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An integrated synchronous buck converter with a high resolution dead time control for input voltages up to 48V and 10MHz switching frequency is presented. The benefit of an enhanced dead time control at light loads to enable zero voltage switching at both the high-side and low-side switch at low output load is studied. This way, compact multi-MHz DCDC converters can be implemented at high efficiency over a wide load current range. The concept also eliminates body diode forward conduction losses and minimizes reverse recovery losses. A dead time resolution of 125 ps is realized by an 8-bit differential delay chain. A further efficiency enhancement by soft switching at the high-side switch at light load is achieved with a voltage boost of the switching node by dead time control in forced continuous conduction mode. The monolithic converter is implemented in an 180nm high-voltage BiCMOS technology. At V IN = 48V, V OUT = 5V, 50mA load, 10MHz switching frequency and 500 nH output inductance, the efficiency is measured to be increased by 14.4% compared to a conventional predictive dead time control. A peak efficiency of 80.9% is achieved at 12V input.
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 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.
The increasing slew rate of modern power switches can increase the efficiency and reduce the size of power electronic applications. This requires a fast and robust signal transmission to the gate driver of the high-side switch. This work proposes a galvanically isolated capacitive signal transmission circuit to increase common mode transient immunity (CMTI). An additional signal path is introduced to significantly improve the transmission robustness for small duty cycles to assure a safe turn-off of the power switch. To limit the input voltage range at the comparator on the secondary side during fast high-side transitions, a clamping structure is implemented. A comparison between a conventional and the proposed signal transmission is performed using transistor level simulations. A propagation delay of about 2 ns over a wide range of voltage transients of up to 300V/ns at input voltages up to 600V is achieved.
This paper presents an integrated synchronous buck converter for input voltages >12V with 10MHz switching frequency. The converter comprises a predictive dead time control with frequency compensated sampling of the switching node which does not require body diode forward conduction. A high dead time resolution of 125 ps is achieved by a differential delay chain with 8-bit resolution. This way, the efficiency of fast switching DCDC converters can be optimized by eliminating the body diode forward conduction losses, minimizing reverse recovery losses and by achieving zero voltage switching at turn off. The converter was implemented in a 180nm high-voltage BiCMOS technology. The power losses were measured to be reduced by 30%by the proposed dead time control, which results in a 6% efficiency increase at VOUT = 5V and 0.2A load. The peak efficiency is 81 %.
Size and cost of a switched mode power supply can be reduced by increasing the switching frequency. The maximum switching frequency and the maximum conversion ratio are limited by the duty cycle of a PWM signal. In DCDC converters, a sawtooth generator is the fundamental circuit block to generate the PWM signal. The presented PWM generator is based on two parallel, fully interleaved PWM generator stages, each containing an integrator based sawtooth generator and two 3-stage highspeed comparators. A digital multiplexing of the PWM signals of each stage eliminates the dependency of the minimum on-time on the large reset times of the sawtooth ramps. A separation of the references of the PWM comparators in both stage allows to configure the PWM generator for a DCDC converter operating in fixed frequency or in constant on-time mode, which requires an operation in a wide frequency range. The PWM generator was fabricated in an 180 nm HV BiCMOS technology, as part of a DCDC converter. Measurements confirm minimum possible ontime pulses as short as 2 ns and thus allows switching frequencies of DCDC converters of >50 MHz at small duty cycle of <10%. At moderate duty cycles switching frequencies up to 100 MHz are possible.
Substrate coupling is a critical failure mechanism especially in fast-switching integrated power stages controlling high-side NMOS power FETs. The parasitic coupling across the substrate in integrated power stages at rise times of up to 500 ps and input voltages of up to 40V is investigated in this paper. The coupling has been studied for the power stage of an integrated buck converter. In particular, dedicated diverting and isolation structures against substrate coupling are analyzed by simulations and evaluated with measurements from test chips in 180nm high-voltage BiCMOS. The results are compared regarding effectiveness, area as well as implementation effort and cost. Back-side metalization shows superior characteristics with nearly 100% noise suppression. Readily available p-guard ring structures bring 75% disturbance reduction. The results are applicable to advanced and future power management solutions with fully integrated switched-mode power supplies at switching frequencies >10 MHz.
DC-DC-converters are used in many different applications. Specifying the switching frequency is the most important parameter to calculate component costs and required space. Especially automotive applications of small brushed- or brushless dc-motors and the increasing number of DC-DC-converters have high requirements on the structual space (low box volume). This is of particular importance for automotive converters for the new 48 V board net. Multiplying the frequency by two will reduce the size of the power inductor by half at a given specification for output-voltage ripple. Smaller power inductors result in reduced losses due to smaller series resistance and parasitic capacitance. Furthermore a larger switching frequency decreases the size of the DC link capacitors. The circuit will get more idealized. However, as the switching losses increase with frequency, a DC-DC-converter can only benefit from these advantages if the switching behavior can be improved.
This paper presents an optimization method to increase switching slope and switching frequency of a 3.6 kW 3-phase step-up converter by separating the design and layout process into two parts. The first part is the power stage which carries the load current. It contains the power inductance and the drain-source-channel of the power MOSFETs. The second part is the driver circuit which contains the driver ICs, the gate resistor and the gate input impedance. While the switching slope was measured to be improved by 50 % , the switching time decreased by 20 %. Hence, the switching frequency of the step-up converter could be increased from 100 kHz to 200 kHz without loss increase. By mounting the driver ICs in a piggyback configuration in close proximity to the power stage, the parasitics could be further reduced significantly and 500 kHz switching frequency could be achieved with 97.5 % efficiency.
A 20 V, 8 MHz resonant DCDC converter with predictive control for 1 ns resolution soft-switching
(2015)
Fast switching power supplies allow to reduce the size and cost of external passive components. However, the capacitive switching losses of the power stage will increase and become the dominant part of the total losses. Therefore, resonant topologies are the known key to reduce the losses of the power stage. A power switch with an additional resonant circuit can be turned on under soft-switching conditions, ideally with zero-voltage-switching (ZVS). As conventional resonant converts are only efficient for a constant load, this paper presents a predictive regulation loop to approach soft-switching conditions under varying load and component tolerances. A sample and hold based detection circuit is utilized to control the turn-on of the power switch by a digital regulation. The proposed design was fabricated in a 180 nm high-voltage BiCMOS technology. The efficiency of the converter was measured to be increased by up to 16 % vs. worst case timing and by 13 % compared to a conventional hard-switching buck converter at 20 V input voltage and at approximately 8 MHz switching frequency.
There is a growing need for motor drives with improved EMC in various automotive and industrial applications. An often referenced approach to reduce EME is to change the shape of the switching signal to reduce the EMI caused by the voltage and current transitions. This requires very precise gate control of the power MOSFET to achive better switching behaviour and lower EME without a major increase in switching losses. In order to find an optimal trade-off, this work utilizes a monolithic current mode gate driver with a variable output current that can be changed within 10ns. With this driver, measurements with different gate current profiles were taken. The di/dt transition was confirmed to be as important as the dv/dt transition in the power MOSFET. As a result of the improved switching behavior the emissions were reduced by up to 20dB between 7MHz and 60MHz with a switching loss that is 52% lower than with a constantly low gate current.