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16

LTC3736

3736fa

operation improves efficiency by reducing MOSFET switch-
ing losses, both gate charge loss and transition loss.
However, lower frequency operation requires more induc-
tance for a given amount of ripple current.

The internal oscillator for each of the LTC3736’s control-
lers runs at a nominal 550kHz frequency when the PLLLPF
pin is left floating and the SYNC/FCB pin is a DC low or
high. Pulling the PLLLPF to V

IN

 selects 750kHz operation;

pulling the PLLLPF to GND selects 300kHz operation.

Alternatively, the LTC3736 will phase-lock to a clock signal
applied to the SYNC/FCB pin with a frequency between
250kHz and 850kHz (see Phase-Locked Loop and Fre-
quency Synchronization).

Inductor Value Calculation

Given the desired input and output voltages, the inductor
value and operating frequency f

OSC 

directly determine the

inductor’s peak-to-peak ripple current:

I

V

V

V

V

f

L

RIPPLE

OUT

IN

IN

OUT

OSC

=



Lower ripple current reduces core losses in the inductor,
ESR losses in the output capacitors, and output voltage
ripple. Thus, highest efficiency operation is obtained at
low frequency with a small ripple current. Achieving this,
however, requires a large inductor.

A reasonable starting point is to choose a ripple current
that is about 40% of I

OUT(MAX)

. Note that the largest ripple

current occurs at the highest input voltage. To guarantee
that ripple current does not exceed a specified maximum,
the inductor should be chosen according to:

L

V

V

f

I

V

V

IN

OUT

OSC

RIPPLE

OUT

IN


Burst Mode Operation Considerations

The choice of R

DS(ON) 

and inductor value also determines

the load current at which the LTC3736 enters Burst Mode
operation. When bursting, the controller clamps the peak
inductor current to approximately:

I

V

R

BURST PEAK

SENSE MAX

DS ON

(

)

(

)

(

)

=

1

4

The corresponding average current depends on the amount
of ripple current. Lower inductor values (higher I

RIPPLE

)

will reduce the load current at which Burst Mode operation
begins.

The ripple current is normally set so that the inductor
current is continuous during the burst periods. Therefore:

I

RIPPLE

 

 I

BURST(PEAK)

This implies a minimum inductance of:

L

V

V

f

I

V

V

MIN

IN

OUT

OSC

BURST PEAK

OUT

IN

(

)

A smaller value than L

MIN

 could be used in the circuit,

although the inductor current will not be continuous
during burst periods, which will result in slightly lower
efficiency. In general, though, it is a good idea to keep
I

RIPPLE

 comparable to I

BURST(PEAK)

.

Inductor Core Selection

Once the inductance value is determined, the type of
inductor must be selected. High efficiency converters
generally cannot afford the core loss found in low cost
powdered iron cores, forcing the use of ferrite, molyper-
malloy or other cores. Actual core loss is independent of
core size for a fixed inductor value, but it is very dependent
on inductance selected. As inductance increases, core
losses go down. Unfortunately, increased inductance re-
quires more turns of wire and therefore copper losses will
increase.

Ferrite designs have very low core loss and are preferred
at high switching frequencies, so design goals can
concentrate on copper loss and preventing saturation.
Ferrite core material saturates “hard,” which means that
inductance collapses abruptly when the peak design cur-
rent is exceeded. This results in an abrupt increase in
inductor ripple current and consequent output voltage
ripple. Do not allow the core to saturate!

Molypermalloy (from Magnetics, Inc.) is a very good, low
loss core material for toroids, but it is more expensive

APPLICATIO  S I  FOR   ATIO

W

U

U

U

Summary of Contents for No Rsense LTC3736

Page 1: ...ent mode architecture with MOSFET VDS sensing eliminates the need for sense resistors and improves efficiency Power loss and noise due to the ESR of the input capacitance are minimized by operating th...

Page 2: ...N PACKAGE 24 LEAD PLASTIC SSOP 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 SW1 IPRG1 VFB1 ITH1 IPRG2 PLLLPF SGND VIN TRACK VFB2 ITH2 PGOOD SENSE1 PGND BG1 SYNC FCB TG1 PGND TG2 RUN SS BG2 PGND SENSE2 SW2 ORDE...

Page 3: ...0 5 VFB1 2 Input Current Note 5 10 50 nA TRACK Input Current TRACK 0 6V 10 50 nA Overvoltage Protect Threshold Measured at VFB 0 66 0 68 0 7 V Overvoltage Protect Hysteresis 20 mV Auxiliary Feedback T...

Page 4: ...ONTINUOUS MODE SYNC FCB 0V VIN 3 3V VOUT 1 8V ILOAD 200mA FIGURE 17 CIRCUIT 4 s DIV 3736 G05 PULSE SKIPPING MODE SYNC FCB 550kHz IL 1A DIV VIN 5V RLOAD1 RLOAD2 1 FIGURE 15 CIRCUIT 200 s DIV 3736 G06 5...

Page 5: ...vs Temperature Shutdown RUN Threshold vs Temperature RUN SS Pull Up Current vs Temperature Maximum Current Sense Threshold vs Temperature TEMPERATURE C 60 0 RUN SS VOLTAGE V 0 1 0 3 0 4 0 5 1 0 0 7 20...

Page 6: ...nected to VFB2 from VOUT2 should be used to connect to TRACK from VOUT1 PGOOD Pin 9 Pin 12 Power Good Output Voltage Moni tor Open Drain Logic Output This pin is pulled to ground when the voltage on e...

Page 7: ...ns19 13 Pins22 16 Bottom NMOS Gate Drive Output These pins drive the gates of the external N channel MOSFETs These pins have an output swing from PGND to SENSE SENSE1 SENSE2 Pins 21 11 Pins 24 14 Posi...

Page 8: ...HROUGH PGND TG1 SENSE1 VIN VOUT1 CIN COUT1 MP1 MN1 BG1 R1B L1 PGND VFB1 ITH1 RITH1 CITH1 0 6V 0 12V SC1 VFB1 SW1 SENSE1 R1A EXTSS INTSS EAMP SHDN BURSTDIS SLEEP1 0 3V IPROG1 ICMP 0 15V BURSTDIS VFB1 O...

Page 9: ...IREV2 S R RS2 ANTISHOOT THROUGH PGND SENSE2 TG2 SENSE2 VIN VOUT2 COUT2 MP2 MN2 BG2 R2B RTRACKB RTRACKA L2 PGND VFB2 ITH2 TRACK RITH2 CITH2 0 6V 0 12V SC2 TRACK VFB2 SW2 R2A VOUT1 EAMP BURSTDIS SLEEP2...

Page 10: ...citor CSS between the RUN SS and SGND pins As the RUN SS pin continues to OPERATIO U rise linearly from approximately 0 65V to 1 3V being charged by the internal 0 7 A current source the EAMP regulate...

Page 11: ...thresholdonVFB2 isbasedonthesmaller of 0 12V and a fraction of the voltage on the TRACK pin This also allows VOUT2 to start up and track VOUT1 more easily Note that if VOUT1 is truly short circuited O...

Page 12: ...e maximum value of VITH is typically about 1 98V so the maximum sense voltage allowed across the external P channel MOSFET is 125mV 85mV or 204mV for the three respective states of the IPRG pin The pe...

Page 13: ...itry Improvements in both conducted and radiatedEMIalsodirectlyaccrueasaresultofthereduced RMSinputcurrentandvoltage Significantcostandboard footprint savings are also realized by being able to use sm...

Page 14: ...on the ITH pin is internally clamped which limits the maximum current sense threshold VSENSE MAX to approximately 128mV when IPRG is floating 86mV when IPRG is tied low 213mV when IPRG is tied high Th...

Page 15: ...eration Shoot through between the P channel and N channel MOSFETs can most easily be spotted by monitoring the input supply current As the input supply voltage in creases iftheinputsupplycurrentincrea...

Page 16: ...ng the controller clamps the peak inductor current to approximately I V R BURST PEAK SENSE MAX DS ON 1 4 Thecorrespondingaveragecurrentdependsontheamount of ripple current Lower inductor values higher...

Page 17: ...N 2VOUT where IRMS IOUT 2 This simple worst case condition is commonly usedfordesignbecauseevensignificantdeviationsdonot offer much relief Note that capacitor manufacturers ripple current ratings are...

Page 18: ...y COUT is the output capacitance and IRIPPLE is the ripple current in the induc tor The output ripple is highest at maximum input voltage since IRIPPLE increases with input voltage Setting Output Volt...

Page 19: ...type that provides zero degrees phase shift between the external and internal oscillators This type of phasedetectordoesnotexhibitfalselocktoharmonicsof the external clock The output of the phase dete...

Page 20: ...Phase Locked to External Clock Auxiliary Winding Control Using SYNC FCB Pin The SYNC FCB can be used as an auxiliary feedback to provide a means of regulating a flyback winding output When this pin d...

Page 21: ...uceddownto2 4V Alsoshown is the effect on VREF Minimum On Time Considerations Minimumon time tON MIN isthesmallestamountoftime in which the LTC3736 is capable of turning the top P channel MOSFET on an...

Page 22: ...tional loss Checking Transient Response The regulator loop response can be checked by looking at the load transient response Switching regulators take several cycles to respond to a step in load curre...

Page 23: ...ack resistor divid ers ITH compensation networks and the SGND pin The power grounds consist of the terminal of the input and output capacitors and the source of the N channel MOSFET Eachchannelshouldh...

Page 24: ...IPRG2 IPRG1 VFB1 ITH1 SW1 RVIN 10 RITH2 15k CITH2 220pF CSS 10nF CIN 10 F 2 CVIN 1 F VIN 5V VIN CITH2B 100pF RITH1 15k CITH1 220pF CITH1A 100pF RFB1B 187k RFB1A 59k PGOOD VFB2 TRACK 25 ITH2 TG2 LTC37...

Page 25: ...ACKA 59k RFB2A 59k RFB2B 118k COUT2 22 F 2 COUT1 22 F 2 D1 VOUT1 2 5V 2A VOUT2 1 8V 2A 3736 F16 L1 L2 VISHAY IHLP 2525CZ 01 D2 Figure 17 2 Phase Synchronizable Dual Output Synchronous DC DC Converter...

Page 26: ...15k CITH1 220pF CITH1A 100pF RFB1B 187k RFB1A 59k PGOOD VFB2 TRACK 25 ITH2 TG2 LTC3736EUF PGND TG1 SYNC FCB BG1 PGND 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 23 24 1 2 3 4 5 9 8 7 6 SENSE1 MP1 MP2 L1 1...

Page 27: ...697 4 00 0 10 4 SIDES NOTE 1 DRAWING PROPOSED TO BE MADE A JEDEC PACKAGE OUTLINE MO 220 VARIATION WGGD X TO BE APPROVED 2 ALL DIMENSIONS ARE IN MILLIMETERS 3 DIMENSIONS OF EXPOSED PAD ON BOTTOM OF PAC...

Page 28: ...to 36V 5V and 3 3V LDOs Switching Regulator 5mm 5mm QFN or 28 Lead SSOP LTC3736 1 Dual 2 Phase No RSENSE Synchronous Controller with VIN 2 75V to 9 8V IOUT Up to 5A 4mm 4mm QFN Package Spread Spectrum...

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