ZHCSLD2E may   2020  – july 2023 UCC28782

PRODUCTION DATA  

  1.   1
  2. 特性
  3. 应用
  4. 描述
  5. Revision History
  6. Device Comparison Table
  7. Pin Configuration and Functions
    1.     Pin Functions
  8. Specifications
    1. 7.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings
    2. 7.2 ESD Ratings
    3. 7.3 Recommended Operating Conditions
    4. 7.4 Thermal Information
    5. 7.5 Electrical Characteristics
    6. 7.6 Typical Characteristics
  9. Detailed Description
    1. 8.1 Overview
    2. 8.2 Functional Block Diagram
    3. 8.3 Detailed Pin Description
      1. 8.3.1  BUR Pin (Programmable Burst Mode)
      2. 8.3.2  FB Pin (Feedback Pin)
      3. 8.3.3  REF Pin (Internal 5-V Bias)
      4. 8.3.4  VDD Pin (Device Bias Supply)
      5. 8.3.5  P13 and SWS Pins
      6. 8.3.6  S13 Pin
      7. 8.3.7  IPC Pin (Intelligent Power Control Pin)
      8. 8.3.8  RUN Pin (Driver and Bias Source for Isolator)
      9. 8.3.9  PWMH and AGND Pins
      10. 8.3.10 PWML and PGND Pins
      11. 8.3.11 SET Pin
      12. 8.3.12 RTZ Pin (Sets Delay for Transition Time to Zero)
      13. 8.3.13 RDM Pin (Sets Synthesized Demagnetization Time for ZVS Tuning)
      14. 8.3.14 BIN, BSW, and BGND Pins
      15. 8.3.15 XCD Pin
      16. 8.3.16 CS, VS, and FLT Pins
    4. 8.4 Device Functional Modes
      1. 8.4.1  Adaptive ZVS Control with Auto-Tuning
      2. 8.4.2  Dead-Time Optimization
      3. 8.4.3  EMI Dither and Dither Fading Function
      4. 8.4.4  Control Law across Entire Load Range
      5. 8.4.5  Adaptive Amplitude Modulation (AAM)
      6. 8.4.6  Adaptive Burst Mode (ABM)
      7. 8.4.7  Low Power Mode (LPM)
      8. 8.4.8  First Standby Power Mode (SBP1)
      9. 8.4.9  Second Standby Power Mode (SBP2)
      10. 8.4.10 Startup Sequence
      11. 8.4.11 Survival Mode of VDD (INT_STOP)
      12. 8.4.12 Capacitor Voltage Balancing Function
      13. 8.4.13 Device Functional Modes for Bias Regulator Control
        1. 8.4.13.1 Mitigation of Switching Interaction with ACF Converter
        2. 8.4.13.2 Protection Functions for the Bias Regulator
        3. 8.4.13.3 BIN-Pin Related Protections
        4. 8.4.13.4 BSW-Pin Related Protections
      14. 8.4.14 System Fault Protections
        1. 8.4.14.1  Brown-In and Brown-Out
        2. 8.4.14.2  Output Over-Voltage Protection (OVP)
        3. 8.4.14.3  Input Over Voltage Protection (IOVP)
        4. 8.4.14.4  Over-Temperature Protection (OTP) on FLT Pin
        5. 8.4.14.5  Over-Temperature Protection (OTP) on CS Pin
        6. 8.4.14.6  Programmable Over-Power Protection (OPP)
        7. 8.4.14.7  Peak Power Limit (PPL)
        8. 8.4.14.8  Output Short-Circuit Protection (SCP)
        9. 8.4.14.9  Over-Current Protection (OCP)
        10. 8.4.14.10 External Shutdown
        11. 8.4.14.11 Internal Thermal Shutdown
      15. 8.4.15 Pin Open/Short Protections
        1. 8.4.15.1 Protections on CS pin Fault
        2. 8.4.15.2 Protections on P13 pin Fault
        3. 8.4.15.3 Protections on RDM and RTZ pin Faults
  10. Application and Implementation
    1. 9.1 Application Information
    2. 9.2 Typical Application Circuit
      1. 9.2.1 Design Requirements for a 65-W USB-PD Adapter Application
      2. 9.2.2 Detailed Design Procedure
        1. 9.2.2.1 Input Bulk Capacitance and Minimum Bulk Voltage
        2. 9.2.2.2 Transformer Calculations
          1. 9.2.2.2.1 Primary-to-Secondary Turns Ratio (NPS)
          2. 9.2.2.2.2 Primary Magnetizing Inductance (LM)
          3. 9.2.2.2.3 Primary Winding Turns (NP)
          4. 9.2.2.2.4 Secondary Winding Turns (NS)
          5. 9.2.2.2.5 Auxiliary Winding Turns (NA)
          6. 9.2.2.2.6 Winding and Magnetic Core Materials
        3. 9.2.2.3 Clamp Capacitor Calculation
          1. 9.2.2.3.1 Primary-Resonance ACF
          2. 9.2.2.3.2 Secondary-Resonance ACF
        4. 9.2.2.4 Bleed-Resistor Calculation
        5. 9.2.2.5 Output Filter Calculation
        6. 9.2.2.6 Calculation of ZVS Sensing Network
        7. 9.2.2.7 Calculation of BUR Pin Resistances
        8. 9.2.2.8 Calculation of Compensation Network
      3. 9.2.3 Application Curves
  11. 10Power Supply Recommendations
  12. 11Layout
    1. 11.1 Layout Guidelines
      1. 11.1.1  General Considerations
      2. 11.1.2  RDM and RTZ Pins
      3. 11.1.3  SWS Pin
      4. 11.1.4  VS Pin
      5. 11.1.5  BUR Pin
      6. 11.1.6  FB Pin
      7. 11.1.7  CS Pin
      8. 11.1.8  BIN Pin
      9. 11.1.9  BSW Pin
      10. 11.1.10 AGND Pin
      11. 11.1.11 BGND Pin
      12. 11.1.12 PGND Pin
      13. 11.1.13 EP Thermal Pad
    2. 11.2 Layout Example
  13. 12Device and Documentation Support
    1. 12.1 Documentation Support
      1. 12.1.1 Related Documentation
    2. 12.2 Receiving Notification of Documentation Updates
    3. 12.3 支持资源
    4. 12.4 Trademarks
    5. 12.5 静电放电警告
    6. 12.6 术语表
  14. 13Mechanical, Packaging, and Orderable Information

封装选项

机械数据 (封装 | 引脚)
散热焊盘机械数据 (封装 | 引脚)
订购信息

PWMH and AGND Pins

The PWMH pin controls the gate of the high-side clamp switch through an external high-voltage gate driver. The PWMH driver ground return is referenced to the AGND pin. The maximum voltage level of PWMH is clamped to 5-V REF level. As PWMH goes high, when its voltage is less than 3 V, a 21-mA peak pull-up current is supplied from the P13 regulator. When the PWMH voltage goes above 3 V, the pull-up is supplied from the REF regulator instead, so the peak driving capability will be limited less than 6 mA in order to avoid the high current loading from tripping the over current protection of the REF regulator.

As shown in Figure 8-12, since the RUN driver charges the decoupling capacitor of a digital isolator first through one small-signal diode at the beginning of every burst cycle, the sourcing current of PWMH is sufficient to send the control signal to the isolator and supply the continuous isolator operating current together with the RUN driver at the same time through another small-signal diode. The high peak driving capability of PWMH provides the flexibility of signal transmission through a digitally isolated gate-driver with opto-compatible input. If the PWMH pin is provided to a half-bridge GaN device with an internal high side driver, the PWMH driver is mainly treated as a logic signal output.

In any case, it is prudent to choose a high-side isolator or gate-driver with minimal power-up delay on both input and output sides to avoid missing several PWMH pulses to the high-side switch. Furthermore, signal transfer from input to output should be edge-triggered to avoid asynchronous high-side turn-on in the middle of a PWMH pulse, as may happen with level-triggered isolators. This can avoid high-side switch turn-off during significant current and its resultant voltage spike.

AGND pin is the ground return for all the analog control signals, RUN driver, and PWMH driver. It is required to implement a careful layout separation from other noisy ground return paths, such as PGND, BGND, and power stage ground. The thermal pad should be connected to the AGND pin directly and could be a Kelvin connection point to the related external components. For details of the grounding layout guideline and noise decoupling techniques, one can refer to the Section 9.1 of this datasheet.