SLVS613D October 2005 – December 2015 TPS65021
PRODUCTION DATA.
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.
The low power section of the control circuit for the step-down converters DCDC1, DCDC2, and DCDC3 is supplied by the VCC pin while the circuitry with high power such as the power stage is powered from the VINDCDC1, VINDCDC2, and VINDCDC3 pins. For proper operation of the step-down converters, VINDCDC1, VINDCDC2, VNDCDC3, and VCC need to be tied to the same voltage rail. Step-down converters that are plannned to be not used, still need to be powered from their input pin on the same rails than the other step-down converters and VCC.
LDO1 and LDO2 share a supply voltage pin which can be powered from the VCC rails or from a voltage lower than VCC, for example, the output of one of the step-down converters as long as it is operated within the input voltage range of the LDOs. If both LDOs are not used, the VINLDO pin can be tied to GND.
In case a step-down converter is not used, its input supply voltage pin VINDCDCx still needs to be connected to the VCC rail along with supply input of the other step-down converters. TI recommends closing the control loop such that an inductor and output capacitor is added in the same way as it would be when operated normally. If one of the LDOs is not used, its output capacitor must be added as well. If both LDOs are not used, the input supply pin as well as the output pins of the LDOs (VINLDO, VLDO1, VLDO2) must be tied to GND.
The TPS6502x devices have only a few design requirements. Use the following parameters for the design examples:
Each of the converters in the TPS65021 typically use a 3.3-μH output inductor. Larger or smaller inductor values are used to optimize the performance of the device for specific operation conditions. The selected inductor has to be rated for its DC resistance and saturation current. The DC resistance of the inductance influences directly the efficiency of the converter. Therefore, an inductor with lowest DC resistance must be selected for highest efficiency.
For a fast transient response, a 2.2-μH inductor in combination with a 22-μF output capacitor is recommended.
Equation 8 calculates the maximum inductor current under static load conditions. The saturation current of the inductor must be rated higher than the maximum inductor current as calculated with Equation 8. This is needed because during heavy load transient the inductor current rises above the value calculated with Equation 8 and Equation 9.
where
The highest inductor current occurs at maximum Vin.
Open-core inductors have a soft saturation characteristic, and they can usually handle higher inductor currents versus a comparable shielded inductor.
A more conservative approach is to select the inductor current rating just for the maximum switch current of the TPS65021 (2 A for the VDCDC1 and VDCDC2 converters, and 1.5 A for the VDCDC3 converter). The core material from inductor to inductor differs and has an impact on the efficiency especially at high switching frequencies.
See Table 17 and the typical applications for possible inductors.
DEVICE | INDUCTOR VALUE | TYPE | COMPONENT SUPPLIER |
---|---|---|---|
DCDC3 converter | 3.3 μH | CDRH2D14NP-3R3 | Sumida |
3.3 μH | LPS3010-332 | Coilcraft | |
3.3 μH | VLF4012AT-3R3M1R3 | TDK | |
2.2 μH | VLF4012AT-2R2M1R5 | TDK | |
DCDC2 converter | 3.3 μH | CDRH2D18/HPNP-3R3 | Sumida |
3.3 μH | VLF4012AT-3R3M1R3 | TDK | |
2.2 μH | VLCF4020-2R2 | TDK | |
DCDC1 converter | 3.3 μH | CDRH3D14/HPNP-3R2 | Sumida |
3.3 μH | CDRH4D28C-3R2 | Sumida | |
3.3 μH | MSS5131-332 | Coilcraft | |
2.2 μH | VLCF4020-2R2 | TDK |
The advanced fast response voltage mode control scheme of the inductive converters implemented in the TPS65021 allow the use of small ceramic capacitors with a typical value of 10 μF for each converter without having large output voltage under and overshoots during heavy load transients. Ceramic capacitors with low ESR values have the lowest output voltage ripple and are recommended. See Table 18 for recommended components.
If ceramic output capacitors are used, the capacitor RMS ripple current rating always meets the application requirements. Just for completeness, the RMS ripple current is calculated as Equation 10.
At nominal load current, the inductive converters operate in PWM mode. The overall output voltage ripple is the sum of the voltage spike caused by the output capacitor ESR plus the voltage ripple caused by charging and discharging the output capacitor in Equation 11.
where
At light-load currents, the converters operate in PSM and the output voltage ripple is dependent on the output capacitor value. The output voltage ripple is set by the internal comparator delay and the external capacitor. The typical output voltage ripple is less than 1% of the nominal output voltage.
Because of the nature of the buck converter having a pulsating input current, a low-ESR input capacitor is required for best input voltage filtering and minimizing the interference with other circuits caused by high input voltage spikes. Each DC-DC converter requires a 10-μF ceramic input capacitor on its input pin VINDCDCx. The input capacitor is increased without any limit for better input voltage filtering. The VCC pin is separated from the input for the DC-DC converters. A filter resistor of up to 10R and a 1-μF capacitor is used for decoupling the VCC pin from switching noise. Note that the filter resistor may affect the UVLO threshold because up to 3 mA can flow through this resistor into the VCC pin when all converters are running in PWM mode.
CAPACITOR VALUE | CASE SIZE | COMPONENT SUPPLIER | COMMENTS |
---|---|---|---|
22 μF | 1206 | TDK C3216X5R0J226M | Ceramic |
22 μF | 1206 | Taiyo Yuden JMK316BJ226ML | Ceramic |
22 μF | 0805 | TDK C2012X5R0J226MT | Ceramic |
22μF | 0805 | Taiyo Yuden JMK212BJ226MG | Ceramic |
10 μF | 0805 | Taiyo Yuden JMK212BJ106M | Ceramic |
10 μF | 0805 | TDK C2012X5R0J106M | Ceramic |
The DEFDCDC1, DEFDCDC2, and DEFDCDC3 pins are used to set the output voltage for each step-down converter. See Table 19 for the default voltages if the pins are pulled to GND or to VCC. If a different voltage is needed, an external resistor divider can be added to the DEFDCDCx pin as shown in Figure 36.
The output voltage of VDCDC3 is set with the I2C interface. If the voltage is changed from the default, using the DEFCORE register, the output voltage only depends on the register value. Any resistor divider at DEFDCDC3 does not change the voltage set with the register.
PIN | LEVEL | DEFAULT OUTPUT VOLTAGE |
---|---|---|
DEFDCDC1 | VCC | 3.3 V |
GND | 3 V | |
DEFDCDC2 | VCC | 2.5 V |
GND | 1.8 V | |
DEFDCDC3 | VCC | 1.55 V |
GND | 1.3 V |
Using an external resistor divider at DEFDCDCx:
When a resistor divider is connected to DEFDCDCx, the output voltage can be set from 0.6 V up to the input voltage V(bat). The total resistance (R1 + R2) of the voltage divider must be kept in the 1-MR range to maintain a high efficiency at light load.
V(DEFDCDCx) = 0.6 V
The VRTC output is typically connected to the VCC_BATT pin of a Intel PXA270 processor. During power-up of the processor, the TPS65021 internally switches from the LDO or the backup battery to the system voltage connected at the VSYSIN pin (see Figure 29). It is required to add a capacitor of 4.7-μF minimum to the VRTC pin, even the output may be unused.
The LDOs in the TPS65021 are general-purpose LDOs which are stable using ceramics capacitors. The minimum output capacitor required is 2.2 μF. The LDOs output voltage can be changed to different voltages between 1 V and 3.3 V using the I2C interface. Therefore, they can also be used as general-purpose LDOs in applications powering processors different from PXA270. The supply voltage for the LDOs needs to be connected to the VINLDO pin, giving the flexibility to connect the lowest voltage available in the system and provides the highest efficiency.
This is the input to a capacitor that defines the reset delay time after the voltage at VRTC rises above 2.52 V. The timing is generated by charging and discharging the capacitor with a current of 2 μA between a threshold of 0.25 V and 1 V for 128 cycles. A 1-nF capacitor gives a delay time of 100 ms.
While there is no real upper and lower limit for the capacitor connected to TRESPWRON, TI recommends to not leave signal pins open.
where
The minimum and maximum values for the timing parameters called ICONST (2 μA), TRESPWRON_UPTH (1 V) and TRESPWRON_LOWTH (0.25 V) can be found in Specifications.
An RC filter connected at the VCC input is used to prevent noise from the internal supply for the bandgap and other analog circuitry. A typical resistor value of 1 Ω and 1 μF is used to filter the switching spikes generated by the DC-DC converters. A resistor larger than 10 Ω must not be used because the current (up to 3 mA) into VCC causes a voltage drop at the resistor. This causes the undervoltage lockout circuitry connected internally at VCC to switch off too early.
Graphs were taken using the EVM with the inductor and output capacitor combinations in Table 20.
CONVERTER | INDUCTOR | OUTPUT CAPACITOR | OUTPUT CAPACITOR VALUE |
---|---|---|---|
VDCDC1 | VLCF4020-2R2 | C2012X5R0J106M | 2 × 10 μF |
VDCDC2 | VLCF4020-2R2 | C2012X5R0J106M | 2 × 10 μF |
VDCDC3 | VLF4012AT-2R2M1R5 | C2012X5R0J106M | 2 × 10 μF |
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