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A highly integrated synchronous buck converter with a predictive dead time control for input voltages >18 V with 10 MHz switching frequency is presented. A high resolution dead time of ˜125 ps allows to reduce dead time dependent losses without requiring body diode conduction to evaluate the dead time. High resolution is achieved by frequency compensated sampling of the switching node and by an 8 bit differential delay chain. Dead time parameters are derived in a comprehensive study of dead time depended losses. This way, the efficiency of fast switching DC-DC converters can be optimized by eliminating the body diode forward conduction losses, minimizing reverse recovery losses and by achieving zero voltage switching. High-speed circuit blocks for fast switching operation are presented including level shifter, gate driver, PWM generator. The converter has been implemented in a 180 nm high-voltage BiCMOS technology.
Es werden eine elektronische Treiberschaltung und ein Ansteuerverfahren offenbart. Die Treiberschaltung weist einen Ausgang auf; einen ersten Ausgangstransistor mit einem Steuerknoten und einer Laststrecke, wobei die Laststrecke zwischen den Ausgang und einen ersten Versorgungsknoten geschaltet ist; einen Spannungsregler, der dazu ausgebildet ist, eine Spannung über der Laststrecke des ersten Ausgangstransistors zu steuern; und einen ersten Treiber, der dazu ausgebildet ist, den ersten Ausgangstransistor in Abhängigkeit von einem ersten Steuersignal anzusteuern.
Disclosed is an electronic drive circuit and a drive method. The drive circuit includes an output; a first output transistor comprising a control node and a load path, wherein the load path is coupled between the output and a first supply node; a voltage regulator configured to control a voltage across the load path of the first output transistor; and a first driver configured to drive the first output transistor based on a first control signal.
The power supply is one of the major challenges for applications like internet of things IoTs and smart home. The maintenance issue of batteries and the limited power level of energy harvesting is addressed by the integrated micro power supply presented in this paper. Connected to the 120/230 Vrms mains, which is one of the most reliable energy sources and anywhere indoor available, it provides a 3.3V DC output voltage. The micro power supply consists of a fully integrated ACDC and DCDC converter with one external low voltage SMD buffer capacitor. The micro power supply is fabricated in a low cost 0.35 μm 700 V CMOS technology and covers a die size of 7.7 mm². The use of only one external low voltage SMD capacitor, results in an extremely compact form factor. The ACDC is a direct coupled, full wave rectifier with a subsequent bipolar shunt regulator, which provides an output voltage around 17 V. The DCDC stage is a fully integrated 4:1 SC DCDC converter with an input voltage as high as 17 V and a peak efficiency of 45 %. The power supply achieves an overall output power of 3 mW, resulting in a power density of 390 μW/mm². This exceeds prior art by a factor of 11.
The efficiency impact of air-cored inductors used close to and beyond its cut-off frequency in multi-MHz converters is investigated. A method is presented to determine the converter switching frequency that causes the lowest losses in a given inductor. Influential parameters are analysed to optimize an inductor for a predefined switching frequency.
A high-voltage replica based current sensor is presented, along with challenges and design techniques which are rarely discussed in literature so far. The performance is evaluated by detailed small signal and large signal analysis. By dedicated placing of high-voltage cascode devices, while keeping as many low-voltage devices as possible, a high gain-bandwidth product is achieved. A decoupling and biasing circuit is introduced which improves the response time of the current sensor at on/off transitions by a factor of five. The current sensor is implemented in a 180nm HV BiCMOS technology. The sensor achieves a DC loop gain of 83 dB and a gain-bandwidth product of 7 MHz. With the proposed techniques, the gain-bandwidth product is increased by a factor of six. The measurable current range is between 60mA and 1.5 A. The performance is demonstrated in a 500 kHz buck converter at an input voltage of 40V. The overall circuit concept is suitable for 100V and beyond, enabling high performance power management designs including switched mode power supplies and motor applications.
Switched-mode power supplies (SMPS) convert an input DC-voltage into a higher or lower output voltage. In automotive, analog control is mostly used in order to keep the required output voltages constant and resistant to disturbances. The design of robust analog control for SMPS faces parameter variations of integrated and external passive components. Using digital control, parameter variations can be eliminated and the required area for the integrated circuit can be reduced at the same time.
Digital control design bears challenges like the prevention of limit cycle oscillations and controller wind-up. This paper reviews how to prevent these effects. Digital control loops introduce new sources for dead times in the control loop, for example the latency of the analog-to-digitalconverter (ADC). Dead times have negative influence on the stability of the control loop, because they lead to phase delays. Consequently, low latency is one of the key requirements for analog-to-digital converters in digitally controlled SMPS.
Exploiting the example of a 500 kHz-buck converter with a crossover frequency of 70 kHz, this paper shows that the 5 μs-latency of a 16-analog-to-digital-converter leads to a reduction in phase margin of 126°. The latency is less critical for boost converters because of their inherent lower crossover frequencies.
Finally, the paper shows a comparison between analog and digital control of SMPS with regard to chip area and test costs.
Size and cost of a boost converter can be minimized by reducing the voltage overshoot and fastening the transient response in case of load transient. The presented technique improves the transient response of a current mode controlled boost converter, which usually suffers from bandwidth limitation because of its right-half-plane zero (RHPZ). The proposed technique comprises a load current estimation which works as part of a digital controller without any additional measurements. Based on the latest load estimation the controller parameters are adapted, achieving small voltage overshoot and fast transient response. The presented technique was implemented in a digital control circuit, consisting of an ASIC in a 110 nm-technology, a Xilinx Spartan-6 field programmable gate array (FPGA), and a TI-ADS8422 analog to-digital-converter (ADC). Simulation and measurements of a 4V-to-6.3V, 500mA boost converter show an improvement of 50% in voltage overshoot and response time to load transient.
The power supply is one of the major challenges for applications like internet of things IoTs and smart home. The maintenance issue of batteries and the limited power level of energy harvesting is addressed by the integrated micro power supply presented in this paper. Connected to the 120/230 Vrms mains, which is one of the most reliable energy sources and anywhere indoor available, it provides a 3.3V DC output voltage. The micro power supply consists of a fully integrated ACDC and DCDC converter with one external low voltage SMD buffer capacitor. The micro power supply is fabricated in a low cost 0.35 μm 700 V CMOS technology and covers a die size of 7.7 mm². The use of only one external low voltage SMD capacitor, results in an extremely compact form factor. The ACDC is a direct coupled, full wave rectifier with a subsequent bipolar shunt regulator, which provides an output voltage around 17 V. The DCDC stage is a fully integrated 4:1 SC DCDC converter with an input voltage as high as 17 V and a peak efficiency of 45 %. The power supply achieves an overall output power of 3 mW, resulting in a power density of 390 μW/mm². This exceeds prior art by a factor of 11.
In recent years, significant progress has been made on switched-capacitor DC-DC converters as they enable fully integrated on-chip power management. New converter topologies overcame the fixed input-to-output voltage limitation and achieved high efficiency at high power densities. SC converters are attractive to not only mobile handheld devices with small input and output voltages, but also for power conversion in IoE, industrial and automotive applications, etc. Such applications need to be capable of handling widely varying input voltages of more than 10V, which requires a large amount of conversion ratios. The goal is to achieve a fine granularity with the least number of flying capacitors. In [1] an SC converter was introduced that achieves these goals at low input voltage VIN ≤ 2.5V. [2] shows good efficiency up to VIN = 8V while its conversion ratio is restricted to ≤1/2 with a limited, non-equidistant number of conversion steps. A particular challenge arises with increasing input voltage as several loss mechanisms like parasitic bottom-plate losses and gate-charge losses of high-voltage transistors become of significant influence. High input voltages require supporting circuits like level shifters, auxiliary supply rails etc., which allocate additional area and add losses [2-5]. The combination of both increasing voltage and conversion ratios (VCR) lowers the efficiency and the achievable output power of SC converters. [3] and [5] use external capacitors to enable higher output power, especially for higher VIN. However, this is contradictory to the goal of a fully integrated power supply.