JAJSL43A July 2014 – September 2021 TPS55340-EP
PRODUCTION DATA
The selection of the inductor affects steady-state operation as well as transient behavior and loop stability. These factors make it the most important component in power regulator design. There are three important inductor specifications: inductor value, DC resistance, and saturation current. Considering inductor value alone is not enough. Inductor values can have ±20% tolerance with no current bias. When the inductor current approaches saturation level, the effective inductance can fall to a fraction of the zero current value.
The minimum value of the inductor should be able to meet inductor current ripple (ΔIL) requirement at worst case. In a boost converter, maximum inductor current ripple occurs at 50% duty cycle. For the applications where duty cycle is always smaller or larger than 50%, Equation 12 should be used with the duty cycle closest to 50% and corresponding input voltage to calculate the minimum inductance. For applications that need to operate with 50% duty cycle when input voltage is somewhere between the minimum and the maximum input voltage, use Equation 13. KIND is a coefficient that represents the amount of inductor ripple current relative to the maximum input current (IINDC = ILavg). The maximum input current can be estimated with Equation 11, with an estimated efficiency based on similar applications (ηEST). The inductor ripple current will be filtered by the output capacitor. Therefore, choosing high inductor ripple currents impacts the selection of the output capacitor because the output capacitor must have a ripple current rating equal to or greater than the inductor ripple current. In general, the inductor ripple value (KIND) is at the discretion of the designer. However, the following guidelines may be used.
For CCM operation, TI recommends to use KIND values in the range of 0.2 to 0.4. Choosing KIND closer to 0.2 results in a larger inductance value, maximizes the converter’s potential output current, and minimizes EMI. Choosing KIND closer to 0.4 results in a smaller inductance value, a physically smaller inductor, and improved transient response, but potentially worse EMI and lower efficiency. Using an inductor with a smaller inductance value may result in the converter operating in DCM. This reduces the boost converter’s maximum output current and causes larger input voltage and output voltage ripple and reduced efficiency. For this design, choose KIND = 0.3 and a conservative efficiency estimate of 85% with the minimum input voltage and maximum output current. Equation 12 is used with the maximum input voltage because this corresponds to duty cycle closest to 50%. The maximum input current is estimated at 4.52 A and the minimum inductance is 7.53 µH. A standard value of 10 µH is chosen.
After choosing the inductance, the required current ratings can be calculated. The inductor will be closest to its ratings with the minimum input voltage. The ripple with the chosen inductance is calculated with Equation 14. The RMS and peak inductor current can be found with Equation 15 and Equation 16. For this design, the current ripple is 663 mA, the RMS inductor current is 4.52 A, and the peak inductor current is 4.85 A. TI generally recommends that the peak inductor current rating of the selected inductor be 20% higher to account for transients during power up, faults, or transient load conditions. The most conservative approach is to specify an inductor with a saturation current greater than the maximum peak current limit of the TPS55340-EP. This approach helps to avoid saturation of the inductor. The chosen inductor is a Würth Elektronik 74437368100. It has a saturation current rating of 12.5 A, RMS current rating of 5.2 A, and typical DCR of 27 mΩ.
The TPS55340-EP has built-in slope compensation to avoid subharmonic oscillation associated with current mode control. If the inductor value is too small, the slope compensation may not be adequate, and the loop can be unstable.