SNVA962 December 2020 TPSM5601R5H
Stability is an important factor in the system when adding more output capacitance. The guideline for a stable design is a desired phase margin of at least 45°. In extreme conditions too much output capacitance added to the system results in a lowered bandwidth and phase margin less than 45°. Table 4-1 shows the phase margin for each output voltage selection measured from the original BOM (COUT = 2 × 4.7 µF) of the TPSM5601R5HEVM.
VIN (V) | VOUT (V) | IOUT (A) | Fcrossover (kHz) | Phase Margin (°) |
---|---|---|---|---|
24 | –2.5 | 1.35 | 19.13 | 54.4 |
24 | –3.3 | 1.3 | 19.03 | 57.0 |
24 | –5 | 1.24 | 18.15 | 54.7 |
24 | –12 | 1.0 | 13.90 | 54.3 |
24 | –15 | 0.92 | 12.22 | 53.7 |
Additionally, too much output capacitance can falsely trigger hiccup-mode in the TPSM5601R5H. After start-up, hiccup mode is a feature in the module that protects the device against output short-circuit conditions. In this mode the high-side and low-side MOSFETs power off and wait for a fixed hiccup time interval before restarting the device operation. Larger output capacitance results a longer charge time of the capacitors to meet the desired output voltage. The device can see this as a false short circuit condition and trigger hiccup mode.