RT6207A/B
potentially cause large, damaging voltage spikes at VIN.
If this phenomenon is observed, some bulk input
capacitance may be required. Ceramic capacitors (to meet
the RMS current requirement) can be placed in parallel
with other types such as tantalum, electrolytic, or polymer
(to reduce ringing and overshoot).
Output Transient Undershoot and Overshoot
In addition to voltage ripple at the switching frequency,
the output capacitor and its ESR also affect the voltage
sag (undershoot) and soar (overshoot) when the load steps
up and down abruptly. The ACOT transient response is
very quick and output transients are usually small.
Choose capacitors rated at higher temperatures than
required. Several ceramic capacitors may be paralleled to
meet the RMS current, size, and height requirements of
the application. The typical operating circuit uses two 10μF
and one 0.1μF low ESR ceramic capacitors on the input.
However, the combination of small ceramic output
capacitors (with little capacitance), low output voltages
(with little stored charge in the output capacitors), and
low duty cycle applications (which require high inductance
to get reasonable ripple currents with high input voltages)
increases the size of voltage variations in response to
very quick load changes. Typically, load changes occur
slowly with respect to the IC's 650kHz switching frequency.
Output Capacitor Selection
The RT6207A/B are optimized for ceramic output
capacitors and best performance will be obtained using
them. The total output capacitance value is usually
determined by the desired output voltage ripple level and
transient response requirements for sag (undershoot on
positive load steps) and soar (overshoot on negative load
steps).
But some modern digital loads can exhibit nearly
instantaneous load changes and the following section
shows how to calculate the worst-case voltage swings in
response to very fast load steps.
The output voltage transient undershoot and overshoot each
have two components : the voltage steps caused by the
output capacitor's ESR, and the voltage sag and soar due
Output Ripple
Output ripple at the switching frequency is caused by the
inductor current ripple and its effect on the output
capacitor's ESR and stored charge. These two ripple
components are called ESR ripple and capacitive ripple.
Since ceramic capacitors have extremely low ESR and
relatively little capacitance, both components are similar
in amplitude and both should be considered if ripple is
critical.
to the finite output capacitance and the inductor current
slew rate. Use the following formulas to check if the ESR
is low enough (typically not a problem with ceramic
capacitors) and the output capacitance is large enough to
prevent excessive sag and soar on very fast load step
edges, with the chosen inductor value.
The amplitude of the ESR step up or down is a function of
the load step and the ESR of the output capacitor :
VRIPPLE = VRIPPLE(ESR) VRIPPLE(C)
VRIPPLE(ESR) = IL RESR
VESR _STEP = ΔIOUT x RESR
The amplitude of the capacitive sag is a function of the
load step, the output capacitor value, the inductor value,
the input-to-output voltage differential, and the maximum
duty cycle. The maximum duty cycle during a fast transient
is a function of the on-time and the minimum off-time since
the ACOTTM control scheme will ramp the current using
on-times spaced apart with minimum off-times, which is
as fast as allowed. Calculate the approximate on-time
(neglecting parasites) and maximum duty cycle for a given
input and output voltage as :
I
OUT
L
V
=
RIPPLE(C)
8C
f
SW
For the Typical Operating Circuit for 1.2V output and an
inductor ripple of 0.923A, with 3 x 22μF output capacitance
each with about 5mΩ ESR including PCB trace resistance,
the output voltage ripple components are :
VRIPPLE(ESR) = 0.923A5m = 4.615mV
0.923A
V
=
= 2.689mV
RIPPLE(C)
866μF650kHz
VRIPPLE = 4.615mV+2.689mV = 7.304mV
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16
DS6207A/B-02 December 2015