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Engineers have many options when designing power stages, from low-dropout (LDO) regulators to switching power supplies. The former provide low noise and ripple for sensitive circuit elements, but the latter deliver the efficiency and power density often required to remain competitive in today’s marketplace.
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Unfortunately, switching power supplies require bulky inductors or transformers that typically require shielding, and they can be difficult to fit within the mechanical constraints of your design. In addition, inductors and transformers may be difficult to source. As an alternative, you can choose a power module that integrates the required inductor or transformer within the switching-regulator package.
Power-Module Types
Power modules come in industry-standard leaded and no-lead packages, or they can incorporate Texas Instruments’ embedded microsystem-in-package (µSiP) or new MagPack packaging technologies. Leaded packages include an IC mounted between two copper leadframes with passive components on top. These commonly used packages make layout intuitive, with their visible leads helping to ensure solder integrity while offering about 8 mm of creepage clearance—and they facilitate debug. However, they generally require large amounts of printed-circuit-board real estate.
Alternatives include quad-flat no-lead (QFN) packages, which make connections to a board via flat pads instead of leads. They come in open-frame or overmolded configurations, with the overmolded versions incorporating conventional copper leadframes in thermally enhanced plastic packages.
One example of an overmolded QFN device is TI’s TPSM64406 high-density power module, which accepts a 36-V input and delivers dual outputs of 3 A each or a single output rated at 6 A. This device includes passive components mounted directly on top of the leadframe, offering improved thermal and electrical performance compared with leaded devices.
A good packaging choice for designs with very limited board space is the embedded µSiP, which includes a converter IC integrated within a substrate that has the passive components mounted on top. One such example is TI’s TPSM83100 5.5-V, 1-W buck-boost module. It offers bidirectional current operation, making it suitable for use in battery-backup systems. It comes in a 2.5- × 2.0- × 1.2-mm package (Fig. 1).