December 2010, Rev A EN6360QI Datasheet
Enpirion 2010 all rights reserved, E&OE Enpirion Confidential
www.enpirion.com, Page 11
External Voltage Reference (Optional)
This feature is available in a separate part
number. Contact Enpirion for more information.
When a voltage greater than 0.6V is present at
the EXTREF pin the device will detect the
presence of the voltage and automatically
switch to this voltage as the reference for
voltage regulation. Bypassing the internal
reference can be used to further improve
overall DC set point accuracy and temperature
drift associated with the internal reference.
EN6360QI accepts a wide range of input
references between 1.15 and 1.5V directly.
Please contact Enpirion to ensure the
appropriate EN6360QI device is selected for
the specific band gap reference being applied.
Phase-Lock Operation:
With M/S pin floating or at a logical ‘0,’ the
internal switching clock of the DC/DC converter
can be phase-locked to a clock signal applied
to S_IN. When a clock signal is present at
S_IN, an activity detector recognizes the
presence of the clock signal and the internal
oscillator phase locks to the external clock. The
external clock could be the system clock or the
output of another EN6360QI. A delayed
version of the phase locked clock is output at
S_OUT. The clock frequency should be within
±20% of the free running frequency for
guaranteed phase-lock. Multiple EN6360QI
devices on a system board may be daisy
chained to avoid beat frequency components.
The device switching frequency can be
adjusted with the resistor to FQADJ as well as
by the external clock source for phase-lock.
Master / Slave (Parallel) Operation:
Two EN6360QI devices may be connected in a
Master/Slave configuration to handle larger
load currents. The Master device’s switching
clock may be phase-locked to an external clock
source or another EN6360QI. The device is
placed in Master mode by pulling the M/S pin
low or in Slave mode by pulling M/S pin high.
When this pin is in Float state, parallel
operation is not possible. In master mode,
the internal PWM signal is output on the
S_OUT pin. This PWM signal from the Master
is fed to the slave device at its S_IN input. The
Slave device acts like an extension of the
power FETs in the Master. The inductor in the
slave prevents crow-bar currents from Master
to slave due to timing delays.
POK Operation
The POK signals the output voltage is within
the specified range. The POK signal is
asserted high when the rising output voltage
crosses 92% (nominal) of the programmed
output voltage. POK is de-asserted low for 256
clock cycles (62us at 1MHz) after the falling
output voltage crosses 90% (nominal) of the
programmed voltage. POK remains asserted if
the output voltage falls outside the range of
90% to 120% for a period of time less than the
de-glitch time. POK is also de-asserted if the
output voltage exceeds 120% of the
programmed output. If the feedback loop is
broken, POK will remain de-asserted (sensed
output < 92% of programmed value!) but the
actual output voltage will equal the input
voltage. If however, there is a short across the
PFET, and the feedback is in place, POK will
be de-asserted as an over voltage condition. In
this case, the power NFET is turned on
resulting in a large input supply current. This in
turn is expected to trip the upstream power
supply powering the EN6360QI. The POK pin
can sink up to 4mA. No pull-up resistor
required; when POK is asserted high the
output will be pulled up to PVIN.
Over Voltage Protection
If the output voltage exceeds 120% of the
programmed value (as sensed at VFB pin), the
low-side power FET is turned on. If the over-
voltage condition is due to an input-to-output or
a high-side power FET short, the turn-on of the
low-side power FET will cause a large current
draw from the input supply. This will likely
cause the input voltage to drop, thus protecting
the load.
Over Current Protection
The current limit function is achieved by
sensing the current flowing through a sense P-
FET. When the sensed current exceeds the
current limit, both power FETs are turned off