TPS54140QDRCRQ1 [TI]

1.5-A 42-V STEP-DOWN SWIFT™ DC/DC CONVERTER WITH Eco-mode™ CONTROL; 1.5 -A 42 -V降压SWIFTâ ?? ¢具有Eco- modeâ DC / DC转换器?? ¢控制
TPS54140QDRCRQ1
型号: TPS54140QDRCRQ1
厂家: TEXAS INSTRUMENTS    TEXAS INSTRUMENTS
描述:

1.5-A 42-V STEP-DOWN SWIFT™ DC/DC CONVERTER WITH Eco-mode™ CONTROL
1.5 -A 42 -V降压SWIFTâ ?? ¢具有Eco- modeâ DC / DC转换器?? ¢控制

转换器
文件: 总52页 (文件大小:1887K)
中文:  中文翻译
下载:  下载PDF数据表文档文件
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
1.5-A 42-V STEP-DOWN SWIFT™ DC/DC CONVERTER  
WITH Eco-mode™ CONTROL  
Check for Samples: TPS54140-Q1  
1
FEATURES  
Adjustable Undervoltage Lockout Voltage and  
Hysteresis  
2
Qualified for Automotive Applications  
3.5-V to 42-V Input Voltage Range  
200-mHigh-Side MOSFET  
0.8-V Internal Voltage Reference  
Supported by SwitcherPro™ Software Tool  
(http://focus.ti.com/docs/toolsw/folders/print/s  
witcherpro.html)  
High Efficiency at Light Loads With Pulse-  
Skipping Eco-mode™ Control Scheme  
For SWIFT™ Documentation, See the TI  
Website at http://www.ti.com/swift  
116-μA Operating Quiescent Current  
1.3-μA Shutdown Current  
100-kHz to 2.5-MHz Switching Frequency  
Synchronizes to External Clock  
Adjustable Slow Start/Sequencing  
APPLICATIONS  
12-V and 24-V Industrial and Commercial Low  
Power Systems  
Undervoltage and Overvoltage Power-good  
Output  
Aftermarket Automotive Accessories: Video,  
GPS, Entertainment  
DESCRIPTION  
The TPS54140-Q1 device is a 42-V 1.5-A step-down regulator with an integrated high-side MOSFET. Current-  
mode control provides simple external compensation and flexible component selection. A low-ripple pulse-skip  
mode reduces the no load, input supply current to 116 μA. Using the enable pin, shutdown supply current is  
reduced to 1.3 μA.  
Undervoltage lockout is internally set at 2.5 V, but can be increased using the enable pin. The output voltage  
startup ramp is controlled by the slow start pin that can also be configured for sequencing or tracking. An open-  
drain power good signal indicates the output is within 92% to 109% of its nominal voltage.  
A wide switching frequency range allows efficiency and external component size to be optimized. Frequency fold  
back and thermal shutdown protects the part during an overload condition.  
The TPS54140-Q1 is available in a 10-pin thermally enhanced MSOP PowerPAD™ package (DGQ) and a 10-  
pin SON package (DRC).  
SIMPLIFIED SCHEMATIC  
EFFICIENCY  
vs  
LOAD CURRENT  
VIN  
PWRGD  
TPS54140  
90  
85  
80  
75  
70  
65  
60  
55  
50  
EN  
BOOT  
PH  
SS/TR  
RT/CLK  
COMP  
VI = 12 V,  
VO = 3.3 V,  
fsw = 1200 kHz  
VSENSE  
GND  
0
0.25  
0.50 0.75  
1
1.25 1.50  
1.75  
2
Load Current - A  
1
Please be aware that an important notice concerning availability, standard warranty, and use in critical applications of  
Texas Instruments semiconductor products and disclaimers thereto appears at the end of this data sheet.  
Eco-mode, SwitcherPro, SWIFT, PowerPAD are trademarks of Texas Instruments.  
2
PRODUCTION DATA information is current as of publication date.  
Products conform to specifications per the terms of the Texas  
Instruments standard warranty. Production processing does not  
necessarily include testing of all parameters.  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
This integrated circuit can be damaged by ESD. Texas Instruments recommends that all integrated circuits be handled with  
appropriate precautions. Failure to observe proper handling and installation procedures can cause damage.  
ESD damage can range from subtle performance degradation to complete device failure. Precision integrated circuits may be more  
susceptible to damage because very small parametric changes could cause the device not to meet its published specifications.  
ORDERING INFORMATION(1)(2)  
TJ  
PACKAGE  
MSOP – DGQ  
SON – DRC  
ORDERABLE PART NUMBER  
TOP-SIDE MARKING  
5414Q  
Reel of 2500  
Reel of 3000  
TPS54140QDGQRQ1  
–40°C to 150°C  
TPS54140QDRCRQ1  
5414Q  
(1) For the most current package and ordering information, see the Package Option Addendum at the end of this document, or see the TI  
web site at www.ti.com.  
(2) Package drawings, thermal data, and symbolization are available at www.ti.com/packaging.  
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS(1)  
over operating temperature range (unless otherwise noted)  
VIN  
EN(2)  
–0.3 V to 47 V  
–0.3 V to 5 V  
55 V  
BOOT  
VSENSE  
COMP  
–0.3 V to 3 V  
–0.3 V to 3 V  
–0.3 V to 6 V  
–0.3 V to 3 V  
–0.3 V to 3.6 V  
8 V  
VIN  
Input voltage  
PWRGD  
SS/TR  
RT/CLK  
PH to BOOT  
–0.6 V to 47 V  
–1 V to 47 V  
–2 V to 47 V  
-0.85 V  
VOUT  
Output voltage  
Differential voltage  
Source current  
200 ns  
PH  
30 ns  
Maximum dc voltage, TJ = -40°C  
VDIFF  
PAD to GND  
EN  
±200 mV  
100 μA  
BOOT  
VSENSE  
PH  
100 mA  
ISOURCE  
10 μA  
Current Limit  
100 μA  
RT/CLK  
VIN  
Current Limit  
100 μA  
COMP  
PWRGD  
SS/TR  
ISINK  
Sink current  
10 mA  
200 μA  
Human-Body Model (HBM) QSS 009-105 (JESD22-A114A)  
500 V  
ESD  
Electrostatic discharge protection Machine Model (MM) QSS 009-105 (JESD22-A115A)  
Charged-Device Model (CDM) QSS 009-147 (JESD22-C101B.01)  
Operating junction temperature range  
50 V  
1000 V  
TJ  
–40°C to 150°C  
–65°C to 150°C  
TSTG  
Storage temperature range  
(1) Stresses beyond those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings  
only, and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond those indicated is not implied. Exposure beyond  
absolute maximum rated conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability.  
(2) See Enable and Adjusting Undervoltage Lockout for details.  
2
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
 
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
THERMAL INFORMATION  
TPS54140-Q1  
THERMAL METRIC(1)(2)  
DGQ  
10 PINS  
62.5  
57  
DRC  
10 PINS  
56.5  
61.5  
52.1  
20.6  
0.9  
UNITS  
θJA  
Junction-to-ambient thermal resistance (standard board)  
Junction-to-ambient thermal resistance (custom board)(3)  
Junction-to-case (top) thermal resistance  
θJA  
θJCtop  
θJB  
83  
Junction-to-board thermal resistance  
28  
°C/W  
ψJT  
Junction-to-top characterization parameter  
Junction-to-board characterization parameter  
Junction-to-case (bottom) thermal resistance  
1.7  
ψJB  
20.1  
21  
20.8  
5.2  
θJCbot  
(1) For more information about traditional and new thermal metrics, see the IC Package Thermal Metrics application report, SPRA953.  
(2) Power rating at a specific ambient temperature TA should be determined with a junction temperature of 150°C. This is the point where  
distortion starts to substantially increase. See power dissipation estimate in application section of this data sheet for more information.  
(3) Test boards conditions:  
(a) 3 inches x 3 inches, 2 layers, thickness: 0.062 inch  
(b) 2 oz. copper traces located on the top of the PCB  
(c) 2 oz. copper ground plane, bottom layer  
(d) 6 thermal vias (13mil) located under the device package  
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS  
TJ = –40°C to 150°C, VIN = 3.5 V to 42 V (unless otherwise noted)  
PARAMETER  
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (VIN PIN)  
Operating input voltage  
TEST CONDITIONS  
MIN  
TYP  
MAX UNIT  
3.5  
42  
V
V
Internal undervoltage lockout  
threshold  
No voltage hysteresis, rising and falling  
2.5  
EN = 0 V, 25°C, 3.5 V VIN 42 V  
EN = 0 V, 125°C, 3.5 V VIN 42 V  
1.3  
1.9  
4
Shutdown supply current  
6.5  
μA  
Operating : nonswitching supply  
current  
VSENSE = 0.83 V, VIN = 12 V, 25°C  
116  
136  
ENABLE AND UVLO (EN PIN)  
Enable threshold voltage  
No voltage hysteresis, rising and falling, 25°C  
Enable threshold +50 mV  
0.9  
1.25  
–3.8  
–0.9  
–2.9  
1.55  
V
Input current  
μA  
μA  
Enable threshold –50 mV  
Hysteresis current  
VOLTAGE REFERENCE  
TJ = 25°C  
0.792  
0.784  
0.8  
0.8  
0.808  
0.816  
Voltage reference  
HIGH-SIDE MOSFET  
On-resistance  
V
VIN = 3.5 V, BOOT-PH = 3 V  
VIN = 12 V, BOOT-PH = 6 V  
300  
200  
mΩ  
410  
ERROR AMPLIFIER  
Input current  
50  
97  
nA  
Error amplifier transconductance (gm) –2 μA < ICOMP < 2 μA, VCOMP = 1 V  
μMhos  
–2 μA < ICOMP < 2 μA, VCOMP = 1 V,  
VVSENSE = 0.4 V  
Error amplifier transconductance (gm)  
during slow start  
26  
μMhos  
Error amplifier dc gain  
VVSENSE = 0.8 V  
10 000  
2700  
±7  
V/V  
kHz  
μA  
Error amplifier bandwidth  
Error amplifier source/sink  
V(COMP) = 1 V, 100 mV overdrive  
COMP to switch current  
transconductance  
6
A/V  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
3
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)  
TJ = –40°C to 150°C, VIN = 3.5 V to 42 V (unless otherwise noted)  
PARAMETER  
TEST CONDITIONS  
MIN  
TYP  
2.7  
MAX UNIT  
CURRENT LIMIT  
Current limit threshold  
THERMAL SHUTDOWN  
Thermal shutdown  
VIN = 12 V, TJ = 25°C  
1.8  
A
182  
°C  
TIMING RESISTOR AND EXTERNAL CLOCK (RT/CLK PIN)  
Switching frequency range using RT  
mode  
VIN = 12 V  
100  
450  
300  
2500  
720  
kHz  
kHz  
kHz  
fSW  
Switching frequency  
VIN = 12 V, RT = 200 kΩ  
581  
Switching frequency range using  
CLK mode  
VIN = 12 V  
2200  
Minimum CLK pulse width  
RT/CLK high threshold  
RT/CLK low threshold  
40  
1.9  
0.7  
ns  
V
VIN = 12 V  
VIN = 12 V  
2.2  
0.45  
V
RT/CLK falling edge to PH rising  
edge delay  
Measured at 500 kHz with RT resistor in series  
Measured at 500 kHz  
60  
ns  
PLL lock in time  
100  
μs  
SLOW START AND TRACKING (SS/TR)  
Charge current  
VSS/TR = 0.4 V  
2
45  
μA  
mV  
V
SS/TR-to-VSENSE matching  
SS/TR-to-reference crossover  
SS/TR discharge current (overload)  
SS/TR discharge voltage  
VSS/TR = 0.4 V  
98% nominal  
1
VSENSE = 0 V, V(SS/TR) = 0.4 V  
VSENSE = 0 V  
112  
54  
μA  
mV  
POWER-GOOD (PWRGD PIN)  
VSENSE falling (Fault)  
92  
94  
VSENSE rising (Good)  
VVSENSE  
VSENSE threshold  
VSENSE rising (Fault)  
109  
107  
2
%
VSENSE falling (Good)  
Hysteresis  
VSENSE falling  
Output high leakage  
On resistance  
VSENSE = VREF, V(PWRGD) = 5.5 V, 25°C  
I(PWRGD) = 3 mA, VSENSE < 0.79 V  
V(PWRGD) < 0.5 V, II(PWRGD) = 100 μA  
10  
nA  
50  
Minimum VIN for defined output  
0.95  
1.5  
V
4
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
 
 
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
DEVICE INFORMATION  
PIN FUNCTIONS  
PIN  
I/O  
DESCRIPTION  
NAME  
NO.  
A bootstrap capacitor is required between BOOT and PH. If the voltage on this capacitor is below the  
minimum required by the output device, the output is forced to switch off until the capacitor is refreshed.  
BOOT  
1
O
O
I
Error amplifier output, and input to the output switch current comparator. Connect frequency compensation  
components to this pin.  
COMP  
EN  
8
3
Enable pin, internal pullup current source. Pull below 1.2 V to disable. Float to enable. Adjust the input  
undervoltage lockout with two resistors.  
GND  
PH  
9
I
Ground  
10  
The source of the internal high-side power MOSFET.  
An open drain output, asserts low if output voltage is low due to thermal shutdown, dropout, over-voltage or  
EN shut down.  
PWRGD  
RT/CLK  
SS/TR  
6
5
4
O
Resistor Timing and External Clock. An internal amplifier holds this pin at a fixed voltage when using an  
external resistor to ground to set the switching frequency. If the pin is pulled above the PLL upper threshold,  
a mode change occurs and the pin becomes a synchronization input. The internal amplifier is disabled and  
the pin is a high impedance clock input to the internal PLL. If clocking edges stop, the internal amplifier is re-  
enabled and the mode returns to a resistor set function.  
I
Slow-start and Tracking. An external capacitor connected to this pin sets the output rise time. Since the  
voltage on this pin overrides the internal reference, it can be used for tracking and sequencing.  
I
VIN  
2
7
I
I
Input supply voltage, 3.5 V to 42 V.  
VSENSE  
Thermal Pad  
Inverting node of the transconductance ( gm) error amplifier.  
GND pin must be electrically connected to the exposed pad on the printed circuit board for proper operation.  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
5
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM  
PWRGD  
6
EN  
3
VIN  
2
Shutdown  
UO  
Thermal  
Shutdown  
UVLO  
Enable  
Comparator  
Logic  
Shutdown  
Shutdown  
Logic  
OV  
Enable  
Threshold  
Boot  
Charge  
Voltage  
Reference  
Minimum  
Clamp  
Pulse  
Boot  
UVLO  
Current  
Sense  
ERROR  
AMPLIFIER  
Skip  
PWM  
Comparator  
VSENSE  
SS/TR  
7
4
BOOT  
1
Logic  
And  
PWM Latch  
Shutdown  
Slope  
Compensation  
PH  
10  
11  
8
COMP  
POWERPAD  
Frequency  
Shift  
Maximum  
Clamp  
Overload  
Recovery  
GND  
9
Oscillator  
with PLL  
TPS54140 Block Diagram  
5
RT/CLK  
6
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS  
ON RESISTANCE vs JUNCTION TEMPERATURE  
VOLTAGE REFERENCE vs JUNCTION TEMPERATURE  
0.816  
500  
375  
250  
VI = 12 V  
VI = 12 V  
0.808  
0.800  
BOOT-PH = 3 V  
BOOT-PH = 6 V  
0.792  
0.784  
125  
0
-50  
-50  
-25  
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
-25  
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
Figure 1.  
Figure 2.  
SWITCH CURRENT LIMIT vs JUNCTION TEMPERATURE  
3.5  
SWITCHING FREQUENCY vs JUNCTION TEMPERATURE  
610  
VI = 12 V,  
VI = 12 V  
RT = 200 kW  
600  
3
590  
580  
570  
2.5  
560  
550  
2
-50  
-25  
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
-50  
-25  
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
Figure 3.  
Figure 4.  
SWITCHING FREQUENCY vs RT/CLK RESISTANCE HIGH  
SWITCHING FREQUENCY vs RT/CLK RESISTANCE LOW  
FREQUENCY RANGE  
FREQUENCY RANGE  
2500  
1000  
VI = 12 V,  
TJ = 25°C  
VI = 12 V,  
TJ = 25°C  
800  
2000  
1500  
1000  
600  
400  
200  
0
500  
0
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
175  
200  
100  
200  
300  
400  
500  
600  
700  
800  
900  
1000  
RT/CLK - Resistance - kW  
RT/CLK - Resistance - kW  
Figure 5.  
Figure 6.  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
7
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)  
EA TRANSCONDUCTANCE DURING SLOW START vs  
JUNCTION TEMPERATURE  
EA TRANSCONDUCTANCE vs JUNCTION TEMPERATURE  
150  
40  
VI = 12 V  
VI = 12 V  
130  
30  
110  
90  
20  
70  
50  
10  
-50  
-50  
-25  
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
-25  
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
Figure 7.  
Figure 8.  
EN PIN VOLTAGE vs JUNCTION TEMPERATURE  
EN PIN CURRENT vs JUNCTION TEMPERATURE  
1.40  
-3.25  
VI = 12 V,  
VI = 12 V  
VI(EN) = Threshold +50 mV  
-3.5  
1.30  
1.20  
1.10  
-3.75  
-4  
-4.25  
75  
150  
-50  
-25  
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
-25  
0
25  
50  
100  
-50  
125  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
Figure 9.  
Figure 10.  
EN PIN CURRENT vs JUNCTION TEMPERATURE  
SS/TR CHARGE CURRENT vs JUNCTION TEMPERATURE  
-1  
-0.8  
VI = 12 V,  
VI = 12 V  
VI(EN) = Threshold -50 mV  
-0.85  
-1.5  
-0.9  
-2  
-0.95  
-2.5  
-1  
-50  
-3  
-50  
150  
25  
125  
0
50  
75  
100  
-25  
-25  
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
Figure 11.  
Figure 12.  
8
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)  
SS/TR DISCHARGE CURRENT vs JUNCTION  
TEMPERATURE  
SWITCHING FREQUENCY vs VSENSE  
120  
115  
100  
80  
60  
40  
20  
0
VI = 12 V  
VI = 12 V,  
TJ = 25°C  
110  
105  
100  
-50  
-25  
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
0
0.2  
0.4  
VSENSE - V  
0.6  
0.8  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
Figure 13.  
Figure 14.  
SHUTDOWN SUPPLY CURRENT vs JUNCTION  
TEMPERATURE  
SHUTDOWN SUPPLY CURRENT vs INPUT VOLTAGE (Vin)  
2
2
VI = 12 V  
TJ = 25°C  
1.5  
1.5  
1
1
0.5  
0.5  
0
-50  
0
-25  
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
0
10  
20  
30  
40  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
VI - Input Voltage - V  
Figure 15.  
Figure 16.  
VIN SUPPLY CURRENT vs JUNCTION TEMPERATURE  
VIN SUPPLY CURRENT vs INPUT VOLTAGE  
140  
140  
TJ = 25oC,  
VI = 12 V,  
VI(VSENSE) = 0.83 V  
VI(VSENSE) = 0.83 V  
130  
120  
130  
120  
110  
100  
90  
110  
100  
90  
0
20  
40  
-50  
-25  
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
VI - Input Voltage - V  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
Figure 17.  
Figure 18.  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
9
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
TYPICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued)  
PWRGD ON RESISTANCE vs JUNCTION TEMPERATURE  
100  
PWRGD THRESHOLD vs JUNCTION TEMPERATURE  
115  
VI = 12 V  
VI = 12 V  
VSENSE Rising  
110  
105  
80  
VSENSE Falling  
60  
40  
100  
95  
VSENSE Rising  
20  
0
VSENSE Falling  
90  
85  
-50  
-25  
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
-50  
50  
0
25  
75  
125  
-25  
100  
150  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
Figure 19.  
Figure 20.  
BOOT-PH UVLO vs JUNCTION TEMPERATURE  
INPUT VOLTAGE (UVLO) vs JUNCTION TEMPERATURE  
3
2.3  
2.75  
2.50  
2.1  
1.9  
1.7  
2.25  
2
-50  
-50  
-25  
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
-25  
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
Figure 21.  
Figure 22.  
SS/TR TO VSENSE OFFSET vs VSENSE  
SS/TR TO VSENSE OFFSET vs TEMPERATURE  
60  
55  
50  
45  
600  
V(SS/TR) = 0.2 V  
VI = 12 V  
V
T
= 12 V  
IN  
= 25°C  
500  
400  
J
300  
40  
35  
200  
100  
0
30  
-50  
-25  
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
TJ - Junction Temperature - °C  
0
200  
400  
Voltage Sense (mV)  
600  
800  
Figure 23.  
Figure 24.  
10  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
OVERVIEW  
The TPS54140-Q1 device is a 42-V, 1.5-A, step-down (buck) regulator with an integrated high side n-channel  
MOSFET. To improve performance during line and load transients the device implements a constant frequency,  
current mode control which reduces output capacitance and simplifies external frequency compensation design.  
The wide switching frequency of 100 kHz to 2500 kHz allows for efficiency and size optimization when selecting  
the output filter components. The switching frequency is adjusted using a resistor to ground on the RT/CLK pin.  
The device has an internal phase lock loop (PLL) on the RT/CLK pin that is used to synchronize the power  
switch turn on to a falling edge of an external system clock.  
The TPS54140-Q1 has a default start up voltage of approximately 2.5 V. The EN pin has an internal pull-up  
current source that can be used to adjust the input voltage undervoltage lockout (UVLO) threshold with two  
external resistors. In addition, the pull up current provides a default condition. When the EN pin is floating the  
device will operate. The operating current is 116 μA when not switching and under no load. When the device is  
disabled, the supply current is 1.3 μA.  
The integrated 200 mhigh side MOSFET allows for high efficiency power supply designs capable of delivering  
1.5 amperes of continuous current to a load. The TPS54140-Q1 reduces the external component count by  
integrating the boot recharge diode. The bias voltage for the integrated high side MOSFET is supplied by a  
capacitor on the BOOT to PH pin. The boot capacitor voltage is monitored by an UVLO circuit and will turn the  
high side MOSFET off when the boot voltage falls below a preset threshold. The TPS54140-Q1 can operate at  
high duty cycles because of the boot UVLO. The output voltage can be stepped down to as low as the 0.8 V  
reference.  
The TPS54140-Q1 has a power-good comparator (PWRGD) which asserts when the regulated output voltage is  
less than 92% or greater than 109% of the nominal output voltage. The PWRGD pin is an open drain output  
which de-asserts when the VSENSE pin voltage is between 94% and 107% of the nominal output voltage  
allowing the pin to transition high when a pull-up resistor is used.  
The TPS54140-Q1 minimizes excessive output overvoltage (OV) transients by taking advantage of the OV  
power-good comparator. When the OV comparator is activated, the high side MOSFET is turned off and masked  
from turning on until the output voltage is lower than 107%.  
The SS/TR (slow start/tracking) pin is used to minimize inrush currents or provide power supply sequencing  
during power up. A small value capacitor should be coupled to the pin to adjust the slow start time. A resistor  
divider can be coupled to the pin for critical power supply sequencing requirements. The SS/TR pin is discharged  
before the output powers up. This discharging ensures a repeatable restart after an over-temperature fault,  
UVLO fault or a disabled condition.  
The TPS54140-Q1, also, discharges the slow start capacitor during overload conditions with an overload  
recovery circuit. The overload recovery circuit will slow start the output from the fault voltage to the nominal  
regulation voltage once a fault condition is removed. A frequency foldback circuit reduces the switching  
frequency during startup and overcurrent fault conditions to help control the inductor current.  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
11  
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION  
Fixed Frequency PWM Control  
The TPS54140-Q1 uses an adjustable fixed frequency, peak current mode control. The output voltage is  
compared through external resistors on the VSENSE pin to an internal voltage reference by an error amplifier  
which drives the COMP pin. An internal oscillator initiates the turn on of the high side power switch. The error  
amplifier output is compared to the high side power switch current. When the power switch current reaches the  
COMP voltage level the power switch is turned off. The COMP pin voltage will increase and decrease as the  
output current increases and decreases. The device implements a current limit by clamping the COMP pin  
voltage to a maximum level. The Eco-Mode™ is implemented with a minimum clamp on the COMP pin.  
Slope Compensation Output Current  
The TPS54140-Q1 adds a compensating ramp to the switch current signal. This slope compensation prevents  
sub-harmonic oscillations. The available peak inductor current remains constant over the full duty cycle range.  
Pulse Skip Eco-Mode  
The TPS54140-Q1 enters the pulse skip mode when the voltage on the COMP pin is the minimum clamp value.  
The TPS54140-Q1 operates in a pulse skip mode at light load currents to improve efficiency. The peak switch  
current during the pulse skip mode will be the greater value of 50 mA or the peak inductor current that is a  
function of the minimum on time, input voltage, output voltage and inductance value. When the load current is  
low and the output voltage is within regulation the device will enter a sleep mode and draw only 116 μA input  
quiescent current. While the device is in sleep mode the output power is delivered by the output capacitor. As the  
load current decreases, the time the output capacitor supplies the load current increases and the switching  
frequency decreases reducing gate drive and switching losses. As the output voltage drops, the TPS54140-Q1  
wakes up from the sleep mode and the power switch turns on to recharge the output capacitor, see Figure 25.  
The internal PLL remains operating when in sleep mode. When operating at light load currents in the pulse skip  
mode the switching transitions occur synchronously with the external clock signal.  
VOUT  
(ac)  
I
L
PH  
Figure 25. Pulse Skip Mode Operation  
12  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
 
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (continued)  
Bootstrap Voltage (BOOT)  
The TPS54140-Q1 has an integrated boot regulator and requires a small ceramic capacitor between the BOOT  
and PH pin to provide the gate drive voltage for the high side MOSFET. The value of the ceramic capacitor  
should be 0.1 μF. A ceramic capacitor with an X7R or X5R grade dielectric is recommended because of the  
stable characteristics over temperature and voltage. To improve drop out, the TPS54140-Q1 is designed to  
operate at 100% duty cycle as long as the BOOT to PH pin voltage is greater than 2.1 V. When the voltage from  
BOOT to PH drops below 2.1 V, the high side MOSFET is turned off using an UVLO circuit allowing for the low  
side diode to conduct which allows refreshing of the BOOT capacitor. Since the supply current sourced from the  
BOOT capacitor is low, the high side MOSFET can remain on for more switching cycles than it refreshes, thus,  
the effective duty cycle limitation that is attributed to the boot regulator system is high.  
Low Dropout Operation  
The duty cycle during dropout of the regulator will be mainly determined by the voltage drops across the power  
MOSFET, inductor, low side diode and printed circuit board resistance. During operating conditions in which the  
input voltage drops, the high side MOSFET can remain on for 100% of the duty cycle to maintain output  
regulation or until the BOOT to PH voltage falls below 2.1 V.  
Once the high side is off, the low side diode will conduct and the BOOT capacitor will be recharged. During this  
boot capacitor recharge time, the inductor current will ramp down until the high side MOSFET turns on. The  
recharge time is longer than the typical high side off time of previous switching cycles, and thus, the inductor  
current ripple is larger resulting in more ripple voltage on the output. The recharge time is a function of the input  
voltage, boot capacitor value, and the impedance of the internal boot recharge diode.  
Attention needs to be taken in maximum duty cycle applications which experience extended time periods without  
a load current. When the voltage across the BOOT capacitors falls below the 2.1 V threshold in applications that  
have a difference in the input voltage and output voltage that is less than 3 V, the high side MOSFET will be  
turned off but there is not enough current in the inductor to pull the PH pin down to recharge the boot capacitor.  
The regulator will not switch because the boot capacitor is less than 2.1 V and the output capacitor will decay  
until the difference in the input voltage and output voltage is 2.1 V. At this time the boot undervoltage lockout is  
exceeded and the device will switch until the desired output voltage is reached.  
The start and stop voltages are shown in Figure 26 and Figure 27 for 3.3-V and 5-V applications. The voltages  
are plotted versus the load current. The start voltage is defined as the input voltage needed to regulate within  
1%. The stop voltage is defined as the input voltage at which the output drops by 5% or stops switching.  
4
5.6  
VO = 3.3 V  
VO = 5 V  
3.8  
3.6  
3.4  
5.4  
5.2  
Start  
Stop  
Start  
Stop  
5
3.2  
3
4.8  
4.6  
0
0.05  
0.10  
IO - Output Current - A  
0.15  
0.20  
0
0.05  
0.10  
IO - Output Current - A  
0.15  
0.20  
Figure 26. 3.3-V Start/Stop Voltage  
Figure 27. 5-V Start/Stop Voltage  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
13  
 
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (continued)  
Error Amplifier  
The TPS54140-Q1 has a transconductance amplifier for the error amplifier. The error amplifier compares the  
VSENSE voltage to the lower of the SS/TR pin voltage or the internal 0.8-V voltage reference. The  
transconductance (gm) of the error amplifier is 97 μA/V during normal operation. During the slow start operation,  
the transconductance is a fraction of the normal operating gm. When the voltage of the VSENSE pin is below 0.8  
V and the device is regulating using the SS/TR voltage, the gm is 25 μA/V.  
The frequency compensation components (capacitor, series resistor and capacitor) are added from the COMP  
pin to ground.  
Voltage Reference  
The voltage reference system produces a precise ±2% voltage reference over temperature by scaling the output  
of a temperature stable bandgap circuit.  
Adjusting the Output Voltage  
The output voltage is set with a resistor divider from the output node to the VSENSE pin. It is recommended to  
use 1% tolerance or better divider resistors. Start with a 10 kfor the R2 resistor and use the Equation 1 to  
calculate R1. To improve efficiency at very light loads consider using larger value resistors. If the values are too  
high the regulator will be more susceptible to noise and voltage errors from the VSENSE input current will be  
noticeable  
Vout - 0.8V  
æ
ö
R1 = R2 ´  
ç
÷
0.8 V  
è
ø
(1)  
Enable and Adjusting Undervoltage Lockout  
The TPS54140-Q1 is disabled when the VIN pin voltage falls below 2.5 V. If an application requires a higher  
undervoltage lockout (UVLO), use the EN pin as shown in Figure 28 to adjust the input voltage UVLO by using  
the two external resistors. Though it is not necessary to use the UVLO adjust resistors, for operation it is highly  
recommended to provide consistent power up behavior. The EN pin has an internal pull-up current source, I1, of  
0.9 μA that provides the default condition of the TPS54140-Q1 operating when the EN pin floats. Once the EN  
pin voltage exceeds 1.25 V, an additional 2.9 μA of hysteresis, IHYS, is added. This additional current facilitates  
input voltage hysteresis. Use Equation 2 to set the external hysteresis for the input voltage. Use Equation 3 to  
set the input start voltage.  
TPS54140  
VIN  
Ihys  
I1  
0.9 mA  
R1  
2.9 mA  
+
R2  
EN  
-
1.25 V  
Figure 28. Adjustable Undervoltage Lockout (UVLO)  
V
- V  
STOP  
START  
R1=  
I
HYS  
(2)  
(3)  
VENA  
R2 =  
VSTART - VENA  
+ I1  
R1  
14  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
 
 
 
 
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (continued)  
Another technique to add input voltage hysteresis is shown in Figure 29. This method may be used, if the  
resistance values are high from the previous method and a wider voltage hysteresis is needed. The resistor R3  
sources additional hysteresis current into the EN pin.  
TPS54140  
VIN  
Ihys  
R1  
R2  
I1  
0.9 mA  
2.9 mA  
+
EN  
1.25 V  
-
VOUT  
R3  
Figure 29. Adding Additional Hysteresis  
VSTART - VSTOP  
R1 =  
VOUT  
+
R3  
IHYS  
(4)  
(5)  
VENA  
R2 =  
VSTART - VENA  
VENA  
+ I1 -  
R1  
R3  
Do not place a low-impedance voltage source with greater than 5 V directly on the EN pin. Do not place a  
capacitor directly on the EN pin if VEN > 5 V when using a voltage divider to adjust the start and stop voltage.  
The node voltage, (see Figure 30) must remain equal to or less than 5.8 V. The zener diode can sink up to 100  
μA. The EN pin voltage can be greater than 5 V if the VIN voltage source has a high impedance and does not  
source more than 100 μA into the EN pin.  
V
IN  
I
A
R
UVLO1  
UVLO2  
EN  
10 kW  
Node  
3
I
C
I
B
5.8 V  
R
UDG-10065  
Figure 30. Node Voltage  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
15  
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (continued)  
Slow Start/Tracking Pin (SS/TR)  
The TPS54140-Q1 effectively uses the lower voltage of the internal voltage reference or the SS/TR pin voltage  
as the reference voltage of the power-supply and regulates the output accordingly. A capacitor on the SS/TR pin  
to ground implements a slow start time. The TPS54140-Q1 has an internal pull-up current source of 2 μA that  
charges the external slow start capacitor. The calculations for the slow start time (10% to 90%) are shown in  
Equation 6. The voltage reference (VREF) is 0.8 V and the slow start current (ISS) is 2 μA. The slow start capacitor  
should remain lower than 0.47 μF and greater than 0.47 nF.  
Tss(ms) ´ Iss(mA)  
Css(nF) =  
Vref (V) ´ 0.8  
(6)  
At power up, the TPS54140-Q1 will not start switching until the slow start pin is discharged to less than 40 mV to  
ensure a proper power up, see Figure 31.  
Also, during normal operation, the TPS54140-Q1 will stop switching and the SS/TR must be discharged to 40  
mV, when the VIN UVLO is exceeded, EN pin pulled below 1.25 V, or a thermal shutdown event occurs.  
The VSENSE voltage will follow the SS/TR pin voltage with a 45-mV offset up to 85% of the internal voltage  
reference. When the SS/TR voltage is greater than 85% on the internal reference voltage the offset increases as  
the effective system reference transitions from the SS/TR voltage to the internal voltage reference (see  
Figure 23). The SS/TR voltage will ramp linearly until clamped at 1.7 V.  
EN  
SS/TR  
V
SENSE  
VOUT  
Figure 31. Operation of SS/TR Pin When Starting  
Overload Recovery Circuit  
The TPS54140-Q1 has an overload recovery (OLR) circuit. The OLR circuit will slow start the output from the  
overload voltage to the nominal regulation voltage once the fault condition is removed. The OLR circuit will  
discharge the SS/TR pin to a voltage slightly greater than the VSENSE pin voltage using an internal pull down of  
100 μA when the error amplifier is changed to a high voltage from a fault condition. When the fault condition is  
removed, the output will slow start from the fault voltage to nominal output voltage.  
16  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (continued)  
Sequencing  
Many of the common power supply sequencing methods can be implemented using the SS/TR, EN and PWRGD  
pins. The sequential method can be implemented using an open drain output of a power-on reset pin of another  
device. The sequential method is illustrated in Figure 32 using two TPS54140-Q1 devices. The power good is  
coupled to the EN pin on the TPS54140-Q1 which will enable the second power supply once the primary supply  
reaches regulation. If needed, a 1-nF ceramic capacitor on the EN pin of the second power supply will provide a  
1-ms start up delay. Figure 33 shows the results of Figure 32.  
TPS54140  
PWRGD  
EN  
EN  
EN1  
SS/TR  
SS /TR  
PWRGD1  
PWRGD  
VOUT1  
VOUT2  
Figure 32. Schematic for Sequential Start-Up  
Sequence  
Figure 33. Sequential Startup using EN and  
PWRGD  
TPS54140  
3
4
6
EN  
EN1, EN2  
SS/TR  
PWRGD  
VOUT1  
TPS54140  
VOUT2  
3
4
6
EN  
SS/TR  
PWRGD  
Figure 34. Schematic for Ratiometric Start-Up  
Using Coupled SS/TR Pins  
Figure 35. Ratiometric Startup Using Coupled  
SS/TR Pins  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
17  
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (continued)  
Figure 34 shows a method for ratiometric start up sequence by connecting the SS/TR pins together. The  
regulator outputs will ramp up and reach regulation at the same time. When calculating the slow start time the  
pullup current source must be doubled in Equation 6. Figure 35 shows the results of Figure 34.  
TPS54140  
EN  
VOUT 1  
SS/TR  
PWRGD  
TPS54140  
VOUT 2  
EN  
R1  
SS/TR  
R2  
PWRGD  
R3  
R4  
Figure 36. Schematic for Ratiometric and Simultaneous Start-Up Sequence  
Ratiometric and simultaneous power supply sequencing can be implemented by connecting the resistor network  
of R1 and R2 shown in Figure 36 to the output of the power supply that needs to be tracked or another voltage  
reference source. Using Equation 7 and Equation 8, the tracking resistors can be calculated to initiate the VOUT2  
slightly before, after or at the same time as VOUT1. Equation 9 is the voltage difference between VOUT1 and VOUT2  
at the 95% of nominal output regulation.  
The ΔV variable is zero volts for simultaneous sequencing. To minimize the effect of the inherent SS/TR to  
VSENSE offset (VSSOFFSET) in the slow start circuit and the offset created by the pullup current source (ISS) and  
tracking resistors, the VSSOFFSET and LSS are included as variables in the equations.  
To design a ratio-metric start up in which the VOUT2 voltage is slightly greater than the VOUT1 voltage when VOUT2  
reaches regulation, use a negative number in Equation 7 through Equation 9 for ΔV. Equation 9 will result in a  
positive number for applications which the VOUT2 is slightly lower than VOUT1 when VOUT2 regulation is achieved.  
Since the SS/TR pin must be pulled below 40 mV before starting after an EN, UVLO or thermal shutdown fault,  
careful selection of the tracking resistors is needed to ensure the device will restart after a fault. Make sure the  
calculated R1 value from Equation 7 is greater than the value calculated in Equation 10 to ensure the device can  
recover from a fault.  
As the SS/TR voltage becomes more than 85% of the nominal reference voltage the VSSOFFSET becomes larger  
as the slow start circuits gradually handoff the regulation reference to the internal voltage reference. The SS/TR  
pin voltage needs to be greater than 1.3 V for a complete handoff to the internal voltage reference as shown in  
Figure 23.  
Vout2 + deltaV  
Vssoffset  
R1 =  
´
VREF  
Iss  
(7)  
VREF ´ R1  
Vout2 + deltaV - VREF  
R2 =  
(8)  
18  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
 
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (continued)  
deltaV = Vout1 - Vout2  
(9)  
R1 > 2800 ´ Vout1 - 180 ´ deltaV  
(10)  
EN  
EN  
VOUT1  
VOUT1  
VOUT2  
VOUT2  
Figure 37. Ratiometric Startup with VOUT2 Leading  
VOUT1  
Figure 38. Ratiometric Startup with VOUT1 Leading  
VOUT2  
EN  
VOUT1  
VOUT2  
Figure 39. Simultaneous Startup With Tracking Resistor  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
19  
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (continued)  
Constant Switching Frequency and Timing Resistor (RT/CLK Pin)  
The switching frequency of the TPS54140-Q1 is adjustable over a wide range from approximately 100 kHz to  
2500 kHz by placing a resistor on the RT/CLK pin. The RT/CLK pin voltage is typically 0.5 V and must have a  
resistor to ground to set the switching frequency. To determine the timing resistance for a given switching  
frequency, use Equation 11 or the curves in Figure 40 or Figure 41. To reduce the solution size one would  
typically set the switching frequency as high as possible, but tradeoffs of the supply efficiency, maximum input  
voltage and minimum controllable on time should be considered.  
The minimum controllable on time is typically 130 ns and limits the maximum operating input voltage.  
The maximum switching frequency is also limited by the frequency shift circuit. More discussion on the details of  
the maximum switching frequency is located below.  
206033  
RT (kOhm) =  
¦sw (kHz)1.0888  
(11)  
SWITCHING FREQUENCY  
SWITCHING FREQUENCY  
vs  
vs  
RT/CLK RESISTANCE HIGH FREQUENCY RANGE  
RT/CLK RESISTANCE LOW FREQUENCY RANGE  
2500  
2000  
1500  
500  
400  
VI = 12 V,  
TJ = 25°C  
VI = 12 V,  
TJ = 25°C  
300  
200  
1000  
500  
0
100  
0
200  
300 400  
500  
600 700  
800  
900 1000 1100 1200  
0
25  
50  
75  
100  
125  
150  
175  
200  
RT/CLK - Resistance - kW  
RT/CLK - Clock Resistance - kW  
Figure 40. High Range RT  
Figure 41. Low Range RT  
Overcurrent Protection and Frequency Shift  
The TPS54140-Q1 implements current mode control which uses the COMP pin voltage to turn off the high side  
MOSFET on a cycle by cycle basis. During each cycle the switch current and COMP pin voltage are compared,  
when the peak switch current intersects the COMP voltage, the high side switch is turned off. During overcurrent  
conditions that pull the output voltage low, the error amplifier will respond by driving the COMP pin high,  
increasing the switch current. The error amplifier output is clamped internally, which functions as a switch current  
limit.  
To increase the maximum operating switching frequency at high input voltages the TPS54140-Q1 implements a  
frequency shift. The switching frequency is divided by 8, 4, 2, and 1 as the voltage ramps from 0 to 0.8 volts on  
VSENSE pin.  
The device implements a digital frequency shift to enable synchronizing to an external clock during normal  
startup and fault conditions. Since the device can only divide the switching frequency by 8, there is a maximum  
input voltage limit in which the device operates and still have frequency shift protection.  
During short-circuit events (particularly with high input voltage applications), the control loop has a finite minimum  
controllable on time and the output has a very low voltage. During the switch on time, the inductor current ramps  
to the peak current limit because of the high input voltage and minimum on time. During the switch off time, the  
inductor would normally not have enough off time and output voltage for the inductor to ramp down by the ramp  
up amount. The frequency shift effectively increases the off time allowing the current to ramp down.  
20  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
 
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (continued)  
Selecting the Switching Frequency  
The switching frequency that is selected should be the lower value of the two equations, Equation 12 and  
Equation 13. Equation 12 is the maximum switching frequency limitation set by the minimum controllable on time.  
Setting the switching frequency above this value will cause the regulator to skip switching pulses.  
Equation 13 is the maximum switching frequency limit set by the frequency shift protection. To have adequate  
output short circuit protection at high input voltages, the switching frequency should be set to be less than the  
ƒSW(maxshift) frequency. In Equation 13, to calculate the maximum switching frequency one must take into account  
that the output voltage decreases from the nominal voltage to 0 volts, the ƒDIV integer increases from 1 to 8  
corresponding to the frequency shift.  
In Figure 42, the solid line illustrates a typical safe operating area regarding frequency shift and assumes the  
output voltage is zero volts, and the resistance of the inductor is 0.1 , FET on resistance of 0.2 and the diode  
voltage drop is 0.5 V. The dashed line is the maximum switching frequency to avoid pulse skipping. Enter these  
equations in a spreadsheet or other software or use the SwitcherPro design software to determine the switching  
frequency.  
æ
ç
ö
÷
IL ´Rdc + VOUT + Vd  
1
fSW maxskip  
=
´
(
)
ç
÷
tON  
VIN -IL ´RDS on + Vd  
( )  
è
ø
(12)  
(13)  
æ
ç
ö
÷
IL ´Rdc + VOUT sc + Vd  
fDIV  
( )  
fSWshift  
=
´
ç
÷
tON  
V
IN -IL ´RDS on + Vd  
( )  
è
ø
IL  
inductor current  
Rdc  
VIN  
VOUT  
inductor resistance  
maximum input voltage  
output voltage  
VOUTSC  
Vd  
RDS(ON)  
tON  
output voltage during short  
diode voltage drop  
switch on resistance  
controllable on time  
ƒDIV  
frequency divide equals (1, 2, 4, or 8)  
2500  
VO = 3.3 V  
2000  
Shift  
1500  
Skip  
1000  
500  
0
20  
30  
10  
40  
VI - Input Voltage - V  
Figure 42. Maximum Switching Frequency vs. Input Voltage  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
21  
 
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (continued)  
How to Interface to RT/CLK Pin  
The RT/CLK pin can be used to synchronize the regulator to an external system clock. To implement the  
synchronization feature connect a square wave to the RT/CLK pin through the circuit network shown in  
Figure 43. The square wave amplitude must transition lower than 0.5 V and higher than 2.2 V on the RT/CLK pin  
and have an on time greater than 40 ns and an off time greater than 40 ns. The synchronization frequency range  
is 300 kHz to 2200 kHz. The rising edge of the PH will be synchronized to the falling edge of RT/CLK pin signal.  
The external synchronization circuit should be designed in such a way that the device will have the default  
frequency set resistor connected from the RT/CLK pin to ground should the synchronization signal turn off. It is  
recommended to use a frequency set resistor connected as shown in Figure 43 through a 50-resistor to  
ground. The resistor should set the switching frequency close to the external CLK frequency. It is recommended  
to ac couple the synchronization signal through a 10-pF ceramic capacitor to RT/CLK pin and a 4-kseries  
resistor. The series resistor reduces PH jitter in heavy load applications when synchronizing to an external clock  
and in applications which transition from synchronizing to RT mode. The first time the CLK is pulled above the  
CLK threshold the device switches from the RT resistor frequency to PLL mode. The internal 0.5-V voltage  
source is removed and the CLK pin becomes high impedance as the PLL starts to lock onto the external signal.  
Since there is a PLL on the regulator the switching frequency can be higher or lower than the frequency set with  
the external resistor. The device transitions from the resistor mode to the PLL mode and then will increase or  
decrease the switching frequency until the PLL locks onto the CLK frequency within 100 microseconds.  
When the device transitions from the PLL to resistor mode the switching frequency will slow down from the CLK  
frequency to 150 kHz, then reapply the 0.5-V voltage and the resistor will then set the switching frequency. The  
switching frequency is divided by 8, 4, 2, and 1 as the voltage ramps from 0- to 0.8-volts on VSENSE pin. The  
device implements a digital frequency shift to enable synchronizing to an external clock during normal startup  
and fault conditions. Figure 44, Figure 45 and Figure 46 show the device synchronized to an external system  
clock in continuous conduction mode (CCM) discontinuous conduction (DCM) and pulse skip mode (PSM).  
TPS54140  
10 pF  
4 kW  
PLL  
R
fset  
RT/CLK  
EXT  
Clock  
Source  
50 W  
Figure 43. Synchronizing to a System Clock  
22  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (continued)  
EXT  
EXT  
VOUT  
IL  
PH  
PH  
IL  
Figure 44. Plot of Synchronizing in CCM  
Figure 45. Plot of Synchronizing in DCM  
EXT  
IL  
PH  
Figure 46. Plot of Synchronizing in PSM  
Power-good (PWRGD Pin)  
The PWRGD pin is an open drain output. Once the VSENSE pin is between 94% and 107% of the internal  
voltage reference the PWRGD pin is de-asserted and the pin floats. It is recommended to use a pull-up resistor  
between the values of 1 kΩ and 100 kto a voltage source that is 5.5 V or less. The PWRGD is in a defined  
state once the VIN input voltage is greater than 1.5 V but with reduced current sinking capability. The PWRGD  
will achieve full current sinking capability as VIN input voltage approaches 3 V.  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
23  
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (continued)  
The PWRGD pin is pulled low when the VSENSE is lower than 92% or greater than 109% of the nominal internal  
reference voltage. Also, the PWRGD is pulled low, if the UVLO or thermal shutdown are asserted or the EN pin  
pulled low.  
Overvoltage Transient Protection  
The TPS54140-Q1 incorporates an overvoltage transient protection (OVTP) circuit to minimize voltage overshoot  
when recovering from output fault conditions or strong unload transients on power supply designs with low value  
output capacitance. For example, when the power supply output is overloaded the error amplifier compares the  
actual output voltage to the internal reference voltage. If the VSENSE pin voltage is lower than the internal  
reference voltage for a considerable time, the output of the error amplifier will respond by clamping the error  
amplifier output to a high voltage, thus requesting the maximum output current. Once the condition is removed,  
the regulator output rises and the error amplifier output transitions to the steady state duty cycle. In some  
applications, the power supply output voltage can respond faster than the error amplifier output can respond, this  
actuality leads to the possibility of an output overshoot. The OVTP feature minimizes the output overshoot, when  
using a low value output capacitor, by implementing a circuit to compare the VSENSE pin voltage to OVTP  
threshold which is 109% of the internal voltage reference. If the VSENSE pin voltage is greater than the OVTP  
threshold, the high side MOSFET is disabled preventing current from flowing to the output and minimizing output  
overshoot. When the VSENSE voltage drops lower than the OVTP threshold, the high side MOSFET is allowed  
to turn on at the next clock cycle.  
Thermal Shutdown  
The device implements an internal thermal shutdown to protect itself if the junction temperature exceeds 182°C.  
The thermal shutdown forces the device to stop switching when the junction temperature exceeds the thermal  
trip threshold. Once the die temperature decreases below 182°C, the device reinitiates the power up sequence  
by discharging the SS/TR pin.  
Small Signal Model for Loop Response  
Figure 47 shows an equivalent model for the TPS54140-Q1 control loop which can be modeled in a circuit  
simulation program to check frequency response and dynamic load response. The error amplifier is a  
transconductance amplifier with a gmEA of 97 μA/V. The error amplifier can be modeled using an ideal voltage  
controlled current source. The resistor Ro and capacitor Co model the open loop gain and frequency response of  
the amplifier. The 1-mV ac voltage source between the nodes a and b effectively breaks the control loop for the  
frequency response measurements. Plotting c/a shows the small signal response of the frequency compensation.  
Plotting a/b shows the small signal response of the overall loop. The dynamic loop response can be checked by  
replacing RL with a current source with the appropriate load step amplitude and step rate in a time domain  
analysis. This equivalent model is only valid for continuous conduction mode designs.  
24  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
 
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (continued)  
PH  
V
O
Power Stage  
gm 6 A/V  
ps  
a
b
R
C
R1  
ESR  
R
COMP  
L
c
VSENSE  
OUT  
0.8 V  
CO  
RO  
R3  
C1  
gm  
ea  
C2  
R2  
97 mA/V  
Figure 47. Small Signal Model for Loop Response  
Simple Small Signal Model for Peak Current Mode Control  
Figure 48 describes a simple small signal model that can be used to understand how to design the frequency  
compensation. The TPS54140-Q1 power stage can be approximated to a voltage-controlled current source (duty  
cycle modulator) supplying current to the output capacitor and load resistor. The control to output transfer  
function is shown in Equation 14 and consists of a dc gain, one dominant pole, and one ESR zero. The quotient  
of the change in switch current and the change in COMP pin voltage (node c in Figure 47) is the power stage  
transconductance. The gmPS for the TPS54140-Q1 is 6 A/V. The low-frequency gain of the power stage  
frequency response is the product of the transconductance and the load resistance as shown in Equation 15.  
As the load current increases and decreases, the low-frequency gain decreases and increases, respectively. This  
variation with the load may seem problematic at first glance, but fortunately the dominant pole moves with the  
load current (see Equation 16). The combined effect is highlighted by the dashed line in the right half of  
Figure 48. As the load current decreases, the gain increases and the pole frequency lowers, keeping the 0-dB  
crossover frequency the same for the varying load conditions which makes it easier to design the frequency  
compensation. The type of output capacitor chosen determines whether the ESR zero has a profound effect on  
the frequency compensation design. Using high ESR aluminum electrolytic capacitors may reduce the number  
frequency compensation components needed to stabilize the overall loop because the phase margin increases  
from the ESR zero at the lower frequencies (see Equation 17).  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
25  
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (continued)  
V
O
Adc  
VC  
R
ESR  
fp  
R
L
gm  
ps  
C
OUT  
fz  
Figure 48. Simple Small Signal Model and Frequency Response for Peak Current Mode Control  
æ
ç
è
ö
÷
ø
s
1+  
1+  
2p´ fZ  
VOUT  
= Adc ´  
VC  
æ
ç
è
ö
÷
ø
s
2p´ fP  
(14)  
(15)  
Adc = gmps ´ RL  
1
f
=
P
C
´R ´ 2p  
L
OUT  
(16)  
(17)  
1
f
=
Z
C
´R  
´ 2p  
OUT  
ESR  
Small Signal Model for Frequency Compensation  
The TPS54140-Q1 uses a transconductance amplifier for the error amplifier and readily supports three of the  
commonly-used frequency compensation circuits. Compensation circuits Type 2A, Type 2B, and Type 1 are  
shown in Figure 49. Type 2 circuits most likely implemented in high bandwidth power-supply designs using low  
ESR output capacitors. The Type 1 circuit is used with power-supply designs with high-ESR aluminum  
electrolytic or tantalum capacitors. Equation 18 and Equation 19 show how to relate the frequency response of  
the amplifier to the small signal model in Figure 49. The open-loop gain and bandwidth are modeled using the RO  
and CO shown in Figure 49. See the application section for a design example using a Type 2A network with a  
low ESR output capacitor.  
Equation 18 through Equation 27 are provided as a reference for those who prefer to compensate using the  
preferred methods. Those who prefer to use prescribed method use the method outlined in the application  
section or use switched information.  
26  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (continued)  
V
O
R1  
VSENSE  
Vref  
Type 2A  
Type 2B  
Type 1  
gm  
ea  
R
COMP  
C2  
R3  
C1  
R3  
R2  
C2  
C
O
O
C1  
Figure 49. Types of Frequency Compensation  
Aol  
P1  
A0  
Z1  
P2  
A1  
BW  
Figure 50. Frequency Response of the Type 2A and Type 2B Frequency Compensation  
Aol(V/V)  
gmea  
Ro =  
(18)  
(19)  
gmea  
COUT  
=
2p ´ BW (Hz)  
æ
ç
è
ö
÷
ø
s
1+  
2p´ fZ1  
EA = A0´  
æ
ç
è
ö æ  
ö
÷
ø
s
s
1+  
´ 1+  
÷ ç  
2p´ fP1  
2p´ fP2  
ø è  
(20)  
(21)  
(22)  
R2  
A0 = gmea ´ Ro ´  
R1 + R2  
R2  
R1 + R2  
A1 = gmea ´ Ro| | R3 ´  
1
P1=  
2p´Ro´ C1  
(23)  
27  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
DETAILED DESCRIPTION (continued)  
1
Z1=  
P2 =  
P2 =  
P2 =  
2p´R3´ C1  
(24)  
(25)  
(26)  
(27)  
1
type 2a  
2p ´ R3 | | R ´ (C2 + COUT  
)
1
type 2b  
2p ´ R3 | | R ´ COUT  
1
type 1  
2p ´ R ´ (C2 + COUT  
)
28  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
APPLICATION INFORMATION  
Design Guide — Step-By-Step Design Procedure  
This example details the design of a high frequency switching regulator design using ceramic output capacitors.  
A few parameters must be known in order to start the design process. These parameters are typically determined  
at the system level. For this example, we will start with the following known parameters:  
Output Voltage  
3.3 V  
Transient Response 0- to 1.5-A load step  
Maximum Output Current  
Input Voltage  
ΔVOUT = 4%  
1.5 A  
12 V nom. 8 V to 18 V  
< 33 mVpp  
7.25 V  
Output Voltage Ripple  
Start Input Voltage (rising VIN)  
Stop Input Voltage (falling VIN)  
6.25 V  
Selecting the Switching Frequency  
The first step is to decide on a switching frequency for the regulator. Typically, the user will want to choose the  
highest switching frequency possible since this will produce the smallest solution size. The high switching  
frequency allows for lower valued inductors and smaller output capacitors compared to a power supply that  
switches at a lower frequency. The switching frequency that can be selected is limited by the minimum on-time of  
the internal power switch, the input voltage and the output voltage and the frequency shift limitation.  
Equation 12 and Equation 13 must be used to find the maximum switching frequency for the regulator, choose  
the lower value of the two equations. Switching frequencies higher than these values will result in pulse skipping  
or the lack of overcurrent protection during a short circuit.  
The typical minimum on time, tonmin, is 130 ns for the TPS54140-Q1. For this example, the output voltage is 3.3 V  
and the maximum input voltage is 18 V, which allows for a maximum switch frequency up to 1600 kHz when  
including the inductor resistance, on resistance and diode voltage in Equation 12. To ensure overcurrent  
runaway is not a concern during short circuits in your design use Equation 13 or the solid curve in Figure 42 to  
determine the maximum switching frequency. With an maximum input voltage of 20 V, assuming a diode voltage  
of 0.5 V, inductor resistance of 100 m, switch resistance of 200 m, an output current of 2.8 A, the maximum  
switching frequency is approximately 1600 kHz.  
Choosing the lower of the two values and adding some margin a switching frequency of 1200 kHz is used. To  
determine the timing resistance for a given switching frequency, use Equation 11 or the curve in Figure 40.  
The switching frequency is set by resistor Rt shown in Figure 51.  
L1  
10 mH  
3.3 V at 1.5 A  
0.1 mF  
C1  
COUT  
U1  
TPS54140DGQ  
D1  
B220A  
+
47 mF/6.3 V  
BOOT  
VIN  
PH  
GND  
8 - 18 V  
C4  
2.2 mF 0.1 mF  
C2  
C3  
R3  
EN  
COMP  
VSNS  
R1  
CF  
SS/TR  
RT/CLK  
RC  
332 kW  
2.2 mF  
31.6 kW  
PWRGD  
76.8 kW  
6.8 pF  
CSS  
RT  
0.01 mF 90.9 kW  
R4  
CC  
R2  
61.9 kW  
10 kW  
2700 pF  
Figure 51. High Frequency, 3.3-V Output Power Supply Design with Adjusted UVLO.  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
29  
 
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
Output Inductor Selection (LO)  
To calculate the minimum value of the output inductor, use Equation 28.  
KIND is a coefficient that represents the amount of inductor ripple current relative to the maximum output current.  
The inductor ripple current will be filtered by the output capacitor. Therefore, choosing high inductor ripple  
currents will impact the selection of the output capacitor since the output capacitor must have a ripple current  
rating equal to or greater than the inductor ripple current. In general, the inductor ripple value is at the discretion  
of the designer; however, the following guidelines may be used.  
For designs using low ESR output capacitors such as ceramics, a value as high as KIND = 0.3 may be used.  
When using higher ESR output capacitors, KIND = 0.2 yields better results. Since the inductor ripple current is  
part of the PWM control system, the inductor ripple current should always be greater than 100 mA for  
dependable operation. In a wide input voltage regulator, it is best to choose an inductor ripple current on the  
larger side. This allows the inductor to still have a measurable ripple current with the input voltage at its  
minimum.  
For this design example, use KIND = 0.2 and the minimum inductor value is calculated to be 7.6 μH. For this  
design, a nearest standard value was chosen: 10 μH. For the output filter inductor, it is important that the RMS  
current and saturation current ratings not be exceeded. The RMS and peak inductor current can be found from  
Equation 30 and Equation 31.  
For this design, the RMS inductor current is 1.506 A and the peak inductor current is 1.62 A. The chosen  
inductor is a MSS6132-103. It has a saturation current rating of 1.64 A and an RMS current rating of 1.9 A.  
As the equation set demonstrates, lower ripple currents will reduce the output voltage ripple of the regulator but  
will require a larger value of inductance. Selecting higher ripple currents will increase the output voltage ripple of  
the regulator but allow for a lower inductance value.  
The current flowing through the inductor is the inductor ripple current plus the output current. During power up,  
faults or transient load conditions, the inductor current can increase above the calculated peak inductor current  
level calculated above. In transient conditions, the inductor current can increase up to the switch current limit of  
the device. For this reason, the most conservative approach is to specify an inductor with a saturation current  
rating equal to or greater than the switch current limit rather than the peak inductor current.  
Vinmax - Vout  
Vout  
Lo min =  
´
Io ´ KIND  
Vinmax ´ ƒsw  
(28)  
(29)  
I
£ I ´K  
O IND  
RIPPLE  
2
æ
ç
ç
è
ö
÷
÷
ø
V
´
Vinmax - V  
OUT  
(
)
1
2
OUT  
I
=
I
+
´
(O )  
L(rms)  
12  
Vinmax ´ L ´ f  
O SW  
(30)  
(31)  
Iripple  
ILpeak = Iout +  
2
Output Capacitor  
There are three primary considerations for selecting the value of the output capacitor. The output capacitor will  
determine the modulator pole, the output voltage ripple, and how the regulators responds to a large change in  
load current. The output capacitance needs to be selected based on the more stringent of these three criteria.  
The desired response to a large change in the load current is the first criteria. The output capacitor needs to  
supply the load with current when the regulator can not. This situation would occur if there are desired hold-up  
times for the regulator where the output capacitor must hold the output voltage above a certain level for a  
specified amount of time after the input power is removed. The regulator also will temporarily not be able to  
supply sufficient output current if there is a large, fast increase in the current needs of the load such as  
transitioning from no load to a full load. The regulator usually needs two or more clock cycles for the control loop  
30  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
 
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
to see the change in load current and output voltage and adjust the duty cycle to react to the change. The output  
capacitor must be sized to supply the extra current to the load until the control loop responds to the load change.  
The output capacitance must be large enough to supply the difference in current for two clock cycles while only  
allowing a tolerable amount of droop in the output voltage. Calculate the minimum output capacitance necessary  
to accomplish this using Equation 32.  
Where ΔIOUT is the change in output current, ƒsw is the regulators switching frequency and ΔVOUT is the allowable  
change in the output voltage. For this example, the transient load response is specified as a 4% change in VOUT  
for a load step from 0 A (no load) to 1.5 A (full load). For this example, ΔIOUT = 1.5-0 = 1.5 A and ΔVOUT = 0.04 ×  
3.3 = 0.132 V. Using these numbers gives a minimum capacitance of 18.9 μF. This value does not take the ESR  
of the output capacitor into account in the output voltage change. For ceramic capacitors, the ESR is usually  
small enough to ignore in this calculation. Aluminum electrolytic and tantalum capacitors have higher ESR that  
should be taken into account.  
The catch diode of the regulator can not sink current so any stored energy in the inductor will produce an output  
voltage overshoot when the load current rapidly decreases, see Figure 52. The output capacitor must also be  
sized to absorb energy stored in the inductor when transitioning from a high load current to a lower load current.  
The excess energy that gets stored in the output capacitor will increase the voltage on the capacitor. The  
capacitor must be sized to maintain the desired output voltage during these transient periods. Use Equation 33 to  
calculate the minimum capacitance to keep the output voltage overshoot to a desired value. Where L is the value  
of the inductor, IOH is the output current under heavy load, IOL is the output under light load, VF is the final peak  
output voltage, and Vi is the initial capacitor voltage. For this example, the worst case load step will be from 1.5  
A to 0 A. The output voltage will increase during this load transition and the stated maximum in our specification  
is 4% of the output voltage. This will make VF = 1.04 × 3.3 = 3.432. Vi is the initial capacitor voltage which is the  
nominal output voltage of 3.3 V. Using these numbers in Equation 33 yields a minimum capacitance of 25.3 μF.  
Use Equation 34 to calculate the minimum output capacitance needed to meet the output voltage ripple  
specification. Where ƒsw is the switching frequency, Voripple is the maximum allowable output voltage ripple, and  
Iripple is the inductor ripple current. Equation 34 yields 0.7 μF.  
Equation 35 calculates the maximum ESR an output capacitor can have to meet the output voltage ripple  
specification. Equation 35 indicates the ESR should be less than 147 m.  
The most stringent criteria for the output capacitor is 25.3 μF of capacitance to keep the output voltage in  
regulation during an unload transient.  
Additional capacitance de-ratings for aging, temperature and dc bias should be factored in which will increase  
this minimum value. For this example, a 47-μF 6.3-V X7R ceramic capacitor with 5 mof ESR will be used.  
Capacitors generally have limits to the amount of ripple current they can handle without failing or producing  
excess heat. An output capacitor that can support the inductor ripple current must be specified. Some capacitor  
data sheets specify the Root Mean Square (RMS) value of the maximum ripple current. Equation 36 can be used  
to calculate the RMS ripple current the output capacitor needs to support. For this application, Equation 36 yields  
64.8 mA.  
2´ DI  
OUT  
C
>
OUT  
f
´ DV  
SW  
OUT  
(32)  
2
(OH ) (OL )  
2
I
- I  
(
)
COUT > LO  
´
2
( ) ( )  
2
V
- V  
f
i
(
)
(33)  
1
1
COUT  
>
´
8´ fSW  
V
æ
ç
ö
÷
OUT ripple  
(
IRIPPLE  
)
ç
è
÷
ø
(34)  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
31  
 
 
 
 
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
VOUT ripple  
(
)
RESR  
=
IRIPPLE  
(35)  
V
´ V  
(
IN max  
(
- V  
OUT  
OUT  
)
IN max  
(
)
I
=
COUT(rms)  
12 ´ V  
´L ´ f  
O SW  
)
(36)  
Catch Diode  
The TPS54140-Q1 requires an external catch diode between the PH pin and GND. The selected diode must  
have a reverse voltage rating equal to or greater than VIN(max). The peak current rating of the diode must be  
greater than the maximum inductor current. The diode should also have a low forward voltage. Schottky diodes  
are typically a good choice for the catch diode due to their low forward voltage. The lower the forward voltage of  
the diode, the higher the efficiency of the regulator will be.  
Typically, the higher the voltage and current ratings the diode has, the higher the forward voltage will be. Since  
the design example has an input voltage up to 18 V, a diode with a minimum of 20 V reverse voltage will be  
selected.  
For the example design, the B220A Schottky diode is selected for its lower forward voltage and it comes in a  
larger package size which has good thermal characteristics over small devices. The typical forward voltage of the  
B220A is 0.50 volts.  
The diode must also be selected with an appropriate power rating. The diode conducts the output current during  
the off-time of the internal power switch. The off-time of the internal switch is a function of the maximum input  
voltage, the output voltage, and the switching frequency. The output current during the off-time is multiplied by  
the forward voltage of the diode which equals the conduction losses of the diode. At higher switch frequencies,  
the ac losses of the diode need to be taken into account. The ac losses of the diode are due to the charging and  
discharging of the junction capacitance and reverse recovery. Equation 37 is used to calculate the total power  
dissipation, conduction losses plus ac losses, of the diode.  
The B220A has a junction capacitance of 120 pF. Using Equation 37, the selected diode will dissipate 0.632  
Watts. This power dissipation, depending on mounting techniques, should produce a 16°C temperature rise in  
the diode when the input voltage is 18 V and the load current is 1.5 A.  
If the power supply spends a significant amount of time at light load currents or in sleep mode consider using a  
diode which has a low leakage current and slightly higher forward voltage drop.  
2
)
V
(
- V  
´ I  
´ Vf d  
OUT  
)
IN max  
OUT  
C ´ f  
´ V + Vf d  
(
IN max  
(
)
j
SW  
IN  
P =  
+
D
V
2
(
)
(37)  
Input Capacitor  
The TPS54140-Q1 requires a high quality ceramic, type X5R or X7R, input decoupling capacitor of at least 3 μF  
of effective capacitance and in some applications a bulk capacitance. The effective capacitance includes any dc  
bias effects. The voltage rating of the input capacitor must be greater than the maximum input voltage. The  
capacitor must also have a ripple current rating greater than the maximum input current ripple of the TPS54140-  
Q1. The input ripple current can be calculated using Equation 38.  
The value of a ceramic capacitor varies significantly over temperature and the amount of dc bias applied to the  
capacitor. The capacitance variations due to temperature can be minimized by selecting a dielectric material that  
is stable over temperature. X5R and X7R ceramic dielectrics are usually selected for power regulator capacitors  
because they have a high capacitance to volume ratio and are fairly stable over temperature. The output  
capacitor must also be selected with the dc bias taken into account. The capacitance value of a capacitor  
decreases as the dc bias across a capacitor increases.  
32  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
 
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
For this example design, a ceramic capacitor with at least a 20-V voltage rating is required to support the  
maximum input voltage. Common standard ceramic capacitor voltage ratings include 4 V, 6.3 V, 10 V, 16 V, 25  
V, 50 V or 100 V so a 25-V capacitor should be selected. For this example, two 2.2-μF, 25-V capacitors in  
parallel have been selected. Table 1 shows a selection of high voltage capacitors. The input capacitance value  
determines the input ripple voltage of the regulator. The input ripple voltage can be calculated using Equation 39.  
Using the design example values, Ioutmax = 1.5 A, CIN = 4.4 μF, ƒSW = 1200 kHz, yields an input voltage ripple of  
71 mV and an RMS input ripple current of 0.701 A.  
Vin min - Vout  
(
)
Vout  
Icirms = Iout ´  
´
Vin min  
Vin min  
(38)  
(39)  
Iout max ´ 0.25  
Cin ´ ¦sw  
ΔVin =  
Table 1. Capacitor Types  
VENDOR  
VALUE (μF)  
EIA Size  
VOLTAGE  
100 V  
50 V  
DIALECTRIC  
COMMENTS  
1 to 2.2  
1 to 4.7  
1
1210  
GRM32 series  
Murata  
100 V  
50 V  
1206  
2220  
2225  
1812  
1210  
1210  
1812  
GRM31 series  
VJ X7R series  
1 to 2.2  
1 10 1.8  
1 to 1.2  
1 to 3.9  
1 to 1.8  
1 to 2.2  
1.5 to 6.8  
1. to 2.2  
1 to 3.3  
1 to 4.7  
1
50 V  
100 V  
50 V  
Vishay  
TDK  
100 V  
100 V  
50 V  
X7R  
C series C4532  
C series C3225  
100 V  
50 V  
50 V  
100 V  
50 V  
AVX  
X7R dielectric series  
1 to 4.7  
1 to 2.2  
100 V  
Slow Start Capacitor  
The slow start capacitor determines the minimum amount of time it will take for the output voltage to reach its  
nominal programmed value during power up. This is useful if a load requires a controlled voltage slew rate. This  
is also used if the output capacitance is very large and would require large amounts of current to quickly charge  
the capacitor to the output voltage level. The large currents necessary to charge the capacitor may make the  
TPS54140-Q1 reach the current limit or excessive current draw from the input power supply may cause the input  
voltage rail to sag. Limiting the output voltage slew rate solves both of these problems.  
The slow start time must be long enough to allow the regulator to charge the output capacitor up to the output  
voltage without drawing excessive current. Equation 40 can be used to find the minimum slow start time, TSS  
,
necessary to charge the output capacitor, COUT, from 10% to 90% of the output voltage, VOUT, with an average  
slow start current of ISSAVG. In the example, to charge the 47 μF output capacitor up to 3.3 V while only allowing  
the average input current to be 0.125 A would require a 1-ms slow start time.  
Once the slow start time is known, the slow start capacitor value can be calculated using Equation 6. For the  
example circuit, the slow start time is not too critical since the output capacitor value is 47 μF which does not  
require much current to charge to 3.3 V. The example circuit has the slow start time set to an arbitrary value of 1-  
ms which requires a 3.3-nF capacitor.  
Cout ´ Vout ´ 0.8  
Tss >  
Issavg  
(40)  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
33  
 
 
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
Bootstrap Capacitor Selection  
A 0.1-μF ceramic capacitor must be connected between the BOOT and PH pins for proper operation. It is  
recommended to use a ceramic capacitor with X5R or better grade dielectric. The capacitor should have a 10-V  
or higher voltage rating.  
Under Voltage Lock Out Set Point  
The Under Voltage Lock Out (UVLO) can be adjusted using an external voltage divider on the EN pin of the  
TPS54140-Q1. The UVLO has two thresholds, one for power up when the input voltage is rising and one for  
power down or brown outs when the input voltage is falling. For the example design, the supply should turn on  
and start switching once the input voltage increases above 7.25 V (enabled). After the regulator starts switching,  
it should continue to do so until the input voltage falls below 6.25 V (UVLO stop).  
The programmable UVLO and enable voltages are set using a resistor divider between VIN and ground to the  
EN pin. Equation 2 through Equation 3 can be used to calculate the resistance values necessary. For the  
example application, a 332 kbetween VIN and EN and a 61.9 kbetween EN and ground are required to  
produce the 7.25- and 6.25-V start and stop voltages.  
Output Voltage and Feedback Resistors Selection  
For the example design, 10.0 kwas selected for R2. Using Equation 1, R1 is calculated as 31.25 k. The  
nearest standard 1% resistor is 31.6 k. Due to current leakage of the VSENSE pin, the current flowing through  
the feedback network should be greater than 1 μA in order to maintain the output voltage accuracy. This  
requirement makes the maximum value of R2 equal to 800 k. Choosing higher resistor values will decrease  
quiescent current and improve efficiency at low output currents but may introduce noise immunity problems.  
Compensation  
There are several industry techniques used to compensate DC/DC regulators. The method presented here yields  
high phase margins. For most conditions, the regulator will have a phase margin between 60 and 90 degrees.  
The method presented here ignores the effects of the slope compensation that is internal to the TPS54140-Q1.  
Since the slope compensation is ignored, the actual cross over frequency is usually lower than the cross over  
frequency used in the calculations.  
Use SwitcherPro software for a more accurate design.  
The uncompensated regulator will have a dominant pole, typically located between 300 Hz and 3 kHz, due to the  
output capacitor and load resistance and a pole due to the error amplifier. One zero exists due to the output  
capacitor and the ESR. The zero frequency is higher than either of the two poles.  
If left uncompensated, the double pole created by the error amplifier and the modulator would lead to an unstable  
regulator. To stabilize the regulator, one pole must be canceled out. One design approach is to locate a  
compensating zero at the modulator pole. Then select a cross over frequency that is higher than the modulator  
pole. The gain of the error amplifier can be calculated to achieve the desired cross over frequency. The capacitor  
used to create the compensation zero along with the output impedance of the error amplifier form a low  
frequency pole to provide a minus one slope through the cross over frequency. Then a compensating pole is  
added to cancel the zero due to the output capacitors ESR. If the ESR zero resides at a frequency higher than  
the switching frequency then it can be ignored.  
34  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
To compensate the TPS54140-Q1 using this method, first calculate the modulator pole and zero using the  
following equations:  
Ioutmax  
¦p mod =  
2 × p × Vout × Cout  
(41)  
Where IOUTMAX is the maximum output current, COUT is the output capacitance and VOUT is the nominal output  
voltage.  
1
¦z mod =  
2 ´ p ´ Resr × Cout  
(42)  
For the example design, the modulator pole is located at 1.5 kHz and the ESR zero is located at 338 kHz.  
Next, the designer needs to select a crossover frequency which will determine the bandwidth of the control loop.  
The cross over frequency must be located at a frequency at least five times higher than the modulator pole. The  
cross over frequency must also be selected so that the available gain of the error amplifier at the cross over  
frequency is high enough to allow for proper compensation.  
Equation 47 is used to calculate the maximum cross over frequency when the ESR zero is located at a frequency  
that is higher than the desired cross over frequency. This will usually be the case for ceramic or low ESR  
tantalum capacitors. Aluminum electrolytic and tantalum capacitors will typically produce a modulator zero at a  
low frequency due to their high ESR.  
The example application is using a low ESR ceramic capacitor with 10 mof ESR making the zero at 338 kHz.  
This value is much higher than typical crossover frequencies so the maximum crossover frequency is calculated  
using both Equation 43 and Equation 46.  
Using Equation 46 gives a minimum crossover frequency of 7.6 kHz and Equation 43 gives a maximum  
crossover frequency of 45.3 kHz.  
A crossover frequency of 45 kHz is arbitrarily selected from this range.  
F
pmod  
F
£ 2100  
for ceramic capacitors.  
c max  
Vout  
(43)  
(44)  
51442  
F
£
for Tantalum or Aluminum capacitors.  
c max  
Vout  
Fsw  
F
£
for all cases.  
³ 5 ´F for all cases.  
pmod  
c max  
5
(45)  
(46)  
F
c min  
Once a cross over frequency, Fc, has been selected, the gain of the modulator at the cross over frequency is  
calculated. The gain of the modulator at the cross over frequency is calculated using Equation 47 .  
gm  
´R  
´ 2p´ f ´ C  
(
´R  
+1  
)
LOAD  
C
OUT  
ESR  
PS  
( )  
G
=
MOD f c  
( )  
2p´ f ´ C  
´ R  
(
+ R +1  
ESR  
)
C
OUT  
LOAD  
(47)  
For the example problem, the gain of the modulator at the cross over frequency is 0.542. Next, the compensation  
components are calculated. A resistor in series with a capacitor is used to create a compensating zero. A  
capacitor in parallel to these two components forms the compensating pole. However, calculating the values of  
these components varies depending on if the ESR zero is located above or below the cross over frequency. For  
ceramic or low ESR tantalum output capacitors, the zero will usually be located above the cross over frequency.  
For aluminum electrolytic and tantalum capacitors, the modulator zero is usually located lower in frequency than  
the cross over frequency. For cases where the modulator zero is higher than the cross over frequency (ceramic  
capacitors).  
VOUT  
RC  
=
GMOD f c ´ gm EA ´ VREF  
( )  
( )  
(48)  
1
Cc =  
p × Rc × ¦p mod  
(49)  
35  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
 
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
Co × Resr  
C¦ =  
Rc  
(50)  
For cases where the modulator zero is less than the cross over frequency (aluminum or tantalum capacitors), the  
equations are:  
VOUT  
RC  
=
GMOD f c ´ fZ mod ´ gm EA ´ VREF  
( )  
(
)
( )  
(51)  
(52)  
(53)  
1
Cc =  
p × Rc × ¦p mod  
1
C¦ =  
2 ´ p ´ Rc ´ ¦z mod  
For the example problem, the ESR zero is located at a higher frequency compared to the cross over frequency  
so Equation 50 through Equation 53 are used to calculate the compensation components. For the example  
problem, the components are calculated to be: Rc= 76.2 k, Cc= 2710 pF, and Cƒ =6.17 pF.  
The calculated value of the Cƒ capacitor is not a standard value so a value of 2700 pF will be used, 6.8 pF is  
used for Cc, and the Rc resistor sets the gain of the error amplifier which determines the cross over frequency.  
The calculated Rc resistor is not a standard value, so 76.8 kwill be used.  
APPLICATION CURVES  
VIN  
VO  
VOUT  
EN  
IO  
IL  
Figure 52. Load Transmit  
Figure 53. Startup With EN  
VOUT  
VOUT  
IL  
PH  
VIN  
IL  
Figure 54. VIN Power Up  
Figure 55. Output Ripple CCM  
36  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
 
 
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
VOUT  
VOUT  
IL  
IL  
PH  
PH  
Figure 56. Output Ripple, DCM  
Figure 57. Output Ripple, PSM  
VIN  
VIN  
IL  
IL  
PH  
PH  
Figure 58. Input Ripple CCM  
Figure 59. Input Ripple DCM  
95  
90  
85  
80  
VO = 3.3 V,  
VI = 8 V  
fsw = 1200 kHz  
VIN  
VI = 12 V  
VI = 16 V  
75  
70  
65  
60  
IL  
PH  
55  
50  
0
0.25  
0.50  
0.75  
1
1.25  
1.5  
1.75  
2
IL - Load Current - A  
Figure 60. Input Ripple PSM  
Figure 61. Efficiency vs Load Current  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
37  
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
60  
1.015  
1.010  
1.005  
150  
100  
50  
VI = 12 V  
40  
Phase  
20  
0
1.000  
0.995  
Gain  
0
-50  
-100  
-150  
-20  
-40  
0.990  
0.985  
1-103  
1-104  
1-105  
1-106  
100  
0.00  
0.25  
0.50  
0.75  
1.00  
1.25  
1.50  
1.75  
2.00  
f - Frequency - Hz  
Load Current - A  
Figure 62. Overall Loop Frequency Response  
Figure 63. Regulation vs Load Current  
1.015  
IO = 0.5 A  
1.010  
1.005  
1.000  
0.995  
0.990  
0.985  
5
10  
15  
20  
V
- Input Voltage - V  
I
Figure 64. Regulation vs Input Voltage  
38  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
Power Dissipation Estimate  
The following formulas show how to estimate the IC power dissipation under continuous conduction mode (CCM)  
operation. These equations should not be used if the device is working in discontinuous conduction mode (DCM).  
The power dissipation of the IC includes conduction loss (Pcon), switching loss (Psw), gate drive loss (Pgd) and  
supply current (Pq).  
Vout  
´
Pcon = Io2 ´ RDS(on)  
Vin  
(54)  
(55)  
PSW = VIN2 × fSW × IO × 0.25×10–9sec/V  
Pgd = VIN × 3×10–9Asec × fSW  
Pq = 116µA × VIN  
(56)  
(57)  
Where:  
IOUT is the output current (A).  
RDS(ON) is the on-resistance of the high-side MOSFET ().  
VOUT is the output voltage (V).  
VIN is the input voltage (V).  
ƒSW is the switching frequency (Hz).  
So  
Ptot = Pcon + Psw + Pgd + Pq  
(58)  
(59)  
(60)  
For given TA,  
TJ = TA + Rth ´ Ptot  
For given TJMAX = 150°C  
TAmax = TJmax - Rth ´ Ptot  
Where:  
Ptot is the total device power dissipation (W).  
TA is the ambient temperature (°C).  
TJ is the junction temperature (°C).  
Rth is the thermal resistance of the package (°C/W).  
TJMAX is maximum junction temperature (°C).  
TAMAX is maximum ambient temperature (°C).  
There will be additional power losses in the regulator circuit due to the inductor ac and dc losses, the catch diode  
and trace resistance that will impact the overall efficiency of the regulator.  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
39  
TPS54140-Q1  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
www.ti.com  
Layout  
Layout is a critical portion of good power supply design. There are several signals paths that conduct quickly  
changing currents or voltages that can interact with stray inductance or parasitic capacitance to generate noise  
or degrade the power supply performance. To reduce these problems, the VIN pin should be bypassed to ground  
with a low-ESR ceramic bypass capacitor with X5R or X7R dielectric. Care should be taken to minimize the loop  
area formed by the bypass capacitor connections, the VIN pin, and the anode of the catch diode. See Figure 65  
for a PCB layout example. The GND pin should be tied directly to the thermal pad under the IC and the exposed  
thermal pad.  
The thermal pad should be connected to any internal PCB ground planes using multiple vias directly under the  
IC. The PH pin should be routed to the cathode of the catch diode and to the output inductor. Because the PH  
connection is the switching node, the catch diode and output inductor should be located very close to the PH  
pins, and the area of the PCB conductor minimized to prevent excessive capacitive coupling. For operation at full  
rated load, the top side ground area must provide adequate heat dissipating area. The RT/CLK pin is sensitive to  
noise so the RT resistor should be located as close as possible to the IC and routed with minimal lengths of  
trace. The additional external components can be placed approximately as shown. It may be possible to obtain  
acceptable performance with alternate PCB layouts; however, this layout has been shown to produce good  
results and is meant as a guideline.  
Vout  
Output  
Capacitor  
Output  
Inductor  
Topside  
Ground  
Route Boot Capacitor  
Catch  
Area  
Trace on another layer to  
provide wide path for  
topside ground  
Diode  
Input  
Bypass  
Capacitor  
BOOT  
VIN  
PH  
GND  
Vin  
EN  
COMP  
UVLO  
SS/TR  
RT/CLK  
VSENSE  
PWRGD  
Compensation  
Network  
Adjust  
Resistor  
Divider  
Resistors  
Slow Start  
Capacitor  
Frequency  
Thermal VIA  
Signal VIA  
Set Resistor  
Figure 65. PCB Layout Example  
40  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
 
TPS54140-Q1  
www.ti.com  
SLVSA24C OCTOBER 2009REVISED AUGUST 2012  
REVISION HISTORY  
Changes from Revision B (March 2011) to Revision C  
Page  
Changed regulated output to input ....................................................................................................................................... 1  
Changed 92 to 93% and 107 to 109% in description. .......................................................................................................... 1  
Updated Abs Max footnote ................................................................................................................................................... 2  
Changed enable threshold to –50 mV for Input current and changed typ values for input current and hysteresis  
current ................................................................................................................................................................................... 3  
Removed input current max value; changed typ value from ±0.9 to –0.9 ............................................................................ 3  
Changed error amplifier test condition from ±2 µA to –2 µA; changed gM to gmin the parameter description ..................... 3  
Changed enable threshold to –50 mV for Input current and changed typ values for input current and hysteresis  
current ................................................................................................................................................................................... 4  
Inserted page break in front of current limit section ............................................................................................................. 4  
Changed RT/CLK low threshold min value from 0.5 to 0.45 ................................................................................................ 4  
Added (Fault) and (Good) to VSENSE falling and rising ...................................................................................................... 4  
Changed Figure 21 to match 57060-Q1 ............................................................................................................................. 10  
Changed "are added to the COMP pin to ground" to "are added from the COMP pin to ground" ..................................... 14  
Changed "use the UVLO adjust registers" to "use the UVLO adjust resistors" .................................................................. 14  
Changed "Each cycle the switch current" to "During each cycle the switch current" ......................................................... 20  
Changed "high voltage. Thus, requesting the" to "high voltage, thus requesting the" ....................................................... 24  
Changed "Equation 32 shows the minimum output capacitance necessary to accomplish this" to "Calculate the  
minimum output capacitance necessary to accomplish this using Equation 32." .............................................................. 31  
Changed "Equation 33 is used to calculate the" to "Use Equation 33 to calculate the minimum" ..................................... 31  
Changed "Equation 34 calculates" to "Use equation 34 to"; changed "Equation 35 yields 0.7 µF" to "Equation 34  
yields 0.7 µF" ...................................................................................................................................................................... 31  
Changed "input voltage ripple" to "input ripple voltage" ..................................................................................................... 33  
Copyright © 2009–2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  
41  
PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM  
www.ti.com  
26-Aug-2011  
PACKAGING INFORMATION  
Status (1)  
Eco Plan (2)  
MSL Peak Temp (3)  
Samples  
Orderable Device  
Package Type Package  
Drawing  
Pins  
Package Qty  
Lead/  
Ball Finish  
(Requires Login)  
TPS54140QDGQRQ1  
TPS54140QDRCRQ1  
ACTIVE  
ACTIVE  
MSOP-  
PowerPAD  
DGQ  
DRC  
10  
10  
2500  
3000  
Green (RoHS  
& no Sb/Br)  
CU NIPDAU Level-3-260C-168 HR  
SON  
Green (RoHS  
& no Sb/Br)  
CU NIPDAU Level-3-260C-168 HR  
(1) The marketing status values are defined as follows:  
ACTIVE: Product device recommended for new designs.  
LIFEBUY: TI has announced that the device will be discontinued, and a lifetime-buy period is in effect.  
NRND: Not recommended for new designs. Device is in production to support existing customers, but TI does not recommend using this part in a new design.  
PREVIEW: Device has been announced but is not in production. Samples may or may not be available.  
OBSOLETE: TI has discontinued the production of the device.  
(2) Eco Plan - The planned eco-friendly classification: Pb-Free (RoHS), Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt), or Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br) - please check http://www.ti.com/productcontent for the latest availability  
information and additional product content details.  
TBD: The Pb-Free/Green conversion plan has not been defined.  
Pb-Free (RoHS): TI's terms "Lead-Free" or "Pb-Free" mean semiconductor products that are compatible with the current RoHS requirements for all 6 substances, including the requirement that  
lead not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous materials. Where designed to be soldered at high temperatures, TI Pb-Free products are suitable for use in specified lead-free processes.  
Pb-Free (RoHS Exempt): This component has a RoHS exemption for either 1) lead-based flip-chip solder bumps used between the die and package, or 2) lead-based die adhesive used between  
the die and leadframe. The component is otherwise considered Pb-Free (RoHS compatible) as defined above.  
Green (RoHS & no Sb/Br): TI defines "Green" to mean Pb-Free (RoHS compatible), and free of Bromine (Br) and Antimony (Sb) based flame retardants (Br or Sb do not exceed 0.1% by weight  
in homogeneous material)  
(3) MSL, Peak Temp. -- The Moisture Sensitivity Level rating according to the JEDEC industry standard classifications, and peak solder temperature.  
Important Information and Disclaimer:The information provided on this page represents TI's knowledge and belief as of the date that it is provided. TI bases its knowledge and belief on information  
provided by third parties, and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of such information. Efforts are underway to better integrate information from third parties. TI has taken and  
continues to take reasonable steps to provide representative and accurate information but may not have conducted destructive testing or chemical analysis on incoming materials and chemicals.  
TI and TI suppliers consider certain information to be proprietary, and thus CAS numbers and other limited information may not be available for release.  
In no event shall TI's liability arising out of such information exceed the total purchase price of the TI part(s) at issue in this document sold by TI to Customer on an annual basis.  
OTHER QUALIFIED VERSIONS OF TPS54140-Q1 :  
Catalog: TPS54140  
NOTE: Qualified Version Definitions:  
Addendum-Page 1  
PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM  
www.ti.com  
26-Aug-2011  
Catalog - TI's standard catalog product  
Addendum-Page 2  
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION  
www.ti.com  
25-Aug-2011  
TAPE AND REEL INFORMATION  
*All dimensions are nominal  
Device  
Package Package Pins  
Type Drawing  
SPQ  
2500  
3000  
Reel  
Reel  
A0  
B0  
K0  
P1  
W
Pin1  
Diameter Width (mm) (mm) (mm) (mm) (mm) Quadrant  
(mm) W1 (mm)  
TPS54140QDGQRQ1  
TPS54140QDRCRQ1  
MSOP-  
Power  
PAD  
DGQ  
DRC  
10  
10  
330.0  
330.0  
12.4  
12.4  
5.3  
3.3  
3.3  
3.3  
1.3  
1.0  
8.0  
8.0  
12.0  
12.0  
Q1  
Q2  
SON  
Pack Materials-Page 1  
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION  
www.ti.com  
25-Aug-2011  
*All dimensions are nominal  
Device  
Package Type Package Drawing Pins  
SPQ  
Length (mm) Width (mm) Height (mm)  
TPS54140QDGQRQ1  
TPS54140QDRCRQ1  
MSOP-PowerPAD  
SON  
DGQ  
DRC  
10  
10  
2500  
3000  
370.0  
370.0  
355.0  
355.0  
55.0  
55.0  
Pack Materials-Page 2  
IMPORTANT NOTICE  
Texas Instruments Incorporated and its subsidiaries (TI) reserve the right to make corrections, enhancements, improvements and other  
changes to its semiconductor products and services per JESD46C and to discontinue any product or service per JESD48B. Buyers should  
obtain the latest relevant information before placing orders and should verify that such information is current and complete. All  
semiconductor products (also referred to herein as “components”) are sold subject to TI’s terms and conditions of sale supplied at the time  
of order acknowledgment.  
TI warrants performance of its components to the specifications applicable at the time of sale, in accordance with the warranty in TI’s terms  
and conditions of sale of semiconductor products. Testing and other quality control techniques are used to the extent TI deems necessary  
to support this warranty. Except where mandated by applicable law, testing of all parameters of each component is not necessarily  
performed.  
TI assumes no liability for applications assistance or the design of Buyers’ products. Buyers are responsible for their products and  
applications using TI components. To minimize the risks associated with Buyers’ products and applications, Buyers should provide  
adequate design and operating safeguards.  
TI does not warrant or represent that any license, either express or implied, is granted under any patent right, copyright, mask work right, or  
other intellectual property right relating to any combination, machine, or process in which TI components or services are used. Information  
published by TI regarding third-party products or services does not constitute a license to use such products or services or a warranty or  
endorsement thereof. Use of such information may require a license from a third party under the patents or other intellectual property of the  
third party, or a license from TI under the patents or other intellectual property of TI.  
Reproduction of significant portions of TI information in TI data books or data sheets is permissible only if reproduction is without alteration  
and is accompanied by all associated warranties, conditions, limitations, and notices. TI is not responsible or liable for such altered  
documentation. Information of third parties may be subject to additional restrictions.  
Resale of TI components or services with statements different from or beyond the parameters stated by TI for that component or service  
voids all express and any implied warranties for the associated TI component or service and is an unfair and deceptive business practice.  
TI is not responsible or liable for any such statements.  
Buyer acknowledges and agrees that it is solely responsible for compliance with all legal, regulatory and safety-related requirements  
concerning its products, and any use of TI components in its applications, notwithstanding any applications-related information or support  
that may be provided by TI. Buyer represents and agrees that it has all the necessary expertise to create and implement safeguards which  
anticipate dangerous consequences of failures, monitor failures and their consequences, lessen the likelihood of failures that might cause  
harm and take appropriate remedial actions. Buyer will fully indemnify TI and its representatives against any damages arising out of the use  
of any TI components in safety-critical applications.  
In some cases, TI components may be promoted specifically to facilitate safety-related applications. With such components, TI’s goal is to  
help enable customers to design and create their own end-product solutions that meet applicable functional safety standards and  
requirements. Nonetheless, such components are subject to these terms.  
No TI components are authorized for use in FDA Class III (or similar life-critical medical equipment) unless authorized officers of the parties  
have executed a special agreement specifically governing such use.  
Only those TI components which TI has specifically designated as military grade or “enhanced plastic” are designed and intended for use in  
military/aerospace applications or environments. Buyer acknowledges and agrees that any military or aerospace use of TI components  
which have not been so designated is solely at the Buyer's risk, and that Buyer is solely responsible for compliance with all legal and  
regulatory requirements in connection with such use.  
TI has specifically designated certain components which meet ISO/TS16949 requirements, mainly for automotive use. Components which  
have not been so designated are neither designed nor intended for automotive use; and TI will not be responsible for any failure of such  
components to meet such requirements.  
Products  
Audio  
Applications  
www.ti.com/audio  
amplifier.ti.com  
dataconverter.ti.com  
www.dlp.com  
Automotive and Transportation www.ti.com/automotive  
Communications and Telecom www.ti.com/communications  
Amplifiers  
Data Converters  
DLP® Products  
DSP  
Computers and Peripherals  
Consumer Electronics  
Energy and Lighting  
Industrial  
www.ti.com/computers  
www.ti.com/consumer-apps  
www.ti.com/energy  
dsp.ti.com  
Clocks and Timers  
Interface  
www.ti.com/clocks  
interface.ti.com  
logic.ti.com  
www.ti.com/industrial  
www.ti.com/medical  
www.ti.com/security  
Medical  
Logic  
Security  
Power Mgmt  
Microcontrollers  
RFID  
power.ti.com  
Space, Avionics and Defense www.ti.com/space-avionics-defense  
microcontroller.ti.com  
www.ti-rfid.com  
Video and Imaging  
www.ti.com/video  
OMAP Mobile Processors www.ti.com/omap  
Wireless Connectivity www.ti.com/wirelessconnectivity  
TI E2E Community  
e2e.ti.com  
Mailing Address: Texas Instruments, Post Office Box 655303, Dallas, Texas 75265  
Copyright © 2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated  

相关型号:

TPS54160

1.5 - A的60V的降压的SWIFT ™ DC / DC变换器与生态模式
TI

TPS54160-Q1

1.5-A 60-V STEP-DOWN SWIFT DC/DC CONVERTER WITH Eco-Mode CONTROL
TI

TPS54160A

1.5-A, 60-V, Step-Down SWIFT DC/DC Converter with Eco-mode
TI

TPS54160ADGQ

1.5-A, 60-V, Step-Down SWIFT DC/DC Converter with Eco-mode
TI

TPS54160ADGQR

1.5-A, 60-V, Step-Down SWIFT DC/DC Converter with Eco-mode
TI

TPS54160ADRC

暂无描述
TI

TPS54160ADRCR

1.5-A, 60-V, Step-Down SWIFT DC/DC Converter with Eco-mode
TI

TPS54160ADRCT

1.5-A, 60-V, Step-Down SWIFT DC/DC Converter with Eco-mode
TI

TPS54160A_13

1.5-A, 60-V, Step-Down SWIFT DC/DC Converter with Eco-mode
TI

TPS54160DGQ

1.5-A, 60V STEP DOWN SWIFT™ DC/DC CONVERTER WITH ECO-MODTM
TI

TPS54160DGQG4

1.5-A, 60V STEP DOWN SWIFT™ DC/DC CONVERTER WITH ECO-MODE™
TI

TPS54160DGQR

1.5-A, 60V STEP DOWN SWIFT™ DC/DC CONVERTER WITH ECO-MODTM
TI