JAJSIL8A February 2020 – July 2020 LM76005
PRODUCTION DATA
DCM operation is employed in the LM76005 when the inductor current valley reaches zero. The LM76005 is in DCM when load current is less than half of the peak-to-peak inductor current ripple in CCM. In DCM, the LS switch is turned off when the inductor current reaches zero. Switching loss is reduced by turning off the LS FET at zero current, and the conduction loss is lowered by not allowing negative current conduction. Power conversion efficiency is higher in DCM than CCM under the same conditions.
In DCM, the HS switch on-time reduces with lower load current. When either the minimum HS switch on-time (tON-MIN) or the minimum peak inductor current (IPEAK-MIN) is reached, the switching frequency decreases to maintain regulation. At this point, the LM76005 operates in PFM. In PFM, switching frequency is decreased by the control loop when load current reduces to maintain output voltage regulation. Reference the Section 8.2.3 for typical steady state switching behavior in PFM. Switching loss is further reduced in PFM operation due to less frequent switching actions.
In PFM operation, a small positive DC offset is required at the output voltage to activate the PFM detector. The lower the frequency is in PFM, the more DC offset is needed at VOUT. See Section 6.9 for typical DC offset at very light load. If the DC offset on VOUT is not acceptable for a given application, TI recommends a static load at output to reduce or eliminate the offset. Lowering values of the feedback divider RFBT and RFBB can also serve as a static load. In conditions with low VIN and high frequency, the LM76005 may not enter PFM mode if the output voltage cannot be charged up to provide the trigger to activate the PFM detector. Once the LM76005 is operating in PFM mode at higher VIN, it remains in PFM operation when VIN is reduced.
Alternatively, the device can run in a forced pulse-width-modulation (FPWM) mode where the switching frequency does not lower with load, and no offset is added to affect the VOUT accuracy unless the minimum on-time of the converter is reached.