BOOT
SW
COMP
FB
RAMP
DITH/RES
VCC
VIN
OUT
CS
CSG
VOUT
EN
HG
GND
L
D
Rs
Q
LM5088
CDITHER/RESTART
CIN
CVCC
CSS
CRAMP
RRAMP
RRT RCOMP CCOMP
CHF
COUT1 COUT2
RFB2
RFB1
CBOOT
RUV2
RUV1
VIN (4.5V-75V)
SS
RT/SYNC
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LM5088
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LM5088, LM5088-Q1 Wide Input Range Non-Synchronous Buck Controller
1 Features 3 Description
The LM5088 high voltage non-synchronous buck
1 LM5088-Q1 is an Automotive Grade Product that controller features all the necessary functions to
is AEC-Q100 Grade 1 Qualified (-40°C to +125°C implement an efficient high voltage buck converter
Operating Junction Temperature) using a minimum number of external components.
Emulated Current Mode Control The LM5088 can be configured to operate over an
ultra-wide input voltage range of 4.5 V to 75 V. This
Drives External High-Side N-channel MOSFET easy to use controller includes a level shifted gate
Ultra-Wide Input Voltage Range from 4.5V to 75V driver capable of controlling an external N-channel
Low IQShutdown and Standby Modes buck switch. The control method is based upon peak
High Duty Cycle Ratio Feature for Reduced current mode control utilizing an emulated current
Dropout Voltage ramp. The use of an emulated control ramp reduces
noise sensitivity of the pulse-width modulation circuit,
Spread Spectrum EMI Reduction (LM5088-1) allowing reliable control of very small duty cycles
Hiccup Timer for Overload Protection (LM5088-2) necessary in high input voltage/low output voltage
Adjustable Output Voltage from 1.205 V with 1.5% applications. The LM5088 switching frequency is
Feedback Reference Accuracy programmable from 50 kHz to 1 MHz.
Wide Bandwidth Error Amplifier The LM5088 is available in two versions: The
LM5088-1 provides a +/-5% frequency dithering
Single Resistor Oscillator Frequency Setting function to reduce the conducted and radiated EMI,
Oscillator Synchronization Capability while the LM5088-2 provides a versatile restart timer
Programmable Soft-Start for overload protection. Additional features include a
High Voltage, Low Dropout Bias Regulator low dropout bias regulator, tri-level enable input to
control shutdown and standby modes, soft-start and
Thermal Shutdown Protection oscillator synchronization capability. The device is
Package: HTSSOP (16 Pin) available in a thermally enhanced HTSSOP-16 pin
package.
2 Applications Device Information(1)
Automotive Infotainment PART NUMBER PACKAGE BODY SIZE (NOM)
Automotive USB Accessory Adapters LM5088 HTSSOP (16) 5.00 mm × 4.00 mm
Industrial DC-DC Bias and Motor Drivers LM5088-Q1 HTSSOP (16) 5.00 mm × 4.00 mm
(1) For all available packages, see the orderable addendum at
the end of the datasheet.
4 Simplified Schematic
Typical Application Circuit Efficiency
1
An IMPORTANT NOTICE at the end of this data sheet addresses availability, warranty, changes, use in safety-critical applications,
intellectual property matters and other important disclaimers. PRODUCTION DATA.
LM5088
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LM5088-Q1
SNVS600I DECEMBER 2008REVISED AUGUST 2014
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Table of Contents
8.4 Device Functional Modes........................................ 19
1 Features.................................................................. 19 Application and Implementation ........................ 20
2 Applications ........................................................... 19.1 Application Information............................................ 20
3 Description............................................................. 19.2 Typical Application.................................................. 20
4 Simplified Schematic............................................. 19.3 Design Requirements.............................................. 20
5 Revision History..................................................... 29.4 Detailed Design Procedure..................................... 20
6 Pin Configuration and Functions......................... 310 Power Supply Recommendations ..................... 29
7 Specifications......................................................... 510.1 Thermal Considerations........................................ 29
7.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings ...................................... 511 Layout................................................................... 32
7.2 Handling Ratings....................................................... 511.1 Layout Guidelines ................................................. 32
7.3 Recommended Operating Conditions....................... 511.2 Layout Example .................................................... 32
7.4 Thermal Information.................................................. 512 Device and Documentation Support................. 33
7.5 Electrical Characteristics........................................... 612.1 Related Links ........................................................ 33
7.6 Typical Characteristics.............................................. 812.2 Trademarks........................................................... 33
8 Detailed Description............................................ 10 12.3 Electrostatic Discharge Caution............................ 33
8.1 Overview................................................................. 10 12.4 Glossary................................................................ 33
8.2 Functional Block Diagram....................................... 10 13 Mechanical, Packaging, and Orderable
8.3 Feature Description................................................. 11 Information ........................................................... 33
5 Revision History
NOTE: Page numbers for previous revisions may differ from page numbers in the current version.
Changes from Revision H (March 2013) to Revision I Page
Changed data sheet flow and layout to conform with new TI standards. Added the following sections: Device
Information Table, Application and Implementation; Power Supply Recommendations; Layout; Device and
Documentation Support; Mechanical, Packaging, and Ordering Information ........................................................................ 1
Changed "x" to "-" ................................................................................................................................................................ 13
Added unit "k" .................................................................................................................................................................... 20
Deleted "/A" in the numerator of Equation 11 ..................................................................................................................... 22
Changes from Revision G (March 2013) to Revision H Page
Changed layout of data sheet from National to TI format ..................................................................................................... 1
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VIN
EN
SS
RAMP
RT
GND
COMP
VCC
BOOT
HG
SW
CS
CSG
FB OUT
RES
EP
HTSSOP-16
VIN
EN
SS
RAMP
RT
GND
COMP
VCC
BOOT
HG
SW
CS
CSG
FB OUT
DITH
EP
HTSSOP-16
LM5088
,
LM5088-Q1
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6 Pin Configuration and Functions
16-Pin (Dither Version)
PWP Package
Top View
16-Pin (Restart Version)
PWP Package
Top View
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Pin Descriptions
PIN DESCRIPTION APPLICATION INFORMATION
NUMBER NAME
1 VIN Input supply voltage IC supply voltage. The operating range is 4.5 V to 75 V
If the EN pin voltage is below 0.4V the regulator will be in a low power state. If the
EN pin voltage is between 0.4V and 1.2V the controller will be in standby mode. If
the EN pin voltage is above 1.2 V the controller will be operational. An external
2 EN Enable input voltage divider can be used to set a line under voltage shutdown threshold. If the
EN pin is left open, a 5µA pull-up current forces the pin to the high state and
enables the controller.
When SS is below the internal 1.2V reference, the SS voltage will control the error
amplifier. An internal 11 µA current source charges an external capacitor to set the
start-up rate of the controller. The SS pin is held low in the standby, VCC UV and
3 SS Soft-start thermal shutdown states. The SS pin can be used for voltage tracking by
connecting this pin to a master voltage supply less than 1.2 V. The applied voltage
will act as the reference for the error amplifier.
An external capacitor connected between this pin and the GND pin sets the ramp
slope used for emulated current mode control. Recommended capacitor range 100
4 RAMP Ramp control signal pF to 2000 pF. See the Application and Implementation section for selection of
capacitor value.
The internal oscillator is programmed with a single resistor between this pin and
Internal oscillator frequency the GND pin. The recommended frequency range is 50 kHz to 1 MHz. An external
5 RT/SYNC set input and synchronization synchronization signal, which is higher in frequency than the programmed
input frequency, can be applied to this pin through a small coupling capacitor. The RT
resistor to ground is required even when using external synchronization.
6 GND Ground Ground return.
Output of the internal error The loop compensation network should be connected between this pin and the FB
7 COMP amplifier pin.
Feedback signal from the This pin is connected to the inverting input of the internal error amplifier. The
8 FB regulated output regulation threshold is 1.205V.
9 OUT Output voltage connection Connect directly to the regulated output voltage.
A capacitor connected between DITH pin and GND is charged and discharged by
27 µA current sources. As the voltage on the DITH pin ramps up and down, the
Frequency Dithering
10 DITH oscillator frequency is modulated between -5% to +5% of the nominal frequency
(LM5088-1 Only) set by the RT resistor. Grounding the DITH pin will disable the frequency dithering
mode.
The RES pin is normally connected to an external capacitor that sets the timing for
hiccup mode current limiting. In normal operation, a 25µA current source
discharges the RES pin capacitor to ground. If cycle-by-cycle current limit threshold
Hiccup Mode Restart is exceeded during any PWM cycle, the current sink is disabled and RES capacitor
10 RES (LM5088-2 Only) is charged by an internal 50 µA current. If the RES voltage reaches 1.2 V, the HG
pin gate drive signal will be disabled and the RES pin capacitor will be discharged
by a 1 µA current sink. Normal operation will resume when the RES pin falls below
0.2 V.
11 CSG Current Sense Ground Low side reference for the current sense resistor.
Current measurement connection for the re-circulating diode. An external sense
resistor and an internal sample/hold circuit sense the diode current at the
12 CS Current sense conclusion of the buck switch off-time. This current measurement provides the DC
offset level for the emulated current ramp.
13 SW Switching node Connect to the source terminal of the external MOSFET switch.
14 HG High Gate Connect to the gate terminal of the external MOSFET switch.
An external capacitor is required between the BOOT and the SW pins to provide
15 BOOT Input for bootstrap capacitor bias to the MOSFET gate driver. The capacitor is charged from VCC via an internal
diode during the off-time of the buck switch.
VCC tracks VIN up to the regulation level (7.8 V Typ). A 0.1 µF to 10 µF ceramic
16 VCC Output of the bias regulator decoupling capacitor is required. An external voltage between 8.3 V and 13 V can
be applied to this pin to reduce internal power dissipation.
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7 Specifications
7.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings(1)(2)
over operating free-air temperature range (unless otherwise noted) MIN MAX UNIT
VIN, VOUT to GND 76 V
BOOT to GND 90 V
SW to GND –2 76 V
VCC to GND –0.3 16 V
HG to SW –0.3 BOOT+0.3 V
EN to GND 14 V
BOOT to SW –0.3 16 V
CS, CSG to GND –0.3 0.3 V
All other inputs to GND –0.3 7 V
Junction Temperature + 150 °C
(1) Absolute Maximum Ratings are limits beyond which damage to the device may occur.
(2) If Military/Aerospace specified devices are required, please contact the Texas Instruments Sales Office/ Distributors for availability and
specifications.
7.2 Handling Ratings MIN MAX UNIT
Tstg Storage temperature range –65 + 150 °C
Human body model (HBM), per ANSI/ESDA/JEDEC JS-001, all 2
V(ESD) Electrostatic discharge kV
pins(1)(2)
(1) JEDEC document JEP155 states that 500-V HBM allows safe manufacturing with a standard ESD control process.
(2) The human body model is a 100 pF capacitor discharged through a 1.5 kresistor into each pin.
7.3 Recommended Operating Conditions(1)
over operating free-air temperature range (unless otherwise noted) MIN MAX UNIT
VIN Voltage 4.5 75 V
VCC Voltage (externally supplied) 8.3 13 V
Operation Junction Temperature –40 +125 °C
(1) Operating Ratings are conditions under which operation of the device is intended to be functional. For specified performance limits and
associated test conditions, see the Electrical Characteristics.
7.4 Thermal Information LM5088(Q1)
THERMAL METRIC(1) PWP UNIT
16 PINS
RθJA Junction-to-ambient thermal resistance 40 °C/W
RθJC(bot) Junction-to-case (bottom) thermal resistance 6
(1) For more information about traditional and new thermal metrics, see the IC Package Thermal Metrics application report, SPRA953.
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7.5 Electrical Characteristics(1)(2)
PARAMETER TJ= -40°C to +125°C. TJ= 25°C UNIT
TEST CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX MIN TYP MAX
VIN SUPPLY
IBIAS VIN Operating Current VFB = 1.3V 5.5 3.8 mA
ISTANDBY VIN Standby Current VEN = 1V 3.6 2.9 mA
ISHUTDOWN VIN Shutdown Current VEN = 0V 26 15 µA
VCC REGULATOR
VVCC(Reg) VCC Regulation VVCC = open 7.4 8.2 7.8 V
VVCC(Reg) VCC Regulation VVIN = 4.5V,VVCC=open 4.3 4.5 V
VCC Sourcing Current Limit VVCC = 0 30 35 mA
VCC Under-Voltage Lockout Positive going VVCC V
VVCC(UV) 3.7 4.2 4
Threshold
VCC Under-Voltage Hysteresis 200 mV
ENABLE THRESHOLDS
EN Shutdown Threshold VEN Rising 320 480 400 mV
EN Shutdown Hysteresis VEN Falling 100 mV
EN Standby Threshold VEN Rising 1.1 1.3 1.2 V
EN Standby Hysteresis VEN Falling 120 mV
EN Pull-up Current Source VEN = 0V 5 µA
SOFT- START
SS Pull-up Current Source VSS = 0V 8 13 11 µA
FB to SS Offset VFB = 1.3V 150 mV
ERROR AMPLIFIER
FB Reference Voltage Measured at FB Pin 1.20 V
VREF 1.187 1.223
FB = COMP 5
FB Input Bias Current VFB = 1.2V 100 18 nA
COMP Sink/Source Current 3 mA
AOL DC Gain 60 dB
FBW Unity gain bandwidth 3 MHz
PWM COMPARATORS
THG(OFF) Forced HG Off-time 185 365 280 ns
TON(MIN) Minimum HG On-time VVIN = 60V 55 ns
COMP to PWM comparator offset 930 mV
OSCILLATOR (RT Pin)
LM5088-2 (Non-Dithering)
Fnom1 Nominal Oscillator Frequency RRT = 31.6 k180 220 200 kHz
Fnom2 RRT = 11.3 k430 565 500 kHz
LM5088-1 (Dithering)
Dithering Range Minimum Dither Frequency Fnom- kHz
Fmin 5%
Maximum Dither Frequency Fnom kHz
Fmax +5%
SYNC
SYNC positive threshold 2.3 V
SYNC Pulse Width 15 150 ns
(1) Typical specifications represent the most likely parametric norm at 25°C operation.
(2) Minimum and Maximum limits are specified through test, design, or statistical correlation. Typical values represent at TJ= 25°C, and are
provided for reference purposes only. Unless otherwise stated the following conditions apply: VVIN = 48V, VVCC= 8V, VEN = 5V RRT =
31.6 k, No load on HG.
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Electrical Characteristics(1)(2) (continued)
PARAMETER TJ= -40°C to +125°C. TJ= 25°C UNIT
TEST CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX MIN TYP MAX
CURRENT LIMIT
Cycle by cycle sense voltage VRAMP = 0V mV
VCS(TH) 112 136 120
threshold
Cycle by Cycle Current Limit Delay VRAMP = 2.5V 280 ns
Buck Switch VDS protection VIN to SW 1.5 V
CURRENT LIMIT RESTART (RES Pin)
Vresup RES Threshold Upper (rising) VCS = 0.125 1.1 1.3 1.2 V
Vresdown RES Threshold Lower (falling) 0.1 0.3 0.2 V
Icharge Charge source current VCS >= 0.125 40 65 50 µA
Idischarge Discharge sink current VCS < 0.125 20 34 27 µA
Irampdown Discharge sink current -(post fault) 0.8 1.6 1.2 µA
RAMP GENERATOR(3)
IRAMP1 RAMP Current 1 VVIN = 60V, VOUT = 10V 235 345 295 µA
IRAMP2 RAMP Current 2 VVIN = 10V, VOUT = 10V 18 30 25 µA
VOUT Bias Current VOUT = 48V 250 µA
RAMP Output Low Voltage VVIN = 60V, VOUT = 10V 200 mV
HIGH SIDE (HG) GATE DRIVER
VOLH HG Low-state Output Voltage IHG = 100 mA 215 115 mV
HG High-state Output Voltage IHG = -100 mA, VOHH = VBOOT - mV
VOHH 240
VHG
HG Rise Time Cload = 1000 pF 12 ns
HG Fall Time Cload = 1000 pF 6 ns
IOHH Peak HG Source Current VHG = 0V 1.5 A
IOLH Peak HG Sink Current VHG = VVCC 2 A
BOOT UVLO BOOT to SW 3 V
Pre RDS(ON) Pre-Charge Switch ON- resistance IVCC = 1 mA 72
Pre-Charge switch ON time 300 ns
THERMAL(4)
TSD Thermal Shutdown Temperature Junction Temperature Rising 165 °C
Thermal Shutdown Hysterisis Junction Temperature Falling 25 °C
(3) RAMP and COMP are output pins. As such they are not specified to have an external voltage applied.
(4) For detailed information on soldering plastic HTSSOP packages visit www.ti.com/packaging.
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7.6 Typical Characteristics
Figure 1. Typical Application Circuit Efficiency Figure 2. VCC vs VIN
Figure 3. VVCC vs IVCC Figure 4. Shutdown Current
Figure 5. Frequency vs RRT Figure 6. Frequency vs VVCC
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1E+04 1E+05 1E+06 1E+07
FREQUENCY (Hz)
-10
50
GAIN (dB)
0
10
20
30
40
-30
150
0
30
60
90
120
PHASE (°)
LM5088
,
LM5088-Q1
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SNVS600I DECEMBER 2008REVISED AUGUST 2014
Typical Characteristics (continued)
Figure 7. VFB vs Temperature Figure 8. Forced-Off Time vs Temperature
Figure 9. Soft-Start vs Temperature Figure 10. Current-Limit vs Temperature
Figure 11. Frequency vs Temperature Figure 12. Error Amplifier Gain/Phase
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FB
VIN VCC
SW
RT
Regulator
DRIVER
BOOT
LEVEL
SHIFT
THERMAL
SHUTDOWN
UVLO
ERROR
AMP
DIS
COMP
TRACK
SAMPLE
and
HOLD
CLK GND
CLK
CSG
CS
CLK
RAMP GENERATOR
+
SHUTDOWN
PWM
I-LIMIT
OUT
RAMP
SS
VIN
STANDBY
5uA
1.2
VIN
EN
Ir
HG
CLK
S
R
Q
Q
CLK
FREQUENCY
DITHERING
STANDBY
SYNC
DITHER
LM5088-1 ONLY
OSCILLATOR
HICCUP
RESTART
LOGIC
Rs
RFB1
DITHER
RES
RFB2
QL
D
VOUT
CBOOT
LM5088
UVLO
MINIMUM
OFF-TIME
LOGIC
7.7V
HICCUP RESTART
LM5088-2 ONLY
5V
A = -10
CRES/DITH
CSYNC
1.2V
RUV2
RUV1
CFT
CIN
4.5V-75V
CSS
CHF
RCOMP
CCOMP
RRT
CRAMP
COUT
0.9V
0.4V
5V
11 uA
CVCC
1.205V
LM5088
,
LM5088-Q1
SNVS600I DECEMBER 2008REVISED AUGUST 2014
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8 Detailed Description
8.1 Overview
The LM5088 Wide Input Range Buck Controller features all the functions necessary to implement an efficient
high voltage step-down converter using a minimum number of external components. The control method is
based on peak current mode control utilizing an emulated current ramp. Peak current mode control provides
inherent line voltage feed-forward, cycle-by-cycle current limiting and ease of loop compensation. The use of an
emulated control ramp reduces noise sensitivity of the pulse-width modulation circuit, allowing reliable processing
of very small duty cycles necessary in high input voltage applications. The operating frequency is user
programmable from 50 kHz to 1 MHz. The LM5088-1 provides a ±5% frequency dithering function to reduce the
conducted and radiated EMI, while the LM5088-2 provides a versatile restart timer for overload protection.
Additional features include the low dropout bias regulator, tri-level enable input to control shutdown and standby
modes, soft-start, and voltage tracking and oscillator synchronization capability. The device is available in a
thermally enhanced HTSSOP-16 pin package.
See Figure 13 and Figure 27. The LM5088 is well suited for a wide range of applications where efficient step-
down of high, unregulated input voltage is required. The LM5088’s typical applications include Telecom,
Industrial and Automotive.
8.2 Functional Block Diagram
Figure 13. LM5088 Functional Block Diagram
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8.3 Feature Description
8.3.1 High Voltage Low-Dropout Regulator
The LM5088 contains a high voltage, low-dropout regulator that provides the VCC bias supply for the controller
and the bootstrap MOSFET gate driver. The input pin (VIN) can be connected directly to an input voltage as high
as 75V. The output of the VCC regulator (7.8V) is internally current limited to 30 mA. Upon power up, the
regulator sources current into the capacitor connected to the VCC pin. When the voltage at the VCC pin exceeds
the upper VCC UV threshold of 4.0V and the EN pin is greater than 1.2 Volts, the output (HG) is enabled and a
soft-start sequence begins. The output is terminated if VCC falls below its lower UV threshold (3.8V) or the EN
pin falls below 1.1V. When VIN is less than VCC regulation point of 7.8V, then the internal pass device acts as a
switch. Thereby, VCC tracks VIN with a voltage drop determined by the RDS(ON) of the internal switch and
operating current of the controller. The required VCC capacitor value is dependant on system startup
characteristics with a minimum value no less than 0.1 µF.
An auxiliary supply voltage can be applied to the VCC pin to reduce the IC power dissipation. If the auxiliary
voltage is greater than 8.2V, the internal regulator will be disabled. The VCC regulator series pass transistor
includes a diode between VCC and VIN that should not be forward biased in normal operation.
In high voltage applications, additional care should be taken to ensure that the VIN pin does not exceed the
absolute maximum voltage rating of 76V. During line or load transients, voltage ringing on the VIN pin that
exceeds the absolute maximum ratings may damage the IC. Both careful PC board layout and the use of high
quality bypass capacitors located close to the VIN and GND pins are essential.
8.3.2 Line Under-Voltage Detector
The LM5088 contains a dual level under-voltage lockout (UVLO) circuit. When the EN pin is below 0.4V, the
controller is in a low current shutdown mode. When the EN pin is greater than 0.4V but less than 1.2V, the
controller is in a standby mode. In standby mode the VCC regulator is active but the output switch is disabled
and the SS pin is held low. When the EN pin exceeds 1.2V and VCC exceeds the VCC UV threshold, the SS pin
and the output switch is enabled and normal operation begins. An internal 5 µA pull-up current source at the EN
pin configures the controller to be fully operational if the EN pin is left open.
An external VIN UVLO set-point voltage divider from VIN to GND can be used to set the minimum startup input
voltage of the controller. The divider must be designed such that the voltage at the EN pin exceeds 1.2V (typ)
when VIN is in the desired operating range. The internal 5 µA pull-up current source must be included in
calculations of the external set-point divider. 100 mV of hysteresis is included for both the shutdown and standby
thresholds. The EN pin is internally connected to a 1 kresistor and an 8V zener clamp. If the voltage at the EN
pin exceeds 8V, the bias current for the EN pin will increase at the rate of 1mA/V. The voltage at the EN pin
should never exceed 14V.
8.3.3 Oscillator and Sync Capability
The LM5088 oscillator frequency is set by a single external resistor connected between the RT pin and the GND
pin. The RTresistor should be located very close to the device. To set a desired oscillator frequency (fSW), the
necessary value of RTresistor can be calculated from the following equation:
(1)
The RT pin can also be used to synchronize the internal oscillator to an external clock. The internal oscillator is
synchronized to an external clock by AC coupling a positive edge into the RT/SYNC pin. The RT/SYNC pin
voltage must exceed 3V to trip the internal clock synchronization pulse detector. The free-running frequency
should be set nominally 15% below the external clock frequency and the pulse width applied to the RT/SYNC pin
must be less than 150ns. Synchronization to an external clock more than twice the free-running frequency can
produce abnormal behavior of the pulse-width modulator.
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1.2V STANDBY
0.4V SHUTDOWN
VIN 5.0V
EN
RUV1
5 PA
LM5088
RUV2
1 k:
8V
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,
LM5088-Q1
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Feature Description (continued)
Figure 14. Basic Enable Configuration
8.3.4 Error Amplifier and PWM Comparator
The internal high gain error amplifier generates an error signal proportional to the difference between the
regulated output voltage and an internal precision voltage reference (1.205V). The output of the error amplifier is
connected to the COMP pin allowing the user to connect loop compensation components. Generally a type II
network, as illustrated in the Figure 13 , is sufficient. This network creates a pole at DC, a mid-band zero for
phase boost and a high frequency pole for noise reduction. The PWM comparator compares the emulated
current signal from the RAMP generator to the error amplifier output voltage at the COMP pin. A typical control
loop gain/phase plot is shown in Typical Characteristics.
8.3.5 Ramp Generator
The ramp signal used for the pulse width modulator in current mode control is typically derived directly from the
buck switch current. This signal corresponds to the positive slope portion of the buck inductor current. Using this
signal for the PWM ramp simplifies the control loop transfer function to a single pole response and provides
inherent input voltage feed-forward compensation. The disadvantage of using the buck switch current signal for
PWM control is the large leading edge spike due to circuit parasitics which must be filtered or blanked. Also, the
current measurement may introduce significant propagation delays. The filtering time, blanking time and
propagation delay limit the minimum achievable pulse width. In applications where the input voltage may be
relatively large in comparison to the output voltage, controlling small pulse widths and duty cycles is necessary
for regulation. The LM5088 utilizes a unique ramp generator which does not actually measure the buck switch
current but rather reconstructs or emulates the signal. Emulating the inductor current provides a ramp signal that
is free of leading edge spikes and measurement or filtering delays. The current reconstruction is comprised of
two elements; a sample & hold DC level and an emulated current ramp.
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CRAMP = RS x A
gm x L
TON
Sample and Hold
DC Level V/A10 x RS
RAMP TON
(5 PA/V x (VIN ± VOUT) + 25 PA) x CRAMP
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Feature Description (continued)
Figure 15. Composition of Current Sense Signal
The sample & hold DC level illustrated in Figure 15 is derived from a measurement of the re-circulating (or free-
wheeling) diode current. The diode current flows through the current sense resistor connected between the CS
and CSG pins. The voltage across the sense resistor is sampled and held just prior to the onset of the next
conduction interval of the buck switch. The diode current sensing and sample & hold provide the DC level for the
reconstructed current signal. The positive slope inductor current ramp is emulated by an external capacitor
connected from the RAMP pin to GND and an internal voltage controlled current source. The ramp current
source that emulates the inductor current is a function of the VIN and VOUT voltages per the following equation:
IRAMP = 5 µA/V x (VIN - VOUT) + 25 µA (2)
Proper selection of the RAMP capacitor depends upon the selected value of the output inductor and the current
sense resistor (RS). For proper current emulation, the DC sample & hold value and the ramp amplitude must
have the same dependence on the load current. That is:
where
gmis the ramp current generator transconductance (5 µA/V)
A is the gain of the current sense amplifier (10V/V) (3)
The RAMP capacitor should connected directly to the RAMP and GND pins of the IC.
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Dropout_Voltage = VOUT x TOSC - TOFF(max)
TOFF(max)
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Feature Description (continued)
For duty cycles greater than 50%, peak current mode control circuits are subject to sub-harmonic oscillation.
Sub-harmonic oscillation is normally characterized by alternating wide and narrow pulses at the SW pin. Adding
a fixed slope voltage ramp (slope compensation) to the current sense signal prevents this oscillation. The 25 µA
offset current supplied by the emulated current source provides a fixed slope to the ramp signal. In some high
output voltage, high duty cycles applications; additional slope compensation may be required. In these
applications, a pull-up resistor may be added between the RAMP and VCC pins to increase the ramp slope
compensation. A formula to configure pull-up resistor is shown in Application and Implementation.
8.3.6 Dropout Voltage Reduction
The LM5088 features unique circuitry to reduce the dropout voltage. Dropout voltage is defined as the difference
between the minimum input voltage to maintain regulation and the output voltage (VINmin - Vout). Dropout voltage
thus determines the lowest input voltage at which the converter maintains regulation. In a buck converter,
dropout voltage primarily depends upon the maximum duty cycle. The maximum duty cycle is dependant on the
oscillator frequency and minimum off-time.
An approximation for the dropout voltage is:
where
TOSC = 1/fSW
TOFF (max) is the forced off-time (280 ns typical, 365 ns maximum)
fSW is the oscillator frequency
TOSC is the oscillator period (4)
From the above equation, it can be seen that for a given output voltage, reducing the dropout voltage requires
either reducing the forced off-time or oscillator frequency (1/TOSC). The forced off-time is limited by the time
required to replenish the bootstrap capacitor and time required to sample the re-circulating diode current. The
365 ns forced off-time of the LM5088 controller is a good trade-off between these two requirements. Thus the
LM5088 reduces dropout voltage by dynamically decreasing the operating frequency during dropout. The
Dynamic Frequency Control (DFC) is achieved using a dropout monitor, which detects a dropout condition and
reduces the operating frequency. The operating frequency will continue to decrease with decreasing input
voltage until the frequency falls to the minimum value set by the DFC circuitry.
fSW(minDFC) 1/3 x fSW(nominal) (5)
If the VIN voltage continues to fall below this point, output regulation can no longer be maintained. The oscillator
frequency will revert back to the nominal operating frequency set by the RT resistor when the input voltage
increases above the dropout range. DFC circuitry does not affect the PWM during normal operating conditions.
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Cdither tfSW x 0.12V
100 x 25 PA
Normal Operation Transition Region Low Dropout Mode
E
Dropout
reduce dropout
Forced
off-time
Forced
off-time
Regulation
Point
ON-TIM CLK VOUT VIN
fSW(minDFC)
Extended
TON(max)
TON(max) TON(maxDFC)
increased to
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Feature Description (continued)
Figure 16. Dropout Voltage Reduction using Dynamic Frequency Control
8.3.7 Frequency Dithering (LM5088-1 Only)
Electro-Magnetic Interference (EMI) emissions are fundamentally associated with switch-mode power supplies
due to sharp voltage transitions, diode reverse recovery currents and the ringing of parasitic L-C circuits. These
emissions will conduct back to the power source or radiate into the environment and potentially interfering with
nearby electronic systems. System designers typically use a combination of shielding, filtering and layout
techniques to reduce the EMI emissions sufficiently to satisfy EMI emission standards established by regulatory
bodies. In a typical fixed frequency switching converter, narrowband emissions typically peak at the switching
frequency with the successive harmonics having less energy. Dithering the oscillator frequency spreads the EMI
energy over a range of frequencies, thus reducing the peak levels. Dithering can also reduce the system cost by
reducing the size and quantity of EMI filtering components.
The LM5088-1 provides an optional frequency dithering function which is enabled by connecting a capacitor from
the dither pin (DITH) to GND. Connecting the DITH pin directly to GND disables frequency dithering causing the
oscillator to operate at the frequency established by the RT resistor. As shown in Figure 17, the Cdither capacitor
is used to generate a triangular wave centered at 1.2V. This triangular waveform is used to manipulate the
oscillator circuit such that the oscillator frequency modulates from -5% to +5% of the nominal operating
frequency set by the RT resistor. The Cdither capacitor value sets the rate of the low frequency modulation i.e., a
lower value Cdither capacitor will modulate the oscillator frequency from -5% to +5% at a faster rate than a higher
value capacitor. For the dither circuit to work effectively the modulation rate must be much less than the oscillator
frequency (fSW), Cdither should be selected such that;
(6)
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Product Folder Links: LM5088 LM5088-Q1
DITHER
+
-Q
Q
R
S
+
-
Oscillator Tosc+'t
Tosc
Tosc-'t
1.26V
Cdither
+5V
25 PA
1.14V
1.26V
1.20V
1.14V
LM5088
50 PA
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Feature Description (continued)
Figure 17. Frequency Dithering Scheme
Figure 18. Conducted Emissions Measured at the Input of a LM5088 Based Buck Converter
Figure 18 shows the conducted emissions on the LM5088 evaluation board input power line. It can be seen from
the above picture that, the peak emissions with non-dithering operation are centered narrowly at the operating
frequency of the converter. With dithering operation, the conducted emissions are spread around the operating
frequency and the maximum amplitude is reduced by approximately 10dB. (Figure 18 was captured using a
Chroma DC power supply model number 62006P and an Agilent network analyzer model number 4395A).
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VOUT
VIN x fSW x CRAMP
25 PA x
IPEAK = A x RS
VOUT
VIN x fSW x CRAMP
1.2V - 25 PA x
0.12V
RS
or IPEAK #
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Feature Description (continued)
8.3.8 Cycle-by-Cycle Current Limit
The LM5088 contains a current limit feature that protects the circuit from extended over current conditions. The
emulated current signal is directly proportional to the buck switch current and is applied to the current limit
comparator. If the emulated current exceeds 1.2V, the PWM cycle is terminated. The peak inductor current
required to trigger the current limit comparator is given by:
where
A = 10V/V is the current sense amplifier gain
CRAMP is the ramp capacitor
RSis the sense resistor
is the voltage ramp added for slope compensation
1.2 V is the reference of the current limit comparator (7)
is the voltage ramp added for slope compensation and 1.2V is the reference of the current limit comparator.
Since the current that charges the RAMP capacitor is proportional to VIN-VOUT, if the output is suddenly
shorted, the VOUT term is zero and the RAMP charging current increases. The increased RAMP charging
current will immediately reduce the PWM duty cycle. The LM5088 also includes a buck switch protection
scheme. A dedicated comparator monitors the drain to source voltage of the buck FET when it is turned ON, if
the VDS exceeds 1.5V, the comparator turns off the buck FET immediately. This feature will help protect the buck
FET in catastrophic conditions such as a sudden saturation of the inductor.
8.3.9 Overload Protection Timer (LM5088-2 Only)
To further protect the external circuitry during a prolonged over current condition, the LM5088-2 provides a
current limit timer to disable the switching regulator and provide a delay before restarting (hiccup mode). The
number of current limit events required to trigger the restart mode is programmed by an external capacitor at the
RES pin. During each PWM cycle, as shown in Figure 20, the LM5088 either sinks current from or sources
current into the RES capacitor. If the emulated current ramp exceeds the 1.2V current limit threshold, the present
PWM cycle is terminated and the LM5088 sources 50 µA into the RES pin capacitor during the next PWM clock
cycle. If a current limit event is not detected in a given PWM cycle, the LM5088 disables the 50 µA source
current and sinks 27 µA from the RES pin capacitor during the next cycle. In an overload condition, the LM5088
protects the converter with cycle-by-cycle current limiting until the voltage at RES pin reaches 1.2V. When RES
reaches 1.2V, a hiccup mode sequence is initiated as follows:
The SS capacitor is fully discharged.
The RES capacitor is discharged with 1.2 µA
Once the RES capacitor reaches 0.2V, a normal soft-start sequence begins. This provides a time delay
before restart.
If the overload condition persists after restart, the cycle repeats.
If the overload condition no longer exists after restart, the RES pin is held at ground by the 27 µA discharge
current source and normal operation resumes.
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Product Folder Links: LM5088 LM5088-Q1
RES
SS
HG
Current Limit Detected
at CS
Current Limit Persistent
Charge Restart cap
with 50 PA current
Discharge Restart
cap with 1.2 PA
11PA
0.2V
FB+120 mV
t2
t1
1.2V
0V
RES
Hiccup
current
source
logic
Current
limit cycle
limit cycle
CLK
+
-
LM5088
R
S
Q
+
-
HG OFF
SS begins
Restart Q
SS = 0
50 PA
5.0V
Non-current
CRES
Post-fault
Discharge
current
I-Limit
0.2V
1.2V
1.2 PA27 PA
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Feature Description (continued)
The overload protection timer is very versatile and can be configured for the following modes of protection:
1. Cycle-by-Cycle only: The hiccup mode can be completely disabled by connecting the RES pin to GND. In
this configuration, the cycle-by-cycle protection will limit the output current indefinitely and no hiccup
sequence will occur.
2. Delayed Hiccup: Connecting a capacitor to the RES pin provides a programmed number of cycle-by-cycle
current limit events before initiating a hiccup mode restart, as previously described. The advantage of this
configuration is that a short term overload will not cause a hiccup mode restart but during extended overload
conditions, the average dissipation of the power converter will be very low.
3. Externally Controlled Hiccup: The RES pin can also be used as an input. By externally driving the pin to a
level greater than the 1.2V hiccup threshold, the controller will be forced into the delayed restart sequence.
For example, the external trigger for a delayed restart sequence could come from an over-temperature
protection or an output over-voltage sensor.
Figure 19. Current Limit Restart Circuit
Figure 20. Current Limit Restart Timing Diagram
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Feature Description (continued)
8.3.10 Soft-Start
The soft-start (SS) feature forces the output to rise linearly until it reaches the steady-state operating voltage set
by the feedback resistors. The LM5088 will regulate the FB pin to the SS pin voltage or the internal 1.205V
reference, which ever is lower. At the beginning of the soft-start sequence VSS = 0V and, an internal 11 µA
current source gradually increases the voltage of the external soft-start capacitor (CSS). An internal amplifier
clamps the SS pin voltage at 120 mV above the FB voltage. This feature provides soft-start controlled recovery
with reduced output overshoot in the event that the output voltage momentarily dips out of regulation.
8.3.11 HG Output
The LM5088 provides a high current, high-side driver and associated level shift circuit to drive an external N-
Channel MOSFET. The gate driver works in conjunction with an internal diode and external bootstrap capacitor.
A ceramic bootstrap capacitor is recommended, and should be connected directly between the BOOT and SW
pins. During the off-time of the buck switch, the bootstrap capacitor charges from VCC through an internal diode.
When operating with a high PWM duty cycle, the HG output will be forced-off each cycle for 365 ns (max) to
ensure that BOOT capacitor is recharged. A “pre-charge” circuit, comprised of a MOSFET between SW and
GND, is turned ON during the forced off-time to help replenish the BOOT capacitor. The pre-charge circuit
provides charge to the BOOT capacitor under light load or pre-biased load conditions when the SW voltage does
not remain low during the entire off-time.
8.3.12 Thermal Protection
Internal thermal shutdown circuitry is provided to protect the integrated circuit in the event the maximum
operating temperature is exceeded. When activated, typically at 165°C, the controller is forced into a low power
reset state, disabling the output driver and the bias supply of the controller. The feature prevents catastrophic
failures from accidental device over-heating.
8.4 Device Functional Modes
8.4.1 EN Pin Modes
If the EN pin voltage is below 0.4 V, the regulator will be in a low power state. If the EN pin voltage is between
0.4 V and 1.2 V, the controller will be in standby mode. If the EN pin voltage is above 1.2 V, the controller will be
operational. An external voltage divider can be used to set a line under the voltage shutdown threshold. If the EN
pin is left open, a 5-μA pull-up current forces the pin to the high state and enables the controller.
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Product Folder Links: LM5088 LM5088-Q1
RRT = 152 pF
250 kHz
1- 280 ns = 24.5 k:
BOOT
SW
COMP
FB
RAMP
DITH/RES
VCC
VIN
OUT
CS
CSG
VOUT
EN
HG
GND
L
D
Rs
Q
LM5088
CDITHER/RESTART
CIN
CVCC
CSS
CRAMP
RRAMP
RRT RCOMP CCOMP
CHF
COUT1 COUT2
RFB2
RFB1
CBOOT
RUV2
RUV1
VIN (4.5V-75V)
SS
RT/SYNC
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9 Application and Implementation
9.1 Application Information
The LM5088 Wide Input Range buck Controller features all the functions necessary to implement an efficient
high voltage step-down converter using a minimum number of external components. The LM5088 is well suited
for a wide range of applications where efficient step-down of high, unregulated input voltage is required.
9.2 Typical Application
Figure 21. LM5088 Typical Application Schematic
9.3 Design Requirements
The procedure for calculating the external components is illustrated with the following design example. The
circuit shown in Figure 27 and Figure 28 is configured for the following specifications:
Output Voltage = 5V
Input Voltage = 5.5V to 36V
Maximum Load Current = 7A
Switching Frequency = 250 kHz
9.4 Detailed Design Procedure
9.4.1 Timing Resistor
The RT resistor sets the oscillator switching frequency. Higher frequencies result in smaller size components
such as the inductor and filter capacitors. However, operating at higher frequencies also results in higher
MOSFET and diode switching losses. Operation at 250 kHz was selected for this example as a reasonable
compromise between size and efficiency.
The value of RT resistor can be calculated as follows:
(8)
The nearest standard value of 24.9 kwas chosen for RT.
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L = 5V
0.4 x 7A x 250 kHz 5V
1 - 55V
x= 6.2 PH
0
IPP
T = 1/FSW
IO
L = VOUT
IPP x fSW
VOUT
1 - VIN(max)
x
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Detailed Design Procedure (continued)
9.4.2 Output Inductor
The inductor value is determined based on the operating frequency, load current, ripple current and the input and
output voltages.
Knowing the switching frequency (fSW), maximum ripple current (IPP), maximum input voltage (VIN(max)) and the
nominal output voltage (VOUT), the inductor value can be calculated as follows:
(9)
Figure 22. Inductor Current
The maximum ripple current occurs at the maximum input voltage. Typically, IPP is selected between 20% and
40% of the full load current. Higher ripple current will result in a smaller inductor. However, it places more burden
on the output capacitor to smooth out the ripple current to achieve low output ripple voltage. For this example
40% ripple was chosen for a smaller sized inductor.
(10)
The nearest standard value of 6.8 µH will be used. To prevent saturation, the inductor must be rated for the peak
current. During normal operation, the peak current occurs at maximum load current (plus maximum ripple). With
properly scaled component values, the peak current is limited to VCS(TH)/RSDuring overload conditions. At the
maximum input voltage with a shorted output, the chosen inductor must be evaluated at elevated temperature. It
should be noted that the saturation current rating of inductors drops significantly at elevated temperatures.
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Product Folder Links: LM5088 LM5088-Q1
VCC
RRAMP
CRAMP
RAMP
RRAMP = VVCC - VRAMP
IOS - 25 PA
CRAMP = 5 PA/V x 6.8 PH
10V/V x 10 m:= 340 pF
CRAMP = gm x L
A x RS
SW
CS
SOUT
OUT PP
V
RV
(1 margin) (I 0.5 I ) L f
0.12 10 mΩ
5 V
(1 0.1) (7 A 0.5 2.8) 6.8 H 250 kHz
=
+ ´ + ´ +
´
= @
+ ´ + ´ +
m ´
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Detailed Design Procedure (continued)
9.4.3 Current Sense Resistor
The current limit value (ILIM) is set by the current sense resistor (RS).
RScan be calculated by
(11)
Some ‘margin’ beyond the maximum load current is recommended for the current limit threshold. In this design
example, the current limit is set at 10% above the maximum load current, resulting in a RSvalue of 10 m. The
CS and CSG pins should be Kelvin connected to the current sense resistor.
9.4.4 Ramp Capacitor
With the inductor and sense resistor value selected, the value of the ramp capacitor (CRAMP) necessary for the
emulation ramp circuit is given by:
where
L is the value of the output inductor
gm is the ramp generator transconductance (5 µA/V)
A is the current sense amplifier gain (10V/V) (12)
For the current design example, the ramp capacitor is calculated as:
(13)
The next lowest standard value 270 pF was selected for CRAMP. An NPO capacitor with 5% or better tolerance is
recommended. It should be noted that selecting a capacitor value lower than the calculated value will increase
the slope compensation. Furthermore, selecting a ramp capacitor substantially lower or higher than the
calculated value will also result in incorrect PWM operation.
For VOUT > 5V, internal slope compensation provided by the LM5088 may not be adequate for certain operating
conditions especially at low input voltages. A pull-up resistor may be added from VCC to RAMP the pin to
increase the slope compensation. Optimal slope compensation current may be calculated from
IOS = VOUT x 5 µA/V (14)
and RRAMP is given by
(15)
Figure 23. Additional Slope Compensation for VOUT > 5V
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'VIN = IOUT
4 x fSW x CIN == 636 mV
7A
4 x 250 kHz x 11 PF
CO = ('V + VOUT)2 - VOUT2
'IPP
IO + 2
L x 2
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Detailed Design Procedure (continued)
9.4.5 Output Capacitors
The output capacitors smooth the inductor current ripple and provide a source of charge for load transient
conditions. The output capacitor selection is primarily dictated by the following specifications:
1. Steady-state output peak-peak ripple (ΔVPK-PK)
2. Output voltage deviation during transient condition (ΔVTransient)
For the 5V output design example, ΔVPK-PK = 50 mV (1% of VOUT) and ΔTTransient = 100 mV (2% of VOUT) was
chosen. The magnitude of output ripple primarily depends on ESR of the capacitors while load transient voltage
deviation depends both on the output capacitance and ESR.
When a full load is suddenly removed from the output, the output capacitor must be large enough to prevent the
inductor energy to raise the output voltage above the specified maximum voltage. In other words, the output
capacitor must be large enough to absorb the inductor’s maximum stored energy. Equating the stored energy
equations of both the inductor and the output capacitor it can be shown that:
(16)
Evaluating, the above equation with a ΔVout of 100 mV results in an output capacitance of 475 µF. As stated
earlier, the maximum peak to peak ripple primarily depends on the ESR of the output capacitor and the inductor
ripple current. To satisfy the ΔVPK-PK of 50 mV with 40% inductor current ripple, the ESR should be less than 15
m. In this design example a 470 µF aluminum capacitor with an ESR of 10 mis paralleled with two 47 µF
ceramic capacitors to further reduce the ESR.
9.4.6 Input Capacitors
The input power supply typically has large source impedance at the switching frequency. Good quality input
capacitors are necessary to limit the ripple voltage at the VIN pin while supplying most of the switch current
during the on-time. When the buck switch turns ON, the current into the external FET steps to the valley of the
inductor current waveform at turn-on, ramps up to the peak value, and then drops to zero at turn-off. The input
capacitors should be selected for RMS current rating and minimum ripple voltage. A good approximation for the
ripple current is IRMS > IOUT/2.
Quality ceramic capacitors with a low ESR should be selected for the input filter. To allow for capacitor
tolerances and voltage rating, five 2.2 µF, 100V ceramic capacitors were selected. With ceramic capacitors, the
input ripple voltage will be triangular and will peak at 50% duty cycle. Taking into account the capacitance
change with DC bias a worst case input peak-to-peak ripple voltage can be approximated as:
(17)
When the converter is connected to an input power source, a resonant circuit is formed by the line impedance
and the input capacitors. This can result in an overshoot at the VIN pin and could result in VIN exceeding its
absolute maximum rating. Because of those conditions, it is recommended that either an aluminum type
capacitor with an ESR or increasing CIN>10 x LIN While using aluminum type capacitor care should be taken to
not exceed its maximum ripple current rating. Tantalum capacitors must be avoided at the input as they are
prone to shorting.
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RFB2
RFB1
VOUT
1.205V
=-1
CHB t'VHB
Qg
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Detailed Design Procedure (continued)
9.4.7 VCC Capacitor
The capacitor at the VCC pin provides noise filtering and stability for the VCC regulator. The recommended value
should be no smaller than 0.1 µF, and should be a good quality, low ESR, ceramic capacitor. A value of 1 µF
was selected for this design.
9.4.8 Bootstrap Capacitor
The bootstrap capacitor between HB and SW pins supplies the gate current to charge the high-side MOSFET
gate at each cycle’s turn-on as well as supplying the recovery charge for the bootstrap diode (D1).The peak
current can be several amperes. The recommended value of the bootstrap capacitor is at least 0.022 µF and
should be a good quality, low ESR, ceramic capacitor located close to the pins of the IC. The absolute minimum
value for the bootstrap capacitor is calculated as:
where
Qgis the high-side MOSFET gate charge
ΔVHB is the tolerable voltage droop on CHB, which is typically less than 5% of the VCC (18)
.A value of 0.1 µF was selected for this design.
9.4.9 Soft-start Capacitor
The capacitor at the SS capacitor determines the soft-start time, the output voltage to reach the final regulated
value. The value of CSS for a given time is determined from:
(19)
For this design example, a value of 0.022 µF was chosen for a soft start time of approximately 2 ms.
9.4.10 Output Voltage Divider
RFB1 and RFB2 set the output voltage level, the ratio of these resistors can be calculated from:
(20)
1.62 kwas chosen for RFB1 in this design which results in a RFB2 value of 5.11 k. A reasonable guide is to
select the value of RFB1 value such that the current through the resistor (1.2V/ RFB1) is in between 1 mA and 100
µA.
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Trestart_delay = CRES x 1.2V
50 PA= CRES x 24k
RUV1 = 1.2V x RUV2
(VIN(min) + (5 PA x RUV2) - 1.2V)
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Detailed Design Procedure (continued)
9.4.11 UVLO Divider
A voltage divider can be connected to the EN pin to the set the minimum startup voltage (VIN(min)) of the
regulator. If this feature is required, set the value of RUV2 between 10 kand 100 kand then calculate RUV1
from:
(21)
In this design, for a VIN(min) of 5V, RUV2 was selected to be 54.9 kresulting in a RUV1value of 16.2 k. it is
recommended to install a capacitor parallel to RUV1 for filtering. If the EN pin is left open, the LM5088 will begin
operation once the upper VCC UV threshold of 4.0V (typ) is reached.
9.4.12 Restart Capacitor (LM5008-2 only)
The basic operation of the hiccup mode current limit is described in Overload Protection Timer (LM5088-2 Only).
In the LM5088-2 application example the RES pin is configured for delayed hiccup mode. Please refer to
Overload Protection Timer (LM5088-2 Only) to configure this pin in alternate configurations and also refer to
Figure 20. The delay time to initiate a hiccup cycle (t1) is programmed by the selection of RES pin capacitor. In
the case of continuous cycle-by-cycle current limit detection at the CS pin, the time required for CRES to reach the
1.2V is given by
(22)
The cool down time (t2) is set by the time taken to discharge the RES cap with 1.2 µA current source. This
feature will reduce the input power drawn by the converter during a prolonged over current condition. In this
application 500 µs of delay time was selected. The minimum value of CRES capacitor should be no less than
0.022 µF.
9.4.13 MOSFET Selection
Selection of the Buck MOSFET is governed by the same tradeoffs as the switching frequency. Losses in power
MOSFETs can be broken down into conduction losses and switching losses. The conduction loss is given by:
PDC = D x (IO2x RDS(ON) x 1.3)
where
D is the duty cycle
IO is the maximum load current (23)
The factor 1.3 accounts for the increase in MOSFET on-resistance due to heating. Alternatively, for a more
precise calculation, the factor of 1.3 can be ignored and the on-resistance of the MOSFET can be estimated
using the RDS(ON) vs. Temperature curves in the MOSFET datasheet.
The switching loss occurs during the brief transition period as the MOSFET turns on and off. During the transition
period both current and voltage are present in the MOSFET. The switching loss can be approximated as:
PSW = 0.5 x VIN x IOx (tR+ tF) x fSW
where
tRthe rise time of the MOSFET
tFis the fall time of the MOSFET (24)
The rise and fall times are usually mentioned in the MOSFET datasheet or can be empirically observed on the
scope. Another loss, which is associated with the buck MOSFET is the “gate-charging loss”. This loss differs
from the above two losses in the sense that it is dissipated in the LM5088 and not in the MOSFET itself. Gate
charging loss, PGC, results from the current driving charging the gate capacitance of the power MOSFETs and is
approximated as:
PGC = VCC x Qgx fSW (25)
Copyright © 2008–2014, Texas Instruments Incorporated Submit Documentation Feedback 25
Product Folder Links: LM5088 LM5088-Q1
LM5088
,
LM5088-Q1
SNVS600I DECEMBER 2008REVISED AUGUST 2014
www.ti.com
Detailed Design Procedure (continued)
For this example with the maximum input voltage of 55V, the Vds breakdown rating of the selected MOSFET
must be greater than 55V plus any ringing across drain to source due to parasitics. In order to minimize switching
time and gate drive losses, the selected MOSFET must also have low gate charge (Qg). A good choice of
MOSFET for this design example is the SI7148DP which has a total gate charge of 30nC and rise and fall times
of 10 ns and 12 ns respectively.
9.4.14 Diode Selection
A Schottky type re-circulating diode is required for all LM5088 applications. The near ideal reverse recovery
current transients and low forward voltage drop are particularly important diode characteristics for high input
voltage and low output voltage applications common to LM5088. The diode switching loss is minimized in a
Schottky diode because of near ideal reverse recovery. The conduction loss can be approximated by:
Pdc_diode = (1 - D) x IOx VF
where
VFis the forward drop of the diode (26)
The worst case is to assume a short circuit load condition. In this case, the diode will carry the output current
almost continuously. The reverse breakdown rating should be selected for the maximum input voltage level plus
some additional safety margin to withstand ringing at the SW node. For this application a 60V On Semiconductor
Schottky diode (MBRB2060) with a specified forward drop of 0.6V at 7A at a junction temperature of 50°C was
selected. For output loads of 5A and greater and high input voltage applications, a diode in a D2PAK package is
recommended to support the worst case power dissipation
9.4.15 Snubber Components Selection
Excessive ringing and spikes can cause erratic operation and couple spikes and noise to the output. Voltage
spikes beyond the rating of the LM5088 or the re-circulating diode can damage these devices. A snubber
network across the power diode reduces ringing and spikes at the switching node. Selecting the values for the
snubber is best accomplished through empirical methods. First, make sure that the lead lengths for the snubber
connections are very short. For the current levels typical for the LM5088, a resistor value between 3 and 10
should be adequate. As a rule of thumb, a snubber capacitor which is 4~5 times the Schottky diode’s junction
capacitance will reduce spikes adequately. Increasing the value of the snubber capacitor will result in more
damping but also results in higher losses. The resistor’s power dissipation is independent of the resistance value
as the resistor dissipates the energy stored by the snubber capacitor. The resistor’s power dissipation can be
approximated as:
PR_SNUB = CSNUB x VINmax2x fSW (27)
26 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2014, Texas Instruments Incorporated
Product Folder Links: LM5088 LM5088-Q1
-60
-40
-20
0
20
40
60
1.E+01 1.E+02 1.E+03 1.E+04 1.E+05
FREQUENCY (Hz)
GAIN (dB)
-200
-160
-120
-80
-40
0
40
80
PHASE (°)
120
160
200
LM5088
,
LM5088-Q1
www.ti.com
SNVS600I DECEMBER 2008REVISED AUGUST 2014
Detailed Design Procedure (continued)
9.4.16 Error Amplifier Compensation
RCOMP, CCOMP and CHF configure the error amplifier gain characteristics to accomplish a stable voltage loop gain.
One advantage of current mode control is the ability of to close the loop with only two feedback components
RCOMP and CCOMP. The voltage loop gain is the product of the modulator gain and the error amplifier gain. For
this example, the modulator can be treated as an ideal voltage-to-current (transconductance) converter, The DC
modulator gain of the LM5088 can be modeled as:
DC Gain (MOD) = RLOAD/(AxRS)
The dominant low frequency pole of the modulator is determined by the load resistance (RLOAD) and the output
capacitance (COUT). The corner frequency of this pole is:
If RLOAD = 5V/7A = 0.714and COUT = 500 µF (effective), then FP(MOD) = 550 Hz. (28)
DC Gain(MOD) = 0.714/ (10 x 10 m) = 7.14 = 17dB (29)
For the 5V design example the modulator gain vs. frequency characteristic was measured as shown in Figure 24.
Figure 24. Modular Gain Phase
Copyright © 2008–2014, Texas Instruments Incorporated Submit Documentation Feedback 27
Product Folder Links: LM5088 LM5088-Q1
-200
-160
-120
-80
-40
0
40
80
PHASE (°)
120
160
200
-60
-40
-20
0
20
40
60
GAIN (dB)
1.E+02 1.E+03 1.E+04 1.E+05
FREQUENCY (Hz)
-60
-40
-20
0
20
40
60
1.E+02 1.E+03 1.E+04 1.E+05 1.E+06
FREQUENCY (Hz)
GAIN (dB)
-200
-160
-120
-80
-40
0
40
80
PHASE (o)
120
160
200
LM5088
,
LM5088-Q1
SNVS600I DECEMBER 2008REVISED AUGUST 2014
www.ti.com
Detailed Design Procedure (continued)
Components RCOMP and CCOMP configure the error amplifier as a type II compensation configuration. The DC
gain of the amplifier is 80dB which has a pole at low frequency and a zero at FZero = 1/(2πx RCOMP x CCOMP).
The error amplifier zero is set such that it cancels the modulator pole leaving a single pole response at the
crossover frequency of the voltage loop. A single pole response at the crossover frequency yields a very stable
loop with 90° of phase margin. For the design example, a target loop bandwidth (crossover frequency) of 15 kHz
was selected. The compensation network zero (FZero) should be at least an order of magnitude lower than the
target crossover frequency. This constrains the product of RCOMP and CCOMP for a desired compensation network
zero 1/ (2πx RCOMP x CCOMP) to be less than 1.5 kHz. Increasing RCOMP, while proportionally decreasing CCOMP,
decreases the error amp gain. For the design example CCOMP was selected to be 0.015 µF and RCOMP was
selected to be 18 k. These values configure the compensation network zero at 0.6 kHz. The error amp gain at
frequencies greater than FZero is RCOMP /RFB2, which is approximately 3.56 (11dB).
Figure 25. Error Amplifier Gain and Phase
The overall voltage loop gain can be predicted as the sum (in dB) of the modulator gain and the error amp gain.
If a network analyzer is available, the modulator gain can be measured and the error amplifier gain can be
configured for the desired loop transfer function. If a network analyzer is not available, the error amplifier
compensation components can be designed with the suggested guidelines. Step load transient tests can be
performed to verify performance. The step load goal is minimum overshoot with a damped response. CHF can be
added to the compensation network to decrease noise susceptibility of the error amplifier. The value of CHF must
be sufficiently small since the addition of this capacitor adds a pole in the error amplifier transfer function. A good
approximation of the location of the pole added by CHF is FP2 = FZero x CCOMP/ CHF.Using CHF is recommended to
minimize coupling of any switching noise into the modulator. The value of CHF was selected as 100 pF for this
design example.
Figure 26. Overall Loop Gain and Phase
28 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2014, Texas Instruments Incorporated
Product Folder Links: LM5088 LM5088-Q1
LM5088
,
LM5088-Q1
www.ti.com
SNVS600I DECEMBER 2008REVISED AUGUST 2014
Detailed Design Procedure (continued)
9.4.17 Application Curves
See Figure 24 through Figure 26 for Typical Application Curves.
10 Power Supply Recommendations
10.1 Thermal Considerations
In a buck converter, most of the losses can be attributed to MOSFET conduction and switching loss, re-
circulating diode conduction loss, inductor DCR loss and LM5088 VIN and VCC loss. The other dissipative
components in a buck converter produce losses but these other losses collectively account for about 2% of the
total loss. Formulae to calculate all the major losses are described in their respective sections of this datasheet.
The easiest method to determine the power dissipated within the LM5088 is to measure the total conversion
losses (Pin-Pout), then subtract the power losses in the Schottky diode, MOSFET, output inductor and snubber
resistor. When operating at 7 A of output current and at 55 V, the power dissipation of the LM5088 is
approximately 850 mW. The junction to ambient thermal resistance of the LM5088 mounted in the evaluation
board is approximately 40°C with no airflow. At 25°C ambient temperature and no airflow, the predicted junction
temperature will be 25+40*0.9 = 61°C. The LM5088 has an exposed thermal pad to aid in power dissipation.
Adding several vias under the device will greatly reduce the controller junction temperature. The junction to
ambient thermal resistance will vary with application. The most significant variables are the area of copper in the
PC board; the number of vias under the IC exposed pad and the amount of forced air cooling. The integrity of
solder connection from the IC exposed pad to the PC board is critical. Excessive voids will greatly diminish the
thermal dissipation capacity.
Copyright © 2008–2014, Texas Instruments Incorporated Submit Documentation Feedback 29
Product Folder Links: LM5088 LM5088-Q1
LM5088
,
LM5088-Q1
SNVS600I DECEMBER 2008REVISED AUGUST 2014
www.ti.com
Figure 27. LM5088-1 Application Schematic
30 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2014, Texas Instruments Incorporated
Product Folder Links: LM5088 LM5088-Q1
LM5088
,
LM5088-Q1
www.ti.com
SNVS600I DECEMBER 2008REVISED AUGUST 2014
Figure 28. LM5088-2 Application Schematic
Copyright © 2008–2014, Texas Instruments Incorporated Submit Documentation Feedback 31
Product Folder Links: LM5088 LM5088-Q1
Controller
VIN
GND
GND
VOUT
Inductor
CIN
CIN
COUT
COUT
RS
Q
D
LM5088
,
LM5088-Q1
SNVS600I DECEMBER 2008REVISED AUGUST 2014
www.ti.com
11 Layout
11.1 Layout Guidelines
In a buck regulator there are two loops where currents are switched very fast. The first loop starts from the input
capacitors, through the buck MOSFET, to the inductor then out to the load. The second loop starts from the
output capacitor ground, to the regulator PGND pins, to the current sense resistor, through the Schottky diode, to
the inductor and then out to the load. Minimizing the area of these two loops reduces the stray inductance and
minimizes noise which can cause erratic operation. A ground plane is recommended as a means to connect the
input filter capacitors of the output filter capacitors and the PGND pin of the regulator. Connect all of the low
power ground connections (CSS, RT, CRAMP) directly to the regulator GND pin. Connect the GND pin and PGND
pins together through to topside copper area covering the entire underside of the device. Place several vias in
this underside copper area to the ground plane. The input capacitor ground connection should be as close as
possible to the current sense ground connection.
11.2 Layout Example
Figure 29. LM5088 Layout Example
32 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2014, Texas Instruments Incorporated
Product Folder Links: LM5088 LM5088-Q1
LM5088
,
LM5088-Q1
www.ti.com
SNVS600I DECEMBER 2008REVISED AUGUST 2014
12 Device and Documentation Support
12.1 Related Links
The table below lists quick access links. Categories include technical documents, support and community
resources, tools and software, and quick access to sample or buy.
Table 1. Related Links
TECHNICAL TOOLS & SUPPORT &
PARTS PRODUCT FOLDER SAMPLE & BUY DOCUMENTS SOFTWARE COMMUNITY
LM5088 Click here Click here Click here Click here Click here
LM5088-Q1 Click here Click here Click here Click here Click here
12.2 Trademarks
All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
12.3 Electrostatic Discharge Caution
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.
12.4 Glossary
SLYZ022 TI Glossary.
This glossary lists and explains terms, acronyms, and definitions.
13 Mechanical, Packaging, and Orderable Information
The following pages include mechanical, packaging, and orderable information. This information is the most
current data available for the designated devices. This data is subject to change without notice and revision of
this document. For browser-based versions of this data sheet, refer to the left-hand navigation.
Copyright © 2008–2014, Texas Instruments Incorporated Submit Documentation Feedback 33
Product Folder Links: LM5088 LM5088-Q1
PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM
www.ti.com 10-Dec-2020
Addendum-Page 1
PACKAGING INFORMATION
Orderable Device Status
(1)
Package Type Package
Drawing Pins Package
Qty Eco Plan
(2)
Lead finish/
Ball material
(6)
MSL Peak Temp
(3)
Op Temp (°C) Device Marking
(4/5)
Samples
LM5088MH-1/NOPB ACTIVE HTSSOP PWP 16 92 RoHS & Green SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM -40 to 125 LM5088
MH-1
LM5088MH-2/NOPB ACTIVE HTSSOP PWP 16 92 RoHS & Green SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM -40 to 125 LM5088
MH-2
LM5088MHX-1/NOPB ACTIVE HTSSOP PWP 16 2500 RoHS & Green SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM -40 to 125 LM5088
MH-1
LM5088MHX-2/NOPB ACTIVE HTSSOP PWP 16 2500 RoHS & Green SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM -40 to 125 LM5088
MH-2
LM5088QMH-1/NOPB ACTIVE HTSSOP PWP 16 92 RoHS & Green SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM -40 to 125 LM5088
QMH-1
LM5088QMH-2/NOPB ACTIVE HTSSOP PWP 16 92 RoHS & Green SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM -40 to 125 LM5088
QMH-2
LM5088QMHX-1/NOPB ACTIVE HTSSOP PWP 16 2500 RoHS & Green SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM -40 to 125 LM5088
QMH-1
LM5088QMHX-2/NOPB ACTIVE HTSSOP PWP 16 2500 RoHS & Green SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM -40 to 125 LM5088
QMH-2
(1) The marketing status values are defined as follows:
ACTIVE: Product device recommended for new designs.
LIFEBUY: TI has announced that the device will be discontinued, and a lifetime-buy period is in effect.
NRND: Not recommended for new designs. Device is in production to support existing customers, but TI does not recommend using this part in a new design.
PREVIEW: Device has been announced but is not in production. Samples may or may not be available.
OBSOLETE: TI has discontinued the production of the device.
(2) RoHS: TI defines "RoHS" to mean semiconductor products that are compliant with the current EU RoHS requirements for all 10 RoHS substances, including the requirement that RoHS substance
do not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous materials. Where designed to be soldered at high temperatures, "RoHS" products are suitable for use in specified lead-free processes. TI may
reference these types of products as "Pb-Free".
RoHS Exempt: TI defines "RoHS Exempt" to mean products that contain lead but are compliant with EU RoHS pursuant to a specific EU RoHS exemption.
Green: TI defines "Green" to mean the content of Chlorine (Cl) and Bromine (Br) based flame retardants meet JS709B low halogen requirements of <=1000ppm threshold. Antimony trioxide based
flame retardants must also meet the <=1000ppm threshold requirement.
(3) MSL, Peak Temp. - The Moisture Sensitivity Level rating according to the JEDEC industry standard classifications, and peak solder temperature.
(4) There may be additional marking, which relates to the logo, the lot trace code information, or the environmental category on the device.
PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM
www.ti.com 10-Dec-2020
Addendum-Page 2
(5) Multiple Device Markings will be inside parentheses. Only one Device Marking contained in parentheses and separated by a "~" will appear on a device. If a line is indented then it is a continuation
of the previous line and the two combined represent the entire Device Marking for that device.
(6) Lead finish/Ball material - Orderable Devices may have multiple material finish options. Finish options are separated by a vertical ruled line. Lead finish/Ball material values may wrap to two
lines if the finish value exceeds the maximum column width.
Important Information and Disclaimer:The information provided on this page represents TI's knowledge and belief as of the date that it is provided. TI bases its knowledge and belief on information
provided by third parties, and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of such information. Efforts are underway to better integrate information from third parties. TI has taken and
continues to take reasonable steps to provide representative and accurate information but may not have conducted destructive testing or chemical analysis on incoming materials and chemicals.
TI and TI suppliers consider certain information to be proprietary, and thus CAS numbers and other limited information may not be available for release.
In no event shall TI's liability arising out of such information exceed the total purchase price of the TI part(s) at issue in this document sold by TI to Customer on an annual basis.
OTHER QUALIFIED VERSIONS OF LM5088, LM5088-Q1 :
Catalog: LM5088
Automotive: LM5088-Q1
NOTE: Qualified Version Definitions:
Catalog - TI's standard catalog product
Automotive - Q100 devices qualified for high-reliability automotive applications targeting zero defects
TAPE AND REEL INFORMATION
*All dimensions are nominal
Device Package
Type Package
Drawing Pins SPQ Reel
Diameter
(mm)
Reel
Width
W1 (mm)
A0
(mm) B0
(mm) K0
(mm) P1
(mm) W
(mm) Pin1
Quadrant
LM5088MHX-1/NOPB HTSSOP PWP 16 2500 330.0 12.4 6.95 5.6 1.6 8.0 12.0 Q1
LM5088MHX-2/NOPB HTSSOP PWP 16 2500 330.0 12.4 6.95 5.6 1.6 8.0 12.0 Q1
LM5088QMHX-1/NOPB HTSSOP PWP 16 2500 330.0 12.4 6.95 5.6 1.6 8.0 12.0 Q1
LM5088QMHX-2/NOPB HTSSOP PWP 16 2500 330.0 12.4 6.95 5.6 1.6 8.0 12.0 Q1
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com 14-Sep-2017
Pack Materials-Page 1
*All dimensions are nominal
Device Package Type Package Drawing Pins SPQ Length (mm) Width (mm) Height (mm)
LM5088MHX-1/NOPB HTSSOP PWP 16 2500 367.0 367.0 35.0
LM5088MHX-2/NOPB HTSSOP PWP 16 2500 367.0 367.0 35.0
LM5088QMHX-1/NOPB HTSSOP PWP 16 2500 367.0 367.0 35.0
LM5088QMHX-2/NOPB HTSSOP PWP 16 2500 367.0 367.0 35.0
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com 14-Sep-2017
Pack Materials-Page 2
www.ti.com
PACKAGE OUTLINE
C
TYP
6.6
6.2
14X 0.65
16X 0.30
0.19
2X
4.55
(0.15) TYP
0 - 8 0.15
0.05
3.3
2.7
3.3
2.7
2X 1.34 MAX
NOTE 5
1.2 MAX
(1)
0.25
GAGE PLANE
0.75
0.50
A
NOTE 3
5.1
4.9
B4.5
4.3
4X 0.166 MAX
NOTE 5
4214868/A 02/2017
PowerPAD HTSSOP - 1.2 mm max heightPWP0016A
PLASTIC SMALL OUTLINE
NOTES:
1. All linear dimensions are in millimeters. Any dimensions in parenthesis are for reference only. Dimensioning and tolerancing
per ASME Y14.5M.
2. This drawing is subject to change without notice.
3. This dimension does not include mold flash, protrusions, or gate burrs. Mold flash, protrusions, or gate burrs shall not
exceed 0.15 mm per side.
4. Reference JEDEC registration MO-153.
5. Features may not be present.
PowerPAD is a trademark of Texas Instruments.
TM
116
0.1 C A B
9
8
PIN 1 ID
AREA
SEATING PLANE
0.1 C
SEE DETAIL A
DETAIL A
TYPICAL
SCALE 2.400
THERMAL
PAD
17
www.ti.com
EXAMPLE BOARD LAYOUT
(5.8)
0.05 MAX
ALL AROUND 0.05 MIN
ALL AROUND
16X (1.5)
16X (0.45)
14X (0.65)
(3.4)
NOTE 9
(5)
NOTE 9
(3.3)
(3.3)
( 0.2) TYP
VIA (1.1) TYP
(1.1)
TYP
4214868/A 02/2017
PowerPAD HTSSOP - 1.2 mm max heightPWP0016A
PLASTIC SMALL OUTLINE
SYMM
SYMM
SEE DETAILS
LAND PATTERN EXAMPLE
EXPOSED METAL SHOWN
SCALE:10X
1
89
16
METAL COVERED
BY SOLDER MASK
SOLDER MASK
DEFINED PAD
17
NOTES: (continued)
6. Publication IPC-7351 may have alternate designs.
7. Solder mask tolerances between and around signal pads can vary based on board fabrication site.
8. This package is designed to be soldered to a thermal pad on the board. For more information, see Texas Instruments literature
numbers SLMA002 (www.ti.com/lit/slma002) and SLMA004 (www.ti.com/lit/slma004).
9. Size of metal pad may vary due to creepage requirement.
TM
METAL
SOLDER MASK
OPENING
NON SOLDER MASK
DEFINED
SOLDER MASK DETAILS
PADS 1-16
EXPOSED
METAL
SOLDER MASK
DEFINED
SOLDER MASK
METAL UNDER SOLDER MASK
OPENING
EXPOSED
METAL
www.ti.com
EXAMPLE STENCIL DESIGN
16X (1.5)
16X (0.45)
(3.3)
(3.3)
BASED ON
0.125 THICK
STENCIL
14X (0.65)
(R0.05) TYP
(5.8)
4214868/A 02/2017
PowerPAD HTSSOP - 1.2 mm max heightPWP0016A
PLASTIC SMALL OUTLINE
2.79 X 2.790.175 3.01 X 3.010.15 3.3 X 3.3 (SHOWN)0.125 3.69 X 3.690.1
SOLDER STENCIL
OPENING
STENCIL
THICKNESS
NOTES: (continued)
10. Laser cutting apertures with trapezoidal walls and rounded corners may offer better paste release. IPC-7525 may have alternate
design recommendations.
11. Board assembly site may have different recommendations for stencil design.
TM
SYMM
SYMM
1
89
16
BASED ON
0.125 THICK
STENCIL
BY SOLDER MASK
METAL COVERED SEE TABLE FOR
DIFFERENT OPENINGS
FOR OTHER STENCIL
THICKNESSES
SOLDER PASTE EXAMPLE
EXPOSED PAD
100% PRINTED SOLDER COVERAGE BY AREA
SCALE:10X
17
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