[Technology Report]
New Techniques Enhance Efficiency Across All Loads
Governments around the world are moving from voluntary to mandatory power-supply efficiency efforts. Challenges may lie ahead, but designers now have methods to cope with them.
Don Tuite
ED Online ID #18321
March 13, 2008
Copyright © 2006 Penton Media, Inc., All rights reserved. Printing of this document is for personal use only.
Reprints
Engineers who design products that plug
into the ac mains face upcoming efficiency
mandates that will make power-supply
design tougher—and, one hopes, more
lucrative. To some extent, the same is true
for designers of portable equipment, as
consumers get used to ever more powerdraining
features while simultaneously
demanding equal or longer battery life.
Back in the 1990s, the Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) created a voluntary labeling program called Energy
Star, which only addressed sleep mode. It was a first step, but
since it was voluntary and ignored operational efficiency, it had
modest impact.
Focusing on operational efficiency in personal computers,
Ecos Consulting partnered with a group of electric utilities to
create another voluntary program called 80 Plus. The name
of the program signifies a requirement for 80% or better efficiency
at 20%, 50%, and 100% of rated load, plus a power factor
greater than 0.9 at rated load.
Manufacturers of desktop computers and desktop-derived
servers earn $5 and $10 rebates, respectively, for every unit with
a certified power supply sold in participating utilities’ territories.
Also, even though 80 Plus is voluntary, U.S. government
agencies will pay a premium for 80 Plus-qualified computers.
In the past, efficiency curves tended to show a pronounced
hump at slightly less than maximum design load, with a severe
droop—even down as far as 40% or 50%—at low current
demands. Yet many applications spend days just idling and
far less time drawing peak power. The 80 Plus initiative aims
at reducing total wasted watt-hours, not just optimizing efficiency
at one point on the curve. Figure 1 demonstrates the
kind of success that is possible.
Last July, the EPA incorporated 80
Plus into a revised Energy Star computer
specification. The EPA also revised
the Energy Star specification for laptop
adapters, mobile phones, printers, scanners,
digital cameras, and other appliances.
Similar programs that harmonized
with Energy Star exist in other countries,
including Japan, China, and the nations
of the European Union.
Although these programs are still
voluntary, the U.S. and other countries are considering mandatory standards for power-supply efficiency.
For example, the Energy Policy and Conservation Act
(EPCA) directed the U.S. Department of Energy to determine
by August 8, 2008 whether energy conservation standards shall
be developed for battery chargers and external power supplies.
Meanwhile, the California Energy Commission’s mandatory
Appliance Efficiency Regulations (CEC-400) include new
Energy Star requirements for external power supplies. And
that’s where the bite comes. Nobody would consider building
a new electronic product they couldn’t sell (or even warehouse)
in California, yet that’s what’s exacted by CEC-400.
Paralleling global efficiency requirements are mandated
limits on power factor—effectively the harmonics of switching-
regulator frequencies placed on utility lines. “Crossing
the threshold of 75 W input has significant consequences. In
effect, 75 W is the power threshold beyond which EU regulation
(IEC1000-3-2) for the reduction
of harmonic currents applies to class D
electrical equipments,” explains the reference
design notes from a few years ago
for an ON Semiconductor notebook acdc
adapter.
The notes also state that “notebook
adapters are classified under class D.
This regulation stipulates the maximum
level of harmonic currents that class D
equipment can inject on the mains ac
line. The IEC1000-3-2 regulation is currently mandatory in Europe and Japan.
In a sense, the mobile/global nature of the
notebook adapters make them the first
mass-market power supply to fall under
the IEC1000-3-2 target.”
THE ENGINEERING PROBLEM
Turning f rom regulation to design
approaches that meet those regulations,
consider the drags on efficiency in a basic
step-down (buck) voltage regulator. Allowing
for circuit differences, there are parallels
in all switching-regulator topologies.
In a basic, non-synchronous buck-regulator
circuit, the forward-voltage drop
across the low-side rectifier diode is in series with the output voltage,
so its losses seriously impact efficiency (Fig. 2). “Even at 3.3 V,
rectifier loss is significant,” points out Maxim Appnote AN652.
“For step-down regulators with a 3.3-V output and a 12-V
battery input, the 0.4-V forward voltage of a Schottky diode represents
a typical efficiency penalty of about 12%, aside from other
loss mechanisms,” the note says. The situation only gets worse at
the lower regulator output voltages required by the latest processors
and FPGAs.
Synchronous rectification—essentially replacing the diode
with a switch, usually another MOSFET—improves powerconversion
efficiency. Appnote AN652 goes on to say that “For
an input voltage of 7.2 V and an output of 3.3 V, a synchronous
rectifier improves on the Schottky diode rectifier’s efficiency by
around 4%.”
Continue to page 2
Explicitly, as output voltages shrink to match the needs of
smaller-geometry ICs, the voltage drop across RDS(ON) becomes
more and more significant. In addition, the power needed to drive
the MOSFET gate cancels out some of the efficiency gained from
a reduced forward-voltage drop.
Another efficiency limitation arises from dead-time delay,
inserted by the synchronous controller to prevent “shootthrough,”
or the switching overlap of the high-side and low-side
MOSFETs that could have both conducting simultaneously.
During this dead time, the low-side MOSFET’s parasitic body
diode would generally act as a clamp on the negative inductor
voltage swing.
However, the body diode is lossy and slow to turn off, which
could result in a 1% to 2% efficiency penalty. Therefore, some
designers parallel the lower MOSFET with a Schottky diode,
which turns on at a lower voltage than the body diode.
Even with that kind of design, conduction losses during the
dead time can become significant at high switching frequencies
and especially at light loads. When load current is light, the current
in the switching supply’s inductor discharges to zero. In that
case, the power-supply designer has several options.
From a simplicity standpoint, it’s attractive to drive the lower
MOSFET gate with the complement of the signal on the upper
MOSFET’s gate. Alternatively, the switching controller could
continue to hold the synchronous switch on until the beginning
of the next cycle.
In that case, when the inductor current would start to flow in
the reverse direction, the regulator’s controller could sense the
inductor current’s zero crossing in each cycle. Then it either shuts
off the synchronous rectifier or simply disables the synchronous
rectifier at light loads.
Many advantages are possible when holding the synchronous
switch off until the beginning of the next cycle. But there’s also
at least one drawback in terms of efficiency. When the inductor
current reverses, the synchronous rectifier pulls current from
the output, storing the energy in the input bypass capacitor and
replacing the lost output energy during the next half cycle. This
dissipates power in all of the circuit’s parasitic resistances and
switching inefficiencies.
One workaround has been pulse-skipping. The supply reverts
to non-synchronous operation, with the Schottky doing the commutation.
That re-introduces the diode drop as a drag on efficiency.
The most efficient approach—and the most complex in
terms of design—uses zero-crossing detection, or “valley control”
(explained below).
Those are some of the essential limitations of older designs
and some traditional ways of dealing with them. Next, let’s look
at some of the most recent power-supply products that attempt
to flatten the efficiency curve across all load regimes—and largely
succeed in doing so.
POWER INTEGRATIONS
One of the companies longest associated with power-supply efficiency,
Power Integrations, introduced its EcoSmart technology in
2002 as part of its LinkSwitch LNK501, a 3-W constant-voltage/
constant-current (CV/CC) ac-dc switcher for portable devices.
This development illustrated some new thinking (Fig. 3).
Traditional switching supplies placed the switching element
on the low side of the transformer. But the LNK501 places it on
the high side. Referencing the IC to the rectified dc input made
it possible to derive all feedback information for an approximate
constant-voltage and constant-current operation from the primary-
side clamp circuit. Removing the sense resistor, along with the
rest of the secondary-side current-sense circuit, cut secondary loss
and increased efficiency by about 10%.
After a bootstrapping startup, the primary-side leakage inductance
clamp (D5 and C4) provides power for the LNK501. The clamp is also the source for feedback
information—that is, the voltage developed
across C4 is an approximate representation
of the output voltage transformed through
the transformer turns ratio. Resistor R1
converts this reflected voltage to a current
that’s applied to the IC’s control pin.
The operating modes are discontinuous
flyback with voltage-mode control for the
constant-voltage portion and current-limit
operation for the constant-current portion
of the output characteristic. Once the output
voltage reaches regulation, control of
the output transitions to constant voltage.
If the output load increases beyond the peak
power point and the output voltage falls,
the reduced control-pin current lowers the
internal current limit, providing an approximate
constant-current output characteristic.
Continue to page 3
Under normal load conditions, when the
control current exceeds a predetermined
value, the duty cycle is controlled, providing
an approximate constant-voltage characteristic. For light-load/
no-load conditions, when the duty cycle drops below 3%, the
switching frequency is reduced to cut energy consumption.
With that CV/CC output characteristic, the flyback transformer
is always in discontinuous current mode (DCM). DCM
is another way of saying that current, and thus the magnetic field
in the coil, may reach or cross zero. With DCM, all of the energy
is delivered to the load during the MOSFET off time for each
switching cycle. (In continuous-current mode, current and the
magnetic field never reach zero.)
Over the years since it introduced the LNK501, Power Integrations
has made the improvement of power efficiency across
all ranges of power output and load conditions into a crusade.
Last year, the company upgraded its higher-power (48 W sans
heatsink, 150 W with heatsink) TOPSwitch ac-dc line with the
HX series. The TOPSwitch HX chips are monolithic ICs that
integrate a 700-V power MOSFET with a controller and supervisory
functions.
No-load power consumption for HX parts is less than 200 mW.
At higher loads, high efficiency is achieved via a multimode control
scheme. At high loads, the chips use a fixed-frequency pulsewidth-
modulation (PWM) control technique. As load decreases,
the controller transitions to a variable-frequency mode and then
to a lower fixed-frequency PWM mode that avoids audible frequencies.
At very low loads, the controller transitions into a cycleskipping
mode that delivers maximum power to the output for
1-W input and consumes very little power in standby.
TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
Texas Instruments’ portfolio of switch-mode regulators is too broad to cover completely. Some of TI’s buck converters, such as
the TPS51117, approach low-load efficiency by varying switching
frequency. “If auto-skip mode is selected, the TPS51117
automatically reduces the switching frequency during a light load condition to maintain high efficiency,” says
the TPS51117’s data sheet.
“As the output current decreases from a
heavy load condition, the inductor current
is also reduced and eventually comes to the
point that its valley touches zero current,
which is the boundary between continuous
conduction and discontinuous conduction
modes. The rectifying MOSFET is
turned off when this zero inductor current
is detected,” it continues.
“Since the output voltage is still higher
than the reference at this moment, both
high-side and low-side MOSFETs are
turned off and wait for the next cycle. As
the load current decreases further, the converter
runs in discontinuous conduction
mode, taking longer time to discharge the
output capacitor below the reference voltage.
Note the ON time is kept the same
as during the heavy load condition,” the
datasheet says.
“In reverse, when the output current increases from a light load
to a heavy load, the switching frequency increases to the preset
value as the inductor current reaches... continuous conduction,”
it concludes.
Another chip, TI’s eight-pin UCC28600 quasi-resonant, flyback
green-mode controller, incorporates three control modes:
quasi-resonant/DCM mode, frequency-foldback mode, and
“green mode.” Quasi-resonant (QR) and DCM operation occur
for high loads, since the rising edge of the gate drive to the switching
MOSFET always occurs at the valley of the resonant ring
after demagnetization (resonant valley switching).
Resonant valley switching is also imposed at maximum switching
frequency. In frequency-foldback mode, the voltage-controlled
oscillator is restricted to 40 to 130 kHz. At the lightest
loads, green mode maintains the oscillator at 40 kHz, and switching
enters a hysteretic “burst” or “hiccup” state.
NATIONAL SEMICONDUCTOR
National Semicondcutor’s LM26480 embodies its own forms of
synchronous switching frequency control in a multi-output controller.
It contains two high-current, step-down dc-dc converters
and a pair of linear regulators. The chips are for portable systems
running off lithium-ion batteries.
One of the buck regulators can provide any voltage between 0.8
and 2.0 V at up to 1.5 A. The other supports 1.0- to 3.3-V output
levels, also up to 1.5 A. The low-dropout regulators (LDOs) can
be set to output between 1.0 and 3.5 V, with ±3% accuracy at up to
300 mA with 25-mV (typical) dropout.
Continue to page 4
The switching regulator efficiency across the load range is
remarkably flat (Fig. 4). There are three modes of operation:
PWM, pulse-frequency modulation (PFM), and shutdown.
PWM is for loads of approximately 70 mA or higher. Lighter
loads cause the device to automatically switch into PFM. That
cuts the IC’s quiescent current to around 15 µA.
Each buck converter has a switching
P-channel FET and a synchronous rectifying
N-channel FET. During PWM
operation, the converter operates as a voltage-
mode controller with input-voltage
feed-forward.
At very light loads, PFM mode means
reduced switching frequency and supply
current. The transition occurs if either the
inductor current becomes discontinuous
or if the peak P-channel switch current
drops below a certain level, roughly 66 mA
+ VIN/160 O.
Here’s the interesting part. During PFM
operation, the converter positions the output
voltage slightly higher than the nominal
output voltage during PWM operation.
This allows more headroom for voltage
drop during a load transient from light to
heavy load.
Explicitly, the controller monitors the
output voltage and controls the switching
of the output FETs so that the output voltage
ramps between 0.8% and 1.6% (typical) above the nominal PWM output voltage. If
the output voltage is below the “high” PFM
comparator threshold, the P-channel MOS
power switch turns on.
It remains on until the output voltage
exceeds the “high” PFM threshold or the
peak current exceeds another preset level,
this time roughly 66 mA + VIN/80 O.
Once the P-channel MOS power switch
is turned off, the N-channel MOS power
switch turns on until the inductor current
ramps to zero.
Now for the power savings. Once that
N-channel MOS zero-current condition
is detected, that switch is turned off. If the
output voltage falls below the “high” PFM
comparator threshold, the P-channel MOS
switch is again turned on and the cycle
repeats until the output reaches the desired
level. Once the output reaches the “high”
PFM threshold, the N-channel MOS switch
is turned on briefly to ramp the inductor current
to zero. Then, both output switches are
turned off and the part enters an extremely
low power mode.
The quiescent supply current during
this “sleep” mode is less than 30 µA. When
the output drops below the “low” PFM threshold, the cycle repeats to restore the
output voltage to roughly 1.6% above
the nominal PWM output voltage. If the
load current increases during PFM mode,
causing the output voltage to fall below
the “low2” PFM threshold, the part transitions
into fixed-frequency PWM mode.
ZILKER LABS
Consider Zilker Labs’ ZL2004 and
ZL2006 point-of-load (POL) regulators,
introduced last January. Following on the
company’s first product, the ZL2005, they
combine a number of circuit techniques
to maximize efficiency across the parts’ load ranges. The ZL2006 integrates 3-A
MOSFET drivers that can support loads
in excess of 40 A, and there’s no need for
an external driver. The ZL2004 interfaces
with external driver/MOSFET ICs and
power-train modules.
The ZL2006 and ZL2004 use adaptive
dead-time control, something included in
the earlier ZL2005s. A proprietary technology
dynamically adjusts the transition
times related to turning on and off the synchronous
MOSFETs.
Then there’s a new technique called
“adaptive diode emulation.” As load current
drops, typical synchronous stepdown
converters will begin to sink current to
maintain regulation. This removes energy
from the output capacitor and reduces efficiency.
The Zilker chips detect this transition
point and prevent the lower MOSFET
from turning on.
Continue to page 5
All Zilker chips include a proprietary
bus that allows multiple chips to be synchronized
and operated in parallel (Fig. 5).
Parallel operation helps optimize efficiency
at higher loads, but the higher losses associated
with switching more components
can result in lower efficiency when the load
current is reduced.
The ZL2006 and ZL2004 add the
ability to automatically shed phases in
response to drops in load current. The
dropped phases can then be re-enabled
when the load current is again increased.
And like other chips, the ZL2006 and
ZL2004 can reduce their operating frequency
within a pre-defined range due to
load current changes.
Uniquely, the new Zilker POLs provide
what the company calls adaptive compensation.
It’s necessary to compensate a
regulator’s control loop to get the optimum
tradeoff between fast transient response
and stability across the operating range.
The new chips can dynamically modify the
loop-compensation coefficients in response
to varying load conditions, without a need
for external components to set or vary the
loop compensation.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
For the latest on regulations, I am indebted
to power-industry guru Lazar Rozenblat
for his recent blog at http://smps-power.blogspot.com, “Power Supply Efficiency
Increase: Requirements and Trends.”
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