Sales Conference Session for Simple Switcher & Tools

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Transcript Sales Conference Session for Simple Switcher & Tools

WEBENCH Power
Designer/Architect
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The WEBENCH Tool Suite
Altera
PowerPlay
Power Architect &
FPGAs
FPGA/Power Architect
WEBENCH Visualizer
WEBENCH Power Designer
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Beginning To End: Design And
Prototyping
1. Choose a Part
2. Create a Design
3. Analyze a Design
4. Build It!
Custom Prototype Kit
Overnight
Enter Specifications
Optimize for
Footprint and
Efficiency, Use
Graphs to
Visualize Design
Generate Schematic/
Electrical Analysis
Select Part
Generate Layout/
Thermal Analysis
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Prototype
Two Ways to Access WEBENCH®
Designer
•
•
.
4
Use the entry panel on
http://www.national.com
OR
Go to the product folder
for a part
WEBENCH Navigation
Navigation Icons
WEBENCH Tools:
Power
LED
LED Architect
Power Architect
FPGA Power Architect
5
5
Create and View Design
Dashboard
1) Graphs
2) Schematic
3) Optimization
4) Operating
values
5) BOM
6) Reporting
Simulation
Controls
Inputs
Op Vals Charts
Schematic
Optimization
Op Vals
BOM/Change
Components
Build It®
& Report
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Schematic – Buck Converter
Components:
Input Capacitor
Regulator with integrated FET
Inductor
Catch Diode
Output Capacitor
Feedback Network
Input
Load
Feature Controls
Current Path with Switch On
Current Path with Switch Off
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Visualize Behavior – Power Dissipation
Efficiency = Pout / Pin
Diode:
Cout:
Pin = Vout * Iout + Pdiss
Isw*Vf *(1-DutyC) ICoutRMS2 * ESR
Switch:
DC: IswRMS2 * Rsw * DutyC
AC: ½ * Vin * Isw *
Inductor:
Cin:
ILRMS2 * DCR
ICinRMS2 * ESR
(Trise + Tfall)/Tsw
Quiescent: Iq * Vin
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FET Selection: AC Loss
• PswAC = ½ * Vdsoff * Idson * (trise + tfall)/Tsw
Regions of power loss (V*I)
Vsw
Miller Plateau
Miller Plateau
Vdriver
Vth
Vth
Isw
Vg
Vsw = -Vds
Switch Off
On
Off
Tfall
Trise
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FET Selection: AC Loss
• PswAC = ½ * Vdsoff * Idson * (trise + tfall)/Tsw
High Freq = High Loss
Low Freq = Low Loss
Regions of power loss (V*I)
Vsw
Miller Plateau
Miller Plateau
Vdriver
Vth
Vth
Isw
Vg
Vsw = -Vds
Switch Off
On
Trise
Off
Tfall
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How To Reduce FET Power Loss
• Choose a FET with low RdsOn
• Choose a FET with low capacitance
• Lower the switching frequency
BUT
• Lowering frequency affects the inductor selection
• We want to keep the inductor ripple current constant
– Because this changes the peak switch current and the Vout
ripple
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Inductor Current vs Switch Voltage
Inductor
Current
Switch
Voltage
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Inductor Ripple Current
On
Time
Voltage
applied
dI = (1/L)*V*dt
Inductor Ripple Current (also determines
peak switch current and Vout ripple)
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Inductor Selection – Lower Frequency
Higher frequency:
On
Time
Voltage
applied
dI = (1/L)*V*dt
Inductor Ripple Current (also determines
peak switch current and Vout ripple)
Lower frequency:
Lower Frequency =
Increased On Time =
Increased Inductor Ripple
Current =
Increased Peak Switch
Current and Increased Vout
Ripple
If L is kept
constant, ILpp
increases
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Inductor Selection – Raise Inductance
Higher frequency:
On
Time
Voltage
applied
dI = (1/L)*V*dt
Inductor Ripple Current (also determines
peak switch current and Vout ripple)
Lower frequency with
higher inductance:
Lower frequency:
If L is kept
constant, ILpp
increases
So we need to
increase L
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Effect Of Lower Frequency On Inductor
• If we keep the inductor ripple current constant by
increasing the inductance:
– The inductor gets larger (more turns)
– The inductor power dissipation goes up (longer wire)
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Optimization – Efficiency vs Footprint
Left side:
Right side:
Higher frequency
Lower frequency
Smaller footprint
Lower resistance
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Optimization Summary
• To get high efficiency
– Decrease frequency to reduce AC losses
– Choose components with low resistance
• To get small footprint
– Increase frequency to reduce inductor size
– Choose components with small footprint
• Cost
• These parameters are at odds with each other and
need to be balanced for a designer’s needs
• Tools are available to visualize tradeoffs and make it
easier to get to the best solution for your design
requirements
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The WEBENCH Tool Suite
Power Architect &
FPGAs
WEBENCH Visualizer
WEBENCH Power Designer
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WEBENCH VisualizerCalculates 50 Designs In 2 Seconds
Recommended
Solutions
Charts
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Calculated BOM Footprint, BOM Cost
and Efficiency
Footprint vs Cost vs Efficiency
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Graphical Plot Gives At A Glance TradeOffs
Click on
square to
resize the plot
to full screen
size
Hover to see
details
Click and
drag to
zoom
Change plot parameters
Bubble Size = BOM Price
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Why Are The Solutions Different?
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Give The Customers What They Want:
Best Efficiency, Footprint and BOM Cost
• Default Setting:
LM22676, 80%, 411mm2, $2.88
• Smallest Footprint: LM25011, 75%, 297mm2, $2.47
• Highest Efficiency: LM3150, 94%, 1320mm2, $6.77
• Comparing different designs up front, achieves better
results than optimizing 1 part after creating a design
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The WEBENCH Tool Suite
Power Architect &
FPGA Architect
WEBENCH Visualizer
WEBENCH Power Designer
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Design This Power Supply In Seconds?
Many Loads, Many Supplies
• Core Supply
[email protected]
• FPGA IO
[email protected]
• Vcca
[email protected]
• Flash
[email protected]
• SDRAM
[email protected]
• CCD
[email protected]
• PLL
[email protected]
• Motor Control
[email protected]
• Miscellaneous
[email protected]
9 Loads and 5 Voltages
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Why Do Designers Use Reference
Designs So Frequently For Complex FPGAs?
• Cyclone IV GX - EP4CGX150
• User guide: 463 pages, 10MB
• 20-30 pages of power details
• Spartan-6 - XC6SLX100T
Minutes, right?
With Confidence?
• 40+ separate reference guides and datasheets: ~2000 pages,
90MB
• 15 pages critical for power details
• Each specification includes challenging requirements
and exceptions
– Voltage, current, ripple, frequency, accuracy, soft start, supply
isolation, and pin specific limitations
• Every complete system has additional loads beyond the
FPGA loads, adding more to the complexity
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WEBENCH® FPGA Power Architect
Select
Device
From List
Add
FPGA
Configure
Loads
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Get FPGA Load Current From Vendor
Estimation Spreadsheet: Xilinx
Spreadsheet
calculates the
current
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Update Load Current Into Preconfigured
FPGA Dependency Template
Voltage, Current,
and Special
Requirements
Included For:
• Max Voltage Ripple
• Isolated Supplies
• Soft Start
Next
• Post Supply Filters
• LDO Preferred
Add All Of Your Own Additional System Loads
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Each Architecture Is Tuned With The
WEBENCH Optimizer, Now For Systems
Optimizer Dial
8000
Relative System Cost
Size
2000
76%
System Efficiency
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92%
WEBENCH FPGA Power Architect
Selects The Best Solutions For Every Rail
Intermediate Rail (12V)
Loads
Supply 2 (1.25V)
Supply 3 (3.3V)
Supply 4 (1.8V)
Supply 5 (2.5V)
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Presenting The User With The Intermediate
Rail Options And Performance Trade-Offs
Intermediate Rail Options Can Be Reviewed & Compared Quickly
12V
3V
5V
No I-Rail
12V
Lowest Cost
12V
23V
5V
Smallest Footprint
Highest Efficiency
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Analyze Performance, Cost and
Footprint for Selected Architecture
Go
Click on
Each
Supply To
Display
Detail
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WEBENCH® FPGA Architect Leverages
The WEBENCH Dashboard
Click on
Each
Supply To
Analyze
Design
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Advanced Tools Are Available For
Further Exploration
Share Design
System
Summary
Optimizer
Simulation
Optimization
Graphs
Charts
Drive
Circuits
Bill of
Materials
Prototyping
System
Op Vals
Power
Topology
& Design Reports
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Complete FPGA Power Supply Design
Reporting – Automatic Generation
Your Design From The Top: Inputs, Supplies, Schematics,
BOMs
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Hands On Exercise
Design Problem:
Goals:
Source: 18 – 32V
Loads:
LCD Panel: 3.3V, 0.2A
What is the system with the:
Flash Memory: 1.8V, .05A
Freescale QorIQ P2020
Smallest footprint
Avdd: 1.05V, 1A
BVdd: 1.8V, .06A
Highest efficiency
Cvdd: 1.8V, .02A
Lowest cost
Gvdd: 1.5V, .9A
LVdd: 2.5V, .1A
OVdd: 3.3V, .01A
SVdd: 1.05V, .4A
Vdd: 1.05V, 5.6A
XVdd: 1.05V, .4A
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Summary
• WEBENCH Visualizer
– View up to 50 designs at a time to get the best solution for a
single power supply
– Each design optimized for efficiency, cost and size
• WEBENCH Power Architect
– System level designs for complex multiple load applications
– Provides different rail architectures
– Each system optimized for efficiency, cost and size
• WEBENCH FPGA/Processor Power Designer
– Preconfigured FPGA and processor loads including
noise/filter requirements
• WEBENCH saves you time!
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Thank You!
Try WEBENCH® FPGA Power Architect yourself:
http://www.national.com/fpga_power_architect
LED Architect:
http://www.national.com/led_architect
Jeff Perry
[email protected]