Designing power-management
subsystems, which supply and control
dc power in electronic systems, is much
more complicated now than it was five
years ago. These days, designers must
cope with ICs that operate below 1 V,
may consume over 100 A, and employ
gigahertz clock rates. In addition, such
subsystems involve more than just power-supply design. They also include system-oriented functions that require
application-specific ICs.
A system viewpoint is necessary to
set the stage for the optimum power-management subsystem design (). First,
you've got to select the electronic system's power-distribution technique
().
MEETING THE APPLICATION
REQUIREMENTS
Once the power-distribution system is selected, the
actual subsystem design starts—with
the power supplies. This requires the
designer to look at the application's
power-supply specifications ().
Except for battery-based systems,
the designer can either make or buy
power supplies and supporting circuits. Making power supplies in-house
has its own design tradeoffs, such as
whether or not to design a switching or
linear regulator.
SWITCHING REGULATORS
A
switching regulator converts a dc input
to a switched voltage controlling a power semiconductor switch, whose output
is rectified and filtered to produce a dc
output. If the output voltage tends to
change, voltage feedback maintains
the proper regulated voltage.
Switching regulators can be self-contained on one
chip or use multiple chips. The single-chip switching
regulator integrates either a bipolar junction transistor
(BJT) or MOSFET power switch. Multiple-chip switching
regulators employ a controller, gate drivers, and MOSFETs. Typically, the switching frequency falls within the
60-kHz to 3-MHz range.
Switching frequency determines the physical size and
value of filter inductors, capacitors, and transformers.
Higher switching frequencies allow for external components with smaller physical size and lower component
values. To optimize efficiency, transformer/inductor core material must operate efficiently at the switching frequency.
Switching voltage regulators may be
isolated or non-isolated. Non-isolated regulators have a dc path from input to output. An isolated regulator employs a
transformer that isolates the input and
output voltage.
Layout is important for all switching
power supplies, especially with high peak
currents and high switching frequencies.
Therefore, use wide and short traces for
the main current path and power ground
tracks. Associated capacitors and inductors should be located as close as possible to the regulator IC.
compares the characteristics
of the three basic switching-regulator
controller IC techniques: pulse-width
modulation (PWM) (), hysteretic (), and multiphase (). These techniques control the
associated power-semiconductor switch
to turn ON and OFF to maintain voltage
regulation.
compares the characteristics
of the low-dropout (LDO) regulator IC and
the basic charge-pump (switched-capacitor) IC. These regulators don't turn a power-semiconductor switch ON and OFF ().
APPLICATION-SPECIFIC POWER-MANAGEMENT ICS
Because electronic systems have grown in complexity
and sophistication, several application-specific IC types are used in power-management subsystems (). These ICs
are also used to design general-purpose
power supplies ().
POWER-SEMICONDUCTOR SWITCHES
Power semiconductors used in
power-management systems include
power MOSFETs and BJTs. Both can be
discrete devices or integrated with other
circuits in a single package. They employ
either internal or external gate drivers to
turn them ON and OFF.
Power switching results in some power loss as the
switch applies and removes power to a load. These power
switches exhibit some delay when turning ON and OFF,
causing power loss when the switch goes through the linear region between ON and OFF. There's an I2R power
loss when the switch turns ON because semiconductor
switches have a finite on-resistance. Although drain current is low when they turn off, there can be a slight power
loss because they have a finite off-resistance. That power
loss ultimately affects a power supply's efficiency.