Power Delivery System in Motherboards
Power Delivery System in Motherboards
Power Delivery System in Motherboards
Motherboards
In this article we will discuss Power Delivery system in Motherboards . For more in depth training , join
PCLR Course of chiptroniks or you can also buy our course materials with online support.
Power Delivery
Power deliveryWhy & How
Why: Motherboard components need one or multiple stable and clean DC power to work
correctly
How: (1) Power Supply directly to motherboard components (2) for the power which Power
Supply can not provide directly, DC to DC power converter on the motherboard converts the
power and provide to components
Aux Voltage: Voltage switch by between Standby voltage and same Normal Voltage, the main
reason of Aux voltage is the function is needed through S0 to S5 state, but standby power can not
provide enough current at S0-S2 state due to the device consume more power at S0-S2 state then
S3-S5 state, so voltage need switch from standby voltage to normal voltage to get enough current
, example: DDR voltage 1.8V, when system is at S3, the Aux voltage comes from 1.8V standby
power to keep DIMM refresh, after power on to S0 state, Aux voltage switch to 1.8V normal
voltage to support DIMM normal read/write (which consume much more current)
Components may contain 1 or more type of voltages depends on
Function needed, such as ICH need all 4 above voltages
Let us take a look at a real sample-Chipset
ICH 10 has require more than 20 voltage rails !! due to lots of functions integrated in ICH 10
This voltage supply to add in PCI-e card, Card is required to design within this limit
Overall Power Delivery ExampleThurley
Multiple Output:
Power supply has multiple DC output rail (NOT connector)
Popular 12V, 5V, 3.3V, -12V, 5VSB and other voltage
12V output may have separate rails, like 12V1, 12V2, etc for 240VA protection
Single output: 12V or other voltage only
Power supply has single DC output, 12V is most popular
Battery is single output example
Power Supply output interface:
Connector: board to board or board to cable connector
PCB gold finger: PCB to mating connector
Tips:
Most of single output PSU also has standby output, like 5VSB
Power Supply Output example 1
Desktop ATX PSU : Multiple output, cable + connector
Notebook Adapter:
19V Single output, connector, connect to motherboard directly
Hotswap module :
12V single output, gold finger and board to board connector
Note:
normally it also has 5VSB output
Same for motherboard, motherboard will also have multiple rails, like 3.3V, 5V, 12V1,
12V3a, each rail has current requirement, so we need to mapping the power supply rails to
motherboard rails to make sure both power supply & motherboard rails can be met
Next page is example
-Low current
-Low efficiency
-Low cost
-Simple
-Clean (little noise)
-High current
-High efficiency
-High cost
-Complex
-High noise
Linear VR
vdrop
on the VR= Vout-Vin, so the power loss = I x Vdrop, for example: Vin=3.3V,
Vout=1.5V, 2A, so the power loss on converter is (3.3-1.5)x2=3.6W, assume 50C/W, so the
temp rise will be 150C, which is burn the components, so only low current and low voltage is
allowed, Linear VR only support low current requirement
(2) Why low efficiency?
The efficiency= output power/input power, obvious, it is low efficiency due to the power loss on
the converter is big, the bigger difference between Vin and Vout, the lower efficiency is.
-High current
-High efficiency
-High cost
-Complex
-High noise
Basic working principal is by control the mosfet PWM value to adjust the output voltage,
Vout/Vin=PWM%, for example: 12V to 1.5V, PWM=12.5%
Switching VR efficiency is between 80 to 98% depends on VR design, the main power loss is
VR Mosfet switching & conduct loss
It can handle high current due to high efficiency
High cost /complex is obvious: it need chip, mosfet, inductor, capacitor
High noise: due to switching method and mosfet switching, it has much higher noise than linear
regulator
We will NOT discuss how VR works here, refer to VR training slides
if you are interested, Overall speaking, VR is a complex technology
VR example
Switching VRsingle phase 12V to DDR 1.5V