USRE37609E1 - Voltage regulator that operates in either PWM or PFM mode - Google Patents

Voltage regulator that operates in either PWM or PFM mode Download PDF

Info

Publication number
USRE37609E1
USRE37609E1 US09/176,656 US17665698A USRE37609E US RE37609 E1 USRE37609 E1 US RE37609E1 US 17665698 A US17665698 A US 17665698A US RE37609 E USRE37609 E US RE37609E
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
output
voltage
pwm
switch
pfm
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US09/176,656
Inventor
Harry J. Bittner
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Microchip Technology Inc
Original Assignee
Micrel Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Micrel Inc filed Critical Micrel Inc
Priority to US09/176,656 priority Critical patent/USRE37609E1/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of USRE37609E1 publication Critical patent/USRE37609E1/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02MAPPARATUS FOR CONVERSION BETWEEN AC AND AC, BETWEEN AC AND DC, OR BETWEEN DC AND DC, AND FOR USE WITH MAINS OR SIMILAR POWER SUPPLY SYSTEMS; CONVERSION OF DC OR AC INPUT POWER INTO SURGE OUTPUT POWER; CONTROL OR REGULATION THEREOF
    • H02M3/00Conversion of dc power input into dc power output
    • H02M3/02Conversion of dc power input into dc power output without intermediate conversion into ac
    • H02M3/04Conversion of dc power input into dc power output without intermediate conversion into ac by static converters
    • H02M3/10Conversion of dc power input into dc power output without intermediate conversion into ac by static converters using discharge tubes with control electrode or semiconductor devices with control electrode
    • H02M3/145Conversion of dc power input into dc power output without intermediate conversion into ac by static converters using discharge tubes with control electrode or semiconductor devices with control electrode using devices of a triode or transistor type requiring continuous application of a control signal
    • H02M3/155Conversion of dc power input into dc power output without intermediate conversion into ac by static converters using discharge tubes with control electrode or semiconductor devices with control electrode using devices of a triode or transistor type requiring continuous application of a control signal using semiconductor devices only
    • H02M3/156Conversion of dc power input into dc power output without intermediate conversion into ac by static converters using discharge tubes with control electrode or semiconductor devices with control electrode using devices of a triode or transistor type requiring continuous application of a control signal using semiconductor devices only with automatic control of output voltage or current, e.g. switching regulators
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02MAPPARATUS FOR CONVERSION BETWEEN AC AND AC, BETWEEN AC AND DC, OR BETWEEN DC AND DC, AND FOR USE WITH MAINS OR SIMILAR POWER SUPPLY SYSTEMS; CONVERSION OF DC OR AC INPUT POWER INTO SURGE OUTPUT POWER; CONTROL OR REGULATION THEREOF
    • H02M3/00Conversion of dc power input into dc power output
    • H02M3/02Conversion of dc power input into dc power output without intermediate conversion into ac
    • H02M3/04Conversion of dc power input into dc power output without intermediate conversion into ac by static converters
    • H02M3/10Conversion of dc power input into dc power output without intermediate conversion into ac by static converters using discharge tubes with control electrode or semiconductor devices with control electrode
    • H02M3/145Conversion of dc power input into dc power output without intermediate conversion into ac by static converters using discharge tubes with control electrode or semiconductor devices with control electrode using devices of a triode or transistor type requiring continuous application of a control signal
    • H02M3/155Conversion of dc power input into dc power output without intermediate conversion into ac by static converters using discharge tubes with control electrode or semiconductor devices with control electrode using devices of a triode or transistor type requiring continuous application of a control signal using semiconductor devices only
    • H02M3/156Conversion of dc power input into dc power output without intermediate conversion into ac by static converters using discharge tubes with control electrode or semiconductor devices with control electrode using devices of a triode or transistor type requiring continuous application of a control signal using semiconductor devices only with automatic control of output voltage or current, e.g. switching regulators
    • H02M3/158Conversion of dc power input into dc power output without intermediate conversion into ac by static converters using discharge tubes with control electrode or semiconductor devices with control electrode using devices of a triode or transistor type requiring continuous application of a control signal using semiconductor devices only with automatic control of output voltage or current, e.g. switching regulators including plural semiconductor devices as final control devices for a single load
    • H02M3/1588Conversion of dc power input into dc power output without intermediate conversion into ac by static converters using discharge tubes with control electrode or semiconductor devices with control electrode using devices of a triode or transistor type requiring continuous application of a control signal using semiconductor devices only with automatic control of output voltage or current, e.g. switching regulators including plural semiconductor devices as final control devices for a single load comprising at least one synchronous rectifier element
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02MAPPARATUS FOR CONVERSION BETWEEN AC AND AC, BETWEEN AC AND DC, OR BETWEEN DC AND DC, AND FOR USE WITH MAINS OR SIMILAR POWER SUPPLY SYSTEMS; CONVERSION OF DC OR AC INPUT POWER INTO SURGE OUTPUT POWER; CONTROL OR REGULATION THEREOF
    • H02M1/00Details of apparatus for conversion
    • H02M1/0003Details of control, feedback or regulation circuits
    • H02M1/0032Control circuits allowing low power mode operation, e.g. in standby mode
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y02TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
    • Y02BCLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION TECHNOLOGIES RELATED TO BUILDINGS, e.g. HOUSING, HOUSE APPLIANCES OR RELATED END-USER APPLICATIONS
    • Y02B70/00Technologies for an efficient end-user side electric power management and consumption
    • Y02B70/10Technologies improving the efficiency by using switched-mode power supplies [SMPS], i.e. efficient power electronics conversion e.g. power factor correction or reduction of losses in power supplies or efficient standby modes

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a voltage regulator. More specifically, the present invention relates to a high efficiency switching voltage regulator capable of operating in either one of two modes.
  • voltage regulator circuits provide a constant output voltage of a predetermined value by monitoring the output and using feedback to keep the output constant.
  • PWM pulse width modulation
  • a square wave is provided to the control terminal of the switching device to control its on and off states. Since increasing the on time of the switching device increases the output voltage, and vice versa, the output voltage may be controlled by manipulating the duty cycle of the square wave. This manipulation is accomplished by a control circuit which continually compares the output voltage to a reference voltage and adjusts the duty cycle of the square wave to maintain a constant output voltage.
  • the switching device When the switching device is an MOS transistor, a significant amount of power is used to periodically charge the gates of the switching transistors. As the switching frequency increases, more power is lost. If the switching frequency is too low and the output current of the regulator is high, the output voltage of the regulator will be difficult to filter and convert to a DC voltage. Hence, the switching frequency must be kept relatively high. When the output current is low, the relatively high power loss due to controlling the switching transistors results in a low efficiency (output power/total power consumed) regulator.
  • a continuing challenge in the design of voltage regulators is to reduce the power loss in the regulator circuit and thereby increase its efficiency. As such, the power dissipate dissipated in the control circuitry and switching circuitry of the PWM regulator is of great concern.
  • a switching voltage regulator is disclosed which is capable of operating in either a pulse frequency modulation (PFM) or pulse-width modulation (PWM) mode.
  • PFM pulse frequency modulation
  • PWM pulse-width modulation
  • the voltage regulator achieves high efficiency by automatically choosing the more efficient mode of regulation based on a continuous monitoring of the output current and the output voltage.
  • the regulator operates in PFM mode when the regulator generates a small output current and switches to PWM operation when the regulator generates a moderate to large output current.
  • a PFM mode of voltage regulation provides better efficiency at small output current levels than does a PWM mode.
  • a PFM mode requires a fewer turn-on transitions to maintain a constant output voltage than does a PWM mode of voltage regulation, thus resulting in a lower gate-drive power dissipation for PFM mode.
  • the present invention switches from a PFM mode of operation to a PWM mode of operation when the output current exceeds a predetermined level.
  • FIG. 1 is a simplified block diagram of one embodiment of the present invention
  • FIG. 2A is a pictorial representation of the PWM control signal
  • FIG. 2B is a pictorial representation of the inductor current during PWM mode of voltage regulation
  • FIGS. 3A and 3B are pictorial representations of the output switch voltage and the inductor current during PFM mode of voltage regulation, respectively;
  • FIGS. 4A-4C are pictorial representations of the inductor current, switching node voltage, and feedback voltage during PFM mode of voltage regulation
  • FIG. 5 is FIGS. 5A-5D illustrate a gate level schematic of one embodiment of the present invention.
  • FIG. 6A shows the inductor current during both PFM mode and PWM mode
  • FIGS. 6B-6E are timing diagrams showing the logic states of various components in the preferred embodiment.
  • FIG. 1 is a simplified block diagram of an embodiment of the present invention.
  • the voltage regulator of FIG. 1 includes a feedback circuit 2 , output voltage sensing circuit 3 , inductor current sensing circuit 4 , control logic circuit 5 , PWM control circuit 6 , PFM control circuit 7 , high-side switch driver 8 , low-side switch driver 9 , input terminal 10 , high-side switch 11 , switching node 12 , low-side switch 13 , schottky diode 14 , inductor 15 , capacitor 16 , and output terminal 17 .
  • High-side switch 11 is preferably a P-channel MOSFET that has a first terminal connected to input terminal 10 and a second terminal connected to a terminal (switching node 12 ) of inductor 15 .
  • the other terminal of inductor 15 is connected to output terminal 17 .
  • PWM control circuit 6 which includes a PWM signal generator, has an output terminal connected to a first input terminal of the high-side switch driver 8 .
  • the output terminal of PWM control circuit 6 is also connected to the low-side switch driver 9 .
  • the output terminal of high-side switch driver 8 is connected to the control terminal of high-side switch 11 for supplying a voltage to turn switch 11 on and off.
  • the output terminal of low-side switch driver 9 is connected to the control terminal of low-side switch 13 , which is preferably an N-channel MOSFET, for supplying a voltage to turn switch 13 on and off.
  • a schottky diode 14 is placed in parallel with low side switch 13 for shunting current to ground when current discharging from inductor 15 forces switching node 12 below approximately ⁇ 0.4 volts.
  • Feedback circuit 2 is coupled between output terminal 17 and a first input terminal of PWM control circuit 6 for providing a feedback signal to PWM control circuit 6 .
  • This feedback signal is also provided to a first input terminal of PFM control circuit 7 .
  • PFM control circuit 7 has a second input terminal connected to switching node 12 for sensing the voltage V sw at switching node 12 and has an output terminal connected to a second input terminal of high-side switch driver 8 for controlling the on and off states of switch 11 .
  • Output voltage sensing circuit 3 has an input terminal connected to output terminal 17 and an output terminal connected to a first input terminal of control logic circuit 5 .
  • Inductor current sensing circuit 4 has an input terminal connected to switching node 12 and an output terminal connected to a second input terminal of control logic circuit 5 and to a third input terminal of PFM control circuit 7 .
  • An output terminal of control logic circuit 5 is connected to a second input terminal of PWM control circuit 6 and to a fourth input terminal of PFM control circuit 7 .
  • Control logic circuit 5 enables/disables PWM control circuit 6 and PFM control circuit 7 , thus determining in which mode the regulator will operate.
  • Capacitor 16 is coupled between output terminal 17 and ground and acts to smooth the voltage at output terminal 17 .
  • V out the voltage at output terminal 17 , V out , is initially below its nominal value, V out,nom .
  • Output voltage sensing circuit 3 detects the low value of V out and sends a logic low signal to control logic circuit 5 , which in turn enables PWM control circuit 6 and disables PFM control circuit 7 . This state is denoted as PWM mode.
  • PWM control circuit 6 Once in PWM mode, PWM control circuit 6 generates and transmits a fixed frequency square wave to the first inputs of high-side switch driver 8 and low-side switch driver 9 which, as mentioned previously, control the on and off states of switches 11 and 13 .
  • a high PWM signal turns high-side switch 11 on and turns low-side switch 13 off.
  • a low PWM signal turns high-side switch 11 off and turns low-side switch on.
  • FIG. 2A illustrates a PWM square wave signal having a period of T.
  • a feedback voltage V fb corresponding to V out is coupled to PWM control circuit 6 via feedback circuit 2 .
  • PWM control circuit 6 compares V fb to a reference voltage V ref and adjusts the duty cycle of the PWM square wave signal such that V fb is equal to V ref .
  • PWM control circuit 6 continues to control switches 11 and 13 until the peak current flowing through inductor 15 , denoted as I ind,pk , drops below a predetermined level, I pk,min .
  • I ind,pk drops below I pk,min
  • inductor sensing circuit 4 sends a first enabling signal to control logic circuit 5 .
  • output voltage sensing circuit 3 detects that V out has not dropped below the regulated output voltage value, output voltage sensing circuit 3 sends a second enabling signal to control circuit 5 , which then simultaneously disables PWM control circuit 6 and enables PFM control circuit 7 .
  • PWM control circuit 6 is disabled, low-side switch 13 is turned off and will remain off until PWM control circuit 6 is re-enabled. This state is known as PFM mode.
  • FIG. 2B illustrates the inductor current during PWM mode.
  • I pk,min and I out,min is set by the following equation:
  • detecting I pk,min accurately corresponds to detecting a constant value of I out,min as long as the change in ⁇ I ind remains small relative to I pk,min . If ⁇ I ind changes substantially compared to I pk,min , then I pk,min must change in equal proportion to changes in ⁇ I ind in order for I out,min to remain constant.
  • PFM control circuit 7 sends an activation signal to high-side switch driver 8 , thus turning on switch 11 .
  • switch 13 remains in an off state during PFM mode.
  • Switch 11 will remain on until the inductor current I ind charges to an upper limit, I Lim,PFM .
  • inductor current sensing circuit 4 detects that this limit has been reached, inductor current sensing circuit 4 sends a de-activation signal to high-side switch driver 8 , thereby turning switch 11 off.
  • the inductor current I ind then discharges through schottky diode 14 , causing the voltage at switching node 12 , V sw , to swing from approximately V in to ⁇ 0.4V.
  • V sw changes abruptly from ⁇ 0.4V to V out .
  • PFM control circuit 7 detects this abrupt increase in V sw and turns on switch 11 .
  • the regulator circuit monitors the inductor current and the voltage at switching node 12 to determine when to turn on and off high-side switch 11 .
  • This PFM mode of voltage regulation is advantageous over others since an internal oscillator is not required.
  • PFM control circuit 7 regulates V out by controlling the on and off states of switch 11 and by preventing switch 11 from turning on when V out exceeds its predetermined nominal value, V out,nom , as follows.
  • PFM control circuit 7 includes a comparator which compares feedback signal V fb , which is proportional to V out , to reference voltage V ref , V ref has an upper value V ref,H and a lower value V ref,L . If V fb is less than V ref,H PFM control circuit 7 will turn on switch 11 as described in the previous paragraph. If, however, V fb exceeds V ref,H (corresponding to V out exceeding V out,nom ), V ref will fall to V ref,L , causing PFM control circuit 7 to turn switch 11 off.
  • V fb must then fall below V ref,L before PFM control circuit 7 again turns on switch 11 .
  • This method of regulating the V out by preventing switch 11 from turning on when V out , exceeds its nominal value V out,nom is commonly referred to as “skipping cycles”.
  • the PFM characteristic of the reference voltage V ref prevents the regulator from sporadically skipping cycles.
  • the average value of the inductor current waveform I ind,avg is a function of only L Lim,PFM , assuming that td is relatively small compared to the switching period.
  • the values of t on and t off will vary as function of V in , V out , and the inductance L of inductor 15 .
  • the regulator circuit monitors V out , to determine when to switch from PFM mode to PWM mode as follows. When the output current exceeds the maximum current the regulator is able to supply in PFM mode, i.e., when I out exceeds I Lim,PFM /2, V out falls below V out,nom . Output voltage sensing circuit 3 detects this change in V out , and sends a logic low signal to control logic circuit 5 . In response to this low signal, control logic circuit 5 sends a disable signal to PFM control circuit 7 and an enable signal to PWM control circuit 6 , thus switching the circuit from PFM mode to PWM mode.
  • the output sensing circuit 3 has a slow enough response time to ensure that brief negative transients at V out do not trigger an erroneous change from PFM to PWM mode
  • the control logic circuit 5 forces the regulator to remain in PWM mode while the PWM control loop settles out (otherwise, during this period control logic circuit 5 may detect I ind,pk falling below I pk,min for brief transients, thereby causing the regulator to oscillate between PWM and PFM operation)
  • the PFM current limit (I Lim,PFM ) is greater than twice the value of the minimum output current required for PWM operation (I out,min ) (this condition ensures that the maximum output current for PFM mode (I Lim,PR /2) is greater than I out,min . If I Lim,PFM /2 is less than or equal to I out,min , the regulator will oscillate between PFM and PWM modes
  • FIGS. 4A, 4 B, and 4 C illustrate the current of inductor 15 (I ind ), the voltage at switching node 12 (Vsw), and the output of feedback circuit 2 , respectively, when the regulator is operating in PFM mode in this particular situation. Since under these conditions I ind never exceeds I Lim,PFM , inductor current sense circuit 4 does not cause PFM control circuit 7 to turn switch 11 off. Thus, as described previously, switch 11 will remain on until V fb exceeds V ref,H , at which point PFM control circuit 7 causes switch 11 to turn off.
  • Inductor 15 then discharges through schottky diode 14 , causing V sw to swing from approximately V in to ⁇ 0.4V.
  • V sw abruptly changes from ⁇ 0.4V to V out .
  • switch 11 remains off until V fb falls below V ref,L .
  • PFM control circuit 7 then causes switch 11 to turn on. I ind will then increase, but it will never exceed I Lim,PFM . Therefore, switch 11 remains on until V fb rises above V ref,H .
  • the present invention achieves high efficiency over a wide range of output currents by automatically switching between PFM mode operation (when the output current is relatively small) and PWM mode operation (when the output current exceeds a predetermined level).
  • FIG. 5 is FIGS. 5A-5D illustrate a gate-level schematic of one embodiment of the present invention.
  • V out When power is first applied to the regulator circuit at V in , V out , is below its nominal value, V out,nom . This is detected by comparator 174 which sends a logic high signal to the gate of switch 178 , turning on switch 178 . The drain of switch 178 then swings low, forcing the output of SR latch 138 high which, in turn, enables the PWM controller 140 .
  • This The high signal from latch 138 is received by invertor 164 , and invertor 164 thus supplies a low signal to NOR gate 166 .
  • the high signal from latch 138 is also supplied to NAND gate 142 .
  • the high signal from latch 138 also disables the PFM control circuit by forcing the output of NOR gate 202 low.
  • the circuit initially operates in PWM mode and will remain in PWM mode as long as the peak inductor current I ind,pk is equal to or greater than the minimum current required for PWM mode, I pk,min .
  • I ind,pk drops below I pk,min , the regulator switches to PFM mode as previously described.
  • PWM controller 140 generates a fixed frequency square wave PWM signal with a variable duty cycle.
  • PWM signal When the PWM signal is high (rising edge), a logic low signal appears at the output of invertor 170 , turning off low-side switch 13 .
  • This high PWM signal also puts a logic high at the input of pulse circuit 151 , which turns on switch 150 long enough to pull down the input of invertor 156 , thus turning on switch 11 .
  • Switch 150 is used to turn on switch 11 during PWM mode, while switch 152 is used to turn on switch 11 during PFM mode.
  • switches 150 and 152 turn off as soon as possible to ensure that switches 146 , 148 , and 200 can reset the output of invertor 156 to a logic low to turn off switch 11 .
  • switches 150 and 152 must be turned on with a relatively narrow pulse at the beginning of the PWM and PFM switching cycles, respectively.
  • Pulse circuits 151 (PWM mode) and 153 (PFM mode) detect a leading edge from the outputs of invertor 144 and nor gate 160 , respectively, and generate a positive pulse approximately 200 nanoseconds long at the gates of switches 150 and 152 , respectively. This pulse turns on switches 150 and 152 just long enough to set the output of invertor 156 high, thereby turning on high-side switch 11 .
  • switch 146 pulls down the input of invertor 154 , turning off switch 11 .
  • This low PWM signal also provides a logic high at the input of NAND gate 168 , allowing low-side switch 13 to turn on when V sw swings low to ⁇ 0.4V.
  • the low PWM signal from PWM controller 140 and the high signal from latch 138 are supplied to NAND gate 142 , NAND gate 142 thus supplies a high signal to invertor 144 , and invertor 144 thus supplies a low signal to NOR gate 166 .
  • the high signal from latch 138 is supplied to inventor 164 , and inventor 164 thus supplies a low signal to NOR gate 166 , and NOR gate 16 thus supplies said logic high at the input of NAND gate 168 .
  • This method of turning on switch 13 results in break-before-make switching of switches 11 and 13 . Switch 11 remains off and switch 13 remains on until the beginning of the next PWM cycle.
  • Error amplifier 176 monitors V out , during PWM operation by measuring the difference between the V fb and V ref (V out appears across resistors 184 , 186 which, acting as a voltage divider, generate V fb at node 185 ). This voltage difference is amplified and provided as input to PWM controller 140 . PWM controller 140 uses this amplified voltage difference to adjust the duty cycle of the PWM signal so that V fb equals V ref , thereby regulating V out . PWM controller 140 can be either a voltage mode or current mode controller. In order to achieve maximum efficiency when the regulator is operating in PFM mode, PWM controller 140 and error amplifier 176 remain off during PFM mode.
  • the regulator indirectly senses the current of inductor 15 by monitoring the drain to source voltage V ds of switch 11 .
  • switch 11 When switch 11 is on, switch 102 connects the drain of switch 11 to the inputs of comparators 122 and 124 .
  • switch 11 When switch 11 is off, switch 104 shorts the inputs of comparators 122 and 124 to the input voltage V in .
  • capacitor 108 and resistor 112 keep switch 102 off and switch 104 on until switch 11 has been on approximately 200 nanoseconds.
  • diode 114 allows switch 102 to turn off and switch 104 to turn on immediately.
  • Comparator 122 causes high-side switch 11 to turn off when the peak inductor current I ind,pk has exceeded the current limit for PWM mode (I lim,pwm ) and PFM mode (I Lim,PFM ). Comparator 122 monitors I ind,pk by comparing the V ds of switch 11 to V ds of switch 116 .
  • switch 11 is a power MOSFET constructed of thousands of small MOSFET cells connected in parallel.
  • Switch 116 is one of those MOSFET cells with its drain separated from the drain of switch 11 .
  • Switch 116 has an area factor of 1 (1 cell), while switch 11 has an area factor of K (K cells).
  • switch 126 When the regulator operates in PFM mode, switch 126 is off, allowing only current source 132 to flow through switch 116 .
  • Current source 132 is set equal to I Lim,PFM /K so that the V ds of switch 116 equals the V ds of switch 11 when I ind equals I Lim,PFM .
  • the threshold voltage of comparator 122 corresponds to I Lim,PFM .
  • switch 126 When the regulator is operating in PWM mode, switch 126 turns on to allow both current sources 130 and 132 to flow through switch 116 .
  • Current source 130 is set to a value so that the sum of current sources 130 and 132 equals I Lim,pwm /K.
  • the threshold voltage of comparator 122 corresponds to I Lim,pwm when the regulator is operating in PWM mode.
  • Comparator 124 monitoring the peak inductor current I ind,pk by comparing the V ds of switch 11 with the V ds of switch 118 . Determines when the regulator should switch from PWM mode to PFM mode.
  • switch 118 is a single MOSFET cell (having an area factor of 1) with its drain separated from the drain of switch 11 .
  • Current source 128 provides a current through switch 118 equal to I pk,min /K, so that the V ds of switch 11 equals the V ds of switch 118 when I ind reaches the value I pk,min .
  • the value of I pk,min is adjusted by a multiplier circuit so that it changes in proportion to changes in V in -V out . This allows I pk,min to change in proportion to changes in ⁇ I ind which, as shown in equation 1, results in I out,min remaining constant.
  • the regulator remains in PWM mode.
  • this event corresponds to time period A.
  • Comparator 124 outputs a logic low which in turn produces a logic low at the output of SR latch 134 .
  • the output of latch 134 remains low until reset to logic high by the falling edge of the PWM signal (see FIG. 6 B).
  • switch 11 turns off, the rising edge of the inverted PWM signal appears at the clock input of master-slave D flip-flop 136 (see FIG. 6 C).
  • the inverted PWM signal is inverted again and used as the reset signal for latch 134 .
  • the logic high signal at the output of latch 138 turns on PWM controller 140 and error amplifier 176 , as well as allowing the PWM signal to propagate through NAND gate 142 , thereby enabling PWM operation.
  • the high signal from the output of latch 138 also turns on switch 126 , re-setting the threshold voltage of comparator 122 to a value corresponding to I lim,pwm .
  • the high signal from the output of latch 138 prevents PFM control signals from propagating through NOR gate 202 .
  • PFM mode operation is thereby disabled.
  • inductor current I ind is equal to or exceeds I lim,pwm , the output of comparator 122 transitions to a logic high, turning on switch 148 .
  • Switch 148 pulls down the input of invertor 120 . Which turns off switch 11 .
  • the positive feedback of weak inverters 154 and 156 keeps the output of 156 low after switch 148 turns off so that switch 11 will remain off until the next rising edge of the PWM signal.
  • the regulator enters PFM mode.
  • the output of comparator 124 and the output of latch 134 remain at logic high when the PWM cycle ends (see FIG. 6 B), causing the output of flip-flop 136 to transition to logic low (see FIG. 6 D).
  • the logic low signal at the output of flip-flop 136 sets the output of latch 138 low (see FIG. 6 E), which will remain low until reset to logic high by switch 178 .
  • This low signal from latch 138 turns off PWM controller 140 and error amplifier 176 , and it prevents the PWM signal from propagating through NAND gate 142 , thereby disabling the PWM control circuit.
  • the low signal from latch 138 also enables PFM control signals to propagate through NOR gate 202 .
  • the low signal from the output of latch 138 turns off switch 126 , resetting the threshold voltage of comparator 122 to a value corresponding to I Lim,PFM .
  • a low signal from the output of latch 138 switches the regulator from PWM mode to PFM mode.
  • Comparator 172 monitors V out by comparing V fb to V ref . When V fb is greater than V ref , comparator 172 puts a logic high at an input of NOR gate 160 , thereby preventing switch 11 from turning on in response to the signal swing of V sw via invertor 158 .
  • the logic high signal from comparator 172 also propagates through invertor 204 and NOR gate 202 so as to turn on switch 200 , which causes switch 11 to turn off.
  • high-side switch 11 turning off when the output voltage has exceeded its nominal value, will turn back on (when I ind discharges to zero) only if the output voltage has dropped to less than or equal to its nominal value.
  • V fb exhibits hysteresis to prevent the regulator from sporadically skipping cycles.
  • comparator 172 exhibits hysteresis at its input terminals of approximately 10 mV.
  • invertor 158 When the output of comparator 172 has transitioned to logic low, and I ind has discharged to zero, invertor 158 sends a logic low signal to NOR gate 160 which, in turn, causes pulse circuit 153 to generate a brief output pulse that turns on high-side switch 11 .
  • the regulator again supplies current to output terminal 17 .
  • the regulator maintains a constant output voltage by supplying current from V in to output terminal 17 when V out is less than or equal to V out,nom . Accordingly, when V out is exceeds V out,nom , the regulator does not supply current from V in to output terminal 17 . Thereby allowing this current to discharge through capacitor 16 until V out again falls below V out,nom .
  • the regulator switches from PFM mode back to PWM mode when the output current exceeds I Lim,PFM /2, which causes V out to fall below V out,nom .
  • This drop in V out is detected by comparator 174 , whose threshold voltage is set to a value about four percent below V ref .
  • comparator 174 whose threshold voltage is set to a value about four percent below V ref .
  • the output of comparator 174 transitions to a logic high, turning on switch 182 and thereby resetting latch 138 .
  • the logic high at the output of latch 138 re-enables the PWM control circuit and disables the PFM control circuit, as described earlier.
  • the PWM signal when re-enabled, may take one hundred or more cycles to settle out. During this period, the inductor current will fluctuate causing I ind,pk to dip below I pk,min for brief transients.
  • the regulator keeps the reset input of latch 138 low for a predetermined amount of time after PWM controller 140 has been re-enabled, as follows. After the regulator re-enters PWM mode, and the output of comparator 174 transitions to a logic low, current source 182 requires several hundred microseconds to pull-up the reset input of latch 138 to a logic high. Accordingly, this time delay forces the regulator to remain in PWM mode for several hundred microseconds after PWM mode is re-enabled.

Abstract

A switching voltage regulator achieves high efficiency by automatically switching between a pulse frequency modulation (PFM) mode and a pulse-width modulation (PWM) mode. Switching between the modes of voltage regulation is accomplished by monitoring the output voltage and the output current, wherein the regulator operates in PFM mode at small output currents and in PWM mode at moderate to large output currents. PFM mode maintains a constant output voltage by forcing the switching device to skip cycles when the output voltage exceeds its nominal value. In PWM mode, a PWM signal having a variable duty cycle controls the switching device. A constant output voltage is maintained by feedback circuitry which alters the duty cycle of the PWM signal according to fluctuations in the output voltage.

Description

FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a voltage regulator. More specifically, the present invention relates to a high efficiency switching voltage regulator capable of operating in either one of two modes.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Typically, voltage regulator circuits provide a constant output voltage of a predetermined value by monitoring the output and using feedback to keep the output constant. In a typical pulse width modulation (PWM) regulator circuit, a square wave is provided to the control terminal of the switching device to control its on and off states. Since increasing the on time of the switching device increases the output voltage, and vice versa, the output voltage may be controlled by manipulating the duty cycle of the square wave. This manipulation is accomplished by a control circuit which continually compares the output voltage to a reference voltage and adjusts the duty cycle of the square wave to maintain a constant output voltage.
When the switching device is an MOS transistor, a significant amount of power is used to periodically charge the gates of the switching transistors. As the switching frequency increases, more power is lost. If the switching frequency is too low and the output current of the regulator is high, the output voltage of the regulator will be difficult to filter and convert to a DC voltage. Hence, the switching frequency must be kept relatively high. When the output current is low, the relatively high power loss due to controlling the switching transistors results in a low efficiency (output power/total power consumed) regulator.
A continuing challenge in the design of voltage regulators is to reduce the power loss in the regulator circuit and thereby increase its efficiency. As such, the power dissipate dissipated in the control circuitry and switching circuitry of the PWM regulator is of great concern.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A switching voltage regulator is disclosed which is capable of operating in either a pulse frequency modulation (PFM) or pulse-width modulation (PWM) mode. The voltage regulator achieves high efficiency by automatically choosing the more efficient mode of regulation based on a continuous monitoring of the output current and the output voltage. The regulator operates in PFM mode when the regulator generates a small output current and switches to PWM operation when the regulator generates a moderate to large output current.
A PFM mode of voltage regulation provides better efficiency at small output current levels than does a PWM mode. First, a PFM mode requires a fewer turn-on transitions to maintain a constant output voltage than does a PWM mode of voltage regulation, thus resulting in a lower gate-drive power dissipation for PFM mode. Second, since a PFM mode can be achieved with a much simpler control circuit having fewer components, the power dissipation in the control loop of a PFM mode is less than that of the control loop of a PWM mode.
However, when the output current reaches a moderate level, a PFM mode of voltage regulation becomes impractical, since the maximum output current available from a PFM mode is generally much less than that available from a PWM mode. Thus, the present invention switches from a PFM mode of operation to a PWM mode of operation when the output current exceeds a predetermined level.
A novel technique to determine when to operate in PWM or PFM mode is also described along with a novel PFM type voltage regulator.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a simplified block diagram of one embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 2A is a pictorial representation of the PWM control signal;
FIG. 2B is a pictorial representation of the inductor current during PWM mode of voltage regulation;
FIGS. 3A and 3B are pictorial representations of the output switch voltage and the inductor current during PFM mode of voltage regulation, respectively;
FIGS. 4A-4C are pictorial representations of the inductor current, switching node voltage, and feedback voltage during PFM mode of voltage regulation;
FIG. 5 is FIGS. 5A-5D illustrate a gate level schematic of one embodiment of the present invention;
FIG. 6A shows the inductor current during both PFM mode and PWM mode; and
FIGS. 6B-6E are timing diagrams showing the logic states of various components in the preferred embodiment.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
FIG. 1 is a simplified block diagram of an embodiment of the present invention. The voltage regulator of FIG. 1 includes a feedback circuit 2, output voltage sensing circuit 3, inductor current sensing circuit 4, control logic circuit 5, PWM control circuit 6, PFM control circuit 7, high-side switch driver 8, low-side switch driver 9, input terminal 10, high-side switch 11, switching node 12, low-side switch 13, schottky diode 14, inductor 15, capacitor 16, and output terminal 17.
High-side switch 11 is preferably a P-channel MOSFET that has a first terminal connected to input terminal 10 and a second terminal connected to a terminal (switching node 12) of inductor 15. The other terminal of inductor 15 is connected to output terminal 17.
PWM control circuit 6, which includes a PWM signal generator, has an output terminal connected to a first input terminal of the high-side switch driver 8. The output terminal of PWM control circuit 6 is also connected to the low-side switch driver 9. The output terminal of high-side switch driver 8 is connected to the control terminal of high-side switch 11 for supplying a voltage to turn switch 11 on and off. Similarly, the output terminal of low-side switch driver 9 is connected to the control terminal of low-side switch 13, which is preferably an N-channel MOSFET, for supplying a voltage to turn switch 13 on and off. A schottky diode 14 is placed in parallel with low side switch 13 for shunting current to ground when current discharging from inductor 15 forces switching node 12 below approximately −0.4 volts.
Feedback circuit 2 is coupled between output terminal 17 and a first input terminal of PWM control circuit 6 for providing a feedback signal to PWM control circuit 6. This feedback signal is also provided to a first input terminal of PFM control circuit 7. PFM control circuit 7 has a second input terminal connected to switching node 12 for sensing the voltage Vsw at switching node 12 and has an output terminal connected to a second input terminal of high-side switch driver 8 for controlling the on and off states of switch 11.
Output voltage sensing circuit 3 has an input terminal connected to output terminal 17 and an output terminal connected to a first input terminal of control logic circuit 5.
Inductor current sensing circuit 4 has an input terminal connected to switching node 12 and an output terminal connected to a second input terminal of control logic circuit 5 and to a third input terminal of PFM control circuit 7. An output terminal of control logic circuit 5 is connected to a second input terminal of PWM control circuit 6 and to a fourth input terminal of PFM control circuit 7. Control logic circuit 5 enables/disables PWM control circuit 6 and PFM control circuit 7, thus determining in which mode the regulator will operate.
Capacitor 16 is coupled between output terminal 17 and ground and acts to smooth the voltage at output terminal 17.
The operation of the regulator is as follows. When an input voltage Vin to be regulated is supplied to the regulator circuit via input terminal 10, the voltage at output terminal 17, Vout, is initially below its nominal value, Vout,nom. Output voltage sensing circuit 3 detects the low value of Vout and sends a logic low signal to control logic circuit 5, which in turn enables PWM control circuit 6 and disables PFM control circuit 7. This state is denoted as PWM mode.
Once in PWM mode, PWM control circuit 6 generates and transmits a fixed frequency square wave to the first inputs of high-side switch driver 8 and low-side switch driver 9 which, as mentioned previously, control the on and off states of switches 11 and 13. A high PWM signal turns high-side switch 11 on and turns low-side switch 13 off. Conversely, a low PWM signal turns high-side switch 11 off and turns low-side switch on. Operating switches 11 and 13 in a push-pull fashion allows inductor 15 to store current from input terminal 10 when switch 11 is on and discharge current to output terminal 17 when switch 11 turns off.
FIG. 2A illustrates a PWM square wave signal having a period of T. This PWM signal has an on-time (representing a logic high) from t=0 to t=DT and an off-time (representing a logic low) from t=DT to t=T, where the duty cycle of the signal is defined as the ratio of on-time to period T.
A feedback voltage Vfb corresponding to Vout is coupled to PWM control circuit 6 via feedback circuit 2. PWM control circuit 6 compares Vfb to a reference voltage Vref and adjusts the duty cycle of the PWM square wave signal such that Vfb is equal to Vref.
PWM control circuit 6 continues to control switches 11 and 13 until the peak current flowing through inductor 15, denoted as Iind,pk, drops below a predetermined level, Ipk,min. When Iind,pk drops below Ipk,min, inductor sensing circuit 4 sends a first enabling signal to control logic circuit 5. If output voltage sensing circuit 3 detects that Vout has not dropped below the regulated output voltage value, output voltage sensing circuit 3 sends a second enabling signal to control circuit 5, which then simultaneously disables PWM control circuit 6 and enables PFM control circuit 7. When PWM control circuit 6 is disabled, low-side switch 13 is turned off and will remain off until PWM control circuit 6 is re-enabled. This state is known as PFM mode.
FIG. 2B illustrates the inductor current during PWM mode. The relationship between Ipk,min and Iout,min is set by the following equation:
Iout,min=Ipk,min−ΔIind/2   (1)
It can be seen from the above equation that detecting Ipk,min accurately corresponds to detecting a constant value of Iout,min as long as the change in ΔIind remains small relative to Ipk,min. If ΔIind changes substantially compared to Ipk,min, then Ipk,min must change in equal proportion to changes in ΔIind in order for Iout,min to remain constant.
Referring back to FIG. 1, when the regulator circuit begins operating in PFM mode, PFM control circuit 7 sends an activation signal to high-side switch driver 8, thus turning on switch 11. As mentioned earlier, switch 13 remains in an off state during PFM mode. Switch 11 will remain on until the inductor current Iind charges to an upper limit, ILim,PFM. When inductor current sensing circuit 4 detects that this limit has been reached, inductor current sensing circuit 4 sends a de-activation signal to high-side switch driver 8, thereby turning switch 11 off. The inductor current Iind then discharges through schottky diode 14, causing the voltage at switching node 12, Vsw, to swing from approximately Vin to −0.4V. When Iind reaches a zero level, Vsw changes abruptly from −0.4V to Vout. PFM control circuit 7 detects this abrupt increase in Vsw and turns on switch 11. Thus, when operating in PFM mode, the regulator circuit monitors the inductor current and the voltage at switching node 12 to determine when to turn on and off high-side switch 11. This PFM mode of voltage regulation is advantageous over others since an internal oscillator is not required.
PFM control circuit 7 regulates Vout by controlling the on and off states of switch 11 and by preventing switch 11 from turning on when Vout exceeds its predetermined nominal value, Vout,nom, as follows. PFM control circuit 7 includes a comparator which compares feedback signal Vfb, which is proportional to Vout, to reference voltage Vref, Vref has an upper value Vref,H and a lower value Vref,L. If Vfb is less than Vref,H PFM control circuit 7 will turn on switch 11 as described in the previous paragraph. If, however, Vfb exceeds Vref,H (corresponding to Vout exceeding Vout,nom), Vref will fall to Vref,L, causing PFM control circuit 7 to turn switch 11 off. Vfb must then fall below Vref,L before PFM control circuit 7 again turns on switch 11. This method of regulating the Vout by preventing switch 11 from turning on when Vout, exceeds its nominal value Vout,nom is commonly referred to as “skipping cycles”. The PFM characteristic of the reference voltage Vref prevents the regulator from sporadically skipping cycles.
FIGS. 3A and 3B illustrate the waveforms of the voltage at switching node 12, Vsw, and the inductor 15 current, Iind, where ton is the on time of switch 11, toff is the off time of switch 11, Iind,avg is the time average value of Iind, and td=the delay time between Iind discharging to zero and high-side switch 11 turning on. The above parameters are defined by the following equations: I ind , avg = L Lim , PFM ( t OR + t off ) 2 ( t on + t off + td ) = I Lim , PFM 2 Eq . 2 t on = I Lim , PFM · L V i - V out Eq . 3 t off = I Lim , PFM · L V out + 0.4 V + td Eq . 4
Figure USRE037609-20020326-M00001
It can be seen from FIG. 3B that the average value of the inductor current waveform Iind,avg is a function of only LLim,PFM, assuming that td is relatively small compared to the switching period. The values of ton and toff will vary as function of Vin, Vout, and the inductance L of inductor 15.
When the regulator is supplying maximum current to output terminal 17 in PFM mode, switch 11 turns on at every switching cycle. Therefore, the maximum output current the regulator can supply when operating in PFM mode, Iind,avg, will always be equal to ILim,PFM/2 irrespective of the values of Vin, Vout, and L. This circuit is thus advantageous over previous methods of PFM mode regulation whose maximum output currents are dependent upon input voltage, output voltage, and inductance values.
The regulator circuit monitors Vout, to determine when to switch from PFM mode to PWM mode as follows. When the output current exceeds the maximum current the regulator is able to supply in PFM mode, i.e., when Iout exceeds ILim,PFM/2, Vout falls below Vout,nom. Output voltage sensing circuit 3 detects this change in Vout, and sends a logic low signal to control logic circuit 5. In response to this low signal, control logic circuit 5 sends a disable signal to PFM control circuit 7 and an enable signal to PWM control circuit 6, thus switching the circuit from PFM mode to PWM mode.
In order to make a clean transition between PFM and PWM modes of operation, the following conditions must be met: (1) the output sensing circuit 3 has a slow enough response time to ensure that brief negative transients at Vout do not trigger an erroneous change from PFM to PWM mode, (2) when the regulator changes from PFM to PWM mode, the control logic circuit 5 forces the regulator to remain in PWM mode while the PWM control loop settles out (otherwise, during this period control logic circuit 5 may detect Iind,pk falling below Ipk,min for brief transients, thereby causing the regulator to oscillate between PWM and PFM operation), and (3) the PFM current limit (ILim,PFM) is greater than twice the value of the minimum output current required for PWM operation (Iout,min) (this condition ensures that the maximum output current for PFM mode (ILim,PR/2) is greater than Iout,min. If ILim,PFM/2 is less than or equal to Iout,min, the regulator will oscillate between PFM and PWM modes).
The PFM mode of operation described above varies when the difference between Vin and Vout is approximately 1 volt or less and the output current is less than ILim.PFM. FIGS. 4A, 4B, and 4C illustrate the current of inductor 15 (Iind), the voltage at switching node 12 (Vsw), and the output of feedback circuit 2, respectively, when the regulator is operating in PFM mode in this particular situation. Since under these conditions Iind never exceeds ILim,PFM, inductor current sense circuit 4 does not cause PFM control circuit 7 to turn switch 11 off. Thus, as described previously, switch 11 will remain on until Vfb exceeds Vref,H, at which point PFM control circuit 7 causes switch 11 to turn off. Inductor 15 then discharges through schottky diode 14, causing Vsw to swing from approximately Vin to −0.4V. When Iind reaches a zero level, Vsw abruptly changes from −0.4V to Vout. However, switch 11 remains off until Vfb falls below Vref,L. PFM control circuit 7 then causes switch 11 to turn on. Iind will then increase, but it will never exceed ILim,PFM. Therefore, switch 11 remains on until Vfb rises above Vref,H.
Thus, the present invention achieves high efficiency over a wide range of output currents by automatically switching between PFM mode operation (when the output current is relatively small) and PWM mode operation (when the output current exceeds a predetermined level).
FIG. 5 is FIGS. 5A-5D illustrate a gate-level schematic of one embodiment of the present invention. When power is first applied to the regulator circuit at Vin, Vout, is below its nominal value, Vout,nom. This is detected by comparator 174 which sends a logic high signal to the gate of switch 178, turning on switch 178. The drain of switch 178 then swings low, forcing the output of SR latch 138 high which, in turn, enables the PWM controller 140. This The high signal from latch 138 is received by invertor 164, and invertor 164 thus supplies a low signal to NOR gate 166. The high signal from latch 138 is also supplied to NAND gate 142. The high signal from latch 138 also disables the PFM control circuit by forcing the output of NOR gate 202 low. Thus, the circuit initially operates in PWM mode and will remain in PWM mode as long as the peak inductor current Iind,pk is equal to or greater than the minimum current required for PWM mode, Ipk,min. When Iind,pk drops below Ipk,min, the regulator switches to PFM mode as previously described.
PWM controller 140 generates a fixed frequency square wave PWM signal with a variable duty cycle. When the PWM signal is high (rising edge), a logic low signal appears at the output of invertor 170, turning off low-side switch 13. This high PWM signal also puts a logic high at the input of pulse circuit 151, which turns on switch 150 long enough to pull down the input of invertor 156, thus turning on switch 11. Switch 150 is used to turn on switch 11 during PWM mode, while switch 152 is used to turn on switch 11 during PFM mode.
Positive feedback is applied to inverters 154 and 156 so that the output of invertor 156 will remain low after switch 150 (PWM mode) or switch 152 (PFM mode) turns off. It is important that switches 150 and 152 turn off as soon as possible to ensure that switches 146, 148, and 200 can reset the output of invertor 156 to a logic low to turn off switch 11. Hence, switches 150 and 152 must be turned on with a relatively narrow pulse at the beginning of the PWM and PFM switching cycles, respectively.
Pulse circuits 151 (PWM mode) and 153 (PFM mode) detect a leading edge from the outputs of invertor 144 and nor gate 160, respectively, and generate a positive pulse approximately 200 nanoseconds long at the gates of switches 150 and 152, respectively. This pulse turns on switches 150 and 152 just long enough to set the output of invertor 156 high, thereby turning on high-side switch 11.
When the PWM signal is low (falling edge), switch 146 pulls down the input of invertor 154, turning off switch 11. This low PWM signal also provides a logic high at the input of NAND gate 168, allowing low-side switch 13 to turn on when Vsw swings low to −0.4V. Specifically, the low PWM signal from PWM controller 140 and the high signal from latch 138 are supplied to NAND gate 142, NAND gate 142 thus supplies a high signal to invertor 144, and invertor 144 thus supplies a low signal to NOR gate 166. The high signal from latch 138 is supplied to inventor 164, and inventor 164 thus supplies a low signal to NOR gate 166, and NOR gate 16 thus supplies said logic high at the input of NAND gate 168. This method of turning on switch 13 results in break-before-make switching of switches 11 and 13. Switch 11 remains off and switch 13 remains on until the beginning of the next PWM cycle.
Error amplifier 176 monitors Vout, during PWM operation by measuring the difference between the Vfb and Vref (Vout appears across resistors 184, 186 which, acting as a voltage divider, generate Vfb at node 185). This voltage difference is amplified and provided as input to PWM controller 140. PWM controller 140 uses this amplified voltage difference to adjust the duty cycle of the PWM signal so that Vfb equals Vref, thereby regulating Vout. PWM controller 140 can be either a voltage mode or current mode controller. In order to achieve maximum efficiency when the regulator is operating in PFM mode, PWM controller 140 and error amplifier 176 remain off during PFM mode.
The regulator indirectly senses the current of inductor 15 by monitoring the drain to source voltage Vds of switch 11. When switch 11 is on, switch 102 connects the drain of switch 11 to the inputs of comparators 122 and 124. When switch 11 is off, switch 104 shorts the inputs of comparators 122 and 124 to the input voltage Vin. In order to eliminate the noise at the leading edge of the Vds waveform when switch 11 is turned on, capacitor 108 and resistor 112 keep switch 102 off and switch 104 on until switch 11 has been on approximately 200 nanoseconds. When switch 11 turns off, diode 114 allows switch 102 to turn off and switch 104 to turn on immediately.
Comparator 122 causes high-side switch 11 to turn off when the peak inductor current Iind,pk has exceeded the current limit for PWM mode (Ilim,pwm) and PFM mode (ILim,PFM). Comparator 122 monitors Iind,pk by comparing the Vds of switch 11 to Vds of switch 116. In one embodiment, switch 11 is a power MOSFET constructed of thousands of small MOSFET cells connected in parallel. Switch 116 is one of those MOSFET cells with its drain separated from the drain of switch 11. Switch 116 has an area factor of 1 (1 cell), while switch 11 has an area factor of K (K cells).
When the regulator operates in PFM mode, switch 126 is off, allowing only current source 132 to flow through switch 116. Current source 132 is set equal to ILim,PFM/K so that the Vds of switch 116 equals the Vds of switch 11 when Iind equals ILim,PFM. In other words, when the regulator is operating in PFM mode, the threshold voltage of comparator 122 corresponds to ILim,PFM.
When the regulator is operating in PWM mode, switch 126 turns on to allow both current sources 130 and 132 to flow through switch 116. Current source 130 is set to a value so that the sum of current sources 130 and 132 equals ILim,pwm/K. Thus, the threshold voltage of comparator 122 corresponds to ILim,pwm when the regulator is operating in PWM mode.
Comparator 124, monitoring the peak inductor current Iind,pk by comparing the Vds of switch 11 with the Vds of switch 118. Determines when the regulator should switch from PWM mode to PFM mode. Like switch 116, switch 118 is a single MOSFET cell (having an area factor of 1) with its drain separated from the drain of switch 11. Current source 128 provides a current through switch 118 equal to Ipk,min/K, so that the Vds of switch 11 equals the Vds of switch 118 when Iind reaches the value Ipk,min. The value of Ipk,min is adjusted by a multiplier circuit so that it changes in proportion to changes in Vin-Vout. This allows Ipk,min to change in proportion to changes in ΔIind which, as shown in equation 1, results in Iout,min remaining constant.
Accordingly, if the peak inductor current Iind,pk is greater than Ipk,min, the regulator remains in PWM mode. Referring to FIG. 6A, this event corresponds to time period A. Comparator 124 outputs a logic low which in turn produces a logic low at the output of SR latch 134. The output of latch 134 remains low until reset to logic high by the falling edge of the PWM signal (see FIG. 6B). When switch 11 turns off, the rising edge of the inverted PWM signal appears at the clock input of master-slave D flip-flop 136 (see FIG. 6C). The inverted PWM signal is inverted again and used as the reset signal for latch 134. Due to the time delay of invertor 163 and latch 134, the rising edge of the clock input of flip-flop 136 occurs before the output of latch 134 is reset to a logic high. Under the conditions of time period A, the output of flip-flop 136 is set to a logic high and remains high so long as Iind,pk exceeds Ipk,min (see FIG. 6D). The logic high output from flip-flop 136 has no effect on the previously set high output of SR latch 138 (see FIG. 6E).
The logic high signal at the output of latch 138 turns on PWM controller 140 and error amplifier 176, as well as allowing the PWM signal to propagate through NAND gate 142, thereby enabling PWM operation. The high signal from the output of latch 138 also turns on switch 126, re-setting the threshold voltage of comparator 122 to a value corresponding to Ilim,pwm. Furthermore, the high signal from the output of latch 138 prevents PFM control signals from propagating through NOR gate 202. By setting the threshold of comparator 122 to Ilim,pwm and preventing PFM control signals from propagating through NOR gate 202, PFM mode operation is thereby disabled.
If the inductor current Iind is equal to or exceeds Ilim,pwm, the output of comparator 122 transitions to a logic high, turning on switch 148. Switch 148 pulls down the input of invertor 120. Which turns off switch 11. The positive feedback of weak inverters 154 and 156 keeps the output of 156 low after switch 148 turns off so that switch 11 will remain off until the next rising edge of the PWM signal.
When Iind,pk is less than Ipk,min (corresponding to time period B in FIG. 6A), the regulator enters PFM mode. The output of comparator 124 and the output of latch 134 remain at logic high when the PWM cycle ends (see FIG. 6B), causing the output of flip-flop 136 to transition to logic low (see FIG. 6D). The logic low signal at the output of flip-flop 136 sets the output of latch 138 low (see FIG. 6E), which will remain low until reset to logic high by switch 178. This low signal from latch 138 turns off PWM controller 140 and error amplifier 176, and it prevents the PWM signal from propagating through NAND gate 142, thereby disabling the PWM control circuit. The low signal from latch 138 also enables PFM control signals to propagate through NOR gate 202. In addition, the low signal from the output of latch 138 turns off switch 126, resetting the threshold voltage of comparator 122 to a value corresponding to ILim,PFM. In other words, a low signal from the output of latch 138 switches the regulator from PWM mode to PFM mode.
Once in PFM mode, the on and off states of high-side switch 11 are controlled as described previously. Assuming that switch 11 is initially on, current flows through inductor 15 to output terminal 17. When the inductor current Iind exceeds ILim,PFM, comparator 122 turns off switch 11. Iind then discharges through diode 14, causing Vsw to drop to −0.4 volts. When Iind discharges to zero, causing Vsw to swing to Vin, invertor 158 sends a logic low signal to NOR gate 160 which, in turn, puts a logic high at the input of pulse circuit 153. Pulse circuit 153, generating a brief turn on pulse at the gate of switch 152, causes switch 11 to turn on and thereby starts a new switching cycle.
The regulator will skip cycles when Vout exceeds its nominal value Vout,nom. Comparator 172 monitors Vout by comparing Vfb to Vref. When Vfb is greater than Vref, comparator 172 puts a logic high at an input of NOR gate 160, thereby preventing switch 11 from turning on in response to the signal swing of Vsw via invertor 158. The logic high signal from comparator 172 also propagates through invertor 204 and NOR gate 202 so as to turn on switch 200, which causes switch 11 to turn off. Thus, high-side switch 11, turning off when the output voltage has exceeded its nominal value, will turn back on (when Iind discharges to zero) only if the output voltage has dropped to less than or equal to its nominal value. As explained earlier, Vfb exhibits hysteresis to prevent the regulator from sporadically skipping cycles. Preferably, comparator 172 exhibits hysteresis at its input terminals of approximately 10 mV.
As mentioned previously, a variation of PFM mode operation occurs when (1) the difference between Vin and Vout is approximately 1 volt or less and (2) the output current is less than ILim,PFM. Since under these conditions the inductor current never exceeds ILim,PFM, the output of comparator 122 will remain at logic low and thus never turn off switch 11. When Vout exceeds Vout,nom, the logic high output of comparator 172 turns on switch 200 which, in turn, causes switch 11 to turn off. The regulator then stops delivering current to output node 17. The output of comparator 172 will remain at logic high until Vout falls below Vout,nom. When the output of comparator 172 has transitioned to logic low, and Iind has discharged to zero, invertor 158 sends a logic low signal to NOR gate 160 which, in turn, causes pulse circuit 153 to generate a brief output pulse that turns on high-side switch 11. The regulator again supplies current to output terminal 17. As a result, the regulator maintains a constant output voltage by supplying current from Vin to output terminal 17 when Vout is less than or equal to Vout,nom. Accordingly, when Vout is exceeds Vout,nom, the regulator does not supply current from Vin to output terminal 17. Thereby allowing this current to discharge through capacitor 16 until Vout again falls below Vout,nom.
The regulator switches from PFM mode back to PWM mode when the output current exceeds ILim,PFM/2, which causes Vout to fall below Vout,nom. This drop in Vout, is detected by comparator 174, whose threshold voltage is set to a value about four percent below Vref. Thus, when Vout falls approximately four percent below Vout,nom, the output of comparator 174 transitions to a logic high, turning on switch 182 and thereby resetting latch 138. The logic high at the output of latch 138 re-enables the PWM control circuit and disables the PFM control circuit, as described earlier.
The PWM signal, when re-enabled, may take one hundred or more cycles to settle out. During this period, the inductor current will fluctuate causing Iind,pk to dip below Ipk,min for brief transients. To prevent the regulator from oscillating between PWM and PFM modes during these brief transients, the regulator keeps the reset input of latch 138 low for a predetermined amount of time after PWM controller 140 has been re-enabled, as follows. After the regulator re-enters PWM mode, and the output of comparator 174 transitions to a logic low, current source 182 requires several hundred microseconds to pull-up the reset input of latch 138 to a logic high. Accordingly, this time delay forces the regulator to remain in PWM mode for several hundred microseconds after PWM mode is re-enabled.
While particular embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that changes and modifications may be made without departing from this invention in its broader aspects and, therefore, the appended claims are to encompass within their scope all such changes and modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of this invention.

Claims (9)

What is claimed is:
1. A method performed by a switching regulator comprising the steps of:
generating a regulated output voltage and an output current at an output terminal of said regulator using a switching device, said switching device having an on state and an off state, said switching device providing said output current;
comparing one or more signals corresponding to said output current to one or more threshold current levels, said one or more threshold current levels corresponding to predetermined output current levels;
generating one or more first control signals in response to said step of comparing;
controlling said switching device with a first control circuit in response to said one or more first control signals indicating said output current is greater than a first current level, wherein said first control circuit comprises:
a square wave generator outputting a square wave having a first frequency and having a duty cycle corresponding to said regulated output voltage at said output terminal, said square wave generator controlling the on and off states of said switching device; and
a first feedback circuit for generating an error signal based on a difference between a voltage corresponding to said output voltage at said output terminal and a first reference voltage level and varying the duty cycle of said square wave generator in response to said error signal to cause said output voltage to be of a predetermined voltage level; and
controlling said switching device with a second control circuit in response to said one or more first control signals indicating said output current is less than said first current level by a predetermined amount, wherein said second control circuit comprises:
a signal generator outputting a switching signal having afixed a fixed duty cycle and having a second frequency, said signal generator controlling the on and off states of said switching device, wherein said second frequency is less than said first frequency; and
a second feedback circuit for generating a disable signal when said output voltage at said output terminal exceeds a second reference voltage level, said disable signal forcing said signal generator to skip one or more cycles to cause said output voltage to be of said predetermined voltage level.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein said predetermined amount is zero.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein said predetermined amount is greater than zero.
4. The method of claim 1 further comprising the steps of:
comparing said output voltage at said output terminal with a third reference voltage level;
generating a second control signal in response to said step of comparing said output voltage; and
controlling said switching device with said first control circuit in response to said second control signal indicating said output voltage at said output terminal is less than said third reference voltage level.
5. The method of claim 1 wherein said switching device comprises a first MOSFET device; said one or more signals corresponding to said output current in said step of comparing being determined by comparing a voltage at a terminal of said first MOSFET device to one or more threshold voltage levels, said threshold voltage levels corresponding to said predetermined output current levels.
6. The method of claim 5 wherein said threshold voltage levels include a voltage at a terminal of a second MOSFET device having characteristics substantially identical to said first MOSFET device, said second MOSFET device conducting a fixed reference current.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the switching device supplies the output current via an inductor; and wherein the duty cycle of the switching signal is fixed at least in part by an inductance of said inductor.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the duty cycle of the switching signal is fixed by at least one of an inductance of said inductor through which the switching device supplies the output current, an input voltage that receives regulation by said method, and the regulated output voltage.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein the signal generator controls duration of on and off states of the switching signal responsive to at least one of an inductance of said inductor through which the switching device supplies the output current, an input voltage that receives regulation by said method, and the regulated output voltage.
US09/176,656 1994-09-27 1998-10-20 Voltage regulator that operates in either PWM or PFM mode Expired - Lifetime USRE37609E1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US09/176,656 USRE37609E1 (en) 1994-09-27 1998-10-20 Voltage regulator that operates in either PWM or PFM mode

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US08/313,489 US5568044A (en) 1994-09-27 1994-09-27 Voltage regulator that operates in either PWM or PFM mode
US09/176,656 USRE37609E1 (en) 1994-09-27 1998-10-20 Voltage regulator that operates in either PWM or PFM mode

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US08/313,489 Reissue US5568044A (en) 1994-09-27 1994-09-27 Voltage regulator that operates in either PWM or PFM mode

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
USRE37609E1 true USRE37609E1 (en) 2002-03-26

Family

ID=23215905

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US08/313,489 Ceased US5568044A (en) 1994-09-27 1994-09-27 Voltage regulator that operates in either PWM or PFM mode
US09/176,656 Expired - Lifetime USRE37609E1 (en) 1994-09-27 1998-10-20 Voltage regulator that operates in either PWM or PFM mode

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US08/313,489 Ceased US5568044A (en) 1994-09-27 1994-09-27 Voltage regulator that operates in either PWM or PFM mode

Country Status (4)

Country Link
US (2) US5568044A (en)
EP (1) EP0783792B1 (en)
DE (1) DE69526100T2 (en)
WO (1) WO1996010287A1 (en)

Cited By (50)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6441598B1 (en) * 2001-11-05 2002-08-27 Texas Instruments Incorporated Synchronous rectifier circuit and method of use in switching voltage converter
US20040036452A1 (en) * 2002-06-28 2004-02-26 Brooks Steven W. Method and apparatus for load sharing in a multiphase switching power converter
US20040041543A1 (en) * 2002-06-28 2004-03-04 Brooks Steven W. Method and apparatus for auto-interleaving synchronization in a multiphase switching power converter
US20050001603A1 (en) * 2003-07-02 2005-01-06 May Marcus W. Pulse-skipping PFM DC-DC converter using a voltage mode control loop
US20050134247A1 (en) * 2002-11-12 2005-06-23 Laszlo Lipcsei Controller for DC to DC converter
US20050258811A1 (en) * 2004-04-27 2005-11-24 Masahiro Matsuo Switching regulator and method for changing output voltages thereof
US6969976B1 (en) * 2003-11-07 2005-11-29 National Semiconductor Corporation Dynamic current limit adjustments
US20050275392A1 (en) * 2004-06-09 2005-12-15 Wong Foot S Boost converter
US20060033483A1 (en) * 2004-08-11 2006-02-16 Niko Semiconductor Co., Ltd. Auto-switching converter with PWM and PFM selection
US20060044853A1 (en) * 2004-08-25 2006-03-02 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Performance controller for a step down current mode switching regulator
US20070041224A1 (en) * 2005-07-06 2007-02-22 Moyse Philip J Switch mode power supply control systems
WO2007024675A1 (en) * 2005-08-23 2007-03-01 Analog Devices, Inc. Improving transient behavior while switching between control loops in a switching voltage regulator
US20070052403A1 (en) * 2005-08-24 2007-03-08 Micrel, Incorporated Analog internal soft-start and clamp circuit for switching regulator
US20070164720A1 (en) * 2005-12-22 2007-07-19 Lalithambika Vinod A Switch-mode power supply controllers
US20070182386A1 (en) * 2005-12-16 2007-08-09 Garner David M Power supply driver circuit
US20070200590A1 (en) * 2005-12-22 2007-08-30 Lalithambika Vinod A Saturation detection circuits
US20070236188A1 (en) * 2006-04-03 2007-10-11 Texas Instruments Deutschland Gmbh Self-oscillating dc-dc buck converter with zero hysteresis
US20080061754A1 (en) * 2006-09-07 2008-03-13 Nec Electronics Corporation Switching power supply unit and control method of switching power supply unit
US20080084190A1 (en) * 2006-10-06 2008-04-10 Remy International, Inc. Method and system for communicating voltage regulator switching information to a vehicle computer
US20080084639A1 (en) * 2006-10-06 2008-04-10 Remy International, Inc. Method and system for improving voltage regulator accuracy in vehicle alternators
US20080084191A1 (en) * 2006-10-06 2008-04-10 Remy International, Inc. Method and system for protecting voltage regulator driver circuitry during field coil short circuit condition
US20080106243A1 (en) * 2006-10-31 2008-05-08 Samsung Electro-Mechanics Co., Ltd. Control circuit of dc-dc converter
US20080137384A1 (en) * 2006-12-11 2008-06-12 Yung-Lin Lin Mixed-mode DC/AC inverter
US20080197828A1 (en) * 2007-02-16 2008-08-21 Yuusuke Michishita Switching regulator
US20090072805A1 (en) * 2007-09-13 2009-03-19 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Switching regulator and method of adjusting pulse width
US20090174440A1 (en) * 2008-01-04 2009-07-09 The Hong Kong University Of Science And Technology Frequency-hopping pulse-width modulator for switching regulators
US20090273295A1 (en) * 2006-07-06 2009-11-05 Microsemi Corporation Striking and open lamp regulation for ccfl controller
US20090322298A1 (en) * 2008-06-26 2009-12-31 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Switching regulator and semiconductor apparatus including the same
US20100066323A1 (en) * 2008-09-18 2010-03-18 Intersil Americas Inc. System and method for providing pulse frequency modulation mode
US20100079181A1 (en) * 2008-09-29 2010-04-01 Infineon Technologies Austria Ag Sample-point adjustment in a switching converter
US20100123400A1 (en) * 2008-11-20 2010-05-20 Microsemi Corporation Method and apparatus for driving ccfl at low burst duty cycle rates
US20100123439A1 (en) * 2008-11-14 2010-05-20 Remy Technologies, L.L.C. Alternator Regulator With Variable Rotor Field Frequency
US20100225293A1 (en) * 2009-03-05 2010-09-09 Iwatt Inc. Adaptive control for transition between multiple modulation modes in a switching power converter
US20100231180A1 (en) * 2009-03-11 2010-09-16 Remy Technologies, L.L.C. Alternator Regulator With Automatic Regulation Dependent on System Voltage
US20100320983A1 (en) * 2009-06-23 2010-12-23 Intersil Americas Inc. System and method for pfm/pwm mode transition within a multi-phase buck converter
US20100327836A1 (en) * 2008-03-24 2010-12-30 Gang Li Controllers for dc to dc converters
US20110006744A1 (en) * 2009-07-08 2011-01-13 Microchip Technology Incorporated System, method and apparatus to transition between pulse width modulation and pulse-frequency modulation in a switch mode power supply
US20120153919A1 (en) * 2010-12-17 2012-06-21 Cristian Garbossa Switching Mode Power Supply Control
US20120223693A1 (en) * 2010-06-08 2012-09-06 Infineon Inc. Methods and apparatus for dc-dc conversion using digitally controlled adaptive pulse frequency modulation
US8283907B1 (en) 2009-11-20 2012-10-09 Texas Instruments Incorporated Boost regulator with pulse frequency mode of operation having substantially constant percentage output ripple and frequency
USRE45862E1 (en) * 1997-06-04 2016-01-19 Semiconductor Components Industries, Llc Power conversion integrated circuit and method for programming
US9423812B2 (en) 2007-06-26 2016-08-23 Vishay-Siliconix Current mode boost converter using slope compensation
US9621036B2 (en) 2014-01-09 2017-04-11 Allegro Microsystems, Llc Circuits and techniques for improving regulation in a regulator having more than one mode of operation
US10033279B2 (en) 2016-04-19 2018-07-24 Mediatek Singapore Pte. Ltd. DC-DC voltage converter and associated control method capable of dynamically adjusting upper boundary of inductor current
US10511225B1 (en) 2018-09-07 2019-12-17 Dialog Semiconductor (Uk) Limited Low IQ hysteretic-PWM automated hybrid control architecture for a switching converter
US10530249B1 (en) 2018-12-31 2020-01-07 Dialog Semiconductor (Uk) Limited Charge pump with switching LDO function for output voltage regulation
US10615694B2 (en) 2018-09-07 2020-04-07 Dialog Semiconductor (Uk) Limited Circuit and method for suppressing audio noise in DC-DC converters
US10686371B1 (en) 2018-12-31 2020-06-16 Dialog Semiconductor (Uk) Limited Protection of charge pump circuits from high input voltages
US10771049B1 (en) 2019-06-28 2020-09-08 Dialog Semiconductor (Uk) Limited Control circuit and method for avoiding reverse recovery of a power transistor
US11201493B2 (en) 2018-12-31 2021-12-14 Dialog Semiconductor (Uk) Limited Circuit for battery charging and system supply, combining capacitive and inductive charging

Families Citing this family (173)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DE19547155C1 (en) * 1995-12-16 1997-02-06 Rexroth Mannesmann Gmbh Electrical circuit arrangement for converting an input voltage
US5818214A (en) * 1996-01-18 1998-10-06 International Rectifier Corporation Buck regulator circuit
KR100209505B1 (en) 1996-12-23 1999-07-15 윤종용 Circuit for change of duty circle
US5912552A (en) 1997-02-12 1999-06-15 Kabushiki Kaisha Toyoda Jidoshokki Seisakusho DC to DC converter with high efficiency for light loads
US5818704A (en) * 1997-04-17 1998-10-06 International Rectifier Corporation Synchronizing/driving circuit for a forward synchronous rectifier
DE69701628T2 (en) * 1997-07-18 2001-02-01 Ansaldo Sistemi Spa Electronic circuit for transient reduction when switching on
JP3123952B2 (en) * 1997-09-30 2001-01-15 日本電気アイシーマイコンシステム株式会社 Output buffer circuit
US6023154A (en) * 1997-10-28 2000-02-08 International Rectifier Corporation Parallel and interwoven buck converter for high efficiency, low voltage power supply
US5959443A (en) * 1997-11-14 1999-09-28 Toko, Inc. Controller circuit for controlling a step down switching regulator operating in discontinuous conduction mode
JP2946091B2 (en) * 1998-02-18 1999-09-06 セイコーインスツルメンツ株式会社 Switching regulator
US6307356B1 (en) * 1998-06-18 2001-10-23 Linear Technology Corporation Voltage mode feedback burst mode circuit
FR2781675B1 (en) * 1998-07-31 2001-09-07 Berkem Sa BIOACTIVE PRODUCT CONTAINING SILICON AND BIOFLAVONOIDS, ITS PREPARATION METHODS AND ITS PHARMACEUTICAL, DIETETIC AND COSMETIC USES
US6268716B1 (en) * 1998-10-30 2001-07-31 Volterra Semiconductor Corporation Digital voltage regulator using current control
US6100676A (en) * 1998-10-30 2000-08-08 Volterra Semiconductor Corporation Method and apparatus for digital voltage regulation
US6198261B1 (en) * 1998-10-30 2001-03-06 Volterra Semiconductor Corporation Method and apparatus for control of a power transistor in a digital voltage regulator
DE59813759D1 (en) * 1998-12-21 2006-11-16 Siebe Appliance Controls Gmbh Temperature determination unit
US6127815A (en) 1999-03-01 2000-10-03 Linear Technology Corp. Circuit and method for reducing quiescent current in a switching regulator
US6172492B1 (en) * 1999-03-26 2001-01-09 Sarnoff Corporation Fixed off time and zero voltage switching dual mode power factor correcting converter
EP1087508A1 (en) * 1999-09-21 2001-03-28 STMicroelectronics S.r.l. Method of controlling a DC-DC converter
EP1087507B1 (en) 1999-09-21 2004-10-13 STMicroelectronics S.r.l. Method of controlling a DC-DC converter
US6462971B1 (en) * 1999-09-24 2002-10-08 Power Integrations, Inc. Method and apparatus providing a multi-function terminal for a power supply controller
US6163140A (en) * 2000-02-01 2000-12-19 Micrel Incorporated Start-up circuit for voltage regulators
US6215288B1 (en) * 2000-02-25 2001-04-10 Cadence Design Systems, Inc. Ultra-low power switching regulator method and apparatus
US6285571B1 (en) 2000-03-03 2001-09-04 Linfinity Microelectronics Method and apparatus for an efficient multiphase switching regulator
US6292378B1 (en) 2000-04-07 2001-09-18 Linfinity Microelectronics Method and apparatus for programmable current sharing
US6366067B1 (en) * 2000-06-30 2002-04-02 Intel Corporation Voltage regulator for reducing EMI
KR20020029941A (en) 2000-07-06 2002-04-20 롤페스 요하네스 게라투스 알베르투스 A multi-output dc/dc converter in pfm/pwm mode
DE60117837T2 (en) * 2000-10-25 2006-09-21 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. CIRCUIT
US6459602B1 (en) * 2000-10-26 2002-10-01 O2 Micro International Limited DC-to-DC converter with improved transient response
EP1211804B1 (en) 2000-12-04 2007-03-28 Infineon Technologies AG Driver for an external FET with high accuracy and gate voltage protection
EP1213822B1 (en) * 2000-12-05 2006-08-02 Infineon Technologies AG Frequency limitation and overload detection in a voltage regulator
US6377034B1 (en) * 2000-12-11 2002-04-23 Texas Instruments Incorporated Method and circuits for inductor current measurement in MOS switching regulators
US6577110B2 (en) 2001-01-12 2003-06-10 Sipex Corporation DC-to-DC converter with constant ripple current regulation for continuous and discontinuous conduction mode operation
US6674274B2 (en) 2001-02-08 2004-01-06 Linear Technology Corporation Multiple phase switching regulators with stage shedding
US6400127B1 (en) * 2001-02-12 2002-06-04 Philips Electronics North America Corporation Dual mode pulse-width modulator for power control applications
JP3872331B2 (en) * 2001-03-07 2007-01-24 富士通株式会社 DC-DC converter and power supply circuit
US6476589B2 (en) 2001-04-06 2002-11-05 Linear Technology Corporation Circuits and methods for synchronizing non-constant frequency switching regulators with a phase locked loop
US7521913B2 (en) * 2004-09-10 2009-04-21 Primarion Corporation Active transient response circuits, system and method for digital multiphase pulse width modulated regulators
US6545882B2 (en) 2001-08-15 2003-04-08 System General Corp. PWM controller having off-time modulation for power converter
US6597159B2 (en) 2001-08-15 2003-07-22 System General Corp. Pulse width modulation controller having frequency modulation for power converter
WO2003041252A1 (en) * 2001-11-05 2003-05-15 Shakti Systems, Inc. Multistage dc-dc converter
US6791298B2 (en) * 2001-11-05 2004-09-14 Shakti Systems, Inc. Monolithic battery charging device
US6819088B2 (en) * 2001-11-05 2004-11-16 Krishna Shenai DC-DC converter with resonant gate drive
DE10157291A1 (en) * 2001-11-22 2003-08-14 Infineon Technologies Ag Integrated DC-DC converter
US6765372B2 (en) * 2001-12-14 2004-07-20 Intersil Americas Inc. Programmable current-sensing circuit providing continuous temperature compensation for DC-DC Converter
KR100431002B1 (en) * 2002-03-15 2004-05-12 삼성전자주식회사 Signal conversion device for resolution improvement and method of the same
AU2003236997A1 (en) * 2002-06-27 2004-01-19 Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. Dc-dc converter
US6836103B2 (en) * 2002-06-28 2004-12-28 Microsemi Corporation Method and apparatus for dithering auto-synchronization of a multiphase switching power converter
JP4110926B2 (en) 2002-07-11 2008-07-02 富士電機デバイステクノロジー株式会社 DC-DC converter
US6979987B2 (en) * 2002-11-14 2005-12-27 Fyre Storm, Inc. Method of regulating an output voltage of a power converter by sensing the output voltage during a first time interval and calculating a next current value in an inductor sufficient to bring the output voltage to a target voltage within a second time interval immediately following the first time interval and varying a duty cycle of a switch during the second time interval
TWI268035B (en) * 2003-01-10 2006-12-01 Sunyen Co Ltd Energy storage circuitry system
US7102340B1 (en) 2003-01-21 2006-09-05 Microsemi Corporation Dual-mode PFM boost converter
US7102339B1 (en) * 2003-01-21 2006-09-05 Microsemi, Inc. Method and apparatus to switch operating modes in a PFM converter
US7385379B2 (en) * 2003-03-06 2008-06-10 Fairchild Semiconductor Corporation No load to high load recovery time in ultraportable DC-DC converters
US7265603B2 (en) * 2003-05-12 2007-09-04 International Rectifier Corporation MOSFET gate driver with a negative gate bias voltage
WO2004105444A1 (en) * 2003-05-19 2004-12-02 Sloanled, Inc. Multiple led control apparatus and method
US6972548B2 (en) 2003-11-25 2005-12-06 Aimtron Technology Corp. Pulse frequency modulated voltage regulator capable of prolonging a minimum off-time
US7071665B2 (en) * 2003-11-25 2006-07-04 Aimtron Technology Corp. Method of reducing a ripple of a heavy loading pulse frequency modulated voltage regulator
US7030596B1 (en) 2003-12-03 2006-04-18 Linear Technology Corporation Methods and circuits for programmable automatic burst mode control using average output current
US7330017B2 (en) * 2004-01-29 2008-02-12 Enpirion, Inc. Driver for a power converter and a method of driving a switch thereof
JP4461842B2 (en) * 2004-03-09 2010-05-12 株式会社デンソー Switching regulator and switching regulator control method
EP1594217A1 (en) * 2004-05-05 2005-11-09 Deutsche Thomson-Brandt Gmbh Switching DC-DC converter with improved stabilization
EP1596490B1 (en) * 2004-05-05 2014-09-10 Thomson Licensing DC-DC converter operating in PFM mode
CN100377486C (en) * 2004-06-08 2008-03-26 尼克森微电子股份有限公司 Converter with automatic switching over pulse width/frequency modulating mode
KR20070056068A (en) * 2004-08-13 2007-05-31 코닌클리즈케 필립스 일렉트로닉스 엔.브이. Dc-dc converter with adaptive switching parameter adjustment
TW200608708A (en) * 2004-08-26 2006-03-01 Richtek Techohnology Corp Current-mode control converter with fixed frequency, and method thereof
US8058859B2 (en) * 2004-08-30 2011-11-15 Monolithic Power Systems, Inc. Pulse frequency modulation methods and circuits
CN101065706B (en) 2004-11-22 2011-01-19 古河Sky株式会社 Movable mechanism
US7180274B2 (en) * 2004-12-10 2007-02-20 Aimtron Technology Corp. Switching voltage regulator operating without a discontinuous mode
WO2006102931A1 (en) * 2005-04-01 2006-10-05 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Voltage converter apparatus and method therefor
US7180757B2 (en) * 2005-04-22 2007-02-20 Aimtron Technology Corp. Sequential soft-start circuit for multiple circuit channels
US7782039B1 (en) 2005-04-27 2010-08-24 Marvell International Ltd. Mixed mode digital control for switching regulator
US7279869B2 (en) * 2005-05-06 2007-10-09 Aimtron Technology Corp. PFM control circuit for DC regulator
US7327127B2 (en) * 2005-06-17 2008-02-05 Via Technologies, Inc. Pulse-frequency mode DC-DC converter circuit
JP4728718B2 (en) * 2005-07-15 2011-07-20 ローム株式会社 STEP-UP SWITCHING REGULATOR, ITS CONTROL CIRCUIT, AND ELECTRONIC DEVICE USING THE SAME
US7716502B2 (en) * 2005-08-24 2010-05-11 Radu Muresan Current flattening and current sensing methods and devices
US7692417B2 (en) * 2005-09-19 2010-04-06 Skyworks Solutions, Inc. Switched mode power converter
US7737673B2 (en) * 2005-09-30 2010-06-15 Silicon Laboratories Inc. Controlling a voltage regulator
US7116089B1 (en) * 2005-10-28 2006-10-03 Monolithic Power Systems, Inc. Constant-peak-current minimum-off-time pulse frequency modulator for switching regulators
US8598857B2 (en) * 2005-12-19 2013-12-03 Infineon Technologies Austria Ag Methods and apparatus for a multiphase power regulator
GB2433654A (en) * 2005-12-22 2007-06-27 Cambridge Semiconductor Ltd Switch mode power supply controller
JP2007202273A (en) * 2006-01-25 2007-08-09 Ricoh Co Ltd Switching regulator
US7521907B2 (en) 2006-03-06 2009-04-21 Enpirion, Inc. Controller for a power converter and method of operating the same
CN101071981B (en) * 2006-05-11 2010-09-29 中华映管股份有限公司 Voltage-rising DC/DC converter
US7541790B2 (en) * 2006-06-09 2009-06-02 Silicon Laboratories Inc. Method and apparatus for power savings in a switching regulator
US7893676B2 (en) * 2006-07-20 2011-02-22 Enpirion, Inc. Driver for switch and a method of driving the same
US7674594B2 (en) 2006-07-27 2010-03-09 Redpoint Bio Corporation Screening assay for inhibitors of TRPA1 activation by a lower alkyl phenol
US7948280B2 (en) * 2006-10-20 2011-05-24 Enpirion, Inc. Controller including a sawtooth generator and method of operating the same
TW200826450A (en) * 2006-12-04 2008-06-16 Winbond Electronics Corp Pulse width modulation controller
KR100887102B1 (en) 2007-01-09 2009-03-04 삼성전기주식회사 Dual mode clock generator
TWI327421B (en) * 2007-03-07 2010-07-11 Orise Technology Co Ltd Method for stabling voltage, pulse frequency modulating circuit and power supply using the same
JP4984997B2 (en) * 2007-03-16 2012-07-25 富士通セミコンダクター株式会社 DC-DC converter control circuit, power supply voltage supply system, and power supply voltage supply method
JP4315208B2 (en) * 2007-03-20 2009-08-19 富士電機デバイステクノロジー株式会社 Control circuit and control method for switching power supply device
US8981751B1 (en) * 2007-05-09 2015-03-17 Intersil Americas LLC Control system optimization via adaptive frequency adjustment
US8228112B2 (en) * 2007-07-13 2012-07-24 International Business Machines Corporation Switch with reduced insertion loss
JP5007650B2 (en) * 2007-10-16 2012-08-22 ソニー株式会社 Display device, light amount adjustment method for display device, and electronic device
US7906943B2 (en) * 2007-12-20 2011-03-15 Microsemi Corporation Boost converter with adaptive coil peak current
US7880454B2 (en) * 2007-12-21 2011-02-01 L&L Engineering Llc Methods and systems for control of switches in power regulators/power amplifiers
US7876080B2 (en) * 2007-12-27 2011-01-25 Enpirion, Inc. Power converter with monotonic turn-on for pre-charged output capacitor
CN101515756B (en) * 2008-02-18 2011-11-23 昂宝电子(上海)有限公司 Multimode method and system for high-efficiency power control
US20090237959A1 (en) * 2008-03-20 2009-09-24 Eric Soenen Digital Control of Power Converters
US7679342B2 (en) * 2008-04-16 2010-03-16 Enpirion, Inc. Power converter with power switch operable in controlled current mode
US8410769B2 (en) 2008-04-16 2013-04-02 Enpirion, Inc. Power converter with controller operable in selected modes of operation
US8541991B2 (en) * 2008-04-16 2013-09-24 Enpirion, Inc. Power converter with controller operable in selected modes of operation
US8692532B2 (en) 2008-04-16 2014-04-08 Enpirion, Inc. Power converter with controller operable in selected modes of operation
US8686698B2 (en) 2008-04-16 2014-04-01 Enpirion, Inc. Power converter with controller operable in selected modes of operation
US9246390B2 (en) 2008-04-16 2016-01-26 Enpirion, Inc. Power converter with controller operable in selected modes of operation
US7884583B2 (en) * 2008-06-30 2011-02-08 Infineon Technologies Austria Ag Speed recognition for half bridge control
EP2144356B1 (en) * 2008-07-09 2019-06-26 Dialog Semiconductor GmbH Buck converter threshold detection for automatic pulse skipping mode
US8305776B2 (en) 2008-07-30 2012-11-06 On-Bright Electronics (Shanghai) Co., Ltd. Systems and methods for primary-side regulation in off-line switching-mode flyback power conversion system
US9350252B2 (en) 2008-10-21 2016-05-24 On-Bright Electronics (Shanghai) Co., Ltd. Systems and methods for protecting power conversion systems based on at least feedback signals
US8526203B2 (en) 2008-10-21 2013-09-03 On-Bright Electronics (Shanghai) Co., Ltd. Systems and methods for constant voltage mode and constant current mode in flyback power converter with primary-side sensing and regulation
US8488342B2 (en) 2008-10-21 2013-07-16 On-Bright Electronics (Shanghai) Co., Ltd. Systems and methods for constant voltage mode and constant current mode in flyback power converters with primary-side sensing and regulation
US9548714B2 (en) 2008-12-29 2017-01-17 Altera Corporation Power converter with a dynamically configurable controller and output filter
US8698463B2 (en) 2008-12-29 2014-04-15 Enpirion, Inc. Power converter with a dynamically configurable controller based on a power conversion mode
CN101510721B (en) * 2009-03-18 2012-04-25 浙江大学 Single inductance switch DC voltage converter and three mode control method
TWI408885B (en) * 2009-07-31 2013-09-11 Orise Technology Co Ltd Dc-dc converter with auto-switching between pwm and pfm
US9088217B2 (en) * 2009-08-20 2015-07-21 On-Bright Electronics (Shanghai) Co., Ltd. Systems and methods for load compensation with primary-side sensing and regulation for flyback power converters
KR101065632B1 (en) 2010-01-18 2011-09-20 고려대학교 산학협력단 Dual mode DC-DC converter and its control method
US8638079B2 (en) * 2010-02-27 2014-01-28 Infineon Technologies Ag Pulse modulation control in a DC-DC converter circuit
US8446038B2 (en) 2010-09-10 2013-05-21 Don Roy Sauer Energy harvesting resistor
US8391029B2 (en) * 2010-12-03 2013-03-05 Himax Technologies Limited DC-DC converter
US8867295B2 (en) 2010-12-17 2014-10-21 Enpirion, Inc. Power converter for a memory module
KR101167807B1 (en) 2010-12-24 2012-07-25 삼성전기주식회사 Resonant converter
US8593123B2 (en) 2010-12-27 2013-11-26 Analog Devices, Inc. Switching voltage regulators with hysteretic control for enhanced mode-transition speed and stability
US8810227B2 (en) 2011-01-14 2014-08-19 Infineon Technologies Austria Ag System and method for controlling a switched-mode power supply
CN102624237B (en) 2011-02-01 2015-09-16 昂宝电子(上海)有限公司 For the system and method that the dynamic threshold of flyback power supply converter regulates
US9531266B2 (en) * 2011-02-23 2016-12-27 Infineon Technologies Americas Corp. Power supply circuitry and adaptive transient control
US8803499B2 (en) * 2011-02-23 2014-08-12 International Recifier Corporation Power supply circuitry and adaptive transient control
US8698470B2 (en) 2011-02-28 2014-04-15 Texas Instruments Incorporated Control for switching between PWM and PFM operation in a buck converter
JP6042091B2 (en) * 2011-05-13 2016-12-14 ローム株式会社 Switching regulator control circuit, switching regulator and electronic equipment, switching power supply, television
CN102801325B (en) 2011-05-23 2015-02-04 广州昂宝电子有限公司 System and method for regulating switching frequency and peak current of power converter
CN102916586B (en) 2011-08-04 2014-04-02 昂宝电子(上海)有限公司 System and method for switching on and off power converter
US20130043849A1 (en) * 2011-08-18 2013-02-21 Broadcom Corporation Voltage Converter Including Variable Mode Switching Regulator And Related Method
CN103368400B (en) 2012-03-31 2015-02-18 昂宝电子(上海)有限公司 System and method for constant voltage control and constant current control
EP2685619B1 (en) * 2012-07-11 2023-05-10 Xueshan Technologies Inc. Efficient energy use in low power products
US9112443B2 (en) * 2012-08-30 2015-08-18 Nxp B.V. Current controlled actuator driver with improved accuracy at low current
CN102946197B (en) 2012-09-14 2014-06-25 昂宝电子(上海)有限公司 System and method for controlling voltage and current of power conversion system
CN103036438B (en) 2012-12-10 2014-09-10 昂宝电子(上海)有限公司 Peak current regulation system and method used in power conversion system
US10698430B2 (en) * 2012-12-19 2020-06-30 Intel Corporation Method and apparatus of current balancing for multiple phase power converter
TWI483523B (en) * 2013-01-14 2015-05-01 Upi Semiconductor Corp Multi-phase dc-dc converter and control method thereof
CN103414350B (en) 2013-08-29 2016-08-17 昂宝电子(上海)有限公司 Based on loading condition regulating frequency and the system and method for electric current
US9419455B2 (en) * 2013-09-06 2016-08-16 Broadcom Corporation Multimode battery charger
WO2015070099A1 (en) 2013-11-08 2015-05-14 Lutron Electronics Co., Inc. Load control device for a light-emitting diode light source
CN103618292B (en) 2013-12-06 2017-01-11 昂宝电子(上海)有限公司 System and method for protecting power source conversion system against thermal runaway
US9554211B2 (en) 2014-01-03 2017-01-24 Summit Semiconductor Llc Wireless speaker unit
US9559583B2 (en) * 2014-01-13 2017-01-31 Mediatek Inc. Power converter with a wave generator that filters a wave signal to generate an output voltage
US9413348B2 (en) * 2014-07-29 2016-08-09 Semiconductor Components Industries, Llc Electronic circuit including a switch having an associated breakdown voltage and a method of using the same
US9502978B2 (en) 2014-08-13 2016-11-22 Endura Technologies LLC Switched power stage and a method for controlling the latter
JP5944452B2 (en) * 2014-09-05 2016-07-05 株式会社MersIntel Method and apparatus for optimal power sampling control in photovoltaic power generation system
US9906128B2 (en) 2014-10-29 2018-02-27 Infineon Technologies Austria Ag Intermediate voltage bus converter with power saving modes
US9509217B2 (en) 2015-04-20 2016-11-29 Altera Corporation Asymmetric power flow controller for a power converter and method of operating the same
US9565731B2 (en) 2015-05-01 2017-02-07 Lutron Electronics Co., Inc. Load control device for a light-emitting diode light source
US9655180B2 (en) 2015-06-19 2017-05-16 Lutron Electronics Co., Inc. Load control device for a light-emitting diode light source
US9634569B1 (en) 2015-10-14 2017-04-25 Dialog Semiconductor (Uk) Limited DC-to-DC output current sensing
US10886833B2 (en) * 2016-05-24 2021-01-05 Fairchild Semiconductor Corporation Inductor current emulation for output current monitoring
US10056828B2 (en) * 2016-07-11 2018-08-21 Infineon Technologies Austria Ag System and method for controlling current in a switching regulator
US9876429B1 (en) * 2016-09-16 2018-01-23 Apple Inc. Reconfigurable on time circuit for current mode control of buck converter
US10098196B2 (en) 2016-09-16 2018-10-09 Lutron Electronics Co., Inc. Load control device for a light-emitting diode light source having different operating modes
TWI617126B (en) * 2017-04-14 2018-03-01 台達電子工業股份有限公司 Power converter and control method thereof
US11245329B2 (en) * 2017-09-29 2022-02-08 Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, Ltd. Power module
CN107546982B (en) * 2017-10-19 2024-01-16 广州大学 PWM/PFM dual-mode control circuit
TWI650629B (en) * 2017-11-23 2019-02-11 晶豪科技股份有限公司 Over-current protection method with frqueency modulation for voltage regulator and circuit thereof
US20190305684A1 (en) * 2018-03-28 2019-10-03 Silicon Laboratories Inc. Apparatus for Power Converter with Improved Performance and Associated Methods
FR3087973A1 (en) * 2018-10-25 2020-05-01 Stmicroelectronics (Grenoble 2) Sas METHOD FOR ADJUSTING A CUT-OFF POWER SUPPLY SOURCE, AND CORRESPONDING SUPPLY SOURCE
CN109768709B (en) 2018-12-29 2021-03-19 昂宝电子(上海)有限公司 Voltage compensation system and method based on load condition in power converter
JP7183068B2 (en) * 2019-02-19 2022-12-05 キヤノン株式会社 IMAGE FORMING APPARATUS, IMAGE FORMING APPARATUS CONTROL METHOD, AND PROGRAM
US11031869B2 (en) * 2019-02-25 2021-06-08 Texas Instruments Incorporated Dual mode switching regulator with PWM/PFM frequency control
US11362579B2 (en) * 2019-09-27 2022-06-14 Apple Inc. Peak voltage overshoot control for switch mode power converters
WO2022052559A1 (en) * 2020-09-11 2022-03-17 浙江大学 Control system for wireless power transfer system
CN114915285A (en) * 2021-02-09 2022-08-16 恩智浦美国有限公司 Half-bridge power circuit, controller for half-bridge power circuit and control method
CN113437870B (en) * 2021-07-13 2023-09-22 上海艾为电子技术股份有限公司 DC-DC converter, mode switching method and circuit thereof, and electronic device
TWI822344B (en) * 2022-09-20 2023-11-11 立錡科技股份有限公司 Switching power converter circuit and conversion control circuit and method thereof

Citations (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4047083A (en) 1976-03-08 1977-09-06 General Electric Company Adjustable speed A-C motor drive with smooth transition between operational modes and with reduced harmonic distortion
US4400767A (en) 1981-06-30 1983-08-23 Honeywell Information Systems Inc. Self start flyback power supply
US4456872A (en) 1969-10-27 1984-06-26 Bose Corporation Current controlled two-state modulation
FR2578118A1 (en) 1985-02-26 1986-08-29 Thomson Csf VARIABLE APPLICATION DECOUPAGE SUPPLY CONTROL CIRCUIT
US4626763A (en) 1985-01-14 1986-12-02 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Inverter system with hysteresis transition between pulse width modulation mode and pure square wave mode of operation
US5162987A (en) 1990-12-28 1992-11-10 Leslie Controls, Inc. Controller which uses pulse width and pulse frequency modulated signals to control a variable
US5192906A (en) * 1989-03-08 1993-03-09 Ant Nachrichtentechnik Gmbh Switching regulator with current limiting shutdown
US5329200A (en) 1992-07-17 1994-07-12 Nec Corporation Piezoelectric transformer converter for power use
US5414341A (en) 1993-12-07 1995-05-09 Benchmarq Microelectronics, Inc. DC-DC converter operable in an asyncronous or syncronous or linear mode
US5481178A (en) 1993-03-23 1996-01-02 Linear Technology Corporation Control circuit and method for maintaining high efficiency over broad current ranges in a switching regulator circuit
US5548206A (en) * 1993-09-30 1996-08-20 National Semiconductor Corporation System and method for dual mode DC-DC power conversion

Patent Citations (11)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4456872A (en) 1969-10-27 1984-06-26 Bose Corporation Current controlled two-state modulation
US4047083A (en) 1976-03-08 1977-09-06 General Electric Company Adjustable speed A-C motor drive with smooth transition between operational modes and with reduced harmonic distortion
US4400767A (en) 1981-06-30 1983-08-23 Honeywell Information Systems Inc. Self start flyback power supply
US4626763A (en) 1985-01-14 1986-12-02 Westinghouse Electric Corp. Inverter system with hysteresis transition between pulse width modulation mode and pure square wave mode of operation
FR2578118A1 (en) 1985-02-26 1986-08-29 Thomson Csf VARIABLE APPLICATION DECOUPAGE SUPPLY CONTROL CIRCUIT
US5192906A (en) * 1989-03-08 1993-03-09 Ant Nachrichtentechnik Gmbh Switching regulator with current limiting shutdown
US5162987A (en) 1990-12-28 1992-11-10 Leslie Controls, Inc. Controller which uses pulse width and pulse frequency modulated signals to control a variable
US5329200A (en) 1992-07-17 1994-07-12 Nec Corporation Piezoelectric transformer converter for power use
US5481178A (en) 1993-03-23 1996-01-02 Linear Technology Corporation Control circuit and method for maintaining high efficiency over broad current ranges in a switching regulator circuit
US5548206A (en) * 1993-09-30 1996-08-20 National Semiconductor Corporation System and method for dual mode DC-DC power conversion
US5414341A (en) 1993-12-07 1995-05-09 Benchmarq Microelectronics, Inc. DC-DC converter operable in an asyncronous or syncronous or linear mode

Non-Patent Citations (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
Advance Information by Maxim Integrated Products, Aug. 1993, pp. 4-241, 4-243, 4-125, 4-211.
Advance Information entitled "Notebook Computer Power Supplies" by Maxim Integrated Products, Feb. 1993, pp. 1-8.
Data sheet entitled "100% Duty Cycle, Low-Noise, Step-Down, PWM DC-DC Converter" by Maxim Integrated Products, Sep. 1996, Doc. No. 19-1142 Rev. 0, pp. 1-12.
Data sheet entitled "5V-to-3.3V, Sychronous, Step-Down Power-Supply Controller" by Maxim Integrated Products, Doc. No. 19-0224, Rev. 2, Aug. 1994, pp. 1-20.
Data sheet entitled "Dual-Output Power-Supply Controller for Notebook Computers" by Maxim Integrated Products, Doc. No. 19-0160 Rev. 1, May 1994, pp. 1-24.
Data sheet entitled "Step-Down Controllers with Synchronous Rectifier for CPU Power" by Maxim Integrated Products, Doc. No. 19-0221 Rev. 2, Apr. 1996, pp. 1-32.
Data sheet entitled "Triple-Output Power-Supply Controller for Notebook Computers" by Maxim Integrated Products, Doc. No. 19-0045 Rev. 1, May 1994, pp. 1-28.
Data sheet entitled "Triple-Output Power-Supply Controller for Notebook Computers" by Maxim Integrated Products, Doc. No. 19-0146 Rev. 2, May 1994, pp. 1-32.

Cited By (89)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
USRE45862E1 (en) * 1997-06-04 2016-01-19 Semiconductor Components Industries, Llc Power conversion integrated circuit and method for programming
US6441598B1 (en) * 2001-11-05 2002-08-27 Texas Instruments Incorporated Synchronous rectifier circuit and method of use in switching voltage converter
US20040036452A1 (en) * 2002-06-28 2004-02-26 Brooks Steven W. Method and apparatus for load sharing in a multiphase switching power converter
US20040041543A1 (en) * 2002-06-28 2004-03-04 Brooks Steven W. Method and apparatus for auto-interleaving synchronization in a multiphase switching power converter
US6965219B2 (en) * 2002-06-28 2005-11-15 Microsemi Corporation Method and apparatus for auto-interleaving synchronization in a multiphase switching power converter
US7109691B2 (en) 2002-06-28 2006-09-19 Microsemi Corporation Systems for auto-interleaving synchronization in a multiphase switching power converter
US7005835B2 (en) 2002-06-28 2006-02-28 Microsemi Corp. Method and apparatus for load sharing in a multiphase switching power converter
US20050134247A1 (en) * 2002-11-12 2005-06-23 Laszlo Lipcsei Controller for DC to DC converter
US7098642B2 (en) * 2002-11-12 2006-08-29 O2Micro International Limited Controller for DC to DC converter
US7075280B2 (en) * 2003-07-02 2006-07-11 Sigmatel, Inc. Pulse-skipping PFM DC-DC converter using a voltage mode control loop
US20050001603A1 (en) * 2003-07-02 2005-01-06 May Marcus W. Pulse-skipping PFM DC-DC converter using a voltage mode control loop
US6969976B1 (en) * 2003-11-07 2005-11-29 National Semiconductor Corporation Dynamic current limit adjustments
US7221129B2 (en) * 2004-04-27 2007-05-22 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Switching regulator and method for changing output voltages thereof
US20070216387A1 (en) * 2004-04-27 2007-09-20 Masahiro Matsuo Switching regulator and method for changing output voltages thereof
US20050258811A1 (en) * 2004-04-27 2005-11-24 Masahiro Matsuo Switching regulator and method for changing output voltages thereof
US7567065B2 (en) 2004-04-27 2009-07-28 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Switching regulator and method for changing output voltages thereof
US20050275392A1 (en) * 2004-06-09 2005-12-15 Wong Foot S Boost converter
US7615981B2 (en) * 2004-06-09 2009-11-10 O2Micro International Limited Boost converter with enhanced control capabilities of emulating an inductor current
US20060033483A1 (en) * 2004-08-11 2006-02-16 Niko Semiconductor Co., Ltd. Auto-switching converter with PWM and PFM selection
US7173404B2 (en) * 2004-08-11 2007-02-06 Niko Semiconductor Co., Ltd. Auto-switching converter with PWM and PFM selection
US7282900B2 (en) * 2004-08-25 2007-10-16 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Performance controller for a step down current mode switching regulator
US20060044853A1 (en) * 2004-08-25 2006-03-02 Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd. Performance controller for a step down current mode switching regulator
US20070041224A1 (en) * 2005-07-06 2007-02-22 Moyse Philip J Switch mode power supply control systems
US7504815B2 (en) 2005-07-06 2009-03-17 Cambridge Semiconductor Limited Switch mode power supply control systems
US20070046273A1 (en) * 2005-08-23 2007-03-01 Riehl Patrick S Transient behavior while switching between control loops in a switching voltage regulator
US7504812B2 (en) 2005-08-23 2009-03-17 Mediatek, Inc. Transient behavior while switching between control loops in a switching voltage regulator
WO2007024675A1 (en) * 2005-08-23 2007-03-01 Analog Devices, Inc. Improving transient behavior while switching between control loops in a switching voltage regulator
US20070052403A1 (en) * 2005-08-24 2007-03-08 Micrel, Incorporated Analog internal soft-start and clamp circuit for switching regulator
US7378827B2 (en) 2005-08-24 2008-05-27 Micrel, Incorporated Analog internal soft-start and clamp circuit for switching regulator
US20070182386A1 (en) * 2005-12-16 2007-08-09 Garner David M Power supply driver circuit
US7710098B2 (en) 2005-12-16 2010-05-04 Cambridge Semiconductor Limited Power supply driver circuit
US20070200590A1 (en) * 2005-12-22 2007-08-30 Lalithambika Vinod A Saturation detection circuits
US20070164720A1 (en) * 2005-12-22 2007-07-19 Lalithambika Vinod A Switch-mode power supply controllers
US7733098B2 (en) 2005-12-22 2010-06-08 Cambridge Semiconductor Limited Saturation detection circuits
US20070236188A1 (en) * 2006-04-03 2007-10-11 Texas Instruments Deutschland Gmbh Self-oscillating dc-dc buck converter with zero hysteresis
US7902805B2 (en) * 2006-04-03 2011-03-08 Texas Instruments Deutschland Gmbh Self-oscillating DC-DC buck converter with zero hysteresis
US8358082B2 (en) 2006-07-06 2013-01-22 Microsemi Corporation Striking and open lamp regulation for CCFL controller
US20090273295A1 (en) * 2006-07-06 2009-11-05 Microsemi Corporation Striking and open lamp regulation for ccfl controller
US7969132B2 (en) * 2006-09-07 2011-06-28 Renesas Electronics Corporation Switching power supply unit and control method of switching power supply unit
US20080061754A1 (en) * 2006-09-07 2008-03-13 Nec Electronics Corporation Switching power supply unit and control method of switching power supply unit
US7623331B2 (en) 2006-10-06 2009-11-24 Remy International, Inc. Method and system for improving voltage regulator accuracy in vehicle alternators
US20080084191A1 (en) * 2006-10-06 2008-04-10 Remy International, Inc. Method and system for protecting voltage regulator driver circuitry during field coil short circuit condition
US20080084190A1 (en) * 2006-10-06 2008-04-10 Remy International, Inc. Method and system for communicating voltage regulator switching information to a vehicle computer
US7420353B2 (en) 2006-10-06 2008-09-02 Remy International, Inc. Method and system for communicating voltage regulator switching information to a vehicle computer
US7583062B2 (en) 2006-10-06 2009-09-01 Reny International, Inc. Method and system for protecting voltage regulator driver circuitry during field coil short circuit condition
US20080084639A1 (en) * 2006-10-06 2008-04-10 Remy International, Inc. Method and system for improving voltage regulator accuracy in vehicle alternators
US20080106243A1 (en) * 2006-10-31 2008-05-08 Samsung Electro-Mechanics Co., Ltd. Control circuit of dc-dc converter
US7646181B2 (en) 2006-10-31 2010-01-12 Samsung Electro-Mechanics Co., Ltd. Control circuit of DC-DC converter
US7768806B2 (en) * 2006-12-11 2010-08-03 O2Micro International Limited Mixed-code DC/AC inverter
US20080137384A1 (en) * 2006-12-11 2008-06-12 Yung-Lin Lin Mixed-mode DC/AC inverter
US20080197828A1 (en) * 2007-02-16 2008-08-21 Yuusuke Michishita Switching regulator
US7852055B2 (en) * 2007-02-16 2010-12-14 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Switching regulator
US9423812B2 (en) 2007-06-26 2016-08-23 Vishay-Siliconix Current mode boost converter using slope compensation
US20090072805A1 (en) * 2007-09-13 2009-03-19 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Switching regulator and method of adjusting pulse width
US7859239B2 (en) * 2007-09-13 2010-12-28 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Switching regulator and method of adjusting pulse width
US20090174440A1 (en) * 2008-01-04 2009-07-09 The Hong Kong University Of Science And Technology Frequency-hopping pulse-width modulator for switching regulators
US8760141B2 (en) 2008-01-04 2014-06-24 The Hong Kong University Of Science And Technology Frequency-hopping pulse-width modulator for switching regulators
US20100327836A1 (en) * 2008-03-24 2010-12-30 Gang Li Controllers for dc to dc converters
US9059632B2 (en) 2008-03-24 2015-06-16 O2Micro, Inc. Controllers for DC to DC converters
US8258765B2 (en) * 2008-06-26 2012-09-04 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Switching regulator and semiconductor apparatus including the same
US20090322298A1 (en) * 2008-06-26 2009-12-31 Ricoh Company, Ltd. Switching regulator and semiconductor apparatus including the same
US20100066323A1 (en) * 2008-09-18 2010-03-18 Intersil Americas Inc. System and method for providing pulse frequency modulation mode
US8847568B2 (en) * 2008-09-29 2014-09-30 Infineon Technologies Ag Sample-point adjustment in a switching converter
US20100079181A1 (en) * 2008-09-29 2010-04-01 Infineon Technologies Austria Ag Sample-point adjustment in a switching converter
US20100123439A1 (en) * 2008-11-14 2010-05-20 Remy Technologies, L.L.C. Alternator Regulator With Variable Rotor Field Frequency
US8330430B2 (en) 2008-11-14 2012-12-11 Remy Technologies, Llc Alternator regulator with variable rotor field frequency
US8093839B2 (en) 2008-11-20 2012-01-10 Microsemi Corporation Method and apparatus for driving CCFL at low burst duty cycle rates
US20100123400A1 (en) * 2008-11-20 2010-05-20 Microsemi Corporation Method and apparatus for driving ccfl at low burst duty cycle rates
US8199539B2 (en) 2009-03-05 2012-06-12 Iwatt Inc. Adaptive control for transition between multiple modulation modes in a switching power converter
US8018743B2 (en) 2009-03-05 2011-09-13 Iwatt Inc. Adaptive control for transition between multiple modulation modes in a switching power converter
US20100225293A1 (en) * 2009-03-05 2010-09-09 Iwatt Inc. Adaptive control for transition between multiple modulation modes in a switching power converter
US20100231180A1 (en) * 2009-03-11 2010-09-16 Remy Technologies, L.L.C. Alternator Regulator With Automatic Regulation Dependent on System Voltage
US8080980B2 (en) 2009-03-11 2011-12-20 Remy Technologies, L.L.C. Alternator regulator with automatic regulation dependent on system voltage
US8330439B2 (en) * 2009-06-23 2012-12-11 Intersil Americas Inc. System and method for PFM/PWM mode transition within a multi-phase buck converter
US20100320983A1 (en) * 2009-06-23 2010-12-23 Intersil Americas Inc. System and method for pfm/pwm mode transition within a multi-phase buck converter
US8427123B2 (en) * 2009-07-08 2013-04-23 Microchip Technology Incorporated System, method and apparatus to transition between pulse width modulation and pulse-frequency modulation in a switch mode power supply
US20110006744A1 (en) * 2009-07-08 2011-01-13 Microchip Technology Incorporated System, method and apparatus to transition between pulse width modulation and pulse-frequency modulation in a switch mode power supply
US8283907B1 (en) 2009-11-20 2012-10-09 Texas Instruments Incorporated Boost regulator with pulse frequency mode of operation having substantially constant percentage output ripple and frequency
US8901908B2 (en) * 2010-06-08 2014-12-02 Infineon Technologies Austria Ag Methods and apparatus for DC-DC conversion using digitally controlled adaptive pulse frequency modulation
US20120223693A1 (en) * 2010-06-08 2012-09-06 Infineon Inc. Methods and apparatus for dc-dc conversion using digitally controlled adaptive pulse frequency modulation
US20120153919A1 (en) * 2010-12-17 2012-06-21 Cristian Garbossa Switching Mode Power Supply Control
US9621036B2 (en) 2014-01-09 2017-04-11 Allegro Microsystems, Llc Circuits and techniques for improving regulation in a regulator having more than one mode of operation
US10033279B2 (en) 2016-04-19 2018-07-24 Mediatek Singapore Pte. Ltd. DC-DC voltage converter and associated control method capable of dynamically adjusting upper boundary of inductor current
US10511225B1 (en) 2018-09-07 2019-12-17 Dialog Semiconductor (Uk) Limited Low IQ hysteretic-PWM automated hybrid control architecture for a switching converter
US10615694B2 (en) 2018-09-07 2020-04-07 Dialog Semiconductor (Uk) Limited Circuit and method for suppressing audio noise in DC-DC converters
US10530249B1 (en) 2018-12-31 2020-01-07 Dialog Semiconductor (Uk) Limited Charge pump with switching LDO function for output voltage regulation
US10686371B1 (en) 2018-12-31 2020-06-16 Dialog Semiconductor (Uk) Limited Protection of charge pump circuits from high input voltages
US11201493B2 (en) 2018-12-31 2021-12-14 Dialog Semiconductor (Uk) Limited Circuit for battery charging and system supply, combining capacitive and inductive charging
US10771049B1 (en) 2019-06-28 2020-09-08 Dialog Semiconductor (Uk) Limited Control circuit and method for avoiding reverse recovery of a power transistor

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
DE69526100D1 (en) 2002-05-02
WO1996010287A1 (en) 1996-04-04
EP0783792B1 (en) 2002-03-27
EP0783792A4 (en) 1998-01-14
EP0783792A1 (en) 1997-07-16
DE69526100T2 (en) 2002-07-25
US5568044A (en) 1996-10-22

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
USRE37609E1 (en) Voltage regulator that operates in either PWM or PFM mode
US6057675A (en) DC/DC converter
US6307356B1 (en) Voltage mode feedback burst mode circuit
EP0617501B2 (en) Control circuit for maintaining high efficiency over broad current ranges in a switching regulator circuit
US7298124B2 (en) PWM regulator with discontinuous mode and method therefor
US7595624B2 (en) Slope compensation for switching regulator
US6396252B1 (en) Switching DC-to-DC converter with discontinuous pulse skipping and continuous operating modes without external sense resistor
US7064531B1 (en) PWM buck regulator with LDO standby mode
EP1969705B1 (en) Switching regulator slope compensation generator circuit
US7728573B2 (en) DC-DC converter controller having optimized load transient response and method thereof
US7098632B2 (en) Controller in a voltage mode buck converter for implementing a mode-switch function and an over-current protection by a multifunction pin and method thereof
US7498789B2 (en) Switching regulator with over-current protection
US7446517B2 (en) Power supply controller and method therefor
US20110101946A1 (en) Voltage converters
US7075277B2 (en) DC-DC converter
EP0746087A2 (en) Low drop-out power supplies
US20080061758A1 (en) Switching regulator, control circuit of switching regulator, and method of controlling operation of switching regulator
US20060220623A1 (en) Switched mode power supply method and apparatus
JPH10225105A (en) Dc-dc converter
US6130528A (en) Switching regulator controlling system having a light load mode of operation based on a voltage feedback signal
US11509222B2 (en) Voltage converter with loop control
US20220407421A1 (en) Control circuit for dc/dc converter
JP3239577B2 (en) DC power supply
CA2292187C (en) Switching voltage regulator
CN116711198A (en) Power converter control with snooze mode

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
FPAY Fee payment

Year of fee payment: 8

FPAY Fee payment

Year of fee payment: 12

REMI Maintenance fee reminder mailed