SLUP409B April 2022 – April 2024 TPS543320 , TPS543620 , TPS543820 , TPS62913 , TPS62916
The next set of modifications inserts another stage of output filtering. Our first example creates a second-stage filter with a feedthrough capacitor. Figure 17 shows the modified schematic, with a red box indicating the location of the feedthrough capacitor. This modification includes moving one of the 22-µF ceramic capacitors (originally placed near the inductor) after the feedthrough capacitor to maximize capacitance at the load. Connecting the feedback for the TPS543620 control loop after the feedthrough capacitor offers the best output regulation.
A feedthrough capacitor is a three-terminal ceramic capacitor designed to give low equivalent series inductance (ESL). Reducing the ESL results in low impedance across a wider range of frequencies than a conventional ceramic capacitor.
Figure 18 shows what feedthrough capacitors look like. There is an input terminal, an output terminal and a ground terminal in the middle. This terminal configuration results in low ESL.
Figure 19 shows the impedance of a 27-µF feedthrough capacitor compared to a conventional 22-µF capacitor. This comparison offers three important observations:
These three effects combined result in less than one-tenth the impedance of the conventional ceramic capacitor above 2MHz.
Figure 20, Figure 21 and Figure 22 show the results of adding the feedthrough capacitor. The improved filtering across the entire frequency range is clearly visible in the output ripple. The total ripple, including the high-frequency switching noise, is less than 10mVp-p. Adding the feedthrough capacitor slightly improves the transient response because there is more capacitance on the output.
Figure 22 clearly shows significant reductions in the peaks at each frequency. The reduction of ripple at the 1-MHz fundamental, however, is only approximately one-half, because as Figure 19 shows, the feedthrough capacitors have about the same impedance as the conventional capacitor at 1MHz. Even though the impedance to ground is about the same, the feedthrough capacitor does still provide some additional attenuation at 1MHz because it is inserted in series with the output.
Feedthrough capacitors are an effective and simple way to achieve very low ripple, but they have potentially significant trade-offs: