ISL6568 Intersil Corporation, ISL6568 Datasheet - Page 20

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ISL6568

Manufacturer Part Number
ISL6568
Description
Two-Phase Buck PWM Controller
Manufacturer
Intersil Corporation
Datasheet

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as shown in Equation 7. A constant 100µA flows through
R
voltage exceeds the OCSET voltage, the overcurrent
protection circuitry activates. Since the droop voltage is
proportional to the output current, the overcurrent trip level,
I
as shown in Equation 14.
Once the output current exceeds the overcurrent trip level,
V
the converter to begin overcurrent protection procedures. At
the beginning of overcurrent shutdown, the controller turns
off both upper and lower MOSFETs. The system remains in
this state for a period of 4096 switching cycles. If the
controller is still enabled at the end of this wait period, it will
attempt a soft-start (as shown in Figure 14). If the fault
remains, the trip-retry cycles will continue indefinitely until
either the controller is disabled or the fault is cleared. Note
that the energy delivered during trip-retry cycling is much
less than during full-load operation, so there is no thermal
hazard.
General Design Guide
This design guide is intended to provide a high-level
explanation of the steps necessary to create a multi-phase
power converter. It is assumed that the reader is familiar with
many of the basic skills and techniques referenced below. In
addition to this guide, Intersil provides complete reference
designs that include schematics, bills of materials, and example
board layouts for all common microprocessor applications.
Power Stages
The first step in designing a multi-phase converter is to
determine the number of phases. This determination
depends heavily on the cost analysis which in turn depends
on system constraints that differ from one design to the next.
R
MAX
OCSET
DROOP
OCSET
FIGURE 14. OVERCURRENT BEHAVIOR IN HICCUP MODE
0A
0V
, can be set by selecting the proper value for R
, creating the OCSET voltage. When the droop
=
will exceed V
OUTPUT CURRENT, 50A/DIV
I
--------------------------------------------------------- -
MAX
OUTPUT VOLTAGE,
500mV/DIV
F
SW
100µ R
R
= 500kHz
COMP
OCSET
S
DCR
2ms/DIV
20
, and a comparator will trigger
OCSET
(EQ. 14)
,
ISL6568
Principally, the designer will be concerned with whether
components can be mounted on both sides of the circuit
board, whether through-hole components are permitted, the
total board space available for power-supply circuitry, and
the maximum amount of load current. Generally speaking,
the most economical solutions are those in which each
phase handles between 25 and 30A. All surface-mount
designs will tend toward the lower end of this current range.
If through-hole MOSFETs and inductors can be used, higher
per-phase currents are possible. In cases where board
space is the limiting constraint, current can be pushed as
high as 40A per phase, but these designs require heat sinks
and forced air to cool the MOSFETs, inductors and heat-
dissipating surfaces.
MOSFETS
The choice of MOSFETs depends on the current each
MOSFET will be required to conduct, the switching frequency,
the capability of the MOSFETs to dissipate heat, and the
availability and nature of heat sinking and air flow.
LOWER MOSFET POWER CALCULATION
The calculation for power loss in the lower MOSFET is
simple, since virtually all of the loss in the lower MOSFET is
due to current conducted through the channel resistance
(r
output current, I
Equation 1), and d is the duty cycle (V
An additional term can be added to the lower-MOSFET loss
equation to account for additional loss accrued during the
dead time when inductor current is flowing through the
lower-MOSFET body diode. This term is dependent on the
diode forward voltage at I
frequency, f
the beginning and the end of the lower-MOSFET conduction
interval respectively.
The total maximum power dissipated in each lower MOSFET
is approximated by the summation of P
UPPER MOSFET POWER CALCULATION
In addition to r
MOSFET losses are due to currents conducted across the
input voltage (V
higher portion of the upper-MOSFET losses are dependent
on switching frequency, the power calculation is more
complex. Upper MOSFET losses can be divided into
separate components involving the upper-MOSFET
switching times, the lower-MOSFET body-diode reverse-
P
P
DS(ON)
LOW 1
LOW 2
,
,
). In Equation 15, I
=
=
r
V
S
DS ON
D ON
, and the length of dead times, t
(
DS(ON)
(
IN
PP
)
) during switching. Since a substantially
)
f
S
is the peak-to-peak inductor current (see
I
----- -
N
M
losses, a large portion of the upper-
I
----- -
N
M
2
(
+
M
1 d
I
-------- -
, V
M
PP
2
is the maximum continuous
D(ON)
 t
)
+
d1
I
--------------------------------
L PP
,
+
2
, the switching
12
I
----- -
OUT
(
N
M
1 d
LOW,1
I
-------- -
/V
PP
2
)
IN
d1
and P
).
t
d2
and t
March 9, 2006
LOW,2
d2
(EQ. 15)
(EQ. 16)
FN9187.4
, at
.

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