SLVUCU5 December 2025 UCD91160 , UCD91320
Each rail has a Power Good status determined by the following rules:
If rail voltage is monitored by an AMON (analog monitoring) pin, the Power Good status is determined by Power Good On and Power Good Off thresholds, which are configured through PMBus.
A rail is given Power Good status if the rail voltage is above the Power Good On threshold. Otherwise, the rail is given Not Power Good status if the rail voltage is below the Power Good Off threshold.
The rail remains in the current state if the voltage is neither above Power Good On nor below Power Good Off thresholds.
If rail voltage is monitored by a DMON (digital monitoring) pin, the Power Good status is determined by the input logic level.
A rail is given Power Good status when the input is logic HIGH (3.3V).
A rail is given Not Power Good status when the input is logic LOW.
If rail voltage is not monitored by an AMON or DMON pin, the Power Good status is determined by the turn-on and turn-off eligibility of the rail.
A rail is immediately given Power Good status when the rail meets all the turn-on conditions set by the user, such as ON_OFF_CONFIG, dependencies on items such as other rails and GPIO, and delays.
Similarly, a rail is immediately given Not Power Good status when the rail meets all the turn-off conditions set by the user.
The behavior is the same regardless whether a physical EN (enable) pin is assigned to the rail.
A rail is on or within regulation when the measured voltage crosses the Power Good On limit, which is configured through PMBus.
A rail remains in regulation even if the voltage is below the power good threshold until it’s commanded off (seeRail On and Off Configuration), and all sequencing dependencies and timing delays are met.