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ADP3159JRUADN/a7avai4-Bit Programmable Synchronous Buck Controllers


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ADP3159JRU
4-Bit Programmable Synchronous Buck Controllers
REV.A
4-Bit Programmable
Synchronous Buck Controllers
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
DRVH
LRDRV2
LRFB2
LRFB1
LRDRV1
COMP
DRVL
CS–
CS+
VCCCT
GND
VID3VID2VID1VID0
PWRGD
FEATURES
Optimally Compensated Active Voltage Positioning
with Gain and Offset Adjustment (ADOPT™) for
Superior Load Transient Response
Complies with VRM 8.4 Specifications with Lowest
System Cost
4-Bit Digitally Programmable 1.3 V to 2.05 V Output
N-Channel Synchronous Buck Driver
Two On-Board Linear Regulator Controllers
Total Accuracy �0.8% Over Temperature
High Efficiency Current-Mode Operation
Short Circuit Protection
Power Good Output
Overvoltage Protection Crowbar Protects Micro-
processors with No Additional External Components
APPLICATIONS
Core Supply Voltage Generation for:
Intel Pentium® III
Intel Celeron™
GENERAL DESCRIPTION

The ADP3159 and ADP3179 are highly efficient output syn-
chronous buck switching regulator controllers optimized for
converting a 5 V main supply into the core supply voltage
required by high-performance processors. These devices use an
internal 4-bit DAC to read a voltage identification (VID) code
directly from the processor, which is used to set the output
voltage between 1.3 V and 2.05 V. They use a current mode,
constant off-time architecture to drive two N-channel
MOSFETs at a programmable switching frequency that can be
optimized for regulator size and efficiency.
The ADP3159 and ADP3179 also use a unique supplemental
regulation technique called Analog Devices Optimal Position-
ing Technology (ADOPT) to enhance load transient
performance. Active voltage positioning results in a dc/dc con-
verter that meets the stringent output voltage specifications
for high-performance processors, with the minimum number
of output capacitors and smallest footprint. Unlike voltage-
mode and standard current-mode architectures, active voltage
positioning adjusts the output voltage as a function of the load
current so it is always optimally positioned for a system tran-
sient. The devices also provide accurate and reliable short
circuit protection and adjustable current limiting. They also
include an integrated overvoltage crowbar function to protect
the microprocessor from destruction in case the core supply
exceeds the nominal programmed voltage by more than 20%.
The ADP3159 and ADP3179 contain two fixed-output volt-
age linear regulator controllers that are designed to drive
external N-channel MOSFETs. The outputs are internally
fixed at 2.5 V and 1.8 V in the ADP3159, while the ADP3179
provides adjustable output, which is set using an external
resistor divider. These linear regulators are used to generate
the auxiliary voltages (AGP, GTL, etc.) required in most moth-
erboard designs, and have been designed to provide a high
bandwidth load-transient response.
The ADP3159 and ADP3179 are specified over the commercial
temperature range of 0°C to 70°C and are available in a 20-lead
TSSOP package.
ADOPT is a trademark of Analog Devices, Inc.
Pentium is a registered trademark of Intel Corporation.
Celeron is a trademark of Intel Corporation.
ADP3159/ADP3179–SPECIFICATIONS1(VCC = 12 V, TA = 0�C to 70�C, unless otherwise noted.)
OSCILLATOR
SUPPLY
NOTES
CAUTION
ESD (electrostatic discharge) sensitive device. Electrostatic charges as high as 4000V readily
ORDERING GUIDE
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS*

VCC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . –0.3 V to +15 V
DRVH, DRVL, LRDRV1, LRDRV2 . . . . –0.3 V to VCC + 0.3 V
All Other Inputs and Outputs . . . . . . . . . . . .–0.3 V to +10 V
Operating Ambient Temperature Range . . . . . . . 0°C to 70°C
Operating Junction Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 125°C
Storage Temperature Range . . . . . . . . . . . .–65°C to +150°C
θJA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .143°C/W
Lead Temperature (Soldering, 10 sec) . . . . . . . . . . . . 300°C
Vapor Phase (60 sec) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 215°C
Infrared (15 sec) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 220°C
*This is a stress rating only; operation beyond these limits can cause the device to
be permanently damaged. Unless otherwise specified, all voltages are referenced
to GND.
PIN FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS
PIN CONFIGURATION
RU-20
ADP3159/ADP3179–Typical Performance Characteristics
SUPPLY CURRENT
mA100200300400500600700800
OSCILLATOR FREQUENCY – kHz

TPC 1.Supply Current vs. Operating Frequency Using
MOSFETs of Figure 3
TPC 2.Gate Switching Waveforms Using MOSFETs of
Figure 3
TPC 4.Power-On Start-Up Waveform
NUMBER OF PARTS
OUTPUT ACCURACY – % of Nominal0.5

TPC 5.Output Accuracy Distribution
Figure 1.Closed Loop Output Voltage Accuracy
Test Circuit
Figure 2.Linear Regulator Output Voltage Accuracy
Test Circuit
THEORY OF OPERATION

The ADP3159 and ADP3179 use a current-mode, constant
off-time control technique to switch a pair of external N-channel
MOSFETs in a synchronous buck topology. Constant off-time
operation offers several performance advantages, including that no
slope compensation is required for stable operation. A unique
feature of the constant off-time control technique is that since
the off-time is fixed, the converter’s switching frequency is a
function of the ratio of input voltage to output voltage. The fixed
off-time is programmed by the value of an external capacitor
connected to the CT pin. The on-time varies in such a way
that a regulated output voltage is maintained as described below
in the cycle-by-cycle operation. The on-time does not vary under
fixed input supply conditions, and it varies only slightly as a func-
tion of load. This means that the switching frequency remains
fairly constant in a standard computer application.
Active Voltage Positioning

The output voltage is sensed at the CS– pin. A voltage error
amplifier, (gm), amplifies the difference between the output
voltage and a programmable reference voltage. The reference
Analog Devices Optimal Positioning Technology (ADOPT)
adjusts the output voltage as a function of the load current so
that it is always optimally positioned for a load transient. Stan-
dard (passive) voltage positioning, sometimes recommended for
use with other architectures, has poor dynamic performance
which renders it ineffective under the stringent repetitive tran-
sient conditions specified in Intel VRM documents. Consequently,
such techniques do not allow the minimum possible number of
output capacitors to be used. ADOPT, as used in the ADP3159
and ADP3179, provides a bandwidth for transient response that
is limited only by parasitic output inductance. This yields opti-
mal load transient response with the minimum number of
output capacitors.
Cycle-by-Cycle Operation

During normal operation (when the output voltage is regulated),
the voltage error amplifier and the current comparator are the
main control elements. During the on-time of the high-side
MOSFET, the current comparator monitors the voltage between
the CS+ and CS– pins. When the voltage level between the two
pins reaches the threshold level, the DRVH output is switched to
ground, which turns off the high-side MOSFET. The timing
capacitor CT is then charged at a rate determined by the off-time
controller. While the timing capacitor is charging, the DRVL
output goes high, turning on the low-side MOSFET. When the
voltage level on the timing capacitor has charged to the upper
threshold voltage level, a comparator resets a latch. The output
of the latch forces the low-side drive output to go low and the
high-side drive output to go high. As a result, the low-side switch
is turned off and the high-side switch is turned on. The sequence
is then repeated. As the load current increases, the output volt-
age starts to decrease. This causes an increase in the output of
the voltage-error amplifier, which, in turn, leads to an increase
in the current comparator threshold, thus tracking the load current. To
prevent cross conduction of the external MOSFETs, feedback is
incorporated to sense the state of the driver output pins. Before
the low-side drive output can go high, the high-side drive output
must be low. Likewise, the high-side drive output is unable to
go high while the low-side drive output is high.
Power Good

The ADP3159 has an internal monitor that senses the output
voltage and drives the PWRGD pin of the device. This pin is an
open drain output whose high level (when connected to a pull-up
resistor) indicates that the output voltage has been within a ±20%
regulation band of the targeted value for more than 500 ms. The
PWRGD pin will go low if the output is outside the regulation
band for more than 500 ms.
Output Crowbar

An added feature of using an N-channel MOSFET as the syn-
chronous switch is the ability to crowbar the output with the same
MOSFET. If the output voltage is 20% greater than the targeted
value, the controller IC will turn on the lower MOSFET,
which will current-limit the source power supply or blow its fuse,
pull down the output voltage, and thus save the microprocessor
from destruction. The crowbar function releases at approximately
50% of the nominal output voltage. For example, if the output
is programmed to 1.5 V, but is pulled up to 1.85 V or above, the
crowbar will turn on the lower MOSFET. If in this case the output
ADP3159/ADP3179
On-board Linear Regulator Controllers

The ADP3159 and ADP3179 include two linear regulator controllers
to provide a low cost solution for generating additional supply rails.
In the ADP3159, these regulators are internally set to 2.5 V (LR1)
and 1.8 V (LR2) with ±2.5% accuracy. The ADP3179 is designed
to allow the outputs to be set externally using a resistor divider.
The output voltage is sensed by the high input impedance LRFB(x)
pin and compared to an internal fixed reference.
The LRDRV(x) pin controls the gate of an external N-channel
MOSFET resulting in a negative feedback loop. The only addi-
tional components required are a capacitor and resistor for
stability. Higher output voltages can be generated by placing
a resistor divider between the linear regulator output and its
respective LRFB pin. The maximum output load current is
determined by the size and thermal impedance of the external
power MOSFET that is placed in series with the supply and
controlled by the ADP3159.
The linear regulator controllers have been designed so that they
remain active even when the switching controller is in UVLO
mode to ensure that the output voltages of the linear regulators
will track the 3.3 V supply as required by Intel design specifica-
tions. By diode ORing the VCC input of the IC to the 5 VSB
and 12 V supplies as shown in Figure 3, the switching output
will be disabled in standby mode, but the linear regulators will
begin conducting once VCC rises above about 1 V. During
Figure 3.15 A Pentium III Application Circuit
start-up the linear outputs will track the 3.3 V supply up until
they reach their respective regulation points, regardless of the
state of the 12 V supply. Once the 12 V supply has exceeded the
5 VSB supply by more than a diode drop, the controller IC
will track the 12 V supply. Once the 12 V supply has risen
above the UVLO value, the switching regulator will begin its
start-up sequence.
Table I. Output Voltage vs. VID Code
APPLICATION INFORMATION
Specifications for a Design Example

The design parameters for a typical 750 MHz Pentium III appli-
cation (shown in Figure 3) are as follows:
Input Voltage: (VIN) = 5 V
Auxiliary Input: (VCC) = 12 V
Output Voltage (VVID) = 1.7 V
Maximum Output Current (IO(MAX)) = 15 A
Minimum Output Current (IO(MIN)) = 1 A
Static tolerance of the supply voltage for the processor core
(∆VO) = +40 mV (–80 mV) = 120 mV
Transient tolerance (for less than 2 µs) of the supply voltage
for the processor core when the load changes between the
minimum and maximum values with a di/dt of 20 A/µs
(∆VO(TRANSIENT)) = +80 mV (–130 mV) = 210 mV
Input current di/dt when the load changes between the mini-
mum and maximum values < 0.1 A/µs.
The above requirements correspond to Intel’s published power
supply requirements based on VRM 8.4 guidelines.
CT Selection for Operating Frequency

The ADP3159 uses a constant off-time architecture with tOFF
determined by an external timing capacitor CT. Each time the
high-side N-channel MOSFET switch turns on, the voltage across
CT is reset to 0 V. During the off-time, CT is discharged by a
constant current of 150 µA. Once CT reaches 3.0V, a new
on-time cycle is initiated. The value of the off-time is calculated
using the continuous-mode operating frequency. Assuming a
nominal operating frequency (fNOM) of 200 kHz at an output
voltage of 1.7 V, the corresponding off-time is:(1)
The timing capacitor can be calculated from the equation:(2)
The converter only operates at the nominal operating frequency
at the above-specified VOUT and at light load. At higher values
of VOUT, or under heavy load, the operating frequency decreases
due to the parasitic voltage drops across the power devices. The
actual minimum frequency at VOUT = 1.7 V is calculated to be
195 kHz (see Equation 3), where:
RDS(ON)HSF is the resistance of the high-side MOSFET
(estimated value: 14 mΩ)
RDS(ON)LSF is the resistance of the low-side MOSFET
(estimated value: 6 mΩ)
RSENSE is the resistance of the sense resistor
(estimated value: 4 mΩ)
RL is the resistance of the inductor
(estimated value: 3 mΩ)
Inductance Selection

The choice of inductance determines the ripple current in the
inductor. Less inductance leads to more ripple current, which
increases the output ripple voltage and the conduction losses in
the MOSFETs, but allows using smaller-size inductors and, for
a specified peak-to-peak transient deviation, output capacitors
with less total capacitance. Conversely, a higher inductance means
lower ripple current and reduced conduction losses, but requires
larger-size inductors and more output capacitance for the same
peak-to-peak transient deviation. The following equation shows
the relationship between the inductance, oscillator frequency,
peak-to-peak ripple current in an inductor and input and
output voltages.(4)
For 4 A peak-to-peak ripple current, which corresponds to
approximately 25% of the 15 A full-load dc current in an induc-
tor, Equation 4 yields an inductance of:
A 1.5 µH inductor can be used, which gives a calculated ripple
current of 3.8 A at no load. The inductor should not saturate at
the peak current of 17 A and should be able to handle the sum
of the power dissipation caused by the average current of 15 A
in the winding and the core loss.
Designing an Inductor

Once the inductance is known, the next step is either to design an
inductor or find a standard inductor that comes as close as
possible to meeting the overall design goals. The first decision
in designing the inductor is to choose the core material. There
are several possibilities for providing low core loss at high frequen-
cies. Two examples are the powder cores (e.g., Kool-Mµ® from
Magnetics, Inc.) and the gapped soft ferrite cores (e.g., 3F3 or 3F4
from Philips). Low frequency powdered iron cores should be
avoided due to their high core loss, especially when the inductor
value is relatively low and the ripple current is high.
Two main core types can be used in this application. Open
magnetic loop types, such as beads, beads on leads, and rods
and slugs, provide lower cost but do not have a focused mag-
netic field in the core. The radiated EMI from the distributed
magnetic field may create problems with noise interference in
the circuitry surrounding the inductor. Closed-loop types, such
as pot cores, PQ, U, and E cores, or toroids, cost more, but
have much better EMI/RFI performance. A good compromise
between price and performance are cores with a toroidal shape.
(3)
ADP3159/ADP3179
There are many useful references for quickly designing a power
inductor. Table II gives some examples.
Table II. Magnetics Design References

Magnetic Designer Software
Intusoft (http://www.intusoft.com)
Designing Magnetic Components for High-Frequency DC-DC
Converters
McLyman, Kg Magnetics
ISBN 1-883107-00-08
Selecting a Standard Inductor

The companies listed in Table III can provide design consul-
tation and deliver power inductors optimized for high power
applications upon request.
Table III.Power Inductor Manufacturers

Coilcraft
(847) 639-6400
http://www.coilcraft.com
Coiltronics
(561) 752-5000
http://www.coiltronics.com
Sumida Electric Company
(408) 982-9660
http://www.sumida.com
COUT Selection—Determining the ESR

The required equivalent series resistance (ESR) and capacitance
drive the selection of the type and quantity of the output capaci-
tors. The ESR must be small enough to contain the voltage
deviation caused by a maximum allowable CPU transient cur-
rent within the specified voltage limits, giving consideration also
to the output ripple and the regulation tolerance. The capaci-
tance must be large enough that the voltage across the capacitor,
which is the sum of the resistive and capacitive voltage deviations,
does not deviate beyond the initial resistive deviation while the
inductor current ramps up or down to the value corresponding
to the new load current. The maximum allowed ESR also repre-
sents the maximum allowed output resistance, ROUT.
The cumulative errors in the output voltage regulation cuts into
the available regulation window, VWIN. When considering dynamic
load regulation this relates directly to the ESR. When consider-
ing dc load regulation, this relates directly to the programmed
output resistance of the power converter.
Some error sources, such as initial voltage accuracy and ripple
voltage, can be directly deducted from the available regulation
window, while other error sources scale proportionally to the
amount of voltage positioning used, which, for an optimal design,
should utilize the maximum that the regulation window will allow.
The error determination is a closed-loop calculation, but it can
be closely approximated. To maintain a conservative design while
avoiding an impractical design, various error sources should
be considered and summed statistically.
The output ripple voltage can be factored into the calculation by
summing the output ripple current with the maximum output
current to determine an effective maximum dynamic current
change. The remaining errors are summed separately according
to the formula:
(5)
where kVID = 0.5% is the initial programmed voltage tolerance
from the graph of TPC 6, kRCS = 2% is the tolerance of the
current sense resistor, kCSF = 10% is the summed tolerance of
the current sense filter components, kRT = 2% is the tolerance of
the two termination resistors added at the COMP pin, and
kEA = 8% accounts for the IC current loop gain tolerance
including the gm tolerance.
The remaining window is then divided by the maximum output
current plus the ripple to determine the maximum allowed ESR
and output resistance:(6)
The output filter capacitor bank must have an ESR of less than
5 mΩ. One can, for example, use five ZA series capacitors from
Rubycon which would give an ESR of 4.8 mΩ. Without ADOPT
voltage positioning, the ESR would need to be less than 3 mΩ,
yielding a 50% increase to eight Rubycon output capacitors.
COUT—Checking the Capacitance

As long as the capacitance of the output capacitor is above a
critical value and the regulating loop is compensated with ADOPT,
the actual value has no influence on the peak-to-peak deviation
of the output voltage to a full step change in the load current.
The critical capacitance can be calculated as follows:(7)
The critical capacitance for the five ZA series Rubycon capaci-
tors is 2.6 mF while the equivalent capacitance is 5 mF. The
capacitance is safely above the critical value.
RSENSE

The value of RSENSE is based on the maximum required output
current. The current comparator of the ADP3159 has a mini-
mum current limit threshold of 69 mV. Note that the 69 mV
value cannot be used for the maximum specified nominal cur-
rent, as headroom is needed for ripple current and tolerances.
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