MAX1533AETJ+ Maxim Integrated Products, MAX1533AETJ+ Datasheet - Page 31

IC POWER SUPPLY CONTROLER 32TQFN

MAX1533AETJ+

Manufacturer Part Number
MAX1533AETJ+
Description
IC POWER SUPPLY CONTROLER 32TQFN
Manufacturer
Maxim Integrated Products
Datasheet

Specifications of MAX1533AETJ+

Applications
Power Supply Controller
Voltage - Input
4.5 ~ 26 V
Current - Supply
15µA
Operating Temperature
-40°C ~ 85°C
Mounting Type
Surface Mount
Package / Case
32-TQFN Exposed Pad
Lead Free Status / RoHS Status
Lead free / RoHS Compliant
Voltage - Supply
-
Lead Free Status / Rohs Status
Lead free / RoHS Compliant
energy while transitioning from full-load to no-load con-
ditions without tripping the overvoltage fault protection.
When using high-capacitance, low-ESR capacitors (see
the Output-Capacitor Stability Considerations section),
the filter capacitor’s ESR dominates the output voltage
ripple. So the output capacitor’s size depends on the
maximum ESR required to meet the output voltage rip-
ple (V
In idle mode, the inductor current becomes discontinu-
ous, with peak currents set by the idle-mode current-
sense threshold (V
no-load output ripple can be determined as follows:
The actual capacitance value required relates to the
physical size needed to achieve low ESR, as well as to
the chemistry of the capacitor technology. Thus, the
capacitor is usually selected by ESR and voltage rating
rather than by capacitance value (this is true of tanta-
lums, OS-CONs, polymers, and other electrolytics).
When using low-capacity filter capacitors, such as
ceramic capacitors, size is usually determined by the
capacity needed to prevent V
causing problems during load transients. Generally,
once enough capacitance is added to meet the over-
shoot requirement, undershoot at the rising load edge
is no longer a problem (see the V
tions in the Transient Response section). However, low-
capacity filter capacitors typically have high-ESR zeros
that may affect the overall stability (see the Output-
Capacitor Stability Considerations ).
Stability is determined by the value of the ESR zero rel-
ative to the switching frequency. The boundary of insta-
bility is given by the following equation:
For a typical 300kHz application, the ESR zero frequency
must be well below 95kHz, preferably below 50kHz.
Tantalum and OS-CON capacitors in widespread use at
the time of publication have typical ESR zero frequen-
cies of 25kHz. In the design example used for inductor
High-Efficiency, 5x Output, Main Power-Supply
RIPPLE(P-P)
V
RIPPLE P P
where f
Output-Capacitor Stability Considerations
V
RIPPLE P P
(
) specifications:
ESR
______________________________________________________________________________________
IDLE
)
(
=
=
= 0.2V
R
)
2
ESR LOAD MAX
f
π
ESR
Controllers for Notebook Computers
=
R
LIMIT
ESR
I
V
IDLE
SAG
SAG
1
R
SENSE
). In idle mode, the
C
f
OSC
(
OUT
R
and V
and V
π
ESR
)
LIR
SOAR
SOAR
equa-
from
selection, the ESR needed to support 25mV
25mV/1.5A = 16.7mΩ. One 220µF/4V Sanyo polymer
(TPE) capacitor provides 15mΩ (max) ESR. This results
in a zero at 48kHz, well within the bounds of stability.
For low-input-voltage applications where the duty cycle
exceeds 50% (V
age should not be greater than twice the internal slope-
compensation voltage:
where V
case ESR limit occurs when V
above equation can be simplified to provide the follow-
ing boundary condition:
Do not put high-value ceramic capacitors directly
across the feedback sense point without taking precau-
tions to ensure stability. Large ceramic capacitors can
have a high-ESR zero frequency and cause erratic,
unstable operation. However, it is easy to add enough
series resistance by placing the capacitors a couple of
inches downstream from the feedback sense point,
which should be as close as possible to the inductor.
Unstable operation manifests itself in two related but
distinctly different ways: short/long pulses or cycle skip-
ping resulting in a lower switching frequency. Instability
occurs due to noise on the output or because the ESR
is so low that there is not enough voltage ramp in the
output voltage signal. This “fools” the error comparator
into triggering too early or skipping a cycle. Cycle skip-
ping is more annoying than harmful, resulting in nothing
worse than increased output ripple. However, it can
indicate the possible presence of loop instability due to
insufficient ESR. Loop instability can result in oscilla-
tions at the output after line or load steps. Such pertur-
bations are usually damped, but can cause the output
voltage to rise above or fall below the tolerance limits.
The easiest method for checking stability is to apply a
very fast zero-to-max load transient and carefully
observe the output-voltage-ripple envelope for over-
shoot and ringing. It can help to simultaneously monitor
the inductor current with an AC-current probe. Do not
allow more than one cycle of ringing after the initial
step-response under/overshoot.
The input capacitor must meet the ripple current
requirement (I
For an out-of-phase regulator, the total RMS current in
the input capacitor is a function of the load currents, the
input currents, the duty cycles, and the amount of over-
lap as defined in Figure 10.
RIPPLE
RMS
equals ΔI
R
V
OUT
ESR
RIPPLE
) imposed by the switching currents.
/V
≤ 0.04 x L x f
Input Capacitor Selection
IN
≤ 0.02 x V
INDUCTOR
≥ 50%), the output ripple volt-
IN
= 2 x V
OUT
OSC
x R
ESR
OUT
. The worst-
P-P
, so the
ripple is
31

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