4.6 Article Proceedings Paper

A 4-Phase 30-70 MHz Switching Frequency Buck Converter Using a Time-Based Compensator

Journal

IEEE JOURNAL OF SOLID-STATE CIRCUITS
Volume 50, Issue 12, Pages 2814-2824

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JSSC.2015.2456884

Keywords

Buck; duty-cycle matching; high switching frequency; multi-phase; passive current sharing; PID compensator; time-based

Funding

  1. Texas Instruments and Systems on Nanoscale Information fabriCs (SONIC), one of the six SRC STARnet Centers - MARCO
  2. DARPA

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A high switching frequency multi-phase buck converter architecture using a time-based compensator is presented. Efficiency degradation due to mismatch between the phases is mitigated by generating precisely matched duty-cycles by combining a time-based multi-phase generator (MPG) with a time-based PID compensator (T-PID). The proposed approach obviates the need for a complex current sensing and calibration circuitry needed to implement active current sharing in an analog controller. It also eliminates the need for a high resolution analog-to-digital converter and digital pulse width modulator needed for implementing passive current sharing in a digital controller. Fabricated in a 65 nm CMOS process, the prototype multi-phase buck converter occupies an active area of 0.32 mm(2), of which the controller occupies only 0.04 mm(2). The converter operates over a wide range of switching frequencies (30-70 MHz) and regulates output to any desired voltage in the range of 0.6 V to 1.5 V from 1.8 V input voltage. With a 400 mA step in the load current, the settling time is less than 0.6 mu s and the measured duty-cycle mismatch is less than 0.48%. Better than 87% peak efficiency is achieved while consuming a quiescent current of only 3 mu A/MHz.

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