Pin Description (Continued)
with no intervening vias between this capacitor and the
V
DD
/SGND pins. If the voltage on Pin 5 falls below the lower
UVLO threshold, the upper and lower FETs are both turned
OFF. ‘Power Not Good’ is also signaled immediately (on Pin
9.) Normal operation will resume once the fault condition has
cleared. Additionally if the voltage on this pin falls below the
minimum voltage required for logic operation (about 1.8V
typ) the part will shutdown identically to enable (see pin 8)
being pulled low.
Pin 6, FREQ: Frequency adjust pin. The switching frequency
(for both channels) is set by a resistor connected between
this pin and ground. A value of 22.1kΩsets the frequency to
300kHz (nominal). If the resistance is increased, the switch-
ing frequency falls. An approximate relationship is that for
every 7.3kΩincrease (or decrease) in the value of the fre-
quency adjust resistance, the time period (1/f) increases (or
decreases) by about 1µs.
Pin 7, SGND: Signal Ground pin. This is the lower rail for the
control and logic sections of both channels. SGND should be
connected on the PCB to the system ground, which in turn is
connected to PGND1 and PGND2. The layout is important
and the recommendations in the section Layout Guidelines
should be followed.
Pin 8, EN: IC Enable pin. When EN is taken high, both
channels are enabled by means of a Soft-start power-up
sequence (see Pin 4). When EN is brought low, ‘Power Not
Good’ is signaled within 100ns. The Soft-start capacitor is
then discharged by an internal 1.8kΩresistor (R
SS_DCHG
,
see Electrical Characteristics table) to ground.
Pin 9, PGOOD: Power Good output pin. An open-Drain logic
output that is pulled high with an external pull-up resistor,
indicating that both output voltages are within a pre-defined
‘Power Good’ window, V
IN
and V
DD
are within required op-
erating range, and enable is high. Outside this window, this
pin is internally pulled low (‘Power Not Good’ signaled) pro-
vided the output error lasts for more than 7µs. The pin also
goes low within 100ns of the Enable pin being taken low, or
V
DD
going below UVLO, or V
IN
going below UVLO irrespec-
tive of the output voltage level. Regulation on both channels
must be achieved first before fault monitoring becomes ac-
tive (i.e. PGOOD must have been high prior to occurrence of
the fault condition for a fault to be asserted). For correct
signaling on this pin under single-channel operation, see
description of Pin 2.
Pin 10, FPWM: Logic input for selecting either the Forced
PWM (‘FPWM’) Mode or Pulse-skip Mode (‘SKIP’) for both
channels (together). When the pin is driven high, the IC
operates in the FPWM mode, and when pulled low or left
floating, the SKIP mode is enabled. In FPWM mode, the
lower FET of a given channel is always ON whenever the
upper FET is OFF (except for a narrow shoot-through pro-
tection deadband). This leads to continuous conduction
mode of operation, which has a fixed frequency and (almost)
fixed duty cycle down to very light loads. But this does
reduce efficiency at light loads. The alternative is the SKIP
mode, where the lower FET remains ON only till the voltage
on the Switch pin (see Pin 27 or Pin 16) goes above -2.2mV
(typical). So for example, for a 21mΩFET, this translates to
a current threshold of 2.2/21 = 0.1A. Therefore if the (instan-
taneous) inductor current falls below this value, the lower
FET will turn OFF every cycle at this point (when operated in
SKIP mode). This threshold is set by the ‘Zero-cross Com-
parator’ in the Block Diagram. Note that if the inductor cur-
rent waveform is high enough to cause the SW pin to be
always below this ‘zero-cross threshold’ (see Electrical Char-
acteristics table), there will be no observable difference be-
tween FPWM and SKIP mode settings (in steady-state).
SKIP mode, when it occurs, is clearly a discontinuous mode
of operation. However, in conventional discontinuous mode,
the duty cycle keeps falling (towards zero) as the load de-
creases. But the LM2657 does not ‘allow’ the duty cycle to
fall by more than 15% of its original value (at the CCM-DCM
boundary). This leads to pulse-skipping, and so the average
frequency decreases as the load decreases. This mode of
operation improves efficiency at light loads, but the fre-
quency is effectively no longer a constant. Note that a mini-
mum preload of 0.1mA should be maintained on the output
of each channel to ensure regulation in SKIP mode. The
resistive divider from output to ground used to set the output
voltage could be designed to serve as this preload.
Pin 11, SS2: Soft-start pin for Channel 2. See Pin 4.
Pin 12, COMP2: Compensation pin for Channel 2. See Pin
3.
Pin 13, FB2: Feedback pin for Channel 2. See Pin 2.
Pin 14, SENSE2: Output voltage sense pin for Channel 2.
See Pin 1.
Pin 15, ILIM2: Channel 2 Current Limit pin. When the bottom
FET is ON, a 62µA (typical) current flows out of this pin into
an external current limit setting resistor connected to the
drain of the lower FET. This is a current source so the drop
across this resistor tries to push the voltage on this pin to a
more positive value. However, the drain of the lower FET,
which is connected to the other side of the same resistor, is
trying to go more negative as the load current increases.
Therefore at some value of current, the voltage on this pin
will cross zero and start to go negative. This is the current
limiting condition and it is detected by the ‘Current Limit
Comparator’ seen in the Block Diagram. When a current limit
condition has been detected, the next ON-pulse of the upper
FET will be omitted. The lower FET will again be monitored
to determine if the current has fallen below the threshold. If it
has, the next ON-pulse will be permitted. If not, the upper
FET will stay OFF, and remain so for several cycles if nec-
essary, until the current returns to normal. Eventually, if the
overcurrent condition persists and the upper FET has not
been turned ON, the output will start to fall eventually trig-
gering “Power not Good”.
Pin 16, SW2: The Switching node of the buck regulator of
Channel 2. Also serves as the lower rail of the floating driver
of the upper FET.
Pin 17, HDRV2: Gate drive pin for the upper FET of Channel
2 (High-side drive). The top gate driver is interlocked with the
bottom gate driver to prevent shoot-through/cross-
conduction.
Pin 18, BOOT2: Bootstrap pin for Channel 2. This is the
upper supply rail for the floating driver of the upper FET. It is
bootstrapped by means of a ceramic capacitor connected to
the channel Switching node. This capacitor is charged up by
the IC to a value of about 5V as derived from the V5 pin (Pin
21).
Pin 19, PGND2: Power Ground pin of Channel 2. This is the
return path for the bottom FET gate drive. Both the PGND’s
are to be connected on the PCB to the system ground and
also to the Signal ground (Pin 7) in accordance with the
recommended Layout Guidelines .
Pin 20, LDRV2: Gate drive pin for the Channel 2 bottom FET
(Low-side drive). The bottom gate driver is interlocked with
the top gate driver to prevent shoot-through/cross-
conduction.
LM2657
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