Datasheet
Datasheet
Datasheet
LM25116
SNVS509E – APRIL 2007 – REVISED SEPTEMBER 2016
Device Information(1)
PART NUMBER PACKAGE BODY SIZE (NOM)
LM25116 HTSSOP (20) 6.50 mm × 4.40 mm
(1) For all available packages, see the orderable addendum at
the end of the data sheet.
Typical Application
VIN
VIN LM25116 VCC
C VCC
CIN RUV2
UVLO HB
VIN
R UV1
CHB
EN HO L
VOUT
CSYNC SW
RT/ SYNC C OUT
LO
RT
CS
RS
COMP CSG
C COMP
DEMB
CHF
R COMP VOUT
FB VCCX R FB2
SS RAMP AGND PGND
C SS C RAMP
RFB1
An IMPORTANT NOTICE at the end of this data sheet addresses availability, warranty, changes, use in safety-critical applications,
intellectual property matters and other important disclaimers. PRODUCTION DATA.
LM25116
SNVS509E – APRIL 2007 – REVISED SEPTEMBER 2016 www.ti.com
Table of Contents
1 Features .................................................................. 1 7.3 Feature Description................................................. 14
2 Applications ........................................................... 1 7.4 Device Functional Modes ....................................... 20
3 Description ............................................................. 1 8 Application and Implementation ........................ 21
4 Revision History..................................................... 2 8.1 Application Information .......................................... 21
8.2 Typical Application .................................................. 21
5 Pin Configuration and Functions ......................... 3
6 Specifications......................................................... 5 9 Power Supply Recommendations...................... 32
6.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings ...................................... 5 10 Layout................................................................... 32
6.2 ESD Ratings.............................................................. 5 10.1 Layout Guidelines ................................................. 32
6.3 Recommended Operating Conditions....................... 5 10.2 Layout Example .................................................... 33
6.4 Thermal Information .................................................. 6 11 Device and Documentation Support ................. 34
6.5 Electrical Characteristics........................................... 6 11.1 Receiving Notification of Documentation Updates 34
6.6 Switching Characteristics .......................................... 8 11.2 Community Resources.......................................... 34
6.7 Typical Characteristics .............................................. 9 11.3 Trademarks ........................................................... 34
7 Detailed Description ............................................ 13 11.4 Electrostatic Discharge Caution ............................ 34
7.1 Overview ................................................................. 13 11.5 Glossary ................................................................ 34
7.2 Functional Block Diagram ....................................... 13 12 Mechanical, Packaging, and Orderable
Information ........................................................... 34
4 Revision History
NOTE: Page numbers for previous revisions may differ from page numbers in the current version.
• Added ESD Ratings table, Feature Description section, Device Functional Modes, Application and Implementation
section, Power Supply Recommendations section, Layout section, Device and Documentation Support section, and
Mechanical, Packaging, and Orderable Information section .................................................................................................. 1
• Changed RθJA value from 40 to 40.6 in the Thermal Information table .................................................................................. 6
• Changed θJC value from 4 to 20.9 (RθJC(top)) and 1.7 (RθJC(bot)) in the Thermal Information table........................................... 6
PWP Package
20-Pin HTSSOP
Top View
VIN 1 20 SW
UVLO 2 19 HO
RT/SYNC 3 18 HB
EN 4 17 VCCX
RAMP 5 16 VCC
EP
AGND 6 15 LO
SS 7 14 PGND
FB 8 13 CSG
COMP 9 12 CS
VOUT 10 11 DEMB
Not to scale
Pin Functions
PIN
TYPE (1) DESCRIPTION
NO. NAME
1 VIN P Chip supply voltage, input voltage monitor and input to the VCC regulator.
If the UVLO pin is below 1.215 V, the regulator is in standby mode (VCC regulator running, switching
regulator disabled). If the UVLO pin voltage is above 1.215 V, the regulator is operational. An external
2 UVLO I voltage divider can be used to set an undervoltage shutdown threshold. There is a fixed 5 µA pull up
current on this pin when EN is high. UVLO is pulled to ground in the event a current limit condition exists
for 256 clock cycles.
The internal oscillator is set with a single resistor between this pin and the AGND pin. The recommended
3 RT/SYNC I frequency range is 50 kHz to 1 MHz. The internal oscillator can be synchronized to an external clock by
AC coupling a positive edge onto this node.
If the EN pin is below 0.5 V, the regulator is in a low power state drawing less than 10 µA from VIN. EN
4 EN I
must be pulled above 3.3 V for normal operation.
Ramp control signal. An external capacitor connected between this pin and the AGND pin sets the ramp
5 RAMP I
slope used for current mode control.
6 AGND G Analog ground. Connect to PGND through the exposed pad ground connection under the LM25116.
An external capacitor and an internal 10-µA current source set the soft start time constant for the rise of
7 SS I the error amp reference. The SS pin is held low during VCC < 4.5 V, UVLO < 1.215 V, EN input low or
thermal shutdown.
Feedback signal from the regulated output. This pin is connected to the inverting input of the internal error
8 FB I
amplifier. The regulation threshold is 1.215 V.
Output of the internal error amplifier. The loop compensation network must be connected between this pin
9 COMP O
and the FB pin.
10 VOUT I Output monitor. Connect directly to the output voltage.
Low-side MOSFET source voltage monitor for diode emulation. For start-up into a pre-biased load, tie this
11 DEMB I pin to ground at the CSG connection. For fully synchronous operation, use an external series resistor
between DEMB and ground to raise the diode emulation threshold above the low-side SW on-voltage.
Current sense amplifier input. Connect to the top of the current sense resistor or the drain of the low-
12 CS I
sided MOSFET if RDS(ON) current sensing is used.
6 Specifications
6.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings
over operating free-air temperature range (unless otherwise noted) (1)
MIN MAX UNIT
VIN to GND –0.3 45 V
(2)
VCC, VCCX, UVLO to GND –0.3 16 V
SW, CS to GND –3 45 V
HB to SW –0.3 16 V
HO to SW –0.3 HB + 0.3 V
VOUT to GND –0.3 45 V
CSG to GND –1 1 V
LO to GND –0.3 VCC + 0.3 V
SS to GND –0.3 7 V
FB to GND –0.3 7 V
DEMB to GND –0.3 VCC V
RT to GND –0.3 7 V
EN to GND –0.3 45 V
Junction temperature, TJ 150 °C
Storage temperature, Tstg –55 150 °C
(1) Stresses beyond those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings
only, which do not imply functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond those indicated under Recommended
Operating Conditions. Exposure to absolute-maximum-rated conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability.
(2) These pins must not exceed VIN.
(1) JEDEC document JEP155 states that 500-V HBM allows safe manufacturing with a standard ESD control process.
(2) JEDEC document JEP157 states that 250-V CDM allows safe manufacturing with a standard ESD control process.
(1) For more information about traditional and new thermal metrics, see the Semiconductor and IC Package Thermal Metrics application
report.
Figure 1. Typical Application Circuit Efficiency Figure 2. Driver Source Current vs VCC
Figure 11. Forced HO Off-time vs Temperature Figure 12. HB DC Bias Current vs Temperature
VCCX = 5 V
Figure 15. Frequency vs Temperature Figure 16. Error Amp Phase vs Frequency
Figure 17. Frequency vs Temperature Figure 18. Current Limit Threshold vs Temperature
Figure 19. VIN Operating Current vs Temperature Figure 20. VCC vs Temperature
Figure 23. VCC vs ICC Figure 24. VCCX Switch RDS(ON) vs VCCX
7 Detailed Description
7.1 Overview
The LM25116 high-voltage switching regulator features all of the functions necessary to implement an efficient
high-voltage buck regulator using a minimum of external components. This easy-to-use regulator integrates high-
side and low-side MOSFET drivers capable of supplying peak currents of 2 A. The regulator control method is
based on current mode control using an emulated current ramp. Emulated peak current mode control provides
inherent line feedforward, cycle-by-cycle current limiting and ease of loop compensation. The use of an emulated
control ramp reduces noise sensitivity of the pulse-width modulation circuit, allowing reliable processing of the
very small duty cycles necessary in high input voltage applications. The operating frequency is user
programmable from 50 kHz to 1 MHz. An oscillator or synchronization pin allows the operating frequency to be
set by a single resistor or synchronized to an external clock. Fault protection features include current limiting,
thermal shutdown and remote shutdown capability. An undervoltage lockout input allows regulator shutdown
when the input voltage is below a user-selected threshold, and an enable function puts the regulator into an
extremely low current shutdown through the enable input. The 20-pin HTSSOP package features an exposed
pad to aid in thermal dissipation.
VCCX
6V VCCX
17
C VCCX
LM25116
VIN
- 4.5V +
-
1 VIN 7. 4 V VCC 16
42 REGULATOR
UVLO
C IN V R EN
D1
C VCC
4 EN SLEEP
EN MODE STANDBY
1.215V SHUTDOWN
D2 THERMAL HB 18
R UV2 5 PA
SHUTDOWN
2 UVLO
UVLO
LOGIC
C FT DIS CHB
R UV1 HICCUP FAULT TIMER UVLO
256 CLOCK CYCLES VIN
CLK DRIVER
HO 19 Q1
10 PA S Q L1
7 SS ADAPTIVE VOUT
3V TIMER SW 20
R Q
CSS PWM
VCC
1.215 V
1V DRIVER
CURRENT LO 15 Q2 CSNUB
LIMIT COUT
8 FB R SNUB
CS 12
C COMP ERROR TRACK
AMP 1.6V SAMPLE 10 x RS V/A
CHF and
A =10
RS
R COMP HOLD 0.5V CSG 13
9 COMP
+ CLK
DIODE SW
EMULATION 11
DEMB
SS CONTROL
VIN VOUT 10
CLK
SYNC C SYNC
3 RT/SYNC
OSCILLATOR R FB2
RAMP GENERATOR
I R = 5 PA / V x ( VIN - VOUT ) + 25 PA
RT
IR
R FB1
VOUT
SW L
COUT
An output voltage derived bias supply can be applied to the VCCX pin to reduce the IC power dissipation. If the
bias supply voltage is greater than 4.5 V, the internal regulator essentially shuts off, reducing the IC power
dissipation. The VCC regulator series pass transistor includes a diode between VCC and VIN that must not be
forward biased in normal operation. For an output voltage between 5 V and 15 V, VOUT can be connected
directly to VCCX. For VOUT < 5 V, a bias winding on the output inductor can be added to VOUT. If the bias
winding can supply VCCX greater than VIN, an external blocking diode is required from the input power supply to
the VIN pin to prevent VCC from discharging into the input supply.
The output of the VCC regulator is current limited to 15 mA minimum. The VCC current is determined by the
MOSFET gate charge, switching frequency and quiescent current (see MOSFETs in the Typical Application). If
VCCX is powered by the output voltage or an inductor winding, the VCC current must be evaluated during start-
up to ensure that it is less than the 15 mA minimum current limit specification. If VCCX is powered by an external
regulator derived from VIN, there is no restriction on the VCC current.
VIN
1
VIN
0.1 PF
6
AGND
In high-voltage applications, take extra care to ensure the VIN pin does not exceed the absolute maximum
voltage rating of 45 V. During line or load transients, voltage ringing on the VIN line that exceeds values listed in
Absolute Maximum Ratings can damage the IC. Both careful PCB layout and the use of quality bypass
capacitors placed close to the VIN and GND pins are essential.
Internal 5V rail
3 PA
EN
6V
where
• T = 1 / fSW
• RT is in Ω
• 450 ns represents the fixed minimum off time (1)
The LM25116 oscillator has a maximum programmable frequency that is dependent on the VCC voltage. If VCC
is above 6 V, the frequency can be programmed up to 1 MHz. If VCCX is used to bias VCC and VCCX < 6 V, the
maximum programmable oscillator frequency is 750 kHz.
The RT/SYNC pin can be used to synchronize the internal oscillator to an external clock. The external clock must
be a higher frequency than the free-running frequency set by the RT resistor. The internal oscillator can be
synchronized to an external clock by AC coupling a positive edge into the RT/SYNC pin. The voltage at the
RT/SYNC pin is nominally 1.215 V and must exceed 4 V to trip the internal synchronization pulse detection. A
5-V amplitude signal and 100-pF coupling capacitor are recommended. The free-running frequency must be set
nominally 15% below the external clock. Synchronizing above twice the free-running frequency may result in
abnormal behavior of the pulse width modulator.
tON
(5 PA/V x (VIN-VOUT) + 25 PA) x
CRAMP
RAMP
tON
The sample-and-hold DC level is derived from a measurement of the recirculating current through either the low-
side MOSFET or current sense resistor. The voltage level across the MOSFET or sense resistor is sampled and
held just prior to the onset of the next conduction interval of the buck switch. The current sensing and sample-
and-hold provide the DC level of the reconstructed current signal. The positive slope inductor current ramp is
emulated by an external capacitor connected from the RAMP pin to the AGND and an internal voltage controlled
current source. The ramp current source that emulates the inductor current is a function of the VIN and VOUT
voltages per Equation 2.
IR = 5 µA/V × (VIN – VOUT) + 25 µA (2)
Proper selection of the RAMP capacitor (CRAMP) depends upon the value of the output inductor (L) and the
current sense resistor (RS). For proper current emulation, the DC sample and hold value and the ramp amplitude
must have the same dependence on the load current. That is in Equation 3.
gm x L
RS x A = , so
CRAMP
gm x L
CRAMP =
A x RS
where
• gm is the ramp generator transconductance (5 µA/V)
• A is the current sense amplifier gain (10 V/V). (3)
The ramp capacitor must be placed very close to the device and connected directly to the pins of the IC (RAMP
and AGND).
The difference between the average inductor current and the DC value of the sampled inductor current can
cause instability for certain operating conditions. This instability is known as subharmonic oscillation, which
occurs when the inductor ripple current does not return to its initial value by the start of next switching cycle.
Subharmonic oscillation is normally characterized by observing alternating wide and narrow pulses at the switch
node. Adding a fixed slope voltage ramp (slope compensation) to the current sense signal prevents this
oscillation. The 25 µA of offset current provided from the emulated current source adds the optimal slope
compensation to the ramp signal for a 5-V output. For higher output voltages, additional slope compensation may
be required. In these applications, a resistor is added between RAMP and VCC to increase the ramp slope
compensation.
SW
LO
RG
CS
RG
CSG
DEMB
RDEMB
The DC current sample is obtained using the CS and CSG pins connected to either a source sense resistor (RS)
or the RDS(ON) of the low-side MOSFET. For RDS(ON) sensing, RS = RDS(ON) of the low-side MOSFET. In this case
it is sometimes helpful to adjust the current sense amplifier gain (A) to a lower value to obtain the desired current
limit. Adding external resistors RG in series with CS and CSG, the current sense amplifier gain A becomes
Equation 4.
10k
A,
1k + RG (4)
10k
HO RAMP A=
1k + RG
CRAMP
where
• tON is the on-time of the high-side MOSFET (5)
The 1.1-V threshold is the difference between the 1.6-V reference at the current limit comparator and the 0.5-V
offset at the current sense amplifier. This offset at the current sense amplifier allows the inductor ripple current to
go negative by 0.5 V / (A × RS) when running full synchronous operation.
Current limit hysteresis prevents chatter around the threshold when VCCX is powered from VOUT. When
4.5 V < VCC < 5.8 V, the 1.6-V reference is increased to 1.72 V. The peak current which triggers the current limit
comparator becomes Equation 6.
25 PA x tON
1.22V -
CRAMP 1.22V
IPEAK = ,
A x RS A x RS (6)
This has the effect of a 10% foldback of the peak current during a short circuit when VCCX is powered from a
5-V output.
7.3.8 HO Output
The LM25116 contains a high current, high-side driver and associated high-voltage level shift. This gate driver
circuit works in conjunction with an external diode and bootstrap capacitor. A 1-µF ceramic capacitor, connected
with short traces between the HB pin and SW pin, is recommended. During the off-time of the high-side
MOSFET, the SW pin voltage is approximately –0.5 V and the bootstrap capacitor charges from VCC through the
external bootstrap diode. When operating with a high PWM duty cycle, the buck switch is forced off each cycle
for 450 ns to ensure that the bootstrap capacitor is recharged.
The LO and HO outputs are controlled with an adaptive deadtime methodology which insures that both outputs
are never enabled at the same time. When the controller commands HO to be enabled, the adaptive block first
disables LO and waits for the LO voltage to drop below approximately 25% of VCC. HO is then enabled after a
small delay. Similarly, when HO turns off, LO waits until the SW voltage has fallen to ½ of VCC. LO is then
enabled after a small delay. In the event that SW does not fall within approximately 150 ns, LO is asserted high.
This methodology insures adequate dead-time for appropriately sized MOSFETs.
In some applications it may be desirable to slow down the high-side MOSFET turnon time to control switching
spikes. This may be accomplished by adding a resistor is series with the HO output to the high-side gate. Values
greater than 10 Ω must be avoided so as not to interfere with the adaptive gate drive. Use of an HB resistor for
this function must be carefully evaluated so as not cause potentially harmful negative voltage to the high-side
driver, and is generally limited to 2.2 Ω maximum.
+
SS
-
During this initial charging of CSS to the internal reference voltage, the LM25116 forces diode emulation. That is,
the low-side MOSFET turns off for the remainder of a cycle if the sensed inductor current becomes negative. The
inductor current is sensed by monitoring the voltage between SW and DEMB. As the SS capacitor continues to
charge beyond 1.215 V to 3 V, the DEMB bias current increases from 0 µA up to 40 µA. With the use of an
external DEMB resistor (RDEMB), the current sense threshold for diode emulation increases resulting in the
gradual transition to synchronous operation. Forcing diode emulation during soft start allows the LM25116 to
start up into a prebiased output without unnecessarily discharging the output capacitor. Full synchronous
operation is obtained if the DEMB pin is always biased to a higher potential than the SW pin when LO is high.
RDEMB = 10 kΩ bias the DEMB pin to 0.45 V minimum, which is adequate for most applications. The DEMB bias
potential must always be kept below 2 V. At very light loads with larger values of output inductance and MOSFET
capacitance, the switch voltage may fall slowly. If the SW voltage does not fall below the DEMB threshold before
the end of the HO fall to LO rise dead time, switching defaults to diode emulation mode. When RDEMB = 0 Ω, the
LM25116 always runs in diode emulation.
Once SS charges to 3 V the SS latch is set, increasing the DEMB bias current to 65 µA. An amplifier is enabled
that regulates SS to 160 mV above the FB voltage. This feature can prevent overshoot of the output voltage in
the event the output voltage momentarily dips out of regulation. When a fault is detected (VCC undervoltage,
UVLO pin < 1.215 V, or EN = 0 V) the soft-start capacitor is discharged. Once the fault condition is no longer
present, a new soft-start sequence begins.
NOTE
Information in the following applications sections is not part of the TI component
specification, and TI does not warrant its accuracy or completeness. TI’s customers are
responsible for determining suitability of components for their purposes. Customers should
validate and test their design implementation to confirm system functionality.
1
- 450 ns
250 kHz
RT = = 12.5 k:
284 pF
(7)
The nearest standard value of 12.4 kΩ was chosen for RT.
IO IPP
0
1
T=
fSW
Knowing the switching frequency (fSW), maximum ripple current (IPP), maximum input voltage (VIN(MAX)) and the
nominal output voltage (VOUT), the inductor value is calculated with Equation 8.
VOUT VOUT
L= x 1-
IPP x fSW VIN(MAX) (8)
The maximum ripple current occurs at the maximum input voltage. Typically, IPP is 20% to 40% of the full load
current. When running diode emulation mode, the maximum ripple current must be less than twice the minimum
load current. For full synchronous operation, higher ripple current is acceptable. Higher ripple current allows for a
smaller inductor size, but places more of a burden on the output capacitor to smooth the ripple current for low
output ripple voltage. For this example, 40% ripple current is chosen for a smaller sized inductor in Equation 9.
5V 5V
L= x 1- = 6.3 PH
0.4 x 7A x 250kHz 42V (9)
The nearest standard value of 6 µH is used. The inductor must be rated for the peak current to prevent
saturation. During normal operation, the peak current occurs at maximum load current plus maximum ripple.
During overload conditions with properly scaled component values, the peak current is limited to VCS(TH) / RS
(See Current Sense Resistor). At the maximum input voltage with a shorted output, the valley current must fall
below VCS(TH) / RS before the high-side MOSFET is allowed to turn on. The peak current in steady state
increases to VIN(MAX) x tON(min) / L above this level. The chosen inductor must be evaluated for this condition,
especially at elevated temperature where the saturation current rating may drop significantly.
where
• L is the value of the output inductor in Henrys
• gm is the ramp generator transconductance (5 µA/V)
• A is the current sense amplifier gain (10 V/V) (13)
For the 5-V output design example, the ramp capacitor is calculated with Equation 14.
5 PA/V x 6 PH
CRAMP = = 300 pF
10V/V x 10 m: (14)
The next lowest standard value of 270 pF was selected for CRAMP. A COG type capacitor with 5% or better
tolerance is recommended.
'VOUT = IPP x
€ ESR2 +
1
8 x fSW x COUT
2
(15)
Equation 16 calculates the typical values for the 5-V design example.
2
1
'VOUT = 3A x 0.4 m:2 +
8 x 250 kHz x 320 PF
LIN 1
ZS = fS =
CIN 2S LIN x CIN
(18)
The converter exhibits a negative input impedance which is lowest at the minimum input voltage in Equation 19.
VIN2
ZIN = -
POUT (19)
The damping factor for the input filter is given by Equation 20.
1 RIN + ESR ZS
G= +
2 ZS ZIN
where
• RIN is the input wiring resistance
• ESR is the series resistance of the input capacitors (20)
The term ZS / ZIN is always negative due to ZIN. When δ = 1, the input filter is critically damped. This may be
difficult to achieve with practical component values. With δ < 0.2, the input filter exhibits significant ringing. If δ is
zero or negative, there is not enough resistance in the circuit and the input filter sustains an oscillation. When
operating near the minimum input voltage, an aluminum electrolytic capacitor across CIN may be required to
damp the input for a typical bench test setup. Any parallel capacitor must be evaluated for its RMS current rating.
The current splits between the ceramic and aluminum capacitors based on the relative impedance at the
switching frequency.
where
• Qg is the high-side MOSFET gate charge
• ΔVHB is the tolerable voltage droop on CHB (21)
ΔVHB is typically less than 5% of VCC. A value of 1 µF was selected for this design.
where
• VIN(MIN) is the desired shutdown voltage (25)
3. Capacitor CFT provides filtering for the divider and determines the off-time of the hiccup duty cycle during
current limit. When CFT is used in conjunction with the voltage divider, a diode across the top resistor must
be used to discharge CFT in the event of an input undervoltage condition in Equation 26.
RUV1 x RUV2 1.215 x (RUV1 + RUV2)
tOFF = - x CFT x ln 1 -
RUV1 + RUV2 VIN x RUV1 (26)
If undervoltage shutdown is not required, RUV1 and RUV2 can be eliminated and the off-time becomes
Equation 27.
1.215V
tOFF = CFT x
5 PA (27)
The voltage at the UVLO pin must never exceed 16 V when using an external setpoint divider. It may be
necessary to clamp the UVLO pin at high input voltages. For the design example, RUV2 = 102 kΩ and
RUV1 = 21 kΩ for a shutdown voltage of 6.6 V. If sustained short-circuit protection is required, CFT ≥ 1 µF limits
the short-circuit power dissipation. D2 may be installed when using CFT with RUV1 and RUV2.
8.2.2.12 MOSFETs
Selection of the power MOSFETs is governed by the same tradeoffs as switching frequency. Breaking down the
losses in the high-side and low-side MOSFETs is one way to determine relative efficiencies between different
devices. When using discrete 8-pin SO MOSFETs, the LM25116 is most efficient for output currents of 2 A to
10 A. Losses in the power MOSFETs can be broken down into conduction loss, gate charging loss, and
switching loss. Conduction, or I2R loss PDC, is approximately Equation 28 and Equation 29.
PDC(HO-MOSFET) = D × (IO2 × RDS(ON) × 1.3) (28)
PDC(LO-MOSFET) = (1 - D) × (IO2 × RDS(ON) × 1.3)
where
• D is the duty cycle (29)
The factor 1.3 accounts for the increase in MOSFET on-resistance due to heating. Alternatively, the factor of 1.3
can be ignored and the on-resistance of the MOSFET can be estimated using the RDS(ON) versus Temperature
curves in the MOSFET datasheet. Gate charging loss, PGC, results from the current driving the gate capacitance
of the power MOSFETs and is approximated with Equation 30.
PGC = n × VCC × Qg × fSW (30)
Qg refers to the total gate charge of an individual MOSFET, and ‘n’ is the number of MOSFETs. If different types
of MOSFETs are used, the ‘n’ term can be ignored and their gate charges summed to form a cumulative Qg.
Gate charge loss differs from conduction and switching losses in that the actual dissipation occurs in the
LM25116 and not in the MOSFET itself. Further loss in the LM25116 is incurred as the gate driving current is
supplied by the internal linear regulator. The gate drive current supplied by the VCC regulator is calculated with
Equation 31.
IGC = (Qgh + Qgl) × fSW
where
• Qgh + Qgl represent the gate charge of the HO and LO MOSFETs at VGS = VCC (31)
To ensure start-up, IGC must be less than the VCC current limit rating of 15 mA minimum when powered by the
internal 7.4-V regulator. Failure to observe this rating may result in excessive MOSFET heating and potential
damage. The IGC run current may exceed 15 mA when VCC is powered by VCCX.
Switching loss occurs during the brief transition period as the MOSFET turns on and off. During the transition
period both current and voltage are present in the channel of the MOSFET. The switching loss can be
approximated with Equation 32.
PSW = 0.5 × VIN × IO × (tR + tF) × fSW
where
• tR and tF are the rise and fall times of the MOSFET (32)
Switching loss is calculated for the high-side MOSFET only. Switching loss in the low-side MOSFET is negligible
because the body diode of the low-side MOSFET turns on before the MOSFET itself, minimizing the voltage from
drain to source before turnon. For this example, the maximum drain-to-source voltage applied to either MOSFET
is 42 V. VCC provides the drive voltage at the gate of the MOSFETs. The selected MOSFETs must be able to
withstand 42 V plus any ringing from drain to source, and be able to handle at least VCC plus ringing from gate
to source. A good choice of MOSFET for the 42-V input design example is the Si7850DP. It has an RDS(ON) of
20 mΩ, total gate charge of 14 nC, and rise and fall times of 10 ns and 12 ns respectively. In applications where
a high step-down ratio is maintained for normal operation, efficiency may be optimized by choosing a high-side
MOSFET with lower Qg, and low-side MOSFET with lower RDS(ON).
For higher voltage MOSFETs which are not true logic level, it is important to use the UVLO feature. Choose a
minimum operating voltage which is high enough for VCC and the bootstrap (HB) supply to fully enhance the
MOSFET gates. This prevents operation in the linear region during power-on or power-off which can result in
MOSFET failure. Similar consideration must be made when powering VCCX from the output voltage. For the
high-side MOSFET, the gate threshold must be considered and careful evaluation made if the gate threshold
voltage exceeds the HO driver UVLO.
Components RCOMP and CCOMP configure the error amplifier as a type II configuration. The DC gain of the
amplifier is 80 dB which has a pole at low frequency and a zero at fZEA = 1 / (2π x RCOMP × CCOMP). The error
amplifier zero cancels the modulator pole leaving a single pole response at the crossover frequency of the
voltage loop. A single pole response at the crossover frequency yields a very stable loop with 90° of phase
margin. For the design example, a target loop bandwidth (crossover frequency) of one-tenth the switching
frequency or 25 kHz was selected. The compensation network zero (fZEA) must be selected at least an order of
magnitude less than the target crossover frequency. This constrains the product of RCOMP and CCOMP for a
desired compensation network zero 1 / (2π × RCOMP × CCOMP) to be 2.5 kHz. Increasing RCOMP, while
proportionally decreasing CCOMP, increases the error amp gain. Conversely, decreasing RCOMP while
proportionally increasing CCOMP, decreases the error amp gain. For the design example, CCOMP was selected as
3300 pF and RCOMP was selected as 18 kΩ. These values configure the compensation network zero at 2.7 kHz.
The error amp gain at frequencies greater than fZEA is: RCOMP / RFB2, which is approximately 4.8 (13.6 dB).
The overall voltage loop gain can be predicted as the sum (in dB) of the modulator gain and the error amp gain.
If a network analyzer is available, the modulator gain can be measured and the error amplifier gain can be
configured for the desired loop transfer function. If a network analyzer is not available, the error amplifier
compensation components can be designed with the guidelines given. Step load transient tests can be
performed to verify acceptable performance. The step load goal is minimum overshoot with a damped response.
CHF can be added to the compensation network to decrease noise susceptibility of the error amplifier. The value
of CHF must be sufficiently small because the addition of this capacitor adds a pole in the error amplifier transfer
function. This pole must be well beyond the loop crossover frequency. A good approximation of the location of
the pole added by CHF is: fP2 = fZEA × CCOMP / CHF. The value of CHF was selected as 100 pF for the design
example.
Best performance method minimizes the current limit deviation due to changes in line voltage, while maintaining
near optimal slope compensation.
Calculate optimal slope current with Equation 39, IOS = (VOUT / 3) × 10 µA/V. For example, at VOUT = 7.5 V,
IOS = 25 µA.
VCS(TH) IOS x L
RS = CRAMP =
VOUT x T VOUT x A x RS
IOUT +
L
(39)
Calculate VRAMP at the nominal input voltage with Equation 40.
VOUT ((VIN ± VOUT) x gm + IOS) x T
VRAMP = x
VIN CRAMP
(40)
For VOUT > 7.5 V, install a resistor from the RAMP pin to VCC and calculate with Equation 41.
VCC - VRAMP
RRAMP =
IOS - 25 PA
(41)
VCC
RRAMP
RAMP
CRAMP
For VOUT < 7.5 V, a negative VCC is required. This can be made with a simple charge pump from the LO gate
output. Install a resistor from the RAMP pin to the negative VCC and calculate with Equation 42.
VCC ± 0.5V + VRAMP
RRAMP =
25 PA - IOS (42)
LO
10 nF 1N914
RRAMP 10 nF
RAMP
-VCC
CRAMP
If a large variation is expected in VCC, say for VIN < 11 V, a Zener regulator may be added to supply a constant
voltage for RRAMP.
gm x T IOS x T
KSL = VSL =
CRAMP CRAMP
(45)
1 1 1 1 S
ZZ = ZP = x + Zn =
COUT x ESR COUT RLOAD Km x A x RS T
(46)
(VIN ± VOUT) x KSL + VSL VIN x A x RS
Se = Sn =
T L
Se 1
mC = Q=
Sn S x (mC ± 0.5) (47)
Km is the effective DC gain of the modulating comparator. The duty cycle D = VOUT / VIN. KSL is the proportional
slope compensation term. VSL is the fixed slope compensation term. Slope compensation is set by mc, which is
the ratio of the external ramp to the natural ramp. The switching frequency sampling gain is characterized by ωn
and Q, which accounts for the high frequency inductor pole.
For VSL without RRAMP, use IOS = 25 µA.
For VSL with RRAMP to VCC, use IOS = 25 µA + VCC/RRAMP.
For VSL with RRAMP to -VCC, use IOS = 25 µA - VCC/RRAMP.
(CHF + CCOMP)
ZHF =
CHF x CCOMP x RCOMP
where
• AOL = 10,000 (80 dB)
• ωBW = 2π × fBW
• GEA(S) is the ideal error amplifier gain, which is modified at DC and high frequency by the open loop gain of the
amplifier and the feedback divider ratio. (50)
Figure 40. Efficiency With 6-µH Copper Inductor Figure 41. Short Circuit Recovery Into Resistive Load
With C7 = 1 µF and D2 Installed
10 Layout
Controller
Place controller as QL
close to the switches
Inductor
QH
RSENSE
CIN COUT
CIN COUT
11.3 Trademarks
E2E is a trademark of Texas Instruments.
All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
11.4 Electrostatic Discharge Caution
These devices have limited built-in ESD protection. The leads should be shorted together or the device placed in conductive foam
during storage or handling to prevent electrostatic damage to the MOS gates.
11.5 Glossary
SLYZ022 — TI Glossary.
This glossary lists and explains terms, acronyms, and definitions.
www.ti.com 18-Feb-2016
PACKAGING INFORMATION
Orderable Device Status Package Type Package Pins Package Eco Plan Lead/Ball Finish MSL Peak Temp Op Temp (°C) Device Marking Samples
(1) Drawing Qty (2) (6) (3) (4/5)
LM25116MH NRND HTSSOP PWP 20 73 TBD Call TI Call TI -40 to 125 LM25116
MH
LM25116MH/NOPB ACTIVE HTSSOP PWP 20 73 Green (RoHS CU SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM -40 to 125 LM25116
& no Sb/Br) MH
LM25116MHX/NOPB ACTIVE HTSSOP PWP 20 2500 Green (RoHS CU SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM -40 to 125 LM25116
& no Sb/Br) MH
(1)
The marketing status values are defined as follows:
ACTIVE: Product device recommended for new designs.
LIFEBUY: TI has announced that the device will be discontinued, and a lifetime-buy period is in effect.
NRND: Not recommended for new designs. Device is in production to support existing customers, but TI does not recommend using this part in a new design.
PREVIEW: Device has been announced but is not in production. Samples may or may not be available.
OBSOLETE: TI has discontinued the production of the device.
(2)
Eco Plan - The planned eco-friendly classification: Pb-Free (RoHS), Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt), or Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) - please check http://www.ti.com/productcontent for the latest availability
information and additional product content details.
TBD: The Pb-Free/Green conversion plan has not been defined.
Pb-Free (RoHS): TI's terms "Lead-Free" or "Pb-Free" mean semiconductor products that are compatible with the current RoHS requirements for all 6 substances, including the requirement that
lead not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous materials. Where designed to be soldered at high temperatures, TI Pb-Free products are suitable for use in specified lead-free processes.
Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt): This component has a RoHS exemption for either 1) lead-based flip-chip solder bumps used between the die and package, or 2) lead-based die adhesive used between
the die and leadframe. The component is otherwise considered Pb-Free (RoHS compatible) as defined above.
Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br): TI defines "Green" to mean Pb-Free (RoHS compatible), and free of Bromine (Br) and Antimony (Sb) based flame retardants (Br or Sb do not exceed 0.1% by weight
in homogeneous material)
(3)
MSL, Peak Temp. - The Moisture Sensitivity Level rating according to the JEDEC industry standard classifications, and peak solder temperature.
(4)
There may be additional marking, which relates to the logo, the lot trace code information, or the environmental category on the device.
(5)
Multiple Device Markings will be inside parentheses. Only one Device Marking contained in parentheses and separated by a "~" will appear on a device. If a line is indented then it is a continuation
of the previous line and the two combined represent the entire Device Marking for that device.
(6)
Lead/Ball Finish - Orderable Devices may have multiple material finish options. Finish options are separated by a vertical ruled line. Lead/Ball Finish values may wrap to two lines if the finish
value exceeds the maximum column width.
Important Information and Disclaimer:The information provided on this page represents TI's knowledge and belief as of the date that it is provided. TI bases its knowledge and belief on information
provided by third parties, and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of such information. Efforts are underway to better integrate information from third parties. TI has taken and
Addendum-Page 1
PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM
www.ti.com 18-Feb-2016
continues to take reasonable steps to provide representative and accurate information but may not have conducted destructive testing or chemical analysis on incoming materials and chemicals.
TI and TI suppliers consider certain information to be proprietary, and thus CAS numbers and other limited information may not be available for release.
In no event shall TI's liability arising out of such information exceed the total purchase price of the TI part(s) at issue in this document sold by TI to Customer on an annual basis.
Addendum-Page 2
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com 14-Sep-2017
Pack Materials-Page 1
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com 14-Sep-2017
Pack Materials-Page 2
MECHANICAL DATA
PWP0020A
MXA20A (Rev C)
www.ti.com
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