Buck Converter Design: Jens Ejury
Buck Converter Design: Jens Ejury
Jens Ejury
Infineon Technologies North America (IFNA) Corp.
Design Note DN 2013-01
V0.1 January 2013
Buck Converter Design
allows for higher switching frequency to balance the losses. If that is reasonable depends on the entire
converter stage and efficiency targets.
However, the calculations have been done only for 33.3 A output current. The high ratio also ensures that
inductively limited switching prevails over a big range to low currents so that efficiency stays high over the
entire range.
Gate charge and output charge related losses are small in comparison. They will start to become relevant
when taking low current operation into consideration.
The total loss is about 1.05 W. Therefore, HS-FET and LS-FET RDSON-selection appears to be well chosen
with respect to the power loss distribution among these two devices.
Output Capacitor
The function of the output capacitor is to filter the inductor current ripple and deliver a stable output voltage.
It also has to ensure that load steps at the output can be supported before the regulator is able to react.
These are two distinct criteria which define the value and concrete design of the output capacitor solution.
is the vector sum of the ripple currents of all phases. The charge change at the output capacitors
causing a voltage ripple is:
Thus, the first criteria for the minimum output capacitance is:
For the given requirements the minimum output capacitance according to criteria 1 is:
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Design Note DN 2013-01
V0.1 January 2013
Buck Converter Design
Having a required load transient of for the application, the regulator can only support a transient of
, even with an immediate response. For the difference the current has to be supported
by the output capacitor for the ramping time tramp.
with
The absolute value of the output voltage drop at a load step of ΔIout in tStep is then:
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Design Note DN 2013-01
V0.1 January 2013
Buck Converter Design
For example, a load step of 20A/20us on a maximum duty cycle of 50% requires a minimum output
capacitance for a permitted voltage drop of 50mV of:
In case of a negative result the transient can fully be supported by the duty cycle change.
This result is an electrical value which is required under the assumption that the response of the regulator is
immediate and simultaneous on all phases. This is normally not the case and has to be considered. Also,
capacitors have a big tolerance usually below its nominal value. Deratings for DC bias and temperature have
to be taken into account too.
Input Capacitor
The function of the input capacitor is to filter the input current into the regulator – ideally it should appear as a
DC current for steady state load conditions.
When filtered ideally, the DC input current is:
Ignoring the ripple effect, the current in one switch during its on-time is:
The charge to be stored in the input capacitor has to compensate for the difference between switched
current and DC input current.
with
Hence the minimum value for the input decoupling capacitor should not be less than:
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Design Note DN 2013-01
V0.1 January 2013
Buck Converter Design
The current in the input capacitor is a critical design criteria for selecting the capacitors. Capacitors have an
intrinsic serial resistance (ESR) which causes conduction loss and heating impacting long term reliability of
electrolyte based capacitors.
The RMS current for the entire input capacitor bank is:
From the power loss in the MOSFET and the permitted temperature rise of its junction to ambient the
required thermal resistance to ambient RthJA can be calculated:
with
The thermal package resistance RthJC is given in the datasheet. For power MOSFETs (TO, SuperSO-8,
S3O8, CanPAK packages) this number is usually below 5 K/W, in cases where the die fills out the package
quite well the numbers are in the vicinity of 1 K/W. A temperature rise of 50 K under operating conditions
would allow for 5 W power loss in the MOSFET with 5 K/W thermal resistance to case - given the pcb is
equal to ambient temperature. This, however, is rarely the case. The determining and mostly limiting factor is
the thermal resistance case to ambient. Criterias defining this number are barely influenced by the package
choice.
- Board size
- Air flow
- Heatsink (RthJCtop is important to make effective use of the heatsink)
- Layer stack and design (copper thickness, closed copper layers and thermal vias, exposed copper area
on top and bottom layers)
- Interface area between package and board.
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Design Note DN 2013-01
V0.1 January 2013
Buck Converter Design
The last point of interface area and especially outline length of the thermal pad of the power MOSFET on the
PCB is particularly important when thermal vias under the pad are missing and when the copper thickness of
the top layer is small. In that case a big difference of total thermal resistance RTHJA can be seen between
S3O8 and SSO-8, which is simply bigger. The heat has to be transported from the package outline to the
PCB. A small outline has a higher resistance. This becomes significant when other paths for thermal
transport are missing (vias in pad or thick copper on top layer to offset small outline).
For transient thermal analysis L3 – PSpice models of the MOSFETs can be used. They incorporate a
thermal network describing the heat transfer characteristic through the die and the package. These models
provide access to TJ and TC so that external thermal networks can be established.
For example, a definition in PSpice as subcircuit for a CanPAK 25V MOSFET is initiated by:
.SUBCKT BSB012NE2LX drain gate source Tj Tcase PARAMS: dVth=0 dRdson=0 dgfs=0 dC=0 Zthtype=0
Ls=0.05n Ld=0.7n Lg=0.1n
Highlighted are the 5 terminals ‘drain’, ‘gate’, ‘source’, ‘Tj’, Tcase’ and the parameters for package
inductances ‘Ls’, Ld’ and ‘Lg’. It can be seen that the dominant inductance is drain inductance. This package
supports fast switching and top-side cooling.
Note that the actual inductance in the application varies from the default values as mutual inductances occur.
This is especially important for the commutation loop in which the MOSFETs are located.
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Design Note DN 2013-01
V0.1 January 2013
Buck Converter Design
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