Turns of the auxiliary winding (NA) is an integer value usually chosen to provide a nominal VVDD that satisfies all devices powered from VVDD, such as a gate driver, UCC28782, etc. NA is determined by the following design considerations:
- VVDD must be lower than the maximum rating voltage of VDD pin (VVDD(MAX)) at maximum output voltage and rectifier forward drop (VO(MAX) + VF). VVDD(MAX) is also limited by the lowest voltage rating of any other devices connected to the VDD pin. Use the lower result of the two following options, where applicable.
- For designs with a fixed output voltage or a narrow output range, the maximum Auxiliary winding turns (NA(MAX)) is given by the following equation.
Equation 36. - For designs with wide-output voltage range (such as with USB-PD or PPS or similar) where the boost circuit is likely to be used, leakage inductance may peak-charge the BIN capacitance. The internal boost switch has a maximum rating of 30 V, so a 24-V Zener diode is often used as a clamping device to avoid overstress on BSW. This clamping voltage sets a lower limit on NA(MAX) and is given by the following equation.
Equation 37.
- The nominal VVDD should consider the impact on the stand-by power. Higher VVDD results in a static-loss increase with the total bias current of the devices connected to the VDD pin.
- VVDD should be higher than the 13-V threshold voltage of survival mode (which is the sum of VVDD(OFF) and VVDD(PCT)) at the minimum sustained output voltage (VO(MIN)). ΔV here represents the voltage difference between the nominal VVDD and the survival-mode threshold. A minimum of 3 V is a recommended design margin for ΔV.
Equation 38.
NA(MIN) must also accommodate the highest VVDD(OFF) threshold of other devices powered by VDD, if any. Select an integer value for NA between the lowest NA(MAX) and the highest NA(MIN) with consideration of #2. For best performance, design the DC resistance of the auxiliary winding to be < 0.1 Ω.