Tps 65162
Tps 65162
Tps 65162
Compact LCD Bias IC With High Speed Amplifiers for TV-LCD Panels
1FEATURES • Gate Voltage Shaping for VGH
• 8-V to 14.7-V Input Voltage Range • Soft Start for all Converters
• 500 kHz / 750 kHz Fixed Switching Frequency • Two Integrated High-Speed Opamps
• Boost Output Voltage up to 19 V – 50-MHz, 3-dB Bandwidth
– 1%-Accurate Boost With 2.8-A Switch – Slew Rate 55 V / µs
Current Overvoltage Protection – 215-mA Short-Circuit Current
• Input-to-Output Isolation Switch for Vs • 48 Pin 7x7 mm QFN Package
Short-Circuit protection for Boost
• 2.5-A Step-Down Converter APPLICATIONS
• Regulated Positive Charge-Pump Driver VGH • LCD TV
• Regulated Negative Charge-Pump Driver VGL • LCD Monitor
DESCRIPTION
The TPS65162 is a compact LCD bias IC with two high-speed operational amplifiers for the Vcom supply. The
high current capability of the device is ideal for large LCD-monitor and LCD-TV applications.
L1
Vin 10uH D1
12V Vs
C11 C12 15V/1.5A
C1 C2 C5 1uF 1uF R1 C7 C8 C9 C10
22uF 22uF 10uF 39kΩ 220pF 22uF 22uF 22uF
C4 R2
22uF 3.6kΩ
SW
SW
SUP
SWI
PVIN
PVIN
AVIN
SWO
EN1 FB D2D3
EN2 Boost
Converter
DRVP
FREQ D C16
470nF R5 C17
S VGH
VIN 62kΩ 470nF
C11
1uF FBP
SS R6
C12 VGHM 3.3kΩ
22nF Gate Voltage
VC
C13 Shaping VGH
22nF CE RE Vs 25V/50mA
C14 R10 R7
100pF 1KΩ 10KΩ
Enable Gate VDPM VDD
Voltage shaping
VFLK CBOOT R8
VFLK 1.5KΩ
D4D5 SWB C20
VGL Buck
DRVN 100nF
-5V/50mA Converter
SWB
D
S
C18 Vlogic
R3 470nF L2 3.3V/2.5A
C7
200k 10uH C21 C22 C23
470nF FBB R11
FBN D5 2.4kΩ 470pF 22uF 22uF
R4 REF
51k DLY1 C24 R12
AGND 10nF 1.5kΩ
C19 1 2 DLY2
220nF C25
PGND1
PGND2
PGND3
22nF
OGND
NEG1
OUT1
POS1
NEG2
OUT2
POS2
GND
Please be aware that an important notice concerning availability, standard warranty, and use in critical applications of Texas
Instruments semiconductor products and disclaimers thereto appears at the end of this data sheet.
PRODUCTION DATA information is current as of publication date. Copyright © 2007–2008, Texas Instruments Incorporated
Products conform to specifications per the terms of the Texas
Instruments standard warranty. Production processing does not
necessarily include testing of all parameters.
TPS65162
These devices have limited built-in ESD protection. The leads should be shorted together or the device placed in conductive foam
during storage or handling to prevent electrostatic damage to the MOS gates.
DESCRIPTION (CONTINUED)
The TPS65162 generates all four voltage rails for a TFT LCD (Vs, Vlogic, VGH and VGL) and includes two
op-amps to generate the VCOM supply rail. An input-to-output isolation switch is integrated into the device,
providing short-circuit protection for the boost converter. A current-limit function is implemented in the
input-to-output isolation switch to allow soft turn-on during start-up. The device also features gate voltage
shaping for improved TFT-LCD picture quality. The device consists of a boost converter to provide the source
voltage Vs, and a step-down converter to provide the logic voltage for the system. A positive and a negative
charge-pump driver provide adjustable regulated output voltages VGH and VGL to bias the TFT. Both boost and
buck converter, as well as the charge-pump drivers, operate with a fixed switching frequency of 500 kHz or 750
kHz, selectable by the FREQ pin. The device includes adjustable power-on sequencing. The safety features of
the device are overvoltage protection for boost converter, short-circuit protection for Vs, Vlogic and VGH, and
thermal shutdown.
(1) The RGZ package is available taped and reeled and shipped in quantities of 2500 devices per reel.
(1) Stresses beyond those listed under absolute maximum ratings may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings
only, and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond those indicated under recommended operating
conditions is not implied. Exposure to absolute-maximum-rated conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability.
(2) All voltage values are with respect to network ground terminal.
(1) Exposed thermal die is soldered to the PCB using thermal vias. Refer to Texas Instruments Application report (SLUA271) QFN/SON
PCB Attachment.
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Vin=12 V, EN1=EN2=FREQ=high, Vs=15 V, Vlogic=3.3 V ,TA = –40°C to 85°C, typical values are at TA = 25°C (unless
otherwise noted)
PARAMETER TEST CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNIT
SUPPLY CURRENT
VI Input voltage range 8 14.7 V
Shutdown current into VIN EN1=EN2=GND 0.03 1
ISD µA
Shutdown current into PVIN EN1=EN2=GND 0.01 1
IQIN Quiescent current into VIN 1.7 4 mA
ISUP Shutdown current into SUP EN1=EN2=GND 0.01 1 µA
Shutdown current into AVIN EN1=EN2=GND 50 220 µA
IAVIN
Quiescent current into AVIN 8 10 mA
VUVLO Undervoltage lockout threshold Vin falling 7.6 7.95 V
VREF Reference voltage 1.253 1.265 1.277 V
Thermal shutdown Temperature rising 160 °C
Thermal shutdown hysteresis 10 °C
LOGIC SIGNALS EN1, EN2, FREQ, VFLK, VDPM
VIH High level input voltage EN1, EN2, VDPM, 2.0 V
FREQ
VIL Low level input voltage EN1, EN2, VDPM, 0.8 V
FREQ
VIH High level input voltage VFLK 1.7 V
VIL lOW level input voltage VFLK 0.4 V
II Input leakage current EN1=EN2=FREQ=VFLK=VDPM=GND or VIN 0.01 0.1 µA
CONTROL AND SOFT START DLY1, DLY2, SS
Ichrg DLY1, DLY2 charge current 3.5 5 6
Vthreshold = 1.280 V µA
ISS SS charge current 6 9.2 12
Vthr Delay threshold 1.280 V
INTERNAL OSCILLATOR
FREQ = high 600 750 900
fosc Oscillator frequency kHz
FREQ = low 400 500 600
BOOST CONVERTER (Vs)
VS Output voltage range 19 V
VFB Feedback regulation voltage 1.255 1.268 1.280 V
IFB Feedback input bias current 10 100 nA
N-MOSFET on-resistance (Q1) Vs = 15 V, I(SW) = 500 mA 130 200 mΩ
RDS(on)
P-MOSFET on-resistance (Q2) Vs = 15 V,I(SW) = 200 mA 9 15 Ω
IMAX Maximum P-MOSFET peak switch current 1 A
ILIM N-MOSFET switch current limit (Q1) 2.8 3.6 4.2 A
Ileak Switch leakage current V(SW) = 15 V 1 10 µA
Vswovp Switch overvoltage protection Vout rising 19.5 20 21 V
Line Regulation 8V≤Vin≤14V, Iout = 2mA 0.007 %/V
Load Regulation 2mA≤Iout≤1.5A 0.03 %/A
ISOLATION SWITCH
RDSon Isolation switch RDSon ISW = 1 A, Vs = 15 V 200 mΩ
I Switch current 2 A
ISC Short circuit current limit SWI = 12V, SWO = 0V 350 mA
(1) The maximum charge pump output current is typically one-half the drive current of the internal current source.
PIN ASSIGNMENT
Top View
OGND
NEG1
NEG2
OUT2
POS2
SWO
AVIN
SWI
SW
SW
NC
FB
POS1 1 48 47 46 45 44 43 42 41 40 39 38 3736 PGND3
OUT1 2 35 PGND2
VDD 3 34 PGND1
CE 4 33 EN1
VFLK 5 32 EN2
VDPM 6 31 VC
Exposed
RE 7 Thermal Pad 30 SS
VGHM 8 29 DLY2
VGH 9 28 FREQ
FBP 10 27 VIN
GND 11 26 PVIN
DRVP 12 25 PVIN
13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
SUP
DRVN
AGND
FBN
REF
DLY1
NC
NC
FBB
CBOOT
SWB
SWB
NOTE: The thermally-enhanced PowerPAD is connected to PGND1 (Device power Ground). NC pin is internally not
connected.
TERMINAL FUNCTIONS
TERMINAL
I/O DESCRIPTION
NAME NO.
POS1 1 I Non inverting input of Operational Amplifier 1
OUT1 2 O Output of Operational Amplifier 1.
Threshold voltage of gate voltage shaping. The five times of voltage applied to this pin set the threshold
VDD 3 I
discharge voltage for the gate voltage shaping function
CE 4 I Delay of gate voltage shaping. Sets the delay between the falling edge of VFLK to the falling edge of VGHM
VFLK 5 I Control of gate voltage shaping.
VDPM 6 I Enable of gate voltage shaping block.
Slope adjustment of gate voltage shaping. Connecting a resistor to this pin allows to adjust the slop of gate
RE 7 O
voltage shaping.
VGHM 8 O Output of the gate voltage shaping block.
VGH 9 I High voltage for gate voltage shaping block. Connect the output of the positive charge pump to this pin.
FBP 10 I Feedback of the positive charge pump.
GND 11 Ground for positive and negative charge pump.
DRVP 12 O Drive pin of the positive charge pump.
SUP 13 I Supply pin of the positive charge pump
DRVN 14 O Drive pin of the negative charge pump
AGND 15 Analog ground
FBN 16 I Feedback of the negative charge pump.
C4 R2
22uF 3.6kΩ
SW
SW
SUP
SWI
PVIN
PVIN
AVIN
SWO
EN1 FB D2D3
EN2 Boost
Converter
DRVP
FREQ D C16
470nF R5 C17
S VGH
VIN 62kΩ 470nF
C11
1uF FBP
SS R6
C12 VGHM 3.3kΩ
22nF Gate Voltage
VC
C13 Shaping VGH
22nF CE RE Vs 25V/50mA
C14 R10 R7
100pF 1KΩ 10KΩ
Enable Gate VDPM VDD
Voltage shaping
VFLK CBOOT R8
VFLK 1.5KΩ
D4D5 SWB C20
VGL Buck
DRVN 100nF
-5V/50mA Converter
SWB
D
S
C18 Vlogic
R3 470nF L2 3.3V/2.5A
C7
200k 10uH C21 C22 C23
470nF FBB R11
FBN D5 2.4kΩ 470pF 22uF 22uF
R4 REF
51k DLY1 C24 R12
AGND 10nF 1.5kΩ
C19 1 2 DLY2
220nF C25
PGND1
PGND2
PGND3
22nF
OGND
NEG1
OUT1
POS1
NEG2
OUT2
POS2
GND
TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Table of Graphs
FIGURE
Main Boost Converter (Vs)
η Efficiency vs Load current Figure 1
Soft start Figure 2
PWM operation at nominal load current Figure 3
PWM operation at light load current Figure 4
Load transient response Figure 5
Short-circuit protection Figure 6
Overvoltage protection Figure 7
Step-Down Converter (Vlogic)
η Efficiency vs Load current Figure 8
PWM operation at nominal load current Figure 9
PWM operation at light load current Figure 10
Soft start Figure 11
Load transient response Figure 12
System Performance
Powerup sequencing EN2 connected to VIN Figure 13
Powerup sequencing EN2 enabled separately Figure 14
Gate voltage shaping Figure 15
Negative Charge Pump Driver
VGL vs VGL Load current Figure 16
VCOM BUFFERS
–3 dB bandwidth, opamp Figure 17
Slew rate, opamp Figure 18
η EFFICIENCY
vs
LOAD CURRENT SOFT-START
100
VI = 14 V VI = 12 V,
VO = 15 V/1.2 A
90 C(SS) = 22 nF
VO
VI = 12 V 10 V/div
VI = 8 V
80
Efficiency - %
VSW
70 10 V/div
60
VS = 15 V,
50 VGH, VGL, VLOGIC no Load Switching II
OpAmp no Load Operating 1 A/div
40
0 0.5 1 1.5 2.5 ms/div
IO - Output Current - A
Figure 1. Figure 2.
VI = 12 V, VI = 12 V,
VO = 15 V/1.5 A VO = 15 V/10 mA
VSW
10 V/div VSW
10 V/div
VO VO
50 mV/div 50 mV/div
IL
1 A/div
IL
500 mA/div
1 ms/div 1 ms/div
Figure 3. Figure 4.
VI = 12 V,
VO = 15 V
Output shorted
VO
200 mV/div
VO
5 V/div
IO IL
500 mA/div 500 mA/div
VI = 12 V,
VO = 15 V/div
Figure 5. Figure 6.
OVERVOLTAGE PROTECTION
VSW
10 V/div
VO
2 V/div
VI = 12 V,
VO = 15 V/100 mA
IL
2 A/div
500 ms/div
Figure 7.
η EFFICIENCY
vs PWM OPERATION, NOMINAL
LOAD CURRENT LOAD CURRENT
90
80 VI = 8 V
VI = 12 V
VI = 14 V
Efficiency - %
70 VSW
5 V/div
60 VO
20 mV/div
50 VLOGIC = 3.3 V, VI = 12 V,
VS, VGH, VGL No Load Switching IL
VO = 3.3 V/1.5 A
OpAmp No Load, Operating 1 A/div
40
500 ns/div
0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5
IO - Output Current - mA
Figure 8. Figure 9.
VSW
5 V/div VO
1 V/div
VO
20 mV/div
IL
IL
1 A/div
200 mA/div
VI = 12 V,
VO = 3.3 V
VO
100 mV/div
IO
1 A/div
100 ms/div
Figure 12.
SYSTEM PERFORMANCE
VLOGIC
VLOGIC
2 V/div
2 V/div
VS
VS
5 V/div
5 V/div
VGH
10 V/div VGH
10 V/div
VGL EN2
5 V/div 10 V/div
VGHM
10 V/div
VDD = 2 V,
RE = 33 kW,
VGH = NO LOAD
IO
2 V/div
5 ms/div
Figure 15.
-4.98
-5
VGL - V
TA = -40°C
-5.02
TA = 25°C
-5.04
-5.06
-5.08
-5.10
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100
IO - Output Current - mA
Figure 16.
VCOM BUFFERS
Output: No load
0 dB
1 dB/div
IN
1 V/div
1 10 100 10 ns/div
f - Frequency - MHz
Figure 17. Figure 18.
APPLICATION INFORMATION
THERMAL SHUTDOWN
The thermal-shutdown feature prevents damage from excessive heat and power dissipation. Typically, the
thermal-shutdown threshold is 160°C. When the temperature drops below the thermal shutdown threshold, the
device restarts again automatically.
UNDERVOLTAGE LOCKOUT
To avoid device malfunction at low input voltages, an undervoltage lockout is included, which shuts down the
device at voltages lower than 7.6 V.
START-UP SEQUENCING
The start-up sequencing can be set by adjusting the capacitors connected to DLY1 and DLY2, and is controlled
by the signals EN1 and EN2. Pulling EN1 high enables the step-down converter. After the step down converter
has reached its power-good threshold, the other sequence timings are started. DLY1 sets the delay time
between the step-down converter and the negative charge-pump driver. This delay starts when the power-good
threshold of the step-down converter is reached. A high level on EN2 enables the boost converter. The boost
converter starts when the power-good threshold of the step down converter is reached and EN2 is pulled high.
DLY2 sets the delay time for the positive charge pump. This delay time starts when the power good threshold of
the step down converter is reached. After the delay time has expired, the positive charge pump and op-amps
start up. As the positive charge pump power-good threshold is reached, then the GPM block is enabled if VDPM
is high as well. See Figure 19.
EN1
EN2
DLY 2
VGHM
with VFLK
=high,
VDPM=high
Vs
Fall time depends on output
capacitors value and load current
V logic
VGL
DLY 1
If EN2 goes high after the step down converter is already enabled, then the delay DLY2 starts when EN2 goes
high. See Figure 20.
EN1
EN2
DLY 2
VGHM
with VFLK
=high,
VDPM=high
Vs
Fall time depends on output
capacitors value and load current
Vlogic
VGL
DLY 1
BOOST CONVERTER
The TPS65162 boost converter block is shown in Figure 21. The boost converter operates with PWM (Pulse
Width Modulation) at a fixed switching frequency of 500 kHz or 750 kHz, selected by the FREQ pin. The
converter uses an unique fast-response, voltage-mode controller scheme with input-voltage feedforward. This
achieves excellent line and load regulation (0.03%/A load regulation typical), and allows the use of small external
components. To add more flexibility to the selection of external component values, the device uses external loop
compensation. Although the boost converter looks like a non-synchronous boost converter topology operating in
discontinuous-conduction mode under a light load, the TPS65162 remains in continuous-conduction mode even
under light load currents. (Figure 4) This is achieved with a novel architecture using an external Schottky diode
with an integrated MOSFET in parallel connected between the SW pin and the SUP pin. This MOSFET allows
the current to go below ground, which is the case under light load conditions. For this use, a small integrated
P-Channel MOSFET (Q2) with typically 9 Ω RDSon is sufficient. When the inductor current is positive, the
external Schottky diode, with the lower forward voltage, carries the current. This causes the converter to operate
with a fixed frequency in continuous-conduction mode over the entire load-current range. This avoids ringing on
the switch pin as seen with a standard non-synchronous boost converter, and allows a simpler compensation
circuit for the boost converter.
VIN FREQ SW SW SWI SWO
Vds Sensor
D
S
Soft start
IDLY
Vref
SS
Control logic EN
Q2
D
D
S
SUP
S EN
Clock 500kHz/
Current limit
750KHz
and
Oszillator
Soft Start
Soft Start
To minimize inrush current during startup, the boost converter has an adjustable soft-start, and the
input-to-output isolation switch has current-limit control. The current limit of the input-to-output isolation switch is
slowly ramped up for a soft turn-on. The VDS sensor of the input-to-output isolation switch monitors the voltage
difference between SWI and SWO, and controls the current through the isolation switch. With VDS = 12 V, the
current-limit threshold through the isolation switch is typically 330 mA. This current-limit threshold will linearly
increase by factor of two till VDS reaches 3 V; current limiting is disabled when VDS is below 3 V. The boost
converter is enabled when VDS is below 0.5 V. An external capacitor connected to the soft-start pin, SS, is used
to slowly ramp up the internal switch current limit of the boost converter. The capacitor connected to the SS pin
is charged with a constant current that increases the voltage on the SS pin. The internal current limit is
proportional to the voltage on the SS pin. When the threshold voltage of the internal-switch soft-start comparator
is reached, the full current limit is released. The larger the soft-start capacitor value, the longer the soft-start time.
A 22-nF capacitor is usually sufficient for typical applications.
Overvoltage Protection
The boost converter has an overvoltage-protection circuit to prevent the switch voltage from exceeding the
absolute-maximum switch voltage rating in the event of a system fault. The device protects itself if the feedback
pin is connected to ground or floated, and clamps the voltage of the output of the boost converter to 20 V. To
implement the overvoltage protection, the overvoltage comparator shown in Figure 21 monitors the output
voltage via the SWI pin. As soon as the output voltage exceeds the overvoltage threshold (typically 20 V), the
device stops switching until the output voltage drops below the comparator threshold again. The typical
waveform when the device is in overvoltage protection is shown in Figure 7.
Vin h
1. Converter Duty Cycle: D +1*
Vout
I
3. Peak switch current: I swpeak + Vin D ) out
2 ƒs L 1 * D
With Isw = converter switch current (minimum switch current limit = 2.8 A)
ƒs = converter switching frequency (typical 500kHz or 750 kHz)
L = Selected inductor value
η = Estimated converter efficiency (use the number from the efficiency curves or 0.8 as an estimation)
The peak switch current is the steady-state peak switch current that the integrated switch, inductor and external
Schottky diode must be able to handle. The calculation must be done for the minimum input voltage where the
peak switch current is highest.
Inductor Selection
The TPS65162 typically operates with a 10-µH inductor. The main parameter for inductor selection is the inductor
saturation current, which should be higher than the peak switch current, as calculated above, with additional
margin to handle heavy load transients. An alternative more conservative approach is to choose an inductor with
a saturation current at least as high as the typical switch current limit of 3.6 A. The second important parameter
is the inductor DC resistance. Usually, the lower the DC resistance, the higher the efficiency of the converter.
The choice of inductor can affect converter efficiency by as much as 10%. Example inductors are shown in
Table 2.
Output Capacitor
For best output-voltage filtering, a low-ESR output capacitor is recommended. Ceramic capacitors have a low
ESR value and work best with the TPS65162. One 10-µF ceramic output capacitor before the input-to-output
isolation switch, SWI, and six 10-µF or three 22-µF ceramic output capacitors in parallel after the input-to-output
isolation switch, SWO, are sufficient for most applications. To improve the load transient regulation, add more
capacitors after the input-to-output isolation switch. Refer to Table 3 for the selection of the output capacitor.
V out + 1.268 V ǒ1 ) R1
R2
Ǔ (5)
Across the upper resistor a bypass capacitor is required to speed up the circuit during load transients. The
capacitor is caluculated as:
1
C ff =
2 × p × f z × R1 (6)
Depending on the inductor value, the zero frequency needs to be set. fz is 19 kHz for a 10 µH inductor, and 9
kHz for a 22 µH inductor. A value coming closest to the calculated value should be used.
Compensation (VC)
The regulator loop can be compensated by adjusting the external components connected to the VC pin. The VC
pin is the output of the internal transconductance error amplifier. A single capacitor connected to this pin sets the
low frequency gain. A 22-nF capacitor is usually sufficient for most applications.
500 kHz/
750 KHz
Oscillator
Current
IDRVP
Control
Softstart
DRVP
Q5
GND
Vref
1.265V
FBP
Since the flying capacitor-voltage sits on top of the drive-pin voltage, the maximum output voltage is VSUP+VS
–Vdrop. Vdrop is the voltage drop across the external diodes and internal charge pump MOSFETs. If higher output
voltages are required, another charge pump stage can be added to the output.
Setting the output voltage:
V out + VREF ǒ1 ) R5
R6
Ǔ + 1.265 V ǒ1 ) R5
R6
Ǔ (7)
To minimize noise and leakage current sensitivity, we recommend a value of approximately 20 kΩ for the lower
feedback divider resistor R6.
500 kHz/
750 KHz
Oscillator
Control
Q7
Logic
DRVN Softstart
IDRVN
GND
FBN
Vref
0V
VFLK is taken low, Q4 is turned off, and the capacitor connected to the CE pin is charged by a constant current
source, typically 60 µA. When the capacitor voltage reaches the internal reference voltage of 1.284 V and VFLK
is low, Q1 is turned off and Q2 is turned on. With Q2 on, VGHM is discharged by the resistor connected to the
RE pin. Once VGHM is discharged to five times VDD, Q2 is turned off and VGHM is high impedance. In the
application of not using this function, connect VDPM, VFLK with high.
VGH
VDPM
Q1
VGHM
Q2
1K 4R
S Q RE
Q3 R
R
INT_REG
VDD
IDLY
Vref
CE
SZ Q
RZ
Thermal shutdown
Q4 Power good from FBP
UVLO
VFLK
VGH
VGHM
5 x VDD
VFLK
Discharge CE capacitor
STEP-DOWN CONVERTER
The TPS65162 step down converter block is shown in Figure 26. The non-synchronous step down converter
operates at a fixed switching frequency using a fast response voltage mode topology with input voltage
feedforward. This topology allows simple internal compensation and it is designed to operate with ceramic output
capacitors. The converter drives an internal 2.8 A N-Channel MOSFET switch. The MOSFET driver is referenced
to the switch pin SWB. The N-Channel MOSFET requires a gate drive voltage higher than the switch pin to turn
the N-Channel MOSFET on. This is accomplished by a boost strap gate drive circuit running of the step down
converter switch pin. When the switch pin SWB is at ground the boot strap capacitor is charged to 8 V. This way
the N-Channel Gate drive voltage is typically around 8 V.
Soft Start
To avoid high inrush current during startup, an internal soft-start is implemented. When the step down converter
is enabled over EN1, its reference voltage slowly rises from zero to its power good threshold of typically 90% of
Vref. When the reference voltage reaches this power good threshold, the Error amplifier is released to its normal
operation with its normal duty cycle. To further limit the inrush current during soft-start the converter frequency is
set to 1/4 of the switching frequency ƒs and 1/2 of ƒs by the comparator that monitors the feedback voltage. refer
to the internal block diagram. The typical soft-start is typically completed within 1ms.
Regulator
PVIN 8V BOOT
Q3
PVIN SWB
SWB
Control Logic
Current limit
Error Amplifier
FBB
Vref
Compensation
and
Softstart
Sawtooth
Generator
Clock/2
Logic
0.9V
Clock/4
0.6V
Clock
Clock
500/750 kHz
V out + 1.265 V ǒ1 ) R5
R6
Ǔ (9)
At load currents <1 mA, the device operates in discontinuous conduction mode. When the load current is
reduced to zero the output voltage rises slightly above the nominal output voltage. At zero load current, the
device skips clock cycles, but does not completely stop switching, thus the output voltage sits slightly above the
nominal output voltage. Therefore, the lower feedback resistor is selected to be around 1.2 kΩ to maintain
around 1 mA minimum load current.
Inductor Selection
The TPS65162 step-down converter typically operates with a 10-µH inductor. For high efficiency, the inductor
should have a low DC resistance to minimize conduction loss. This must be considered when selecting the
appropriate inductor. In order to avoid inductor saturation, the inductor should be rated at least for the maximum
output current of the converter plus the inductor ripple current that will be calculated by:
1 * Vout DI
DI L + Vout Vin I Lmax + I outmax ) L
L ƒ 2 (11)
where
ƒ = Switching Frequency (750 kHz, 500 kHz minimal)
L = Inductor Value (typically 10 µH)
ΔIL= Peak to Peak inductor ripple current
ILmax = Maximum Inductor current
The highest inductor current occurs at maximum Vin. A more conservative approach is to select the inductor
current rating just for the typical switch-current limit of 3.5 A.
1 2
NEG1
OUT1
POS1
NEG2
OUT2
POS2
3.3R
10nF
Proper termination when not in use
The power supply pin for the opamps is the AVIN pin connected to the input of the isolation switch of the boost
converter. To achieve good performance and minimize the output noise, a 1-µF bypass capacitor is required
directly from the AVIN pin to ground. The opamps are not designed to drive capacitive loads, therefore it is not
recommended to connect a capacitor directly to the output of the opamps. If capacitive loads are driven, use a
series resistor at the output to provide stable operation. With a 3.3-Ω series resistor, a capacitive load of 10 nF
can be driven, which is usually sufficient for typical LCD applications.
4. Use a short and wide trace to connect the SUP pin to the output of the boost converter Vs.
5. Place the 220-nF reference capacitor directly from REF to GND close to the IC pins.
6. The feedback resistor for the negative charge pump between FBN and REF should be >40 kΩ.
7. Use short traces for the charge-pump drive pin (DRVN) of VGL because the traces carry switching
waveforms.
8. Solder the PowerPad™ of the QFN package to GND, and use thermal vias to lower the thermal resistance.
9. For more layout recommendations, refer to the TPS65162 evaluation module (EVM)
L1
Vin 10uH D1
12V Vs
C11 C12 15V/1.5A
C1 C2 C5 1uF 1uF R1 C7 C8 C9 C10
22uF 22uF 10uF 39kΩ 220pF 22uF 22uF 22uF
C4 R2
25 26 37 38 43 39 42 13
22uF 3.6kΩ
SW
SW
SUP
SWI
PVIN
PVIN
AVIN
SWO
33 D2D3
EN1 FB 41
32 EN2
12
28 DRVP
FREQ C16
470nF R5 C17
27 VGH 9
VIN 62kΩ 470nF
C11 10
1uF FBP
30
SS R6
C12 VGHM 8 3.3kΩ
22nF 31
VC
C13 VGH
22nF 28 CE RE 7 Vs 25V/50mA
C14 R10 R7
Enable Gate 100pF 6 1KΩ 10KΩ
VDPM VDD 3
Voltage shaping
5 VFLK CBOOT 22 R8
VFLK 1.5KΩ
D4D5 SWB 23 C20
VGL 14 100nF
-5V/50mA DRVN
SWB
C18 24
Vlogic
R3 470nF L2 3.3V/2.5A
C7 10uH
200k 21 C21 C22 C23
470nF FBB R11
16 22uF 22uF
FBN D5 2.4kΩ 470pF
R4 17
REF
51k 18
DLY1 C24 R12
15 1.5kΩ
AGND 10nF
C19 DLY2 29
220nF C25
PGND1
PGND2
PGND3
11 22nF
OGND
NEG1
OUT1
POS1
NEG2
OUT2
POS2
GND
47 48 2 1 44 46 45 34 35 36
TYPICAL APPLICATION
L1
Vin 10uH D1
12V Vs
C11 C12 15V/1.5A
C1 C2 C5 1uF 1uF R1 C7 C8 C9 C10
22uF 22uF 10uF 39kΩ 220pF 22uF 22uF 22uF
C4 R2
22uF 3.6kΩ
SW
SW
SUP
SWI
PVIN
PVIN
AVIN
SWO
EN1 FB D2D3
EN2 Boost
Converter
DRVP
FREQ D C16
470nF R5 C17
S VGH
VIN 62kΩ 470nF
C11
1uF FBP
SS R6
C12 VGHM 3.3kΩ
22nF Gate Voltage
VC
C13 Shaping VGH
22nF CE RE Vs 25V/50mA
C14 R10 R7
100pF 1KΩ 10KΩ
Enable Gate VDPM VDD
Voltage shaping
VFLK CBOOT R8
VFLK 1.5KΩ
D4D5 SWB C20
VGL Buck
DRVN 100nF
-5V/50mA Converter
SWB
D
S
C18 Vlogic
R3 470nF L2 3.3V/2.5A
C7
200k 10uH C21 C22 C23
470nF FBB R11
FBN D5 2.4kΩ 470pF 22uF 22uF
R4 REF
51k DLY1 C24 R12
AGND 10nF 1.5kΩ
C19 1 2 DLY2
220nF C25
PGND1
PGND2
PGND3
22nF
OGND
NEG1
OUT1
POS1
NEG2
OUT2
POS2
GND
Revision History
• Changed list item from "8-V to 14.4-V Input Voltage Range" to "8-V to 14.7-V Input Voltage Range"................................. 1
• Changed Input voltage range max from 14.4 to 14.7 V......................................................................................................... 2
• Changed Input voltage range max from 14.4 to 14.7 V......................................................................................................... 3
• Updated layout guidelines drawing. ..................................................................................................................................... 28
• Updated typcal application schematic. ................................................................................................................................ 29
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