LT8620
16
8620fa
For more information www.linear.com/LT8620
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
When operating in Burst Mode operation for light load
currents, the current through the VIN(EN) resistor network
can easily be greater than the supply current consumed
by the LT8620. Therefore, the VIN(EN) resistors should be
large to minimize their effect on efficiency at low loads.
INTVCC Regulator
An internal low dropout (LDO) regulator produces the 3.4V
supply from VIN that powers the drivers and the internal
bias circuitry. The INTVCC can supply enough current for
the LT8620’s circuitry and must be bypassed to ground
with a minimum of 1μF ceramic capacitor. Good bypassing
is necessary to supply the high transient currents required
by the power MOSFET gate drivers. To improve efficiency
the internal LDO can also draw current from the BIAS
pin when the BIAS pin is at 3.1V or higher. Typically the
BIAS pin can be tied to the output of the LT8620, or can
be tied to an external supply of 3.3V or above. If BIAS is
connected to a supply other than VOUT, be sure to bypass
with a local ceramic capacitor. If the BIAS pin is below
3.0V, the internal LDO will consume current from VIN.
Applications with high input voltage and high switching
frequency where the internal LDO pulls current from VIN
will increase die temperature because of the higher power
dissipation across the LDO. Do not connect an external
load to the INTVCC pin.
Output Voltage Tracking and Soft-Start
T
he LT8620 allows the user to program its output voltage
ramp rate by means of the TR/SS pin. An internal 2μA
pulls up the TR/SS pin to INTVCC. Putting an external
capacitor on TR/SS enables soft starting the output to pre-
vent current surge on the input supply. During the soft-start
ramp the output voltage will proportionally track the TR/SS
pin voltage. For output tracking applications, TR/SS can
be externally driven by another voltage source. From 0V to
0.97V, the TR/SS voltage will override the internal 0.97V
reference input to the error amplifier, thus regulating the
FB pin voltage to that of TR/SS pin. When TR/SS is above
0.97V, tracking is disabled and the feedback voltage will
regulate to the internal reference voltage. The TR/SS pin
may be left floating if the function is not needed.
An active pull-down circuit is connected to the TR/SS pin
which will discharge the external soft-start capacitor in
the case of fault conditions and restart the ramp when the
faults are cleared. Fault conditions that clear the soft-start
capacitor are the EN/UV pin transitioning low, VIN voltage
falling too low, or thermal shutdown.
Output Power Good
When the LT8620’s output voltage is within the ±9%
window of the regulation point, which is a VFB voltage in
the range of 0.883V to 1.057V (typical), the output voltage
is considered good and the open-drain PG pin goes high
impedance and is typically pulled high with an external
resistor. Otherwise, the internal pull-down device will pull
the PG pin low. To prevent glitching both the upper and
lower thresholds include 1.3% of hysteresis.
The PG pin is also actively pulled low during several fault
conditions: EN/UV pin is below 1V, INTVCC has fallen too
low, VIN is too low, or thermal shutdown.
Synchronization
To select low ripple Burst Mode operation, tie the SYNC pin
below 0.4V (this can be ground or a logic low output). To
synchronize the LT8620 oscillator to an external frequency
connect a square wave (with 20% to 80% duty cycle) to
the SYNC pin. The square wave amplitude should have val-
leys that are below 0.4V and peaks above 1.5V (up to 6V).
The LT8620 will not enter Burst Mode operation at low
output loads while synchronized to an external clock, but
instead will pulse skip to maintain regulation. The LT8620
may be synchronized over a 200kHz to 2.2MHz range. The
RT resistor should be chosen to set the LT8620 switching
frequency equal to or below the lowest synchronization
input. For example, if the synchronization signal will be
500kHz and higher, the RT should be selected for 500kHz.
The slope compensation is set by the RT value, while the
minimum slope compensation required to avoid subhar-
monic oscillations is established by the inductor size,
input voltage, and output voltage. Since the synchroniza-
tion frequency will not change the slopes of the inductor
current waveform, if the inductor is large enough to avoid