LTC3556EUFD#PBF [Linear]

LTC3556 - High Efficiency USB Power Manager with Dual Buck and Buck-Boost DC/DCs; Package: QFN; Pins: 28; Temperature Range: -40°C to 85°C;
LTC3556EUFD#PBF
型号: LTC3556EUFD#PBF
厂家: Linear    Linear
描述:

LTC3556 - High Efficiency USB Power Manager with Dual Buck and Buck-Boost DC/DCs; Package: QFN; Pins: 28; Temperature Range: -40°C to 85°C

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LTC3556  
High Efficiency USB Power  
Manager with Dual Buck  
and Buck-Boost DC/DCs  
FeaTures  
POWER MANAGER  
DescripTion  
The LTC®3556 is a highly integrated power management  
and battery charger IC for Li-Ion/Polymer battery applica-  
tions.Itincludesahighefficiencycurrentlimitedswitching  
PowerPath manager with automatic load prioritization, a  
battery charger, an ideal diode, and three synchronous  
switching regulators (two bucks and one buck-boost).  
DesignedspecificallyforUSBapplications, theLTC3556’s  
switching power manager automatically limits input cur-  
rent to a maximum of either 100mA or 500mA for USB  
applications or 1A for adapter-powered applications.  
High Efficiency Switching PowerPathTM Controller  
n
with Bat-TrackTM Adaptive Output Control  
n
Programmable USB or Wall Current Limit  
(100mA/500mA/1A)  
n
Full Featured Li-Ion/Polymer Battery Charger  
n
Instant-On Operation with a Discharged Battery  
n
1.5A Maximum Charge Current  
n
Internal 180mΩ Ideal Diode Plus External Ideal Diode  
Controller Powers Load in Battery Mode  
n
Low No-Load I when Powered from BAT (<30µA)  
Q
The LTC3556’s switching input stage transmits nearly all  
of the 2.5W available from the USB port to the system load  
with minimal power wasted as heat. This feature allows  
the LTC3556 to provide more power to the application and  
eases the constraint ofthermal budgeting in small spaces.  
The two buck regulators can provide up to 400mA each  
and the buck-boost can deliver 1A.  
DC/DCs  
n
n
n
n
n
n
n
Dual High Efficiency Buck DC/DCs (400mA/400mA I  
)
OUT  
High Efficiency Buck-Boost DC/DC (1A I  
All Regulators Operate at 2.25MHz  
)
OUT  
Dynamic Voltage Scaling on Two Buck Outputs  
2
I C Control of Enables, Mode, Two V  
Settings  
OUT  
ENALL Pin with Power-Up Sequence Control  
Low No-Load Quiescent Current: 20µA Each  
The LTC3556 is available in the low profile 28-pin (4mm  
× 5mm × 0.75mm) QFN surface mount package.  
L, LT, LTC, LTM, Linear Technology, Burst Mode and the Linear logo are registered trademarks  
and PowerPath and Bat-Track are trademarks of Linear Technology Corporation. All other  
trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Protected by U.S. Patents including  
6522118 and 6404251.  
applicaTions  
n
HDD-Based MP3 Players, PDAs, GPS, PMPs  
n
Other USB-Based Handheld Products  
Typical applicaTion  
Battery Charge Current  
vs Battery Voltage  
High Efficiency PowerPath Manager, Dual Buck, Buck-Boost and LDO  
USB/WALL  
4.5V TO 5.5V  
TO OTHER  
LOADS  
USB COMPLIANT  
STEP-DOWN  
REGULATOR  
700  
600  
500  
400  
300  
200  
100  
0
BATTERY CHARGE CURRENT  
EXTRA CURRENT  
FOR FASTER CHARGING  
CC/CV  
BATTERY  
CHARGER  
0V  
OPTIONAL  
Li-Ion  
500mA USB CURRENT LIMIT  
CHARGE  
+
T
LTC3556  
3.3V/25mA  
RTC/LOW  
POWER LOGIC  
ALWAYS ON LDO  
1
V
= 5V  
BUS  
5X MODE  
0.8V TO 3.6V/400mA  
0.8V TO 3.6V/400mA  
MEMORY  
CORE  
µP  
BATTERY CHARGER PROGRAMMED FOR 1A  
DUAL HIGH EFFICIENCY  
ENALL  
BUCKS  
2
3
2.8  
3.2 3.4 3.6  
3.8  
4
4.2  
3
BATTERY VOLTAGE (V)  
HIGH EFFICIENCY  
BUCK-BOOST  
SEQ  
2.5V to 3.3V/1A  
PGOODALL  
3556 TA01b  
HDD/IO  
3
2
2
I C  
I C PORT  
3556 TA01  
3556fa  
1
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
absoluTe MaxiMuM raTings  
pin conFiguraTion  
TOP VIEW  
(Note 1)  
V
V
(Transient) t < 1ms, Duty Cycle < 1%.. –0.3V to 7V  
BUS  
, V , V , V  
(Static), DV ,  
IN1 IN2 IN3 BUS  
CC  
FB1, FB2, NTC, BAT, SCL, SDA,  
28 27 26 25 24 23  
LDO3V3  
CLPROG  
NTC  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
22  
21  
20  
19  
18  
17  
16  
15  
GATE  
CHRG  
PROG  
SW2  
PGOODALL, CHRG....................................... –0.3V to 6V  
ENALL...................................... –0.3V to Lesser of 6V or  
[MAX(V , V , BAT) + 0.3V]  
BUS OUT  
SW1  
29  
SEQ................... –0.3V to Lesser of 6V or (V  
+ 0.3V)  
OUT  
IN3  
V
V
IN1  
IN2  
FB3, V ..............–0.3V to Lesser of 6V or (V + 0.3V)  
C3  
CLPROG  
PGOODALL CHRG  
FB1  
FB3  
FB2  
I
I
....................................................................3mA  
SDA  
V
C3  
PGOODALL  
, I  
....................................................50mA  
9
10 11 12 13 14  
UFD PACKAGE  
I
........................................................................2mA  
PROG  
I
I
I
I
...................................................................30mA  
LDO3V3  
SW1 SW2  
, I  
........................................................... 600mA  
28-LEAD (4mm × 5mm) PLASTIC QFN  
, I , I  
............................................................2A  
SW BAT VOUT  
T
JMAX  
= 125°C, θ = 37°C/W  
JA  
, I  
, I  
.............................................2.5A  
EXPOSED PAD (PIN 29) IS GND, MUST BE SOLDERED TO PCB  
SWAB3 SWCD3 VOUT3  
Operating Temperature Range (Note 2)....–40°C to 85°C  
Junction Temperature (Note 3) ............................. 125°C  
Storage Temperature Range .................. –65°C to 125°C  
orDer inForMaTion  
http://www.linear.com/product/LTC3556#orderinfo  
LEAD FREE FINISH  
TAPE AND REEL  
PART MARKING  
PACKAGE DESCRIPTION  
TEMPERATURE RANGE  
LTC3556EUFD#PBF  
LTC3556EUFD#TRPBF  
3556  
28-Lead (4mm × 5mm) Plastic QFN  
–40°C to 85°C  
Consult LTC Marketing for parts specified with wider operating temperature ranges.  
For more information on lead free part marking, go to: http://www.linear.com/leadfree/  
For more information on tape and reel specifications, go to: http://www.linear.com/tapeandreel/. Some packages are available in 500 unit reels through  
designated sales channels with #TRMPBF suffix.  
3556fa  
2
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
elecTrical characTerisTics The l denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating  
temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. VBUS = 5V, VIN1 = VIN2 = VIN3 = VOUT3 = 3.8V, BAT = 3.8V, DVCC = 3.3V,  
RPROG = 1k, RCLPROG = 3.01k, unless otherwise noted.  
SYMBOL  
PARAMETER  
CONDITIONS  
MIN  
TYP  
MAX  
UNITS  
PowerPath Switching Regulator  
V
Input Supply Voltage  
Total Input Current  
4.35  
5.5  
V
BUS  
l
l
l
l
I
1x Mode, V  
5x Mode, V  
= BAT  
= BAT  
OUT  
87  
95  
100  
500  
1000  
0.50  
mA  
mA  
mA  
mA  
BUSLIM  
OUT  
OUT  
436  
800  
0.31  
460  
860  
0.38  
10x Mode, V  
= BAT  
Suspend Mode, V  
= BAT  
OUT  
I
V
Quiescent Current  
1x Mode, I  
5x Mode, I  
= 0mA  
= 0mA  
7
15  
mA  
mA  
mA  
mA  
VBUSQ  
BUS  
OUT  
OUT  
10x Mode, I  
= 0mA  
15  
OUT  
Suspend Mode, I  
= 0mA  
0.044  
OUT  
h
(Note 4) Ratio of Measured V  
Current to  
BUS  
1x Mode  
224  
1133  
2140  
11.3  
mA/mA  
mA/mA  
mA/mA  
mA/mA  
CLPROG  
CLPROG Program Current  
5x Mode  
10x Mode  
Suspend Mode  
I
V
Current Available Before Loading 1x Mode, BAT = 3.3V  
5x Mode, BAT = 3.3V  
135  
672  
1251  
0.32  
mA  
mA  
mA  
mA  
OUT(POWERPATH)  
OUT  
BAT  
10x Mode, BAT = 3.3V  
Suspend Mode  
V
V
V
V
CLPROG Servo Voltage in Current  
Limit  
1x, 5x, 10x Modes  
Suspend Mode  
1.188  
100  
V
CLPROG  
mV  
V
Undervoltage Lockout  
Rising Threshold  
Falling Threshold  
4.30  
4.00  
4.35  
4.7  
V
V
UVLO_VBUS  
UVLO_VBUS-BAT  
OUT  
BUS  
3.95  
3.4  
V
to BAT Differential Undervoltage Rising Threshold  
200  
50  
mV  
mV  
BUS  
Lockout  
Falling Threshold  
V
Voltage  
1x, 5x, 10x Modes, 0V < BAT < 4.2V,  
BAT +  
0.3  
V
OUT  
I
= 0mA, Battery Charger Off  
OUT  
USB Suspend Mode, I  
= 250µA  
4.5  
1.8  
4.6  
4.7  
2.7  
V
MHz  
Ω
OUT  
l
f
Switching Frequency  
PMOS On-Resistance  
NMOS On-Resistance  
Peak Switch Current Limit  
2.25  
0.18  
0.30  
OSC  
R
R
PMOS_POWERPATH  
NMOS_POWERPATH  
PEAK_POWERPATH  
Ω
I
1x, 5x Modes  
10x Mode  
2
3
A
A
Battery Charger  
V
FLOAT  
BAT Regulated Output Voltage  
4.179  
4.165  
4.200  
4.200  
4.221  
4.235  
V
V
l
I
I
Constant Current Mode Charge  
Current  
980  
185  
1022  
204  
1065  
223  
mA  
mA  
CHG  
R
= 5k  
PROG  
Battery Drain Current  
V
BUS  
V
BUS  
> V  
, Battery Charger Off, I = 0µA  
OUT  
OUT  
2
3.5  
27  
5
38  
µA  
µA  
BAT  
UVLO  
= 0V, I  
= 0µA (Ideal Diode Mode)  
V
V
PROG Pin Servo Voltage  
1.000  
0.100  
V
V
PROG  
PROG Pin Servo Voltage in Trickle  
Charge  
BAT < V  
BAT < V  
PROG_TRKL  
TRKL  
V
C/10 Threshold Voltage at PROG  
100  
1022  
100  
mV  
mA/mA  
mA  
C/10  
PROG  
TRKL  
h
Ratio of I to PROG Pin Current  
BAT  
I
Trickle Charge Current  
TRKL  
3556fa  
3
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
elecTrical characTerisTics The l denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating  
temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. VBUS = 5V, VIN1 = VIN2 = VIN3 = VOUT3 = 3.8V, BAT = 3.8V, DVCC = 3.3V,  
RPROG = 1k, RCLPROG = 3.01k, unless otherwise noted.  
SYMBOL  
PARAMETER  
CONDITIONS  
MIN  
TYP  
2.85  
135  
–100  
4
MAX  
UNITS  
V
V
TRKL  
Trickle Charge Threshold Voltage  
Trickle Charge Hysteresis Voltage  
Recharge Battery Threshold Voltage  
Safety Timer Termination  
BAT Rising  
2.7  
3.0  
V  
mV  
TRKL  
RECHRG  
TERM  
V
Threshold Voltage Relative to V  
–75  
3.3  
–125  
5
mV  
FLOAT  
t
t
Timer Starts When BAT = V  
Hour  
Hour  
mA/mA  
mV  
FLOAT  
Bad Battery Termination Time  
BAT < V  
0.42  
0.088  
0.5  
0.63  
0.112  
100  
1
BADBAT  
TRKL  
h
C/10  
End of Charge Indication Current Ratio (Note 5)  
0.1  
V
CHRG Pin Output Low Voltage  
CHRG Pin Leakage Current  
Battery Charger Power FET  
I
= 5mA  
= 5V  
65  
CHRG  
CHRG  
CHRG  
I
V
µA  
CHRG  
R
0.18  
110  
Ω
ON_CHG  
On-Resistance (Between V  
and BAT)  
OUT  
T
LIM  
Junction Temperature in Constant  
Temperature Mode  
°C  
NTC  
V
COLD  
V
HOT  
V
DIS  
Cold Temperature Fault Threshold  
Voltage  
Rising Threshold  
Hysteresis  
75.0  
33.4  
0.7  
76.5  
1.5  
78.0  
36.4  
2.7  
%V  
%V  
BUS  
BUS  
Hot Temperature Fault Threshold  
Voltage  
Falling Threshold  
Hysteresis  
34.9  
1.5  
%V  
%V  
BUS  
BUS  
NTC Disable Threshold Voltage  
Falling Threshold  
Hysteresis  
1.7  
50  
%V  
BUS  
mV  
I
NTC Leakage Current  
V
= V = 5V  
BUS  
–50  
50  
nA  
NTC  
NTC  
Ideal Diode  
V
FWD  
Forward Voltage  
V
= 0V, I = 10mA  
OUT  
= 10mA  
2
15  
mV  
mV  
BUS  
OUT  
I
R
Internal Diode On-Resistance, Dropout V  
Internal Diode Current Limit  
= 0V  
0.18  
Ω
A
DROPOUT  
BUS  
I
1.6  
3.1  
MAX_DIODE  
Always On 3.3V Supply  
V
Regulated Output Voltage  
0mA < I  
< 25mA  
LDO3V3  
3.3  
4
3.5  
0.4  
V
Ω
Ω
LDO3V3  
R
R
Closed-Loop Output Resistance  
Dropout Output Resistance  
CL_LDO3V3  
23  
OL_LDO3V3  
Logic (ENALL, PGOODALL)  
V
IL  
Logic Low Input Voltage  
Logic High Input Voltage  
Pull-Down Resistance  
ENALL Pin  
ENALL Pin  
ENALL Pin  
V
V
V
IH  
1.2  
1.6  
R
4.5  
MΩ  
V
PD  
OL  
V
Logic Low Output Voltage  
Logic High Leakage Current  
PGOODALL Assertion Delay  
PGOODALL Pin, I  
= 5mA  
0.07  
0.2  
1
PULL-UP  
I
t
PGOODALL Pin, V  
= 5V  
PGOODALL  
µA  
ms  
OH  
230  
PGOODALL  
2
I C Port (Note 9)  
DV  
Input Supply Voltage  
5.5  
1
V
µA  
V
CC  
I
DV Current  
CC  
SCL/SDA = 0kHz  
0.3  
1.0  
DVCC  
V
DV UVLO  
CC  
DVCC_UVLO  
3556fa  
4
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
elecTrical characTerisTics The l denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating  
temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. VBUS = 5V, VIN1 = VIN2 = VIN3 = VOUT3 = 3.8V, BAT = 3.8V, DVCC = 3.3V,  
RPROG = 1k, RCLPROG = 3.01k, unless otherwise noted.  
SYMBOL  
PARAMETER  
CONDITIONS  
MIN  
TYP  
MAX  
UNITS  
2
ADDRESS  
I C Address  
0001 001[0]  
V
V
SDA, SCL  
SDA, SCL  
Input High Voltage  
Input Low Voltage  
70  
–1  
%DV  
%DV  
IH  
IL  
CC  
CC  
30  
1
I , I SDA, SCL Input High/Low Current  
IH IL  
0
µA  
V
V
SDA  
SDA Output Low Voltage  
Clock Operating Frequency  
I
= 3mA  
SDA  
0.4  
400  
OL  
SCL  
BUF  
f
t
kHz  
µs  
Bus Free Time Between Stop and Start  
Condition  
1.3  
0.6  
t
Hold Time After (Repeated) Start  
Condition  
µs  
HD_STA  
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
t
Repeated Start Condition Setup Time  
Stop Condition Setup Time  
Data Hold Time Output  
Data Hold Time Input  
0.6  
0.6  
0
µs  
µs  
ns  
ns  
ns  
µs  
µs  
ns  
ns  
ns  
SU_STA  
SU_STO  
HD_DAT(O)  
HD_DAT(I)  
SU_DAT  
LOW  
900  
0
Data Setup Time  
100  
1.3  
0.6  
SCL Clock Low Period  
SCL Clock High Period  
Clock/Data Fall Time  
HIGH  
C = Capacitance of One BUS Line (pF)  
20 + 0.1C  
20 + 0.1C  
300  
300  
50  
f
B
B
B
Clock/Data Rise Time  
C = Capacitance of One BUS Line (pF)  
B
r
Input Spike Suppression Pulse Width  
SP  
Switching Regulators 1, 2 and 3  
V
Input Supply Voltage  
2.7  
2.5  
5.5  
2.9  
2.7  
V
IN1,2,3  
V
V
OUT  
V
OUT  
UVLO—V  
UVLO—V  
Falling  
Rising  
V
Connected to V Through Low  
OUT  
2.6  
2.8  
V
V
OUTUVLO  
OUT  
OUT  
IN1,2,3  
Impedance. Switching Regulators are  
Disabled in UVLO  
l
f
Oscillator Frequency  
1.8  
2.25  
MHz  
OSC  
Switching Regulator 1 (Buck)  
I
Pulse Skip Mode Input Current  
Burst Mode® Input Current  
Forced Burst Mode Input Current  
LDO Mode Input Current  
I
I
I
I
I
= 0µA (Note 6)  
= 0µA (Note 6)  
= 0µA (Note 6)  
= 0µA (Note 6)  
= 0µA, FB1 = 0V  
225  
35  
400  
60  
35  
35  
1
µA  
µA  
µA  
µA  
µA  
VIN1  
OUT1  
OUT1  
OUT1  
OUT1  
OUT1  
20  
20  
Shutdown Input Current  
I
I
PMOS Switch Current Limit  
Available Output Current  
Pulse Skip/Burst Mode Operation  
600  
800  
1100  
mA  
LIM1  
Pulse Skip/Burst Mode Operation (Note 9)  
Forced Burst Mode Operation (Note 9)  
LDO Mode (Note 9)  
400  
60  
50  
mA  
mA  
mA  
OUT1  
l
l
V
V
V
Maximum Servo Voltage  
Minimum Servo Voltage  
Full Scale (1, 1, 1, 1) (Note 7)  
Zero Scale (0, 0, 0, 0) (Note 7)  
0.780  
0.405  
0.800  
0.425  
25  
0.820  
0.445  
V
V
FBHIGH1  
FBLOW1  
LSB1  
V
Servo Voltage Step Size  
mV  
Ω
FB1  
R
R
R
PMOS R  
NMOS R  
0.6  
P1  
DS(ON)  
DS(ON)  
0.7  
Ω
N1  
LDO Mode Closed-Loop R  
0.25  
Ω
LDO_CL1  
OUT  
3556fa  
5
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
elecTrical characTerisTics The l denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating  
temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. VBUS = 5V, VIN1 = VIN2 = VIN3 = VOUT3 = 3.8V, BAT = 3.8V, DVCC = 3.3V,  
RPROG = 1k, RCLPROG = 3.01k, unless otherwise noted.  
SYMBOL  
PARAMETER  
CONDITIONS  
MIN  
TYP  
MAX  
UNITS  
Ω
R
LDO Mode Open-Loop R  
FB1 Input Current  
Maximum Duty Cycle  
(Note 8)  
2.5  
LDO_OL1  
OUT  
I
V
= 0.85V  
–50  
100  
50  
nA  
FB1  
FB1  
l
D1  
%
R
SW1 Pull-Down in Shutdown  
Switching Regulator 2 (Buck)  
10  
kΩ  
SW1  
I
Pulse Skip Mode Input Current  
Burst Mode Input Current  
Forced Burst Mode Input Current  
LDO Mode Input Current  
I
I
I
I
I
= 0µA (Note 6)  
= 0µA (Note 6)  
= 0µA (Note 6)  
= 0µA (Note 6)  
= 0µA, FB2 = 0V  
225  
35  
400  
60  
35  
35  
1
µA  
µA  
µA  
µA  
µA  
VIN2  
OUT2  
OUT2  
OUT2  
OUT2  
OUT2  
20  
20  
Shutdown Input Current  
I
I
PMOS Switch Current Limit  
Available Output Current  
Pulse Skip/Burst Mode Operation  
600  
800  
1100  
mA  
LIM2  
Pulse Skip/Burst Mode Operation (Note 9)  
Forced Burst Mode Operation (Note 9)  
LDO Mode (Note 9)  
400  
60  
50  
mA  
mA  
mA  
OUT2  
l
V
V
Servo Voltage  
FB2  
(Note 7)  
0.780  
0.800  
0.6  
0.820  
V
Ω
FB2  
R
R
R
R
PMOS R  
NMOS R  
P2  
DS(ON)  
DS(ON)  
0.7  
Ω
N2  
LDO Mode Closed-Loop R  
0.25  
2.5  
Ω
LDO_CL2  
LDO_OL2  
OUT  
LDO Mode Open-Loop R  
FB2 Input Current  
(Note 8)  
Ω
OUT  
I
V
= 0.85V  
FB2  
–50  
100  
50  
nA  
%
FB2  
l
D2  
Maximum Duty Cycle  
R
SW2 Pull-Down in Shutdown  
10  
kΩ  
SW2  
Switching Regulator 3 (Buck-Boost)  
I
Input Current  
PWM Mode, I  
= 0µA  
OUT3  
220  
13  
0
400  
20  
1
µA  
µA  
µA  
VIN3  
Burst Mode Operation, I  
Shutdown  
= 0µA  
OUT3  
V
V
Minimum Regulated Output Voltage  
For Burst Mode Operation or Synchronous  
PWM Operation  
2.65  
2.75  
V
OUT3(LOW)  
Maximum Regulated Output Voltage  
Forward Current Limit (Switch A)  
5.50  
2
5.60  
2.5  
275  
0
V
A
OUT3(HIGH)  
LIMF3  
l
l
l
I
I
I
I
PWM Mode  
3
Forward Burst Current Limit (Switch A) Burst Mode Operation  
Reverse Burst Current Limit (Switch D) Burst Mode Operation  
200  
–30  
50  
350  
30  
mA  
mA  
mA  
PEAK3(BURST)  
ZERO3(BURST)  
MAX3(BURST)  
Maximum Deliverable Output Current 2.7V ≤ V ≤ 5.5V, 2.75V ≤ V  
≤ 5.5V  
OUT3  
IN3  
in Burst Mode Operation  
Maximum Servo Voltage  
Minimum Servo Voltage  
(Note 9)  
l
l
V
V
V
Full Scale (1, 1, 1, 1)  
Zero Scale (0, 0, 0, 0)  
0.780  
0.405  
0.800  
0.425  
25  
0.820  
0.445  
V
V
FBHIGH3  
FBLOW3  
LSB3  
V
Servo Voltage Step Size  
mV  
nA  
FB3  
I
FB3 Input Current  
V
= 0.8V  
FB3  
–50  
50  
FB3  
3556fa  
6
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
elecTrical characTerisTics The l denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating  
temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. VBUS = 5V, VIN1 = VIN2 = VIN3 = VOUT3 = 3.8V, BAT = 3.8V, DVCC = 3.3V,  
RPROG = 1k, RCLPROG = 3.01k, unless otherwise noted.  
SYMBOL  
PARAMETER  
CONDITIONS  
Switches A, D  
Switches B, C  
Switches A, D  
Switches B, C  
MIN  
TYP  
0.22  
0.17  
MAX  
UNITS  
Ω
R
R
PMOS R  
NMOS R  
DS(ON)P  
DS(ON)N  
LEAK(P)  
LEAK(N)  
DS(ON)  
DS(ON)  
Ω
I
I
PMOS Switch Leakage  
NMOS Switch Leakage  
–1  
–1  
1
1
µA  
µA  
kΩ  
%
R
D
D
V
Pull-Down in Shutdown  
OUT3  
10  
VOUT3  
l
Maximum Buck Duty Cycle  
Maximum Boost Duty Cycle  
Soft-Start Time  
PWM Mode  
PWM Mode  
100  
BUCK(MAX)  
BOOST(MAX)  
75  
%
t
0.5  
ms  
SS3  
Note 1: Stresses beyond those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings  
may cause permanent damage to the device. Exposure to any Absolute  
Maximum Rating condition for extended periods may affect device  
reliability and lifetime.  
Note 2: The LTC3556E is guaranteed to meet performance specifications  
from 0°C to 85°C. Specifications over the –40°C to 85°C operating  
temperature range are assured by design, characterization and correlation  
with statistical process controls.  
Note 3: The LTC3556E includes overtemperature protection that is  
intended to protect the device during momentary overload conditions.  
Junction temperature will exceed 125°C when overtemperature protection  
is active. Continuous operation above the specified maximum operating  
junction temperature may impair device reliability.  
Note 4: Total input current is the sum of quiescent current, I  
measured current given by:  
, and  
VBUSQ  
V
/R  
(h  
+1)  
CLPROG CLPROG  
CLPROG  
Note 5: h  
is expressed as a fraction of measured full charge current  
C/10  
with indicated PROG resistor.  
Note 6: FBx above regulation such that regulator is in sleep. Specification  
does not include resistive divider current reflected back to V  
.
INx  
Note 7: Applies to Pulse Skip, Burst Mode operation and Forced Burst  
Mode operation only.  
Note 8: Inductor series resistance adds to open-loop R  
Note 9: Guaranteed by design.  
.
OUT  
3556fa  
7
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
Typical perForMance characTerisTics  
Ideal Diode Resistance  
vs Battery Voltage  
Output Voltage vs Load Current  
(Battery Charger Disabled)  
Ideal Diode V-I Characteristics  
1.0  
0.8  
0.6  
0.4  
0.2  
0
0.25  
0.20  
0.15  
0.10  
0.05  
0
4.50  
4.25  
4.00  
3.75  
3.50  
3.25  
V
= 5V  
INTERNAL IDEAL DIODE  
WITH SUPPLEMENTAL  
EXTERNAL VISHAY  
Si2333 PMOS  
BUS  
BAT = 4V  
5x MODE  
INTERNAL IDEAL  
DIODE  
INTERNAL IDEAL  
DIODE ONLY  
BAT = 3.4V  
INTERNAL IDEAL DIODE  
WITH SUPPLEMENTAL  
EXTERNAL VISHAY  
Si2333 PMOS  
V
V
= 0V  
= 5V  
BUS  
BUS  
0
0.04  
0.08  
0.12  
0.16  
0.20  
2.7  
3.0  
3.3  
3.6  
3.9  
4.2  
0
200  
400  
600  
800  
1000  
FORWARD VOLTAGE (V)  
BATTERY VOLTAGE (V)  
LOAD CURRENT (mA)  
3556 G01  
3556 G02  
3556 G03  
USB Limited Battery Charge  
Current vs Battery Voltage  
USB Limited Battery Charge  
Current vs Battery Voltage  
Battery Drain Current  
vs Battery Voltage  
700  
600  
150  
125  
25  
20  
15  
10  
5
I
= 0µA  
VOUT  
V
= 0V  
BUS  
V
R
R
= 5V  
BUS  
500  
400  
300  
200  
100  
0
V
R
R
= 5V  
BUS  
= 1k  
PROG  
CLPROG  
100  
75  
= 1k  
PROG  
CLPROG  
= 3.01k  
= 3.01k  
50  
25  
0
V
= 5V  
BUS  
(SUSPEND MODE)  
1x USB SETTING,  
BATTERY CHARGER SET FOR 1A  
5x USB SETTING,  
BATTERY CHARGER SET FOR 1A  
0
3.0  
3.3  
3.6  
4.2  
2.7  
3.9  
2.7 3.0 3.3 3.6  
BATTERY VOLTAGE (V)  
3.9  
4.2  
2.7  
3.0  
3.3  
3.6  
3.9  
4.2  
BATTERY VOLTAGE (V)  
BATTERY VOLTAGE (V)  
3556 G04  
3556 G05  
3556 G06  
Battery Charging Efficiency vs  
PowerPath Switching Regulator  
Efficiency vs Load Current  
VBUS Current vs VBUS Voltage  
(Suspend)  
Battery Voltage with No External  
Load (PBAT/PBUS  
)
100  
90  
80  
70  
60  
50  
40  
100  
90  
80  
70  
60  
50  
40  
30  
20  
10  
0
BAT = 3.8V  
R
R
VOUT  
= 3.01k  
BAT = 3.8V  
VOUT  
CLPROG  
PROG  
5x, 10x MODE  
= 1k  
I
= 0mA  
1x MODE  
I
= 0mA  
1x CHARGING  
EFFICIENCY  
5x CHARGING  
EFFICIENCY  
0.01  
0.1  
1
2.7  
3.0  
3.3  
3.6  
3.9  
4.2  
0
1
3
4
5
2
LOAD CURRENT (A)  
BATTERY VOLTAGE (V)  
BUS VOLTAGE (V)  
3556 G07  
3556 G08  
3556 G09  
3556fa  
8
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
Typical perForMance characTerisTics  
Output Voltage vs Load Current  
in Suspend  
VBUS Current vs Load Current  
in Suspend  
3.3V LDO Output Voltage  
vs Load Current, VBUS = 0V  
5.0  
4.5  
4.0  
3.5  
3.0  
2.5  
3.4  
3.2  
3.0  
2.8  
2.6  
0.5  
0.4  
0.3  
0.2  
0.1  
0
BAT = 3.5V  
V
BUS  
= 5V  
BAT = 3.9V, 4.2V  
BAT = 3.4V  
BAT = 3.3V  
= 3.01k  
BAT = 3.6V  
R
CLPROG  
BAT = 3V  
BAT = 3.1V  
BAT = 3.2V  
V
= 5V  
BUS  
BAT = 3.3V  
= 3k  
R
CLPROG  
BAT = 3.3V  
0
0.1  
0.2  
0.3  
0.4  
0.5  
0
5
10  
15  
20  
25  
0
0.1  
0.2  
0.3  
0.4  
0.5  
LOAD CURRENT (mA)  
LOAD CURRENT (mA)  
LOAD CURRENT (mA)  
3556 G10  
3556 G12  
3556 G11  
Battery Charge Current  
vs Temperature  
Battery Charger Float Voltage  
vs Temperature  
Low-Battery (Instant On) Output  
Voltage vs Temperature  
4.21  
4.20  
4.19  
4.18  
4.17  
3.68  
3.66  
3.64  
3.62  
3.60  
600  
500  
400  
300  
200  
100  
0
BAT = 2.7V  
I
= 100mA  
VOUT  
5x MODE  
THERMAL REGULATION  
R
= 2k  
PROG  
10x MODE  
60 80  
20 40  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
–40 –20  
0
100 120  
–40  
–15  
10  
35  
60  
85  
–40  
–15  
10  
35  
60  
85  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
3556 G13  
3556 G14  
3556 G15  
Oscillator Frequency  
vs Temperature  
V
BUS Quiescent Current  
VBUS Quiescent Current in  
Suspend vs Temperature  
vs Temperature  
2.6  
2.4  
2.2  
2.0  
1.8  
15  
12  
9
70  
60  
50  
40  
30  
V
I
= 5V  
= 0µA  
I
= 0µA  
BUS  
VOUT  
VOUT  
5x MODE  
BAT = 3.6V  
= 0V  
V
= 5V  
BUS  
V
BUS  
BAT = 3V  
= 0V  
1x MODE  
V
BUS  
6
BAT = 2.7V  
= 0V  
V
BUS  
3
–40  
–15  
10  
35  
60  
85  
–40  
–15  
10  
35  
60  
85  
–40  
–15  
10  
35  
60  
85  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
3556 G16  
3556 G17  
3556 G18  
3556fa  
9
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
Typical perForMance characTerisTics  
PGOODALL, CHRG Pin Current  
vs Voltage (Pull-Down State)  
3.3V LDO Step Response  
(5mA to 15mA)  
Battery Drain Current  
vs Temperature  
100  
80  
60  
40  
20  
0
50  
40  
30  
20  
10  
0
V
= 5V  
BAT = 3.8V  
BUS  
BAT = 3.8V  
V
= 0V  
BUS  
ALL REGULATORS OFF  
I
LDO3V3  
5mA/DIV  
0mA  
V
LDO3V3  
20mV/DIV  
AC COUPLED  
3556 G20  
BAT = 3.8V  
20µs/DIV  
0
1
2
3
4
5
–40  
–15  
10  
35  
60  
85  
PGOODALL, CHRG PIN VOLTAGE (V)  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
3556 G19  
3556 G21  
Switching Regulators 1, 2  
Burst Mode Efficiency  
Switching Regulators 1, 2 Pulse  
Skip Mode Quiescent Currents  
Switching Regulators 1, 2  
Pulse Skip Mode Efficiency  
325  
300  
275  
250  
225  
200  
1.95  
100  
90  
80  
70  
60  
50  
40  
30  
20  
10  
0
100  
90  
V
= 3.8V  
V
= 2.5V  
OUT1,2  
IN1,2  
V
= 2.5V  
OUT1,2  
1.90  
1.85  
1.80  
1.75  
1.70  
V
= 1.2V  
80  
OUT1,2  
V
= 1.2V  
V
= 2.5V  
OUT1,2  
V
= 1.8V  
OUT1,2  
OUT1,2  
70  
(CONSTANT FREQUENCY)  
V
= 1.8V  
OUT1,2  
60  
50  
40  
30  
20  
10  
0
V
= 1.25V  
OUT1,2  
(PULSE SKIPPING)  
V
= 3.8V  
V
= 3.8V  
IN1,2  
IN1,2  
–40  
–15  
10  
35  
60  
85  
0.1  
1
10  
100  
1000  
1
10  
100  
1000  
LOAD CURRENT (mA)  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
LOAD CURRENT (mA)  
3556 G24  
3556 G22  
3556 G23  
Switching Regulators 1, 2 Load  
Regulation at VOUT1,2 = 1.2V  
Switching Regulators 1, 2 Load  
Regulation at VOUT1,2 = 1.8V  
Switching Regulators 1, 2  
Forced Burst Mode Efficiency  
1.230  
1.215  
1.200  
100  
90  
80  
70  
60  
50  
40  
30  
20  
10  
0
1.845  
1.823  
1.800  
V
= 3.8V  
V
= 2.5V  
V
= 3.8V  
BUS  
OUT1,2  
BUS  
Burst Mode  
OPERATION  
Burst Mode OPERATION  
PULSE SKIP MODE  
V
= 1.2V  
OUT1,2  
V
= 1.8V  
OUT1,2  
FORCED  
Burst Mode  
OPERATION  
PULSE SKIP  
MODE  
1.185  
1.170  
1.778  
1.755  
FORCED  
Burst Mode  
OPERATION  
V
= 3.8V  
IN1,2  
0.1  
1
10  
100  
1000  
0.1  
1
10  
100  
1000  
0.1  
1
10  
100  
1000  
LOAD CURRENT (mA)  
LOAD CURRENT (mA)  
LOAD CURRENT (mA)  
3556 G26  
3556 G27  
3556 G25  
3556fa  
10  
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
Typical perForMance characTerisTics  
Switching Regulator 3 Burst Mode  
Operation Input Quiescent Current  
Switching Regulator 3 Forward  
Current Limit vs Temperature  
Switching Regulators 1, 2 Load  
Regulation at VOUT1,2 = 2.5V  
2.56  
2.53  
2.50  
2600  
2550  
2500  
2450  
2400  
2350  
2300  
14.0  
13.5  
13.0  
12.5  
12.0  
11.5  
11.0  
V
= 3.8V  
V
A
= 3.3V  
BUS  
OUT3  
V
= 3V  
IN3  
T
= 27°C  
V
IN3  
= 4.5V  
Burst Mode OPERATION  
PULSE SKIP MODE  
V
= 3.6V  
= 4.5V  
IN3  
V
= 3.6V  
IN3  
V
= 3V  
IN3  
V
IN3  
FORCED  
Burst Mode  
OPERATION  
2.47  
2.44  
0.1  
1
10  
100  
1000  
–15  
5
25 45 65 85  
125  
105  
–15  
5
25 45 65 85  
125  
105  
–55 –35  
–55 –35  
LOAD CURRENT (mA)  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
3556 G28  
3556 G30  
3556 G29  
RDS(ON)’s for Switching Regulator 3  
vs Temperature  
Switching Regulator 3 Efficiency  
vs Load Current  
0.30  
0.25  
0.20  
0.15  
0.10  
0.05  
0
0.40  
100  
90  
0.35  
0.30  
0.25  
0.20  
0.15  
0.10  
80  
Burst Mode  
PWM MODE  
OPERATION  
CURVES  
PMOS  
V
70  
CURVES  
V
= V  
= 3V  
OUT3  
IN3  
60  
50  
V
= V  
= 3.6V  
OUT3  
IN3  
= V  
= 4.5V  
OUT3  
IN3  
40  
30  
20  
10  
0
V
A
= 3.3V  
OUT3  
T
= 27°C  
NMOS  
V
= 3V  
IN3  
V
V
V
= 3V  
= 3.6V  
= 4.5V  
IN3  
IN3  
IN3  
V
= 3.6V  
IN3  
V
= 4.5V  
IN3  
–15  
5
25 45 65 85  
125  
105  
0.1  
1
10  
100  
1000  
–55 –35  
LOAD CURRENT (mA)  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
3556 G31  
3556 G32  
Switching Regulator 3 PWM Mode  
Efficiency vs Input Voltage  
Switching Regulator 3 Reduction in  
Current Deliverability at Low VIN3  
100  
90  
300  
250  
200  
150  
100  
50  
I
= 50mA  
V
A
= 3.3V  
OUT3  
OUT3  
T
= 27°C  
80  
I
= 200mA  
OUT3  
I
= 1000mA  
OUT3  
70  
60  
50  
40  
30  
20  
10  
0
STEADY STATE LOAD  
START-UP WITH A  
RESISTIVE LOAD  
START-UP WITH A  
CURRENT SOURCE LOAD  
V
A
= 3.3V  
OUT3  
T
= 27°C  
0
2.7  
3.5  
3.9  
(V)  
4.3  
4.7  
3.1  
2.7  
3.5  
3.9  
(V)  
4.3  
4.7  
3.1  
V
V
IN3  
IN3  
3556 G33  
3556 G34  
3556fa  
11  
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
Typical perForMance characTerisTics  
Start-Up Sequencing with SEQ = 0V  
Switching Regulator 3 Step  
Response (0mA to 300mA)  
VIN1 = VIN2 = VIN3 = 4.2V  
All Outputs Loaded with 5mA  
V
OUT3  
V
V
= 3.8V  
OUT3  
IN3  
100mV/DIV  
AC  
= 3.3V  
ENALL  
COUPLED  
V
OUT3  
= 3.3V  
1V/DIV  
V
V
= 1.8V  
= 1.6V  
OUT2  
OUT1  
300mA  
I
OUT3  
200mA/  
DIV  
0
3556 G36  
3556 G35  
200µs/DIV  
100µs/DIV  
pin FuncTions  
LDO3V3 (Pin 1): 3.3V LDO Output Pin. This pin provides  
V
(Pin 5): Power Input for (Buck) Switching Regula-  
IN1  
a regulated, always-on, 3.3V supply voltage. LDO3V3  
tor 1. This pin will generally be connected to V . A 1µF  
OUT  
gets its power from V . It may be used for light loads  
MLCC capacitor is recommended on this pin.  
OUT  
such as a watchdog microprocessor or real time clock.  
A 1µF capacitor is required from LDO3V3 to ground. If  
the LDO3V3 output is not used it should be disabled by  
FB1 (Pin 6): Feedback Input for (Buck) Switching Regula-  
tor 1. When regulator 1’s control loop is complete, this  
pin servos to 1 of 16 possible set-points based on the  
connecting it to V  
.
OUT  
2
commanded value from the I C serial port. See Table 4.  
CLPROG (Pin 2): USB Current Limit Program and Moni-  
tor Pin. A resistor from CLPROG to ground determines  
FB3 (Pin 7): Feedback Input for (Buck-Boost) Switching  
Regulator 3. When regulator 3’s control loop is complete,  
this pin servos to 1 of 16 possible set-points based on the  
the upper limit of the current drawn from the V  
pin.  
BUS  
A fraction of the V  
current is sent to the CLPROG pin  
BUS  
2
commanded value from the I C serial port. See Table 4.  
when thesynchronous switchofthePowerPath switching  
regulatorison.Theswitchingregulatordeliverspoweruntil  
V
(Pin 8): Output of the Error Amplifier and Voltage  
C3  
theCLPROGpinreaches1.188V.SeveralV currentlimit  
Compensation Node for (Buck-Boost) Switching Regula-  
tor 3. External Type I or Type III compensation (to FB3)  
connects to this pin. See Applications Information section  
for selecting buck-boost compensation components.  
BUS  
settings are available via user input which will typically  
correspond to the 500mA and 100mA USB specifications.  
A multilayer ceramic averaging capacitor or R-C network  
is required at CLPROG for filtering.  
SWAB3 (Pin 9): Switch Node for (Buck-Boost) Switching  
Regulator 3. Connected to internal power switches A and B.  
External inductor connects between this node and SWCD3.  
NTC (Pin 3): Input to the Thermistor Monitoring Circuits.  
The NTC pin connects to a battery’s thermistor to deter-  
mine if the battery is too hot or too cold to charge. If the  
battery’s temperature is out of range, charging is paused  
until it re-enters the valid range. A low drift bias resistor  
2
DV (Pin 10): Logic Supply for the I C Serial Port.  
CC  
V
(Pin 11): Power Input for (Buck-Boost) Switching  
IN3  
is required from V  
to NTC and a thermistor is required  
BUS  
Regulator 3. This pin will generally be connected to V  
.
OUT  
from NTC to ground. If the NTC function is not desired,  
the NTC pin should be grounded.  
A 1µF (min) MLCC capacitor is recommended on this pin.  
V
(Pin12):RegulatedOutputVoltagefor(Buck-Boost)  
OUT3  
SW1 (Pin 4): Power Transmission Pin for (Buck) Switch-  
ing Regulator 1.  
Switching Regulator 3.  
3556fa  
12  
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
pin FuncTions  
2
SCL (Pin 13): Clock Input Pin for the I C Serial Port. The  
BAT (Pin 23): Single Cell Li-Ion Battery Pin. Depending on  
2
I C logic levels are scaled with respect to DV .  
available V  
power, a Li-Ion battery on BAT will either  
CC  
BUS  
deliverpowertoV throughtheidealdiodeorbecharged  
OUT  
SWCD3(Pin14):SwitchNodefor(Buck-Boost)Switching  
Regulator3.ConnectedtointernalpowerswitchesCandD.  
ExternalinductorconnectsbetweenthisnodeandSWAB3.  
from V  
via the battery charger.  
OUT  
V
(Pin24):OutputVoltageoftheSwitchingPowerPath  
OUT  
Controller and Input Voltage of the Battery Charger. The  
majority of the portable product should be powered from  
PGOODALL (Pin 15): Logic Output. This in an open-drain  
output which indicates that all enabled switching regula-  
tors have settled to their final value. It can be used as a  
power-on reset for the primary microprocessor.  
V
. The LTC3556 will partition the available power be-  
OUT  
tween the external load on V  
and the internal battery  
OUT  
charger. Priority is given to the external load and any extra  
power is used to charge the battery. An ideal diode from  
2
SDA (Pin 16): Data Input Pin for the I C Serial Port. The  
2
BAT to V  
ensures that V  
is powered even if the load  
I C logic levels are scaled with respect to DV .  
OUT  
OUT  
CC  
exceeds the allotted power from V  
or if the V  
power  
BUS  
BUS  
FB2 (Pin 17): Feedback Input for (Buck) Switching Regu-  
lator 2. When regulator 2’s control loop is complete, this  
pin servos to a fixed voltage of 0.8V.  
source is removed. V  
impedance ceramic capacitor.  
should be bypassed with a low  
OUT  
V
(Pin 25): Primary Input Power Pin. This pin delivers  
BUS  
power to V  
V
(Pin 18): Power Input for (Buck) Switching Regula-  
IN2  
via the SW pin by drawing controlled cur-  
OUT  
tor 2. This pin will generally be connected to V . A 1µF  
OUT  
rent from a DC source such as a USB port or wall adapter.  
MLCC capacitor is recommended on this pin.  
SW (Pin 26): Power Transmission Pin for the USB Power  
SW2 (Pin 19): Power Transmission Pin for (Buck) Switch-  
ing Regulator 2.  
Path. The SW pin delivers power from V  
to V  
via the  
BUS  
OUT  
step-down switching regulator. A 3.3µH inductor should  
be connected from SW to V  
.
OUT  
PROG (Pin 20): Charge Current Program and Charge  
Current Monitor Pin. Connecting a resistor from PROG  
to ground programs the charge current. If sufficient in-  
put power is available in constant-current mode, this pin  
servos to 1V. The voltage on this pin always represents  
the actual charge current.  
SEQ (Pin 27): Sequence Select Logic Input. Three-state  
input which determines start-up sequence after ENALL  
is asserted.  
If tied to GND, start-up sequence is:  
Buck 1 Buck 2 Buck-Boost  
CHRG (Pin 21): Open-Drain Charge Status Output. The  
CHRG pin indicates the status of the battery charger. Four  
possible states are represented by CHRG: charging, not  
charging, unresponsive battery and battery temperature  
out of range. CHRG is modulated at 35kHz and switches  
between a low and a high duty cycle for easy recognition  
by either humans or microprocessors. See Table 1. CHRG  
requiresapull-upresistorand/orLEDtoprovideindication.  
If tied to V , start-up sequence is:  
OUT  
Buck 1 Buck-Boost Buck 2  
If left floating, start-up sequence is:  
Buck-Boost Buck 1 Buck 2  
ENALL (Pin 28): Enable All Logic Input. Enables all three  
switching regulators in sequence according to the state of  
the SEQ pin. Active high. Has a 5.5M internal pull-down  
resistor. Alternately, all switching regulators can be indi-  
GATE (Pin 22): Analog Output. This pin controls the gate  
2
vidually enabled via the I C serial port.  
of an optional external P-channel MOSFET transistor used  
Exposed Pad (Pin 29): Ground. The Exposed Pad should  
be connected to a continuous ground plane on the second  
layer of the printed circuit board by several vias directly  
under the LTC3556.  
to supplement the ideal diode between V  
and BAT. The  
OUT  
external ideal diode operates in parallel with the internal  
ideal diode. The source of the P-channel MOSFET should  
be connected to V  
and the drain should be connected  
OUT  
to BAT. If the external ideal diode FET is not used, GATE  
should be left floating.  
3556fa  
13  
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
block DiagraM  
V
BUS  
25  
2.25MHz  
PowerPath  
SWITCHING  
REGULATOR  
SW  
26  
1
LDO3V3  
3.3V LDO  
SUSPEND  
LDO  
500µA  
V
24  
22  
OUT  
+
+
+
+
GATE  
IDEAL  
CC/CV  
CLPROG  
NTC  
2
3
CHARGER  
+
15mV  
0.3V  
+
BATTERY  
TEMPERATURE  
MONITOR  
BAT  
23  
20  
5
1.188V  
3.6V  
PROG  
V
IN1  
EN1  
CHRG 21  
CHARGE  
STATUS  
4
6
SW1  
FB1  
400mA  
2.25MHz  
(BUCK)  
D/A  
SWITCHING  
REGULATOR 1  
4
V
18  
IN2  
EN2  
EN3  
400mA  
2.25MHz  
19 SW2  
PGOODALL 15  
POWER  
GOOD  
(BUCK)  
SWITCHING  
REGULATOR 2  
FB2  
17  
11  
V
IN3  
A
9
SWAB3  
MASTER LOGIC  
AND  
SEQUENCER  
B
1A  
SEQ 27  
2.25MHz  
D/A  
(BUCK-BOOST)  
SWITCHING  
REGULATOR 3  
V
OUT3  
12  
D
C
4
14 SWCD3  
ENALL 28  
FB3  
7
8
DV 10  
CC  
V
C3  
2
SDA 16  
SCL 13  
I C PORT  
29  
3556 BD  
GND  
3556fa  
14  
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
TiMing DiagraM  
I2C Timing Diagram  
DATA BYTE A  
DATA BYTE B  
ADDRESS  
WR  
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
A7  
1
A6  
2
A5  
3
A4  
A3  
A2  
6
A1  
7
A0  
8
B7  
1
B6  
2
B5  
3
B4  
B3  
B2  
6
B1  
7
B0  
START  
STOP  
ACK  
SDA  
SCL  
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
8
ACK  
9
ACK  
9
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
4
5
4
5
8
9
SDA  
t
t
t
BUF  
SU, DAT  
SU, STA  
t
t
t
t
LOW  
HD, STA  
SU, STO  
HD, DAT  
3556 TD  
SCL  
t
t
t
HD, STA  
HIGH  
SP  
START  
CONDITION  
REPEATED START  
CONDITION  
STOP  
CONDITION  
START  
CONDITION  
t
r
t
f
operaTion  
Introduction  
The three switching regulators can be enabled together in  
any desired sequence via the ENALL and SEQ pins or can  
The LTC3556 is a highly integrated power management IC  
which includes a high efficiency switch mode PowerPath  
controller, a battery charger, an ideal diode, an always-on  
LDO,two400mAbuckswitchingregulatorsanda1Abuck-  
boost switching regulator. The entire chip is controllable  
2
2
be independently enabled via the I C serial port. Under I C  
control, one of the 400mA bucks and the 1A buck-boost  
haveadjustableset-pointssothatvoltagescanbereduced  
when high processor performance is not needed. Along  
with constant frequency PWM mode, all three switching  
regulators have a low power burst-only mode setting for  
significantly reduced quiescent current under light load  
conditions. Additionally, the 400mA bucks can be config-  
ured for automatic Burst Mode operation or LDO mode.  
2
via an I C serial port.  
DesignedspecificallyforUSBapplications,thePowerPath  
controller incorporates a precision average input current  
step-down switching regulator to make maximum use of  
the allowable USB power. Because power is conserved,  
the LTC3556 allows the load current on V  
the current drawn by the USB port without exceeding the  
USB load specifications.  
to exceed  
High Efficiency Switching PowerPath Controller  
OUT  
Whenever V  
is available and the PowerPath switch-  
BUS  
ing regulator is enabled, power is delivered from V  
to  
BUS  
The PowerPath switching regulator and battery charger  
communicatetoensurethattheinputcurrentneverviolates  
the USB specifications.  
V
OUT  
via SW. V  
drives the combination of the external  
OUT  
load (including switching regulators 1, 2 and 3) and the  
battery charger.  
The ideal diode from BAT to V  
guarantees that ample  
even if there is insuf-  
OUT  
IfthecombinedloaddoesnotexceedthePowerPathswitching  
power is always available to V  
OUT  
.
regulator’s programmed input current limit, V  
will track  
OUT  
ficient or absent power at V  
BUS  
0.3V above the battery (Bat-Track). By keeping the voltage  
across the battery charger low, efficiency is optimized be-  
cause power lost to the linear battery charger is minimized.  
Power available to the external load is therefore optimized.  
An “always-on” LDO provides a regulated 3.3V from avail-  
able power at V . Drawing very little quiescent current,  
OUT  
this LDO will be on at all times and can be used to supply  
up to 25mA.  
3556fa  
15  
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
operaTion  
If the combined load at V  
4.5  
4.2  
3.9  
3.6  
3.3  
3.0  
2.7  
2.4  
is large enough to cause the  
OUT  
switching power supply to reach the programmed input  
currentlimit,thebatterychargerwillreduceitschargecur-  
rent by that amount necessary to enable the external load  
to be satisfied. Even if the battery charge current is set to  
exceed the allowable USB current, the USB specification  
will not be violated. The switching regulator will limit the  
averageinputcurrentsothattheUSBspecificationisnever  
violated. Furthermore, load current at V  
prioritizedandonlyremainingavailablepowerwillbeused  
to charge the battery.  
NO LOAD  
300mV  
will always be  
OUT  
3.6  
4.2  
2.4  
2.7  
3.0  
3.3  
3.9  
BAT (V)  
3556 F01  
If the voltage at BAT is below 3.3V, or the battery is not  
presentandtheloadrequirementdoesnotcausetheswitch-  
Figure 1. VOUT vs BAT  
ing regulator to exceed the USB specification, V  
will  
OUT  
regulate at 3.6V, thereby providing instant-on operation.  
If the load exceeds the available power, V will drop to  
Ideal Diode from BAT to V  
OUT  
OUT  
The LTC3556 has an internal ideal diode as well as a con-  
troller for an optional external ideal diode. The ideal diode  
controller is always on and will respond quickly whenever  
a voltage between 3.6V and the battery voltage. If there  
is no battery present when the load exceeds the available  
USB power, V  
can drop toward ground.  
OUT  
V
drops below BAT.  
OUT  
The power delivered from V  
to V  
is controlled  
OUT  
BUS  
If the load current increases beyond the power allowed  
from the switching regulator, additional power will be  
pulled from the battery via the ideal diode. Furthermore,  
by a 2.25MHz constant-frequency step-down switching  
regulator. To meet the USB maximum load specification,  
the switching regulator includes a control loop which  
ensures that the average input current is below the level  
programmed at CLPROG.  
if power to V  
(USB or wall power) is removed, then all  
BUS  
of the application power will be provided by the battery via  
the ideal diode. The transition from input power to battery  
–1  
ThecurrentatCLPROGisafraction(h  
)oftheV  
power at V  
will be quick enough to allow only the 10µF  
CLPROG  
BUS  
OUT  
current. When a programming resistor and an averaging  
capacitorareconnectedfromCLPROGtoGND,thevoltage  
on CLPROG represents the average input current of the  
switching regulator. When the input current approaches  
capacitor to keep V  
from drooping. The ideal diode  
OUT  
consists of a precision amplifier that enables a large on-  
chipP-channelMOSFETtransistorwheneverthevoltageat  
2200  
the programmed limit, CLPROG reaches V  
, 1.188V  
VISHAY Si2333  
CLPROG  
2000  
OPTIONAL EXTERNAL  
and power out is held constant. The input current limit is  
1800  
1600  
1400  
1200  
1000  
800  
IDEAL DIODE  
2
programmed by the B1 and B0 bits of the I C serial port.  
It can be configured to limit average input current to one  
of several possible settings as well as be deactivated (USB  
LTC3556  
IDEAL DIODE  
Suspend).TheinputcurrentlimitwillbesetbytheV  
CLPROG  
servo voltage and the resistor on CLPROG according to  
600  
ON  
SEMICONDUCTOR  
MBRM120LT3  
the following expression:  
400  
200  
VCLPROG  
RCLPROG  
0
I
VBUS = IVBUSQ  
+
h  
(
+ 1  
)
CLPROG  
0
120 180 240 300 360 420 480  
60  
FORWARD VOLTAGE (mV) (BAT – V  
)
OUT  
3556 F02  
Figure 1 shows the range of possible voltages at V  
a function of battery voltage.  
as  
OUT  
Figure 2. Ideal Diode Operation  
3556fa  
16  
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
operaTion  
V
is approximately 15mV (V ) below the voltage at  
If the load on V exceeds the suspend current limit,  
OUT  
OUT  
FWD  
BAT. The resistance of the internal ideal diode is approxi-  
mately180mΩ. Ifthisissufficientfortheapplication, then  
no external components are necessary. However, if more  
conductance is needed, an external P-channel MOSFET  
the additional current will come from the battery via the  
ideal diode.  
3.3V Always-On Supply  
transistor can be added from BAT to V  
.
OUT  
TheLTC3556includesalowquiescentcurrentlowdropout  
regulator that is always powered. This LDO can be used to  
provide power to a system pushbutton controller, standby  
microcontroller or real time clock. Designed to deliver up  
to 25mA, the always-on LDO requires at least a 1µF low  
impedance ceramic bypass capacitor for compensation.  
WhenanexternalP-channelMOSFETtransistorispresent,  
the GATE pin of the LTC3556 drives its gate for automatic  
ideal diode control. The source of the external P-channel  
MOSFETshouldbeconnectedtoV andthedrainshould  
OUT  
beconnectedtoBAT.Capableofdrivinga1nFload,theGATE  
pin can control an external P-channel MOSFET transistor  
having an on-resistance of 40mΩ or lower.  
The LDO is powered from V , and therefore will enter  
OUT  
dropout at loads less than 25mA as V  
falls near 3.3V.  
OUT  
If the LDO3V3 output is not used, it should be disabled  
by connecting it to V  
.
Suspend LDO  
OUT  
If the LTC3556 is configured for USB suspend mode,  
the switching regulator is disabled and the suspend LDO  
V
Undervoltage Lockout (UVLO)  
BUS  
AninternalundervoltagelockoutcircuitmonitorsV  
keeps the PowerPath switching regulator off until V  
rises above 4.30V and is about 200mV above the battery  
voltage. Hysteresis on the UVLO turns off the regulator if  
and  
BUS  
BUS  
provides power to the V  
pin (presuming there is power  
OUT  
available to V ). This LDO will prevent the battery from  
BUS  
running down when the portable product has access to a  
suspended USB port. Regulating at 4.6V, this LDO only  
becomes active when the switching converter is disabled  
(suspended). ToremaincompliantwiththeUSBspecifica-  
tion, the input to the LDO is current limited so that it will  
not exceed the 500µA low power suspend specification.  
V
drops below 4.00V or to within 50mV of BAT. When  
BUS  
this happens, system power at V  
the battery via the ideal diode.  
will be drawn from  
OUT  
3.5V TO  
TO USB  
OR WALL  
ADAPTER  
V
BUS  
SW  
26  
(BAT + 0.3V)  
TO SYSTEM  
LOAD  
25  
V
OUT  
PWM AND  
GATE DRIVE  
24  
22  
IDEAL  
DIODE  
I
/
SWITCH  
OPTIONAL  
EXTERNAL  
IDEAL DIODE  
PMOS  
h
CLPROG  
+
GATE  
BAT  
CONSTANT CURRENT  
CONSTANT VOLTAGE  
BATTERY CHARGER  
+
15mV  
+
+
+
0.3V  
CLPROG  
1.188V  
2
+
23  
3.6V  
AVERAGE INPUT  
CURRENT LIMIT  
CONTROLLER  
AVERAGE OUTPUT  
VOLTAGE LIMIT  
CONTROLLER  
+
SINGLE CELL  
Li-Ion  
3556 F03  
Figure 3. PowerPath Block Diagram  
3556fa  
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For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
operaTion  
Battery Charger  
the battery is always topped off, a charge cycle will auto-  
matically begin when the battery voltage falls below 4.1V.  
In the event that the safety timer is running when the  
battery voltage falls below 4.1V, it will reset back to zero.  
To prevent brief excursions below 4.1V from resetting the  
safety timer, the battery voltage must be below 4.1V for  
more than 1.3ms. The charge cycle and safety timer will  
The LTC3556 includes a constant-current/constant-volt-  
age battery charger with automatic recharge, automatic  
termination by safety timer, low voltage trickle charging,  
bad cell detection and thermistor sensor input for out-of-  
temperature charge pausing.  
also restart if the V  
UVLO cycles low and then high  
BUS  
Battery Preconditioning  
(e.g., V  
is removed and then replaced), or if the battery  
charger is cycled on and off by the I C port.  
BUS  
When a battery charge cycle begins, the battery charger  
first determines if the battery is deeply discharged. If the  
batteryvoltageisbelowV  
trickle charge feature sets the battery charge current to  
10% of the programmed value. If the low voltage persists  
for more than 1/2 hour, the battery charger automatically  
terminates and indicates via the CHRG pin that the battery  
was unresponsive.  
2
,typically2.85V,anautomatic  
TRKL  
Charge Current  
The charge current is programmed using a single resis-  
tor from PROG to ground. 1/1022th of the battery charge  
current is sent to PROG which will attempt to servo to  
1.000V. Thus, the battery charge current will try to reach  
1022 times the current in the PROG pin. The program  
resistor and the charge current are calculated using the  
following equations:  
Oncethebatteryvoltageisabove2.85V,thebatterycharger  
begins charging in full power constant-current mode. The  
current delivered to the battery will try to reach 1022V/  
1022V  
ICHRG  
1022V  
RPROG  
R
. Depending on available input power and external  
PROG  
RPROG  
=
, ICHRG =  
load conditions, the battery charger may or may not be  
able to charge at the full programmed rate. The external  
load will always be prioritized over the battery charge  
current. The USB current limit programming will always  
be observed and only additional power will be available to  
charge the battery. When system loads are light, battery  
charge current will be maximized.  
Ineithertheconstant-currentorconstant-voltagecharging  
modes, the voltage at the PROG pin will be proportional to  
the actual charge current delivered to the battery. There-  
fore, the actual charge current can be determined at any  
time by monitoring the PROG pin voltage and using the  
following equation:  
Charge Termination  
VPROG  
RPROG  
IBAT  
=
1022  
The battery charger has a built-in safety timer. When  
the voltage on the battery reaches the pre-programmed  
float voltage of 4.200V, the battery charger will regulate  
the battery voltage and the charge current will decrease  
naturally. Once the battery charger detects that the battery  
has reached 4.200V, the four hour safety timer is started.  
After the safety timer expires, charging of the battery will  
discontinue and no more current will be delivered.  
In many cases, the actual battery charge current, I , will  
BAT  
be lower than I  
due to limited input power available  
CHRG  
and prioritization with the system load drawn from V  
.
OUT  
Charge Status Indication  
The CHRG pin indicates the status of the battery charger.  
Four possible states are represented by CHRG which in-  
clude charging, not charging, unresponsive battery, and  
battery temperature out of range.  
Automatic Recharge  
After the battery charger terminates, it will remain off  
drawing only microamperes of current from the battery.  
If the portable product remains in this state long enough,  
the battery will eventually self discharge. To ensure that  
The signal at the CHRG pin can be easily recognized as  
one of the above four states by either a human or a mi-  
croprocessor. An open-drain output, the CHRG pin can  
3556fa  
18  
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
operaTion  
drive an indicator LED through a current limiting resistor  
for human interfacing or simply a pull-up resistor for  
microprocessor interfacing.  
would easily recognize the frantic 6.1Hz “fast” blink of the  
LEDwhileamicroprocessorwouldbeabletodecodeeither  
the 12.5% or 87.5% duty cycles as a bad battery fault.  
Note that the LTC3556 is a 3-terminal PowerPath prod-  
uct where system load is always prioritized over battery  
charging. Due to excessive system load, there may not be  
sufficient power to charge the battery beyond the trickle  
charge threshold voltage within the bad battery timeout  
period. Inthiscase, thebatterychargerwillfalselyindicate  
a bad battery. System software may then reduce the load  
and reset the battery charger to try again.  
To make the CHRG pin easily recognized by both humans  
and microprocessors, the pin is either Low for charging,  
High for not charging, or it is switched at high frequency  
(35kHz) to indicate the two possible faults, unresponsive  
battery and battery temperature out of range.  
When charging begins, CHRG is pulled low and remains  
low for the duration of a normal charge cycle. When  
charging is complete, i.e., the BAT pin reaches 4.200V  
and the charge current has dropped to one tenth of the  
programmed value, the CHRG pin is released (Hi-Z). If a  
faultoccurs,thepinisswitchedat35kHz.Whileswitching,  
its duty cycle is modulated between a high and low value  
at a very low frequency. The low and high duty cycles are  
disparate enough to make an LED appear to be on or off  
thus giving the appearance of “blinking”. Each of the two  
faultshasitsownuniqueblinkrateforhumanrecognition  
as well as two unique duty cycles for machine recognition.  
Although very improbable, it is possible that a duty cycle  
reading could be taken at the bright-dim transition (low  
duty cycle to high duty cycle). When this happens the  
duty cycle reading will be precisely 50%. If the duty cycle  
reading is 50%, system software should disqualify it and  
take a new duty cycle reading.  
NTC Thermistor  
The battery temperature is measured by placing a nega-  
tive temperature coefficient (NTC) thermistor close to the  
battery pack.  
The CHRG pin does not respond to the C/10 threshold if  
the LTC3556 is in V  
current limit. This prevents false  
BUS  
end of charge indications due to insufficient power avail-  
To use this feature, connect the NTC thermistor, R , be-  
NTC  
able to the battery charger.  
tween the NTC pin and ground and a resistor, R  
, from  
NOM  
Table 1 illustrates the four possible states of the CHRG  
pin when the battery charger is active.  
V
to the NTC pin. R  
should be a 1% resistor with  
BUS  
NOM  
a value equal to the value of the chosen NTC thermistor  
at 25°C (R25). A 100k thermistor is recommended since  
thermistor current is not measured by the LTC3556 and  
will have to be budgeted for USB compliance.  
Table 1. CHRG Signal  
MODULATION  
STATUS  
Charging  
Not Charging  
NTC Fault  
Bad Battery  
FREQUENCY (BLINK) FREQUENCY  
DUTY CYCLES  
100%  
0Hz  
0Hz  
35kHz  
35kHz  
0Hz (Lo-Z)  
0Hz (Hi-Z)  
1.5Hz at 50%  
6.1Hz at 50%  
The LTC3556 will pause charging when the resistance of  
the NTC thermistor drops to 0.54 times the value of R25  
or approximately 54k. For Vishay “Curve 1” thermistor,  
this corresponds to approximately 40°C. If the battery  
charger is in constant-voltage (float) mode, the safety  
timer also pauses until the thermistor indicates a return  
to a valid temperature. As the temperature drops, the  
resistance of the NTC thermistor rises. The LTC3556 is  
also designed to pause charging when the value of the  
NTC thermistor increases to 3.25 times the value of R25.  
For Vishay “Curve 1” this resistance, 325k, corresponds  
to approximately 0°C. The hot and cold comparators each  
haveapproximately3°Cofhysteresistopreventoscillation  
3556fa  
0%  
6.25%, 93.75%  
12.5%, 87.5%  
An NTC fault is represented by a 35kHz pulse train whose  
duty cycle alternates between 6.25% and 93.75% at a  
1.5Hz rate. A human will easily recognize the 1.5Hz rate as  
a “slow” blinking which indicates the out-of-range battery  
temperaturewhileamicroprocessorwillbeabletodecode  
either the 6.25% or 93.75% duty cycles as an NTC fault.  
If a battery is found to be unresponsive to charging (i.e.,  
its voltage remains below 2.85V for 1/2 hour), the CHRG  
pingivesthebatteryfaultindication.Forthisfault,ahuman  
19  
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
operaTion  
about the trip point. Grounding the NTC pin disables the  
NTC charge pausing function.  
Bus Speed  
2
The I C port is designed to be operated at speeds of up  
to 400kHz. It has built-in timing delays to ensure correct  
Thermal Regulation  
2
operation when addressed from an I C compliant master  
To optimize charging time, an internal thermal feedback  
loop may automatically decrease the programmed charge  
current. This will occur if the die temperature rises to  
approximately 110°C. Thermal regulation protects the  
LTC3556 from excessive temperature due to high power  
operation or high ambient thermal conditions and allows  
the user to push the limits ofthepowerhandlingcapability  
with a given circuit board design without risk of damaging  
the LTC3556 or external components. The benefit of the  
LTC3556thermalregulationloopisthatchargecurrentcan  
besetaccordingtoactualconditionsratherthanworst-case  
conditions with the assurance that the battery charger will  
automaticallyreducethecurrentinworst-caseconditions.  
device. It also contains input filters designed to suppress  
glitches should the bus become corrupted.  
Start and Stop Condition  
A bus master signals the beginning of a communication  
to a slave device by transmitting a Start condition. A Start  
condition is generated by transitioning SDA from high  
to low while SCL is high. When the master has finished  
communicating with the slave, it issues a Stop condition  
by transitioning SDA from low to high while SCL is high.  
2
The bus is then free for communication with another I C  
device.  
Byte Format  
2
I C Interface  
Each byte sent to the LTC3556 must be eight bits long  
followed by an extra clock cycle for the Acknowledge bit  
to be returned by the LTC3556. The data should be sent  
to the LTC3556 most significant bit (MSb) first.  
The LTC3556 may receive commands from a host (mas-  
2
ter) using the standard I C 2-wire interface. The Timing  
Diagram shows the timing relationship of the signals on  
the bus. The two bus lines, SDA and SCL, must be high  
when the bus is not in use. External pull-up resistors or  
Acknowledge  
2
current sources, such as the LTC1694 I C accelerator, are  
The Acknowledge signal is used for handshaking between  
the master and the slave. An Acknowledge (active low)  
generated by the slave (LTC3556) lets the master know  
that the latest byte of information was received. The  
Acknowledge related clock pulse is generated by the  
master. The master releases the SDA line (high) during  
the Acknowledge clock cycle. The slave receiver must pull  
down the SDA line during the Acknowledge clock pulse  
so that it remains a stable Low during the High period of  
this clock pulse.  
required on these lines. The LTC3556 is a receive-only  
2
(slave) device. The I C control signals, SDA and SCL are  
scaled internally to the DV supply. DV should be con-  
CC  
CC  
nected to the same power supply as the microcontroller  
2
generating the I C signals.  
2
The I C port has an undervoltage lockout on the DV  
CC  
2
pin. When DV is below approximately 1V, the I C serial  
CC  
port is cleared and switching regulators 1 and 3 are set  
to full scale.  
Slave Address  
The LTC3556 responds to only one 7-bit address which  
has been factory programmed to 0001001. The LSb of the  
address byte is 1 for Read and 0 for Write. This device is  
write only corresponding to an address byte of 00010010  
(0×12). If the correct seven bit address is given but the  
R/W bit is 1, the LTC3556 will not respond.  
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Table 2. I2C Serial Port Mapping (Defaults to 0xFF00 in Reset State or if DVCC = 0V)  
A7  
A6  
A5  
A4  
A3  
A2  
A1  
A0  
B7  
B6  
B5  
B4  
B3  
B2  
Enable Input Current Limit  
(See Table 3)  
B1  
B0  
Switching Regulator 1  
Voltage (See Table 4)  
Switching Regulator 3  
Voltage (See Table 4)  
Disable Switching Regulator  
Enable  
Enable  
Battery Modes (See Table 5) Regulator Regulator Regulator  
Charger  
1
2
3
Bus Write Operation  
Table 3. USB Current Limit Settings  
The master initiates communication with the LTC3556  
with a Start condition and a 7-bit address followed by  
the Write Bit R/W = 0. If the address matches that of the  
LTC3556, the LTC3556 returns an Acknowledge. The  
master should then deliver the most significant data byte.  
AgaintheLTC3556acknowledgesandthecycleisrepeated  
for a total of one address byte and two data bytes. Each  
data byte is transferred to an internal holding latch upon  
the return of an Acknowledge. After both data bytes have  
beentransferredtotheLTC3556,themastermayterminate  
the communication with a Stop condition. Alternatively, a  
Repeat-Start condition can be initiated by the master and  
B1  
0
B0  
1
USB SETTING  
10x Mode (Wall 1A Limit)  
5x Mode (USB 500mA Limit)  
1x Mode (USB 100mA Limit)  
Suspend  
1
1
0
0
1
0
Table 4. Switching Regulator Servo Voltage  
A7  
A3  
0
A6  
A2  
0
A5  
A1  
0
A4 SWITCHING REGULATOR 1 SERVO VOLTAGE  
A0 SWITCHING REGULATOR 3 SERVO VOLTAGE  
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0
1
0.425V  
0.450V  
0.475V  
0.500V  
0.525V  
0.550V  
0.575V  
0.600V  
0.625V  
0.650V  
0.675V  
0.700V  
0.725V  
0.750V  
0.775V  
0.800V  
0
0
0
2
0
0
1
another chip on the I C bus can be addressed. This cycle  
0
0
1
can continue indefinitely and the LTC3556 will remember  
the last input of valid data that it received. Once all chips  
on the bus have been addressed and sent valid data, a  
global Stop condition can be sent and the LTC3556 will  
updateitscommandlatchwiththedatathatithadreceived.  
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
1
1
0
0
2
In certain circumstances the data on the I C bus may  
1
0
0
become corrupted. In these cases the LTC3556 responds  
appropriately by preserving only the last set of complete  
datathatithasreceived.Forexample,assumetheLTC3556  
has been successfully addressed and is receiving data  
when a Stop condition mistakenly occurs. The LTC3556  
will ignore this stop condition and will not respond until  
a new Start condition, correct address, new set of data  
and Stop condition are transmitted.  
1
0
1
1
0
1
1
1
0
1
1
0
1
1
1
1
1
1
Table 5. Switching Regulator Modes  
MODE OF (BUCK) SWITCHING MODE OF (BUCK-BOOST)  
B6 B5 REGULATORS 1 AND 2  
Likewise, with only one exception, if the LTC3556 was  
previously addressed and sent valid data but not updated  
with a Stop, it will respond to any Stop that appears on  
the bus, independent of the number of Repeat-Starts that  
have occurred. If a Repeat-Start is given and the LTC3556  
successfully acknowledges its address and first byte, it  
will not respond to a Stop until both bytes of the new data  
have been received and acknowledged.  
SWITCHING REGULATOR 3  
0
1
0
1
0
1
1
0
Pulse Skip Mode  
PWM Mode  
Burst Mode Operation  
Forced Burst Mode Operation Burst Mode Operation  
LDO Mode  
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2
Disabling the I C Port  
Burst Mode operation, forced Burst Mode operation or  
LDO mode may be selected. The buck regulators include  
soft-start to limit inrush current when powering on, short-  
circuit current protection and switch node slew limiting  
circuitrytoreduceradiatedEMI.Noexternalcompensation  
componentsarerequired. Theoperatingmodeofthebuck  
2
The I C serial port can be disabled by grounding the  
DV pin. In this mode, control automatically passes to  
CC  
the individual logic input pins ENALL and SEQ. However,  
considerablefunctionalityisnotavailableinthismodesuch  
as the ability to independently enable the three switching  
regulators and disable the battery charger. In addition,  
2
regulators can be set by I C control and defaults to pulse  
2
skip mode if the I C port is not used. Both buck converters  
2
with the I C port disabled, both programmable switching  
are enabled (along with the buck-boost) when the ENALL  
pin is asserted or each may be individually enabled by the  
regulators default to a fixed servo voltage of 0.8V, both  
400mA bucks default to pulse skip mode, the 1A buck-  
boost defaults to PWM mode, and the USB input current  
limit defaults to 1x mode (100mA Limit).  
2
I C port. Buck regulator 1 has a programmable feedback  
2
servo voltage via I C control (which defaults to 800mV if  
2
the I C port is not used) whereas buck regulator 2 has a  
fixedfeedbackservovoltageof800mV.Thebuckregulator  
PGOODALL Pin  
input supplies V and V will generally be connected  
IN1  
IN2  
The PGOODALL pin is an open-drain output used to in-  
dicate that all enabled switching regulators have reached  
their final voltage. PGOODALL remains low impedance  
until the last enabled regulator in the sequence reaches  
92% of its regulation value. A 230ms delay is included to  
allow a system microcontroller ample time to reset itself.  
PGOODALLmaybeusedasapower-onresettothemicro-  
processorpoweredbyone(ormore)ofthethreeregulated  
outputs. PGOODALL is an open-drain output and requires  
a pull-up resistor to the input voltage of the monitoring  
microprocessor or another appropriate power source.  
to the system load pin V  
.
OUT  
Buck Regulator Output Voltage Programming  
Both buck regulators can be programmed for output  
voltages greater than 0.8V. The full-scale output voltage  
for each buck regulator is programmed using a resistor  
divider from the buck regulator output connected to the  
feedback pins (FB1 and FB2) such that:  
R1  
R2  
VOUTX = VFBX  
+ 1  
400mA Step-Down Switching Regulators  
whereV rangesfrom0.425Vto0.8Vforbuckregulator1  
FBX  
and V is fixed at 0.8V for buck regulator 2. See Figure 4.  
The LTC3556 contains two 2.25MHz step-down (buck)  
constant-frequency current mode switching regulators.  
Each buck regulator can provide up to 400mA of output  
current. Both buck regulators can be programmed for a  
minimumoutputvoltageof0.8Vandcanbeusedtopower  
a microcontroller core, microcontroller I/O, memory, disk  
drive or other logic circuitry. One of the buck regulators  
FBX  
Typical values for R1 are in the range of 40k to 1M. The  
capacitor, C , cancels the pole created by feedback resis-  
FB  
torsandtheinputcapacitanceoftheFBxpinandalsohelps  
to improve transient response for output voltages much  
greater than 0.8V. A variety of capacitor sizes can be used  
2
has I C programmable set-points for on-the-fly power  
savings. Both buck converters support 100% duty cycle  
operation (low dropout mode) when their input voltage  
drops very close to their output voltage. To suit a variety  
of applications, selectable mode functions can be used to  
trade off noise for efficiency. Four modes are available to  
control the operation of the LTC3556’s buck regulators.  
At moderate to heavy loads, the pulse skip mode provides  
the least noise switching solution. At lighter loads, either  
V
INx  
L
V
SWx  
LTC3556  
FBx  
OUTx  
C
R1  
C
OUT  
FB  
R2  
GND  
3556 F04  
Figure 4. Buck Converter Application Circuit  
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for C but a value of 10pF is recommended for most ap-  
charged to a voltage slightly higher than the regulation  
point.Thestep-downconverterthengoesintosleepmode,  
during which the output capacitor provides the load cur  
rent. In sleep mode, most of the regulator’s circuitry is  
powereddown, helpingconservebatterypower. Whenthe  
output voltage drops below a predetermined value, the  
buck regulator circuitry is powered on and another burst  
cycle begins. The duration for which the buck regulator  
operates in sleep mode depends on the load current. The  
sleep time decreases as the load current increases. The  
maximum output current in forced Burst Mode operation  
is about 100mA for buck regulators 1 and 2. The buck  
regulatorswillnotentersleepmodeifthemaximumoutput  
current is exceeded in forced Burst Mode operation and  
the output will drop out of regulation. Forced Burst Mode  
operationprovidesasignificantimprovementinefficiency  
at light loads at the expense of higher output ripple when  
compared to pulse skip mode. For many noise-sensitive  
systems,forcedBurstModeoperationmightbeundesirable  
at certain times (i.e., during a transmit or receive cycle  
of a wireless device), but highly desirable at others (i.e.,  
FB  
plications. Experimentation with capacitor sizes between  
2pF and 22pF may yield improved transient response.  
Buck Regulator Operating Modes  
The LTC3556’s buck regulators include four possible  
operating modes to meet the noise/power needs of a  
variety of applications.  
In pulse skip mode, an internal latch is set at the start of  
every cycle which turns on the main P-channel MOSFET  
switch.Duringeachcycle,acurrentcomparatorcompares  
thepeakinductorcurrenttotheoutputofanerroramplifier.  
The output of the current comparator resets the internal  
latch which causes the main P-channel MOSFET switch to  
turn off and the N-channel MOSFET synchronous rectifier  
to turn on. The N-channel MOSFET synchronous rectifier  
turns off at the end of the 2.25MHz cycle or if the current  
through the N-channel MOSFET synchronous rectifier  
drops to zero. Using this method of operation, the error  
amplifier adjusts the peak inductor current to deliver the  
required output power. All necessary compensation is  
internal to the switching regulator requiring only a single  
ceramicoutputcapacitorforstability.AtlightloadsinPWM  
mode, the inductor current may reach zero on each pulse  
which will turn off the N-channel MOSFET synchronous  
rectifier. In this case, the switch node (SW) goes high  
impedance and the switch node voltage will “ring.” This  
is discontinuous mode operation and is normal behavior  
for a switching regulator. At very light loads in pulse skip  
mode, the buck regulators will automatically skip pulses  
as needed to maintain output regulation.  
2
when the device is in low power standby mode). The I C  
port can be used to enable or disable forced Burst Mode  
operation at any time, offering both low noise and low  
power operation when they are needed.  
In Burst Mode operation, the buck regulator automati-  
cally switches between fixed frequency PWM operation  
and hysteretic control as a function of the load current.  
At light loads, the buck regulators operate in hysteretic  
mode in much the same way as described for the forced  
Burst Mode operation. Burst Mode operation provides  
slightly less output ripple at the expense of slightly lower  
efficiency than forced Burst Mode operation. At heavy  
loads, the buck regulator operates in the same manner  
as pulse skip operation does at high loads. For applica-  
tions that can tolerate some output ripple at low output  
currents, Burst Mode operation provides better efficiency  
than pulse skip at light loads while still providing the full  
specified output current of the buck regulator.  
At high duty cycles (V  
> V /2) it is possible for the  
INx  
OUTx  
inductor current to reverse, causing the buck regulator  
to operate continuously at light loads. This is normal and  
regulationismaintained,butthesupplycurrentwillincrease  
to several milliamperes due to continuous switching.  
In forced Burst Mode operation, the buck regulators use a  
constant-currentalgorithmtocontroltheinductorcurrent.  
By controlling the inductor current directly and using a  
hysteretic control loop, both noise and switching losses  
areminimized. Inthismodeoutputpowerislimited. While  
in forced Burst Mode operation, the output capacitor is  
Finally, the buck regulators have an LDO mode that gives  
a DC option for regulating their output voltages. In LDO  
mode, the buck regulators are converted to linear regula-  
tors and deliver continuous power from their SWx pins  
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LTC3556  
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through their respective inductors. This mode gives the  
lowest possible output noise as well as low quiescent  
current at light loads.  
Buck Regulator Switching Slew Rate Control  
The buck regulators contain new patent pending circuitry  
to limit the slew rate of the switch node (SW1 and SW2).  
Thisnewcircuitryisdesignedtotransitiontheswitchnode  
over a period of a couple of nanoseconds, significantly  
reducing radiated EMI and conducted supply noise.  
The buck regulators allow mode transition on the fly,  
providing seamless transition between modes even under  
load.Thisallowstheusertoswitchbackandforthbetween  
modes to reduce output ripple or increase low current  
efficiency as needed.  
Low Supply Operation  
TheLTC3556incorporatesanundervoltagelockoutcircuit  
Buck Regulator in Shutdown  
on V  
which shuts down both buck regulators (as well  
OUT  
The buck regulators are in shutdown when not enabled  
for operation. In shutdown, all circuitry in the buck regula-  
tor is disconnected from the buck regulator input supply  
leaving only a few nanoamperes of leakage current. The  
buck regulator outputs are individually pulled to ground  
through a 10k resistor on the switch pins (SW1 and SW2)  
when in shutdown.  
as the buck-boost) when V  
This UVLO prevents unstable operation.  
drops below V  
.
OUT  
OUTUVLO  
Buck-Boost DC/DC Switching Regulator  
TheLTC3556containsa2.25MHzconstant-frequencyvolt-  
age mode buck-boost switching regulator. The regulator  
provides up to 1A of output load current. The buck-boost  
can be programmed to a minimum output voltage of 2.5V  
and can be used to power a microcontroller core, micro-  
controller I/O, memory, disk drive or other logic circuitry.  
Buck Regulator Dropout Operation  
It is possible for a buck regulator’s input voltage, V , to  
INX  
2
approach its programmed output voltage (e.g., a battery  
voltageof3.4Vwithaprogrammedoutputvoltageof3.3V).  
Whenthishappens,thePMOSswitchdutycycleincreases  
until it is turned on continuously at 100%. In this dropout  
condition, the respective output voltage equals the buck  
regulator’s input voltage minus the voltage drops across  
the internal P-channel MOSFET and the inductor.  
WhencontrolledbyI C,thebuck-boosthasprogrammable  
set-pointsforon-the-flypowersavings. Tosuitavarietyof  
applications, aselectablemodefunctionallowstheuserto  
trade off noise for efficiency. Two modes are available to  
controltheoperationoftheLTC3556’sbuck-boostregula-  
tor. At moderate to heavy loads, the constant frequency  
PWMmodeprovidestheleastnoiseswitchingsolution. At  
lighter loads Burst Mode operation may be selected. The  
full-scaleoutputvoltageisprogrammedbyauser-supplied  
resistive divider returned to the FB3 pin. An error amplifier  
compares the divided output voltage with a reference and  
adjuststhecompensationvoltageaccordinglyuntiltheFB3  
has stabilized to the selected reference voltage (0.425V to  
0.8V).Thebuck-boostregulatoralsoincludesasoft-startto  
limit inrush current and voltage overshoot when powering  
on, short circuit current protection, and switch node slew  
limiting circuitry for reduced radiated EMI.  
Buck Regulator Soft-Start Operation  
Soft-start is accomplished by gradually increasing the  
peak inductor current for each buck regulator over a  
500μs period. This allows each output to rise slowly,  
helping minimize the battery surge current. A soft-start  
cycle occurs whenever a given buck regulator is enabled,  
or after a fault condition has occurred (thermal shutdown  
or UVLO). A soft-start cycle is not triggered by changing  
operating modes. This allows seamless output operation  
when transitioning between forced Burst Mode, Burst  
Mode, pulse skip mode or LDO operation.  
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Input Current Limit  
Buck-Boost Regulator Burst Mode Operation  
The input current limit comparator will shut the input  
PMOS switch off once current exceeds 2.5A (typical).  
The 2.5A input current limit also protects against a  
grounded VOUT3 node.  
In Burst Mode operation, the buck-boost regulator uses  
a hysteretic FB3 voltage algorithm to control the output  
voltage. By limiting FET switching and using a hysteretic  
control loop, switching losses are greatly reduced. In this  
mode output current is limited to 50mA typical. While  
operating in Burst Mode operation, the output capacitor  
is charged to a voltage slightly higher than the regulation  
point. The buck-boost converter then goes into a sleep  
state, during which the output capacitor provides the load  
current. The output capacitor is charged by charging the  
inductor until the input current reaches 250mA typical  
andthendischargingtheinductoruntilthereversecurrent  
reaches 0mA typical. This process is repeated until the  
feedbackvoltagehaschargedto6mVabovetheregulation  
point. In the sleep state, most of the regulator’s circuitry is  
powered down, helping to conserve battery power. When  
the feedback voltage drops 6mV below the regulation  
point, the switching regulator circuitry is powered on and  
another burst cycle begins. The duration for which the  
regulator sleeps depends on the load current and output  
capacitor value. The sleep time decreases as the load cur-  
rent increases. The maximum load current in Burst Mode  
operation is 50mA typical. The buck-boost regulator will  
not go to sleep if the current is greater than 50mA, and  
if the load current increases beyond this point while in  
BurstModeoperationtheoutputwillloseregulation.Burst  
Mode operation provides a significant improvement in ef-  
ficiencyatlightloadsattheexpenseofhigheroutputripple  
when compared to PWM mode. For many noise-sensitive  
systems, Burst Mode operation might be undesirable at  
certain times (i.e., during a transmit or receive cycle of a  
wireless device), but highly desirable at others (i.e., when  
the device is in low power standby mode). The B6 and  
Output Overvoltage Protection  
If the FB3 node were inadvertently shorted to ground, then  
the output would increase indefinitely with the maximum  
current that could be sourced from V . The LTC3556  
IN3  
protects against this by shutting off the input PMOS if  
the output voltage exceeds 5.6V (typical).  
Low Output Voltage Operation  
When the output voltage is below 2.65V (typical) during  
startup, Burst Mode operation is disabled and switch D  
is turned off (allowing forward current through the well  
diode and limiting reverse current to 0mA).  
Buck-Boost Regulator PWM Operating Mode  
In PWM mode the voltage seen at FB3 is compared to the  
selectedreferencevoltage(0.425Vto0.8V).FromtheFB3  
voltage an error amplifier generates an error signal seen  
at VC3. This error signal commands PWM waveforms  
that modulate switches A, B, C and D. Switches A and B  
operate synchronously as do switches C and D. If VIN3 is  
significantlygreaterthantheprogrammedVOUT3,thenthe  
converter will operate in buck mode. In this case switches  
A and B will be modulated, with switch D always on (and  
switch C always off), to step down the input voltage to  
the programmed output. If VIN3 is significantly less than  
the programmed VOUT3, then the converter will operate in  
boostmode. InthiscaseswitchesCandDaremodulated,  
with switch A always on (and switch B always off), to step  
up the input voltage to the programmed output. If VIN3  
is close to the programmed VOUT3, then the converter  
will operate in 4-switch mode. In this mode the switches  
sequence through the pattern of AD, AC, BD to either step  
the input voltage up or down to the programmed output.  
2
B5 bits of the I C port are used to enable or disable Burst  
Mode operation at any time, offering both low noise and  
low power operation when they are needed.  
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LTC3556  
operaTion  
Buck-Boost Regulator Soft-Start Operation  
condition has occurred (thermal shutdown or UVLO). A  
soft-start cycle is not triggered by changing operating  
modes.Thisallowsseamlessoperationwhentransitioning  
between Burst Mode operation and PWM mode.  
Soft-start is accomplished by gradually increasing the  
reference voltage input to the error amplifier over a 0.5ms  
(typical)period.Thislimitstransientinrushcurrentsduring  
start-up because the output voltage is always “in regula-  
tion.” Ramping the reference voltage input also limits the  
rate of increase in the V voltage which helps minimize  
output overshoot during start-up. A soft-start cycle oc-  
Low Supply Operation  
TheLTC3556incorporatesanundervoltagelockoutcircuit  
on V  
(connected to V ) which shuts down the buck-  
C3  
OUT  
IN3  
boost regulator when V  
drops below 2.6V. This UVLO  
OUT  
curs whenever the buck-boost is enabled, or after a fault  
prevents unstable operation.  
applicaTions inForMaTion  
CLPROG Resistor and Capacitor  
row, the LTC3556 was designed for a specific inductance  
value of 3.3µH. Some inductors which may be suitable  
for this application are listed in Table 6.  
As described in the High Efficiency Switching PowerPath  
Controller section, the resistor on the CLPROG pin deter-  
mines the average input current limit when the switching  
regulator is set to either the 1x mode (USB 100mA), the  
5x mode (USB 500mA) or the 10x mode. The input cur-  
rent will be comprised of two components, the current  
Table 6. Recommended Inductors for PowerPath Controller  
MAX MAX  
INDUCTOR  
TYPE  
L
I
DCR  
(Ω)  
SIZE IN mm  
(L × W × H) MANUFACTURER  
DC  
(µH) (A)  
LPS4018  
3.3 2.2  
0.08 3.9 × 3.9 × 1.7 Coilcraft  
www.coilcraft.com  
that is used to drive V  
and the quiescent current of the  
OUT  
switching regulator. To ensure that the USB specification  
is strictly met, both components of input current should  
be considered. The Electrical Characteristics table gives  
values for quiescent currents in either setting as well as  
current limit programming accuracy. To get as close to the  
500mA or 100mA specifications as possible, a 1% resis-  
D53LC  
3.3 2.26 0.034 5.0 × 5.0 × 3.0 Toko  
DB318C  
3.3 1.55 0.070 3.8 × 3.8 × 1.8 www.toko.com  
WE-TPC  
Type M1  
3.3 1.95 0.065 4.8 × 4.8 × 1.8 Würth Elektronik  
www.we-online.com  
CDRH6D12 3.3 2.2 0.0625 6.7 × 6.7 × 1.5 Sumida  
CDRH6D38 3.3 3.5 0.020 7.0 × 7.0 × 4.0 www.sumida.com  
tor should be used. Recall that I  
= I  
+ V  
/
V
and V  
Bypass Capacitors  
VBUS VBUSQ  
CLPROG  
BUS  
OUT  
R
(h  
+1).  
CLPPROG  
CLPROG  
The style and value of capacitors used with the LTC3556  
determineseveralimportantparameterssuchasregulator  
control-loop stability and input voltage ripple. Because  
the LTC3556 uses a step-down switching power supply  
An averaging capacitor or an R-C combination is required  
in parallel with the CLPROG resistor so that the switching  
regulator can determine the average input current. This  
network also provides the dominant pole for the feedback  
loop when current limit is reached. To ensure stability,  
the capacitor on CLPROG should be 0.47µF or larger.  
Alternatively, faster transient response may be achieved  
with 0.1µF in series with 8.2Ω.  
from V  
to V , its input current waveform contains  
BUS  
OUT  
high frequency components. It is strongly recommended  
that a low equivalent series resistance (ESR) multilayer  
ceramic capacitor be used to bypass V . Tantalum and  
BUS  
aluminum capacitors are not recommended because of  
their high ESR. The value of the capacitor on V  
directly  
BUS  
Choosing the PowerPath Inductor  
controls the amount of input ripple for a given load cur-  
rent. Increasing the size of this capacitor will reduce the  
input ripple.  
Because the input voltage range and output voltage range  
of the power path switching regulator are both fairly nar-  
3556fa  
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For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
applicaTions inForMaTion  
maximize efficiency, choose an inductor with a low DC  
resistance. For a 1.2V output, efficiency is reduced about  
2% for 100mΩ series resistance at 400mA load current,  
and about 2% for 300mΩ series resistance at 100mA load  
current. Choose an inductor with a DC current rating at  
least 1.5 times larger than the maximum load current to  
ensure that the inductor does not saturate during normal  
operation. If output short-circuit is a possible condition,  
the inductor should be rated to handle the maximum peak  
current specified for the buck converters.  
To prevent large V  
voltage steps during transient load  
OUT  
conditions, it is also recommended that a ceramic capaci-  
tor be used to bypass V . The output capacitor is used  
OUT  
in the compensation of the switching regulator. At least  
4μF of actual capacitance with low ESR are required on  
V
. Additional capacitance will improve load transient  
OUT  
performance and stability.  
Multilayer ceramic chip capacitors typically have excep-  
tional ESR performance. MLCCs combined with a tight  
board layout and an unbroken ground plane will yield very  
good performance and low EMI emissions.  
Different core materials and shapes will change the size/  
current and price/current relationship of an induc- tor.  
Toroid or shielded pot cores in ferrite or Permalloy materi-  
als are small and don’t radiate much energy, but generally  
cost more than powdered iron core inductors with similar  
electrical characteristics. Inductors that are very thin or  
have a very small volume typically have much higher core  
and DCR losses, and will not give the best ef- ficiency.  
The choice of which style inductor to use often depends  
more on the price vs size, performance and any radiated  
EMI requirements than on what the LTC3556 requires to  
operate.  
There are several types of ceramic capacitors available,  
each having considerably different characteristics. For  
example, X7R ceramic capacitors have the best voltage  
and temperature stability. X5R ceramic capacitors have  
apparentlyhigherpackingdensitybutpoorerperformance  
over their rated voltage and temperature ranges. Y5V  
ceramic capacitors have the highest packing density,  
but must be used with caution, because of their extreme  
nonlinear characteristic of capacitance vs voltage. The  
actualin-circuitcapacitanceofaceramiccapacitorshould  
be measured with a small AC signal (ideally less than  
200mV) as is expected in-circuit. Many vendors specify  
The inductor value also has an effect on forced burst  
and Burst Mode operations. Lower inductor values will  
cause the Burst Mode and forced Burst Mode switching  
frequencies to increase.  
thecapacitancevsvoltagewitha1V  
ACtestsignaland  
RMS  
as a result overstate the capacitance that the capacitor will  
present in the application. Using similar operating condi-  
tions as the application, the user must measure or request  
from the vendor the actual capacitance to determine if the  
selected capacitor meets the minimum capacitance that  
the application requires.  
Table 7 shows several inductors that work well with the  
LTC3556’s buck regulators. These inductors offer a good  
compromise in current rating, DCR and physical size.  
Consult each manufacturer for detailed information on  
their entire selection of inductors.  
400mA Step-Down Switching Regulator Inductor  
Selection  
Table 7. Recommended Inductors for 400mA Step-Down  
Switching Regulators  
Many different sizes and shapes of inductors are avail-  
able from numerous manufacturers. Choosing the right  
inductor from such a large selection of devices can be  
overwhelming, but following a few basic guidelines will  
make the selection process much simpler.  
NDUCTOR  
TYPE  
L
(µH)  
MAX  
I (A) DCR(Ω) (L × W × H) MANUFACTURER  
DC  
MAX  
SIZE IN mm  
DE2818C  
DE2812C  
4.7  
4.7  
1.25  
1.15  
0.9  
0.072* 3.0 × 2.8 × 1.8 Toko  
www.toko.com  
0.13* 3.0 × 2.8 × 1.2  
0.11 4.0 × 4.0 × 1.8 Sumida  
www.sumida.com  
0.162 3.1 × 3.1 × 1.8 Cooper  
www.cooperet.  
CDRH3D16 4.7  
Thebuckconvertersaredesignedtoworkwithinductorsin  
the range of 2.2µH to 10µH. For most applications a 4.7µH  
inductor is suggested for both buck regulators. Larger  
value inductors reduce ripple current which improves  
outputripplevoltage.Lowervalueinductorsresultinhigher  
ripple current and improved transient response time. To  
SD3118  
SD3112  
4.7  
4.7  
1.3  
0.8  
0.246 3.1 × 3.1 × 1.2  
com  
3.0 × 3.0 × 1.5 Coilcraft  
www.coilcraft.com  
LPS3015  
4.7  
1.1  
0.2  
*Typical DCR  
3556fa  
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For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
applicaTions inForMaTion  
400mA Step-Down Switching Regulator Input/Output  
Capacitor Selection  
Table 9. Recommended Inductors for Buck-Boost Regulator  
MAX MAX  
INDUCTOR  
TYPE  
L
I
DCR  
(Ω)  
SIZE IN mm  
DC  
Low ESR (equivalent series resistance) MLCC capacitors  
shouldbeusedatbothbuckregulatoroutputsaswellasat  
(µH) (A)  
(L × W × H) MANUFACTURER  
LPS4018  
3.3 2.2  
2.2 2.5  
0.08 3.9 × 3.9 × 1.7 Coilcraft  
0.07 3.9 × 3.9 × 1.7 www.coilcraft.com  
eachbuckregulatorinputsupply(V andV ).OnlyX5R  
IN1  
IN2  
D53LC  
2.0 3.25 0.02 5.0 × 5.0 × 3.0 Toko  
www.toko.com  
or X7R ceramic capacitors should be used because they  
retaintheircapacitanceoverwidervoltageandtemperature  
ranges than other ceramic types. A 10μF output capaci-  
tor is sufficient for most applications. For good transient  
response and stability the output capacitor should retain  
at least 4μF of capacitance over operating temperature  
and bias voltage. Each buck regulator input supply should  
be bypassed with a 1μF capacitor. Consult with capacitor  
manufacturers for detailed information on their selection  
and specifications of ceramic capacitors. Many manufac-  
turers now offer very thin (<1mm tall) ceramic capacitors  
ideal for use in height-restricted designs. Table 8 shows a  
list of several ceramic capacitor manufacturers.  
7440430022 2.2 2.5 0.028 4.8 × 4.8 × 2.8 Würth-Elektronik  
www.we-online.com  
CDRH4D22/ 2.2 2.4 0.044 4.7 × 4.7 × 2.4 Sumida  
HP  
www.sumida.com  
5.2 × 5.2 × Cooper  
1.45 www.cooperet.com  
SD14  
2.0 2.56 0.045  
Buck-Boost Regulator Input/Output Capacitor  
Selection  
Low ESR MLCC capacitorsshould also beusedatboth the  
buck-boost regulator output (V  
) and the buck-boost  
OUT3  
regulator input supply (V ). Again, only X5R or X7R  
IN3  
ceramic capacitors should be used because they retain  
their capacitance over wider voltage and temperature  
ranges than other ceramic types. A 22µF output capaci-  
tor is sufficient for most applications. The buck-boost  
regulator input supply should be bypassed with a 2.2µF  
capacitor. Refer to Table 8 for recommended ceramic  
capacitor manufacturers.  
Table 8. Recommended Ceramic Capacitor Manufacturers  
AVX  
www.avxcorp.com  
www.murata.com  
www.t-yuden.com  
www.vishay.com  
www.tdk.com  
Murata  
Taiyo Yuden  
Vishay Siliconix  
TDK  
Buck-Boost Regulator Inductor Selection  
Buck-Boost Regulator Output Voltage Programming  
Inductor selection criteria for the buck-boost are similar  
tothosegivenforthe400mAstep-downswitchingregula-  
tors. The buck-boost converter is designed to work with  
inductors in the range of 1µH to 5µH. For most applica-  
tions a 2.2µH inductor will suffice. Choose an inductor  
with a DC current rating at least 2 times larger than the  
maximum load current to ensure that the inductor does  
not saturate during normal operation. If output short cir-  
cuit is a possible condition, the inductor should be rated  
to handle the maximum peak current specified for the  
buck-boost converter.  
The buck-boost regulator can be programmed for output  
voltages greater than 2.75V and less than 5.5V. The full-  
scaleoutputvoltageisprogrammedusingaresistordivider  
from the V  
pin connected to the FB3 pin such that:  
OUT3  
R1  
R2  
VOUT3 = V  
+ 1  
FB3  
where V ranges from 0.425V to 0.8V.  
FB3  
Table 9 shows several inductors that work well with the  
LTC3556’s buck-boost regulator. These inductors offer  
a good compromise in current rating, DCR and physical  
size. Consult each manufacturer for detailed information  
on their entire selection of inductors.  
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LTC3556  
applicaTions inForMaTion  
Closing the Feedback Loop  
The unity-gain frequency of the error amplifier with the  
Type I compensation is given by:  
TheLTC3556incorporatesvoltagemodePWMcontrol.The  
control to output gain varies with operation region (buck,  
boost, buck-boost), but is usually no greater than 20. The  
output filter exhibits a double-pole response given by:  
1
fUG  
=
Hz  
2 • π R1CP1  
Mostapplicationsdemandanimprovedtransientresponse  
toallowasmalleroutputfiltercapacitor.Toachieveahigher  
bandwidth, Type III compensation is required. Two zeros  
are required to compensate for the double-pole response.  
1
fFILTER_POLE  
=
Hz  
2 • π L COUT  
is the output filter capacitor.  
where C  
OUT  
Type III compensation also reduces any V  
at start-up.  
overshoot  
OUT3  
The output filter zero is given by:  
1
The compensation network depicted in Figure 6 yields the  
transfer function:  
fFILTER_ZERO  
=
Hz  
2 • π RESR COUT  
is the capacitor equivalent series resistance.  
where R  
VC3  
1
ESR  
=
VOUT3 R1(C1+ C2)  
Atroublesomefeatureinboostmodeistheright-halfplane  
zero (RHP), and is given by:  
(1+ sR2C2)[1+ s(R1+ R3)C3]  
s 1+ sR2(C1||C2) (1+ sR3C3)  
2
V
IN  
fRHPZ  
=
Hz  
2 • π IOUT L VOUT  
A Type III compensation network attempts to introduce  
a phase bump at a higher frequency than the LC double  
pole. This allows the system to cross unity gain after the  
LC double pole, and achieve a higher bandwidth. While  
attempting to cross over after the LC double pole, the  
system must still cross over before the boost right-half  
plane zero. If unity gain is not reached sufficiently before  
the right-half plane zero, then the –180° of phase lag from  
The loop gain is typically rolled off before the RHP zero  
frequency.  
A simple Type I compensation network (as shown in  
Figure 5) can be incorporated to stabilize the loop but  
at the cost of reduced bandwidth and slower transient  
response. To ensure proper phase margin, the loop must  
cross unity-gain a decade before the LC double pole.  
V
OUT3  
R3  
C3  
0.8V  
+
R1  
V
OUT3  
ERROR  
AMP  
FB3  
7
0.8V  
+
ERROR  
AMP  
R1  
FB3  
7
C2  
R
V
C3  
FB  
R2  
C1  
8
C
P1  
R2  
V
C3  
3556 F06  
8
3556 F05  
Figure 5. Error Amplifier with Type I Compensation  
Figure 6. Error Amplifier with Type III Compensation  
3556fa  
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LTC3556  
applicaTions inForMaTion  
the LC double pole combined with the –90° of phase lag  
from the right-half plane zero will result in negating the  
phase bump of the compensator.  
Over-Programming the Battery Charger  
The USB high power specification allows for up to 2.5W to  
bedrawnfromtheUSBport(5V×500mA).ThePowerPath  
switching regulator transforms the voltage at V  
to just  
The compensator zeros should be placed either before  
or only slightly after the LC double pole such that their  
positive phase contributions offset the –180° that occurs  
at the filter double pole. If they are placed at too low of a  
frequency, theywillintroducetoomuchgaintothesystem  
and the crossover frequency will be too high. The two high  
frequency poles should be placed such that the system  
crosses unity gain during the phase bump introduced  
by the zeros and before the boost right-half plane zero  
and such that the compensator bandwidth is less than  
the bandwidth of the error amp (typically 900kHz). If the  
gain of the compensation network is ever greater than  
the gain of the error amplifier, then the error amplifier no  
longer acts as an ideal op amp, and another pole will be  
introduced at the same point.  
BUS  
abovethevoltageatBATwithhighefficiency,whilelimiting  
power to less than the amount programmed at CLPROG.  
In some cases the battery charger may be programmed  
(withthePROGpin)todeliverthemaximumsafecharging  
current without regard to the USB specifications. If there  
is insufficient current available to charge the battery at the  
programmed rate, the PowerPath regulator will reduce  
charge current until the system load on V  
is satisfied  
OUT  
and the V  
current limit is satisfied. Programming the  
BUS  
battery charger for more current than is available will not  
cause the average input current limit to be violated. It will  
merelyallowthebatterychargertomakeuseofallavailable  
power to charge the battery as quickly as possible, and  
with minimal power dissipation within the battery charger.  
Recommended Type III compensation components for a  
3.3V output:  
Alternate NTC Thermistors and Biasing  
The LTC3556 provides temperature qualified charging if  
a grounded thermistor and a bias resistor are connected  
to NTC. By using a bias resistor whose value is equal to  
the room temperature resistance of the thermistor (R25)  
the upper and lower temperatures are pre-programmed  
to approximately 40°C and 0°C, respectively (assuming  
a Vishay “Curve 1” thermistor).  
R1: 324kΩ  
R : 105kΩ  
FB  
C1: 10pF  
R2: 15kΩ  
C2: 330pF  
R3: 121kΩ  
C3: 33pF  
The upper and lower temperature thresholds can be ad-  
justed by either a modification of the bias resistor value  
or by adding a second adjustment resistor to the circuit.  
If only the bias resistor is adjusted, then either the upper  
or the lower threshold can be modified but not both. The  
other trip point will be determined by the characteristics  
of the thermistor. Using the bias resistor in addition to an  
adjustmentresistor,boththeupperandthelowertempera-  
ture trip points can be independently programmed with  
the constraint that the difference between the upper and  
lower temperature thresholds cannot decrease. Examples  
of each technique follow.  
C
: 22µF  
OUT  
L : 2.2µH  
OUT  
NTC thermistors have temperature characteristics which  
areindicatedonresistance-temperatureconversiontables.  
TheVishay-DalethermistorNTHS0603N011-N1003F,used  
3556fa  
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For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
applicaTions inForMaTion  
in the following examples, has a nominal value of 100k  
and follows the Vishay “Curve 1” resistance-temperature  
characteristic.  
to the nonlinear behavior of the thermistor. The following  
equations can be used to easily calculate a new value for  
the bias resistor:  
rHOT  
0.536  
In the explanation below, the following notation is used.  
R25 = Value of the thermistor at 25°C  
RNOM  
RNOM  
=
R25  
R25  
rCOLD  
3.25  
R
R
= Value of thermistor at the cold trip point  
NTC|COLD  
=
= Value of thermistor at the hot trip point  
NTC|HOT  
where r  
and r  
are the resistance ratios at the de-  
r
r
= Ratio of R  
to R25  
HOT  
COLD  
COLD  
NTC|COLD  
sired hot and cold trip points. Note that these equations  
are linked. Therefore, only one of the two trip points can  
be chosen, the other is determined by the default ratios  
designed in the IC. Consider an example where a 60°C  
hot trip point is desired.  
= Ratio of R  
to R25  
HOT  
NTC|COLD  
R
=Primarythermistorbiasresistor(seeFigure7a)  
NOM  
R1 = Optional temperature range adjustment resistor  
(see Figure 7b)  
FromtheVishayCurve1R-Tcharacteristics,r  
is0.2488  
ThetrippointsfortheLTC3556’stemperaturequalification  
HOT  
at 60°C. Using the above equation, R  
should be set to  
are internally programmed at 0.349 V  
for the hot  
NOM  
BUS  
46.4k. With this value of R  
, the cold trip point is about  
NOM  
threshold and 0.765 V  
for the cold threshold.  
BUS  
16°C. Notice that the span is now 44°C rather than the  
previous 40°C. Thisisdue to the decrease intemperature  
gainofthethermistorasabsolutetemperatureincreases.  
Therefore, the hot trip point is set when:  
RNTC|HOT  
VBUS = 0.349 VBUS  
R
NOM +RNTC|HOT  
The upper and lower temperature trip points can be inde-  
pendentlyprogrammedbyusinganadditionalbiasresistor  
asshowninFigure7b. Thefollowingformulascanbeused  
and the cold trip point is set when:  
to compute the values of R  
and R1:  
NOM  
RNTC|COLD  
VBUS = 0.765 VBUS  
rCOLD rHOT  
R
NOM +RNTC|COLD  
RNOM  
=
R25  
2.714  
SolvingtheseequationsforR  
in the following:  
andR  
results  
NTC|COLD  
NTC|HOT  
R1= 0.536 RNOM rHOT R25  
For example, to set the trip points to 0°C and 45°C with  
a Vishay Curve 1 thermistor choose:  
R
= 0.536 R  
NTC|HOT  
NOM  
and  
3.266 – 0.4368  
R
= 3.25 R  
RNOM  
=
100k = 104.2k  
NTC|COLD  
NOM  
2.714  
By setting R  
equal to R25, the above equations result  
NOM  
The nearest 1% value is 105k.  
in r  
= 0.536 and r  
= 3.25. Referencing these ratios  
HOT  
COLD  
to the Vishay Resistance-Temperature Curve 1 chart gives  
a hot trip point of about 40°C and a cold trip point of about  
0°C. The difference between the hot and cold trip points  
is approximately 40°C.  
R1 = 0.536 105k – 0.4368 100k = 12.6k  
The nearest 1% value is 12.7k. The final solution is shown  
in Figure 7b and results in an upper trip point of 45°C and  
a lower trip point of 0°C.  
By using a bias resistor, R , different in value from  
NOM  
R25, the hot and cold trip points can be moved in either  
direction.Thetemperaturespanwillchangesomewhatdue  
3556fa  
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For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
applicaTions inForMaTion  
LTC3556  
NTC BLOCK  
V
V
BUS  
BUS  
0.765 • V  
BUS  
R
NOM  
+
100k  
TOO_COLD  
TOO_HOT  
NTC  
3
R
NTC  
T
100k  
+
0.349 • V  
BUS  
+
NTC_ENABLE  
0.017V • V  
BUS  
3556 F07a  
(7a)  
V
V
BUS  
LTC3556  
NTC BLOCK  
BUS  
0.765 • V  
BUS  
R
NOM  
+
105k  
TOO_COLD  
TOO_HOT  
NTC  
3
R1  
12.7k  
+
0.349 • V  
BUS  
R
NTC  
T
100k  
+
NTC_ENABLE  
0.017 • V  
BUS  
3556 F07b  
(7b)  
Figure 7. NTC Circuits  
3556fa  
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LTC3556  
applicaTions inForMaTion  
USB Inrush Limiting  
Printed Circuit Board Layout Considerations  
When a USB cable is plugged into a portable product,  
the inductance of the cable and the high-Q ceramic input  
capacitor form an L-C resonant circuit. If the cable does  
not have adequate mutual coupling or if there is not much  
impedance in the cable, it is possible for the voltage at  
the input of the product to reach as high as twice the USB  
voltage (~10V) before it settles out. To prevent excessive  
voltagefromdamagingtheLTC3556duringahotinsertion,  
it is best to have a low voltage coefficient capacitor at the  
In order to be able to deliver maximum current under  
all conditions, it is critical that the Exposed Pad on the  
backside of the LTC3556 package be soldered to the PC  
board ground. Failure to make thermal contact between  
the Exposed Pad on the backside of the package and the  
copper board will result in higher thermal resistances.  
Furthermore, duetoitshighfrequencyswitchingcircuitry,  
it is imperative that the input capacitors, inductors and  
output capacitors be as close to the LTC3556 as possible  
and that there be an unbroken ground plane under the  
LTC3556 and all of its external high frequency compo-  
V
pin to the LTC3556. This is achievable by selecting  
BUS  
an MLCC capacitor that has a higher voltage rating than  
that required for the application. For example, a 16V, X5R,  
10µFcapacitorina1206casewouldbeamoreconservative  
choice than a 6.3V, X5R, 10µF capacitor in a smaller 0805  
case. The size of the input overshoot will be determined  
nents. High frequency currents such as the V , V  
,
BUS IN1  
V
and V currents on the LTC3556, tend to find their  
IN2  
IN3  
way along the ground plane in a myriad of paths ranging  
from directly back to a mirror path beneath the incident  
path on the top of the board. If there are slits or cuts  
in the ground plane due to other traces on that layer,  
the current will be forced to go around the slits. If high  
frequency currents are not allowed to flow back through  
their natural least-area path, excessive voltage will build  
up and radiated emissions will occur. There should be a  
group of vias under the grounded backside of the pack-  
age leading directly down to an internal ground plane. To  
minimize parasitic inductance, the ground plane should  
be on the second layer of the PC board.  
by the “Q” of the resonant tank circuit formed by C and  
IN  
the input lead inductance. It is recommended to measure  
the input ringing with the selected components to verify  
compliance with the Absolute Maximum specifications.  
Alternatively, the following soft connect circuit (Figure 8)  
can be employed. In this circuit, capacitor C1 holds MP1  
off when the cable is first connected. Eventually C1 begins  
to charge up to the USB input voltage applying increasing  
gate support to MP1. The long time constant of R1 and  
C1 prevent the current from building up in the cable too  
fast thus dampening out any resonant overshoot.  
MP1  
Si2333  
V
BUS  
C1  
100nF  
5V USB  
INPUT  
C2  
10µF  
LTC3556  
USB CABLE  
R1  
40k  
GND  
3556 F08  
Figure 8. USB Soft Connect Circuit  
3556fa  
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LTC3556  
applicaTions inForMaTion  
The GATE pin for the external ideal diode controller has  
extremely limited drive current. Care must be taken to  
minimize leakage to adjacent PC board traces. 100nA of  
leakage from this pin will introduce an offset to the 15mV  
ideal diode of approximately 10mV. To minimize leakage,  
the trace can be guarded on the PC board by surrounding  
lead length, however, may add enough series inductance  
to require a bypass capacitor of at least 1µF from BAT to  
GND. Furthermore, when the battery is disconnected, a  
100µF OSCON B6 capacitor in series with a 0Ω jumper  
from BAT to GND is required to keep ripple voltage low.  
High value, low ESR multilayer ceramic chip capacitors  
reduce the constant-voltage loop phase margin, possibly  
resulting in instability. Ceramic capacitors up to 22µF  
may be used in parallel with a battery, but larger ceramics  
should bedecoupled with 0.2Ωto 1Ωofseries resistance.  
it with V  
connected metal, which should generally be  
OUT  
less that one volt higher than GATE.  
When laying out the printed circuit board, the following  
checklist should be used to ensure proper operation of  
the LTC3556.  
In constant-current mode, the PROG pin is in the feed-  
back loop rather than the battery voltage. Because of the  
additional pole created by any PROG pin capacitance,  
capacitance on this pin must be kept to a minimum. With  
no additional capacitance on the PROG pin, the battery  
charger is stable with program resistor values as high  
as 25k. However, additional capacitance on this node  
reduces the maximum allowed program resistor. The pole  
frequency at the PROG pin should be kept above 100kHz.  
Therefore, if the PROG pin has a parasitic capacitance,  
1. Are the capacitors at V , V , V and V as close  
BUS IN1 IN2  
IN3  
as possible to the LTC3556? These capacitors provide  
the AC current to the internal power MOSFETs and their  
drivers. Minimizing inductance from these capacitors  
to the LTC3556 is a top priority.  
2. Are C and L1 closely connected? The (–) plate of C  
OUT  
OUT  
IN  
returns current to the GND plane, and then back to C .  
3. Keep sensitive components away from the SW pins.  
C
, the following equation should be used to calculate  
PROG  
Battery Charger Stability Considerations  
the maximum resistance value for R  
:
PROG  
The LTC3556’s battery charger contains both a constant-  
voltageandaconstant-currentcontrolloop.Theconstant-  
voltage loop is stable without any compensation when a  
battery is connected with low impedance leads. Excessive  
1
RPROG  
2π 100kHz CPROG  
3556 F09  
Figure 9. Higher Frequency Ground Currents Follow Their Incident Path.  
Slices in the Ground Plane Cause High Voltage and Increased Emissions  
3556fa  
34  
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
Typical applicaTion  
Watchdog Microcontroller Operation  
L1  
3.3µH  
25  
26  
USB/WALL  
4.5V TO 5.5V  
TO OTHER  
LOADS  
SW  
OUT  
V
BUS  
24  
22  
23  
C1  
V
100k  
10µF  
3
20  
2
510Ω  
C2  
22µF  
GATE  
BAT  
NTC  
MP1  
PROG  
CLPROG  
T
8.25Ω  
0.1µF  
+
Li-Ion  
2k  
RED  
29  
GND  
3.01k  
2.5V TO  
3.3V  
1A  
21  
12  
CHRG  
V
HDD  
OUT3  
10pF  
121k  
33pF  
330pF  
15k  
8
324k  
1
V
C3  
LDO3V3  
22µF  
7
10  
FB3  
1µF  
DV  
CC  
14  
2.2µF  
SWCD3  
105k  
L2  
2.2µH  
9
SWAB3  
11  
PUSHBUTTON  
MICROCONTROLLER  
V
IN3  
L3  
4.7µH  
1.8V  
400mA  
LTC3555  
19  
17  
SW2  
FB2  
I/O  
1.02M  
806k  
10pF  
2
13,16  
2
I C (SCL, SDA)  
1µF  
10µF  
MICROPROCESSOR  
C1: MURATA GRM21BR61A106KE19  
C2: TDK C2012X5R0J226M  
L1: COILCRAFT LPS4018-332LM  
L2: COILCRAFT LPS4018-222MLC  
L3, L4: TOKO 1098AS-4R7M  
MP1: SILICONIX Si2333  
18  
4
V
0.8V TO  
1.6V  
IN2  
L4  
4.7µH  
400mA  
SW1  
FB1  
CORE  
POR  
806k  
806k  
28  
27  
10pF  
ENALL  
SEQ  
6
1µF  
10k  
10µF  
5
V
IN1  
15  
3556 TA02  
PGOODALL  
3556fa  
35  
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
package DescripTion  
Please refer to http://www.linear.com/product/LTC3556#packaging for the most recent package drawings.  
UFD Package  
28-Lead Plastic QFN (4mm × 5mm)  
(Reference LTC DWG # 05-08-1712 Rev B)  
0.70 0.05  
4.50 0.05  
3.ꢀ0 0.05  
2.50 REF  
2.65 0.05  
3.65 0.05  
PACKAGE OUTLINE  
0.25 0.05  
0.50 BSC  
3.50 REF  
4.ꢀ0 0.05  
5.50 0.05  
RECOMMENDED SOLDER PAD PITCH AND DIMENSIONS  
APPLY SOLDER MASK TO AREAS THAT ARE NOT SOLDERED  
PIN ꢀ NOTCH  
R = 0.20 OR 0.35  
× 45° CHAMFER  
2.50 REF  
R = 0.ꢀꢀ5  
TYP  
R = 0.05  
TYP  
0.75 0.05  
4.00 0.ꢀ0  
(2 SIDES)  
27  
28  
0.40 0.ꢀ0  
PIN ꢀ  
TOP MARK  
(NOTE 6)  
2
5.00 0.ꢀ0  
(2 SIDES)  
3.50 REF  
3.65 0.ꢀ0  
2.65 0.ꢀ0  
(UFD28) QFN 0506 REV B  
0.25 0.05  
0.50 BSC  
0.200 REF  
0.00 – 0.05  
BOTTOM VIEW—EXPOSED PAD  
NOTE:  
ꢀ. DRAWING PROPOSED TO BE MADE A JEDEC PACKAGE OUTLINE MO-220 VARIATION (WXXX-X).  
2. DRAWING NOT TO SCALE  
3. ALL DIMENSIONS ARE IN MILLIMETERS  
4. DIMENSIONS OF EXPOSED PAD ON BOTTOM OF PACKAGE DO NOT INCLUDE  
MOLD FLASH. MOLD FLASH, IF PRESENT, SHALL NOT EXCEED 0.ꢀ5mm ON ANY SIDE  
5. EXPOSED PAD SHALL BE SOLDER PLATED  
6. SHADED AREA IS ONLY A REFERENCE FOR PIN ꢀ LOCATION  
ON THE TOP AND BOTTOM OF PACKAGE  
3556fa  
36  
For more information www.linear.com/LTC3556  
LTC3556  
revision hisTory  
REV  
DATE  
DESCRIPTION  
PAGE NUMBER  
A
10/16 Revised ENALL conditions in Absolute Maximum Ratings  
2
3556fa  
Information furnished by Linear Technology Corporation is believed to be accurate and reliable.  
However, no responsibility is assumed for its use. Linear Technology Corporation makes no representa-  
tion that the interconnection of its circuits as described herein will not infringe on existing patent rights.  
37  
LTC3556  
Typical applicaTion  
Pushbutton Start with Automatic Sequencing, Reverse Input Voltage Protection and 10 Second Push and Hold Hard Shutdown  
MP1  
25  
12  
8
USB  
CONNECTOR  
V
MEMORY  
V
OUT3  
BUS  
10µF  
V
C3  
7
14  
FB3  
SWCD3  
10  
DV  
CC  
9
15  
0.1µF  
SWAB3  
PGOODALL  
1
CORE  
LDO3V3  
4
6
1µF  
SW1  
4.7k  
1k  
LTC3556  
FB1  
1M  
28  
27  
MN1  
ENALL  
SEQ  
2
SDA  
SCL  
2
13,16  
19  
I C (SCL, SDA)  
I/O  
10µF  
10µF  
SW2  
FB2  
10k  
29  
17  
GND  
2
SEND I C CODE: “0x12FF1C”  
ONCE POWER IS DETECTED  
MN1: 2N7002  
MP1: SILICONIX Si2333DS  
3556 TA03  
relaTeD parTs  
PART NUMBER DESCRIPTION  
COMMENTS  
LTC3455  
LTC3456  
LTC3552  
Dual DC/DC Converter with USB Power  
Manager and Li-Ion Battery Charger  
Seamless Transition Between Input Power Sources: Li-Ion Battery, USB and 5V Wall  
Adapter. Two High Efficiency DC/DC Converters: Up to 96%. Full Featured Li-Ion Battery  
Charger with Accurate USB Current Limiting (500mA/100mA). Pin Selectable Burst Mode  
Operation. Hot Swap Output for SDIO and Memory Cards. 24-Lead 4mm × 4mm QFN  
Package  
2-Cell, Multi-Output DC/DC Converter  
with USB Power Manager  
Seamless Transition Between 2-Cell Battery, USB and AC Wall Adapter Input Power  
Sources. Main Output: Fixed 3.3V Output, Core Output: Adjustable from 0.8V to V  
.
BATT(MIN)  
Hot Swap Output for Memory Cards. Power Supply Sequencing: Main and Hot Swap  
Accurate USB Current Limiting. High Frequency Operation: 1MHz. High Efficiency: Up to  
92%. 24-Lead 4mm × 4mm QFN Package  
Standalone Linear Li-Ion Battery  
Charger with Adjustable Output Dual  
Synchronous Buck Converter  
Synchronous Buck Converter, Efficiency: >90%, Adjustable Outputs at 800mA and 400mA,  
Charge Current Programmable up to 950mA, USB Compatible, 16-Lead 5mm × 3mm DFN  
Package  
LTC3555/  
LTC3555-1  
High Efficiency USB Power Manager Plus Maximizes Available Power from USB Port, Bat-Track, “Instant On” Operation, 1.5A Max  
Triple Step-Down DC/DC  
Charge Current, 180mΩ Ideal Diode with <50mΩ Option, 3.3V/25mA Always-On LDO,  
Three Synchronous Buck Regulators (400mA/400mA/1A), 4mm × 5mm QFN28 Package  
LTC3557/  
LTC3557-1  
Linear USB Power Manager with Li-Ion/  
Complete Multifunction ASSP: Linear Power Manager and Three Buck Regulators  
Polymer Charger and Triple Synchronous Charge Current Programmable up to 1.5A from Wall Adapter Input, Thermal Regulation,  
Buck Converter  
Synchronous Buck Efficiency: >95%, ADJ Outputs: 0.8V to 3.6V at 400mA/400mA/600mA  
Bat-Track Adaptive Output Control, 200mΩ Ideal Diode, 4mm × 4mm QFN28 Package  
LTC4085  
Linear USB Power Manager with Ideal  
Diode Controller and Li-Ion Charger  
Charges Single Cell Li-Ion Batteries Directly from a USB Port, Thermal Regulation, 200mΩ  
Ideal Diode with <50mΩ option, 4mm × 3mm DFN14 Package  
LTC4088/  
LTC4088-1  
High Efficiency USB Power Manager and Maximizes Available Power from USB Port, Bat-Track, “Instant On” Operation, 1.5A Max  
Battery Charger  
Charge Current, 180mΩ Ideal Diode with <50mΩ Option, 3.3V/25mA Always-On LDO,  
4mm × 3mm DFN14 Package  
3556fa  
LT 1016 REV A • PRINTED IN USA  
LinearTechnology Corporation  
1630 McCarthy Blvd., Milpitas, CA 95035-7417  
38  
LINEAR TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION 2008  
(408)432-1900 FAX: (408) 434-0507 www.linear.com/LTC3556  

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