Typical Performance Characteristics: continued
0.200
0.175
100.0
90.0
80.0
0.150
70.0
0.125
0.100
0.075
60.0
T
CASE
= 125°C
50.0
40.0
T
CASE
= 25°C
I
= 7A
OUT
(V Ð V
) = 3V
OUT
= 1.6V
PP
IN
T
= 25°C
CASE
30.0
20.0
10.0
0.0
V
RIPPLE
0.050
0.025
0.000
T
= 0°C
CASE
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
1
2
3
4
5
10
10
10
10
10
Output Current (A)
Frequency (Hz)
Load Regulation vs. Output Current
Ripple Rejection vs Frequency
Applications Information
the CS5207-2 linear regulator provides a fixed 1.5V out-
put at currents up to 7A. The regulator is protected
against short circuit, and includes thermal shutdown and
safe area protection (SOA) circuitry. The SOA protection
circuitry decreases the maximum available output current
as the input-output differential voltage increases.
and reduces the instantaneous output voltage drop under
load transient conditions. The output capacitor network
should be as close as possible to the load for the best results.
Protection Diodes
The CS5207-2 has a composite PNP-NPN output transistor
and requires an output capacitor for stability. A detailed
procedure for selecting this capacitor is included in the
Stability Considerations section.
When large external capacitors are used with a linear regu-
lator it is sometimes necessary to add protection diodes. If
the input voltage of the regulator gets shorted, the output
capacitor will discharge into the output of the regulator.
The discharge current depends on the value of the capaci-
tor, the output voltage and the rate at which VIN drops. In
the CS5207-2, the discharge path is through a large junc-
tion and protection diodes are not usually needed. If the
regulator is used with large values of output capacitance
and the input voltage is instantaneously shorted to
ground, damage can occur. In this case, a diode connected
as shown in Figure 1 is recommended.
Stability Considerations
The output or compensation capacitor helps determine
three main characteristics of a linear regulator: start-up
delay, load transient response and loop stability.
The capacitor value and type is based on cost, availability,
size and temperature constraints. A tantalum or aluminum
electrolytic capacitor is best, since a film or ceramic capaci-
tor with almost zero ESR can cause instability. The alu-
minum electrolytic capacitor is the least expensive solu-
tion. However, when the circuit operates at low tempera-
tures, both the value and ESR of the capacitor will vary
considerably. The capacitor manufacturersÕ data sheet pro-
vides this information.
IN4002 (optional)
VIN
VOUT
VOUT
VIN
A 22µF tantalum capacitor will work for most applications,
but with high current regulators such as the CS5207-2 the
transient response and stability improve with higher val-
ues of capacitor. The majority of applications for this regu-
lator involve large changes in load current so the output
capacitor must supply the instantaneous load current.
C1
CS5207-2
C2
Gnd
The ESR of the output capacitor causes an immediate drop
in output voltage given by:
ÆV = ÆI ´ ESR
Figure 1. Protection diode scheme for fixed output regulators.
For microprocessor applications it is customary to use an
output capacitor network consisting of several tantalum and
ceramic capacitors in parallel. This reduces the overall ESR
3