High-Voltage Single-Ended Converter

March 3, 2004
Expanding its power management portfolio, National Semiconductor Corp.’s new high-voltage, single-ended converter contains all the functions required to implement control, drive and regulation in flyback and forward power supplies. Packaged in a tiny (4 ...

Expanding its power management portfolio, National Semiconductor Corp.’s new high-voltage, single-ended converter contains all the functions required to implement control, drive and regulation in flyback and forward power supplies.

Packaged in a tiny (4 mm × 4 mm), thermally enhanced chip-scale package, this device integrates a 100-V start-up bias regulator, a current-mode PWM controller, 1.5-A power MOSFET driver and precision high-frequency control circuitry, making it a compact and efficient solution for many Power-over-Ethernet (PoE) powered device (PD) applications. It’s also an ideal bias supply controller for 42-V automotive, 36-V industrial power bus and high-availability distributed power systems in 48-V communications equipment, such as central office switches, routers and DSL access multiplexers.

National’s LM5020 is offered as a high-voltage (up to 100 V) single-ended converter controller that will complement the recently launched LM5030 push-pull controller.

The high-speed LM5020 controller provides total propagation delays less than 100 ns and a 1-MHz-capable oscillator that is programmed with a single resistor. The level of integration and innovative technology in National’s LM5020 differentiates it from competitors’ products:

  • Wide-range, 15-V to 100-V, start-up bias regulator

  • High-speed, 1.5-A peak power MOSFET driver

  • User-programmable line undervoltage lockout (UVLO) with hysteresis

  • Tiny, 10-pin MSOP or 10-pin thermally enhanced LLP chip-scale package

Additional features of the LM5020 include error amplifier, precision reference, cycle-by-cycle current limit, internal slope compensation, programmable soft-start, oscillator synchronization capability and thermal shutdown. Customers will benefit from reduced component count, high-speed performance, elimination of the external start-up regulator, power on sequencing, minimized start-up surge currents and the capability to synchronize the oscillator while eliminating interference.

For more information, visit www.national.com.

Sponsored Recommendations

Comments

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Electronic Design, create an account today!