DC-DC Conversion Without Inductors: Charge Pumps-A General Description
DC-DC Conversion Without Inductors: Charge Pumps-A General Description
DC-DC Conversion Without Inductors: Charge Pumps-A General Description
Maxim > Design Support > Technical Documents > Tutorials > Power-Supply Circuits > APP 725
Keywords: power supply, voltage converter, dc-dc converters, charge pumps, switched capacitor
regulator, regulated charge pump, unregulated charge pump, voltage divider, voltage doubler, regulated
inverter, buck-boost, regulator, charge pump power dissipation
TUTORIAL 725
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Capacitive Voltage-Divider
Consider a circuit designed to divide the input voltage by two and double the output current. It offers
advantages over linear regulators (which usually convert power into heat), and benefits applications that
require a limited output current. A 4mA to 20mA interface, for example, often provides a relatively high
output voltage but a limited preset output current. Other applications include the many op amps and
microcontrollers that now operate with very low supply voltages. In those circuits, dividing the supply
voltage by two theoretically divides the power consumption by four.
The configuration of Figure 2 generates a regulated VOUT (= VIN/2) using the capacitive voltage divider
C3, C4 and C5, C6. By switching the flying capacitor, C2, alternately between upper and lower halves of
this divider, the IC counterbalances any load-dependant voltage differences. The circuit's switching
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frequency is 35kHz and its quiescent current is only 36A. When load currents exceed 1mA, the circuit's
efficiency exceeds 90%. Given very small load currents (i.e., below 100A), however, even this low
36mA quiescent current reduces conversion efficiency. This switched-capacitor configuration provides
both better regulation than a simple resistive voltage-divider, and higher efficiency than that obtained
from a simple combination of a voltage-divider and an op-amp buffer. The IC specification limits VIN to
5.5V maximum.
Figure 2. With the connections shown, this inverting charge-pump IC divides the input voltage by two.
Figure 3. This model of a switched capacitor shows that it behaves like a resistor.
A reservoir capacitor, C2, and load, R L , are connected to VOUT . The charge transmitted per cycle is:
Q = C1(V+ - VOUT )
Which produces a current, I, that depends on the frequency f:
I = fQ = fC1(V+ - VOUT ).
After changing the equation according to Ohm's Law, an equivalent resistance, R ERS, for the switched
capacitor can be calculated as:
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R ERS = 1/fC1
This equation shows that the resistance and, consequently, the resistive losses decrease with increasing
frequency and higher capacitance. Higher capacitance lowers the output resistance only until the
switches' resistance and the capacitors' equivalent series resistance (ESR) exceed R ERS. This internal
loss (switching loss) can be reduced only by choosing low-ESR capacitors. Switch on-resistance can be
lowered through the use of sophisticated new charge pumps.
Switching loss is caused by the voltage difference between the flying capacitor and the output capacitor,
as well as by on-resistance in the switches. This voltage difference appears across the switches, causing
dissipation in the application. As shown before, a switched capacitor behaves like a resistance. Thus,
you can reduce output resistance and increase the output power by connecting several switchedcapacitor devices in parallel.
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Regulated Inverter
Many applications need an additional negative voltage such as -5V. Such a voltage can be generated
with a regulating charge-pump inverter (MAX868) and a few external components (Figure 5). When
charging, the left-side switches close and the right-side switches open. Both flying capacitors are
charged in parallel, and the load is serviced entirely by charge stored in the output capacitor. During
discharge, the switches reconfigure to connect the flying capacitors in series. When connected to the
output capacitor, they then transfer charge as required to maintain output-voltage regulation.
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Figure 5. Internal components illustrate the operation of this regulated charge-pump inverter (MAX868).
The internal oscillator frequency (450kHz) is sufficiently high to ensure small external capacitors and high
output current. Controlled by a comparator, the oscillator becomes active only when the output voltage is
lower than its threshold. This regulation enables the circuit to provide constant output voltages as high as
-2VIN. At the same time, the circuit draws minimum quiescent currents at light loads.
Buck/Boost Combination
Another problem common in battery-powered applications is a battery voltage that ranges above and
below the regulated output voltage. The output voltage of a Li+ cell varies from 3.6V to 1.5V during its
lifetime, before it is recharged. To derive a constant 3.3V from this changing input, a combined
buck/boost converter is required. Initially this device downconverts the full battery voltage (3.6V) to 3.3V.
When the battery voltage drops below 3.3V, the step-up converter function guarantees the regulated
3.3V output voltage.
Though usually complicated, this approach can now be implemented with a simple charge-pump IC like
the MAX1759. Operating from input voltages ranging from 1.6V to 5.5V, the MAX1759 generates an
output either fixed (3.3V) or adjustable (2.5V to 5.5V) and delivers output currents up to 100mA. This IC
comes in a 10-pin MAX package and operates with three external capacitors. An additional shutdown
mode disconnects output from input while lowering the quiescent current to 1A.
Charge-Pump Overview
Tables 1 and 2 list some of the regulated and unregulated charge pumps available from Maxim,
including those with special functions and all those mentioned in the text. These tables enable designers
to choose a suitable charge pump according to the application's required package, functions, and outputcurrent specifications.
Maxim continually introduces new products. We encourage you to browse Maxim's product lines for the
most updated list of charge-pump devices. Capacitor charge pumps are shown under the Power and
Battery Management category.
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Features
MAX828/MAX829
1.5V to
-VIN
5.5V
25mA
12kHz/35kHz
MAX1720
1.5V to
-VIN
5.5V
25mA
12kHz
MAX1719/1721
1.5V to
-VIN
5.5V
25mA
125kHz
MAX870/871
1.4V to
-VIN
5.5V
25mA
MAX1682/1683
2V to
5.5V
2 VIN
30mA
12kHz/35kHz
ICL7660
MAX1044
1.5V to -VIN,
2 VIN
10V
10mA
10kHz
MAX860
1.5V to -VIN,
2 VIN
5.5V
50mA
6kHz; 50kHz;
130kHz
MAX861
1.5V to -VIN,
2 VIN
5.5V
50mA
13kHz;
100kHz;
250kHz
MAX1680
2V to
5.5V
-VIN,
2 VIN
125mA
125kHz;
250kHz
MAX1681
3V to
5.5V
-VIN,
2 VIN
125mA
500kHz; 1MHz
Switching
Frequency
Features
MAX619
2V to 3.6V +5V
50mA
500kHz
MAX682
2.7V to
5.5V
+5V
250mA
50kHz to 2MHz
MAX868
1.8V to
5.5V
Up to
-2 VIN
30mA
up to 450kHz
MAX1673
2.0V to
5.5V
Up to -VIN
125mA
350kHz
MAX1759
1.6V to
5.5V
2.5V to
5.5V
100mA
1.5MHz
Buck/boost converter
Related Parts
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ICL7660
Free Samples
MAX1044
Free Samples
MAX1673
Free Samples
MAX1680
Free Samples
MAX1681
Free Samples
MAX1682
Free Samples
MAX1719
Free Samples
MAX1720
Free Samples
MAX1721
Free Samples
MAX1759
Free Samples
MAX619
Free Samples
MAX682
Free Samples
MAX828
Free Samples
MAX829
Free Samples
MAX860
Free Samples
MAX861
Free Samples
MAX868
Free Samples
MAX870
Free Samples
MAX871
Free Samples
More Information
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Other Questions and Comments:http://www.maximintegrated.com/contact
Application Note 725: http://www.maximintegrated.com/an725
TUTORIAL 725, AN725, AN 725, APP725, Appnote725, Appnote 725
Copyright by Maxim Integrated Products
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