to plated terminal and is measured between 0.25 and 0.30 mm terminal 4. coplanarity applies to the exposed pad as well as the terminals. plane dim min nom max millimeters a 0.800 0.900 1.000 a1 0.000 0.025 0.050 a3 0.200 ref b 0.180 0.250 0.300 d 5.00 bsc d2 2.950 3.100 3.250 e 5.00 bsc e2 e 0.500 bsc k 0.200 ??? ??? l 0.300 0.400 0.500 2.950 3.100 3.250 *for additional information on our pb ? free strategy and soldering details, please download the on semiconductor soldering and mounting t echniques reference manual, solderrm/d. soldering footprint* 0.50 pitch 3.20 0.28 3.20 32 x 28 x 0.63 32 x 5.30 5.30 on semiconductor and are registered trademarks of semiconductor components industries, llc (scillc). scillc reserves the right to mak e changes without further notice to any products herein. scillc makes no warranty, representation or guarantee regarding the suitability of its products for an y particular purpose, nor does scillc assume any liability arising out of the application or use of any product or circuit, and specifically disclaims any and all liability, in cluding without limitation special, consequential or incidental damages. ?typical? parameters which may be provided in scillc data sheets and/or specifications can and do vary in different a pplications and actual performance may vary over time. all operating parameters, including ?typicals? must be validated for each customer application by customer?s technical e xperts. scillc does not convey any license under its patent rights nor the rights of others. scillc 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 scillc prod uct could create a s ituation where personal injury or death may occur. should buyer purchase or use scillc products for any such unintended or unauthorized application, buyer shall indem nify and hold scillc and its officers, employees, subsidiaries, affiliates, and distributors harmless against all claims, costs, damages, and expenses, and reasonable attorney f ees 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 scillc was neglig ent regarding the design or manufacture of the part. scillc is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. this literature is subject to all applicable copyright laws and is not for resale in any manner. publication ordering information n. american technical support : 800 ? 282 ? 9855 toll free usa/canada europe, middle east and africa technical support: phone: 421 33 790 2910 japan customer focus center phone: 81 ? 3 ? 5773 ? 3850 adp3211/d all brand names and product names appearing in this document are registered trademarks or trademarks of their respective holder s. literature fulfillment : literature distribution center for on semiconductor p.o. box 5163, denver, colorado 80217 usa phone : 303 ? 675 ? 2175 or 800 ? 344 ? 3860 toll free usa/canada fax : 303 ? 675 ? 2176 or 800 ? 344 ? 3867 toll free usa/canada email : orderlit@onsemi.com on semiconductor website : www.onsemi.com order literature : http://www.onsemi.com/orderlit for additional information, please contact your loc a sales representative


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