1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a constant-on-time generation circuit, and more particularly, to a constant-on-time generation circuit capable of compensating a turn-on delay time of a high-side switch of a buck converter.
2. Description of the Prior Art
Most electronic products, such as a laptop, a mobile phone, a personal digital assistant, a multimedia player and so on, require a power converter converting an alternate current source into a direct current source to provide a proper input voltage to ensure a normal operation of the electronic products. A buck converter is widely used since it has advantages of simple structure, easy design and low cost.
Please refer to
In operation, the comparator COMP′ of the trigger signal generation circuit 101 outputs a trigger signal CPOUT to the COT generation circuit 104 according to a trigger reference voltage VREF and a feedback voltage VFB, wherein the output voltage VOUT is divided by the resistors RF1 and RF2 to obtain the feedback voltage VFB denoted as
The COT generation circuit 104 generates the turn-on signal STON having a constant turn-on time TON to the front-end driver 106 according to the trigger signal CPOUT, the output voltage VOUT and the input voltage VIN. Moreover, when the high-side switch HS is turned on, a phase signal SUGON is equal to the input voltage VIN, such that the COT generation circuit 104 may generate the turn-on signal STON according to the trigger signal CPOUT, the output voltage VOUT and the phase signal SUGON as well. The front-end drivers 106 and 108 respectively generate a first front-end driver signal UG and a second front-end driver signal LG according to turn-on signal STON and a bootstrap voltage VBOOT and the operating bias VCC to control when to turn on or off the high-side switch HS and the low-side switch LS. For example, the high-side switch HS is turned on and the low-side switch LS is turned off during the turn-on time TON; the high-side switch HS is turned off and the low-side switch LS is turned on during a turn-off time TOFF. The turn-on time TON is predetermined to be a constant, while the turn-off time TOFF is determined according to the feedback voltage VFB, specifically, when the feedback voltage VFB is less than the trigger reference voltage VREF, a switch duty cycle is triggered to start the next turn-on time TON.
However, in the buck converter 10, the high-side switch HS requires a higher drive voltage to be turned on and a longer response time compared to other electronic elements. In other words, when the turn-on STON falls to a low voltage, the high-side switch HS may remain turned on for a while instead of turning off immediately, which causes a turn-on time TON, of the high-side switch HS to be longer than the predetermined turn-on time TON, i.e. TON′=TON+ΔT, wherein ΔT is a delay time of the high-side switch HS.
A duty cycle D of the buck converter is defined to be a ratio of the output voltage VOUT and the input voltage VIN, i.e.
furthermore, a switch frequency FSW is defined to be a ratio of the output voltage VOUT and the input voltage VIN per second, i.e.
Due to the non-ideal delay time of the high-side switch HS, a real switch frequency FSW′ may be denoted as:
Therefore, the delay time ΔT causes the real time TON′ to be different from the default turn-on time, such that the switch frequency FSW′ of the buck converter is changed and does not provide the predetermined or correct switch frequency to the output load. Besides, in practice, the delay time ΔT also causes the switch frequency FSW′ to change with the duty cycle D and a risk of abnormal power supply. Thus, there is a need to improve the prior art.
It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a constant-on-time generation circuit and buck converter capable of compensating a turn-on delay time of a high-side switch of a buck converter.
The present invention discloses a constant-on-time generation circuit for generating a turn-on signal to a buck converter for converting an input voltage to an output voltage. The constant-on-time generation circuit comprises a capacitor, a current source having a transfer impedance and coupled to a first voltage for generating a current according to a first resistance of the transfer impedance and the first voltage, a second resistor coupled between the capacitor and the current source, an inverter coupled to a first front-end driver signal of the buck converter for inverting the first front-end driver signal, a transistor including a drain coupled to the capacitor, a source coupled to a ground terminal and a gate, for receiving the inverted first front-end driver signal to trigger the current source charging the capacitor so as to generate a set turn-on signal, a comparator including a negative input terminal coupled to a reference voltage, a positive input terminal coupled to the second resistor and the current source, and an output terminal, for comparing the reference voltage with the set turn-on signal to output a comparison result, and an SR-latch including a reset input terminal coupled to the output terminal of the comparator, and a set input terminal coupled to a trigger signal of the buck converter, for outputting a turn-on signal to a driver stage circuit of the buck converter according to the trigger signal and the comparison result.
The present invention further discloses a buck converter for converting an input voltage to an output voltage. The buck converter comprises a trigger signal generation circuit for outputting a trigger signal, a constant-on-time generation circuit including a capacitor, a current source having a transfer impedance and coupled to a first voltage for generating a current according to a first resistance of the transfer impedance and the first voltage, a second resistor coupled between the capacitor and the current source, an inverter coupled to a first front-end driver signal of the buck converter for inverting the first front-end driver signal, a transistor including a drain coupled to the capacitor, a source coupled to a ground terminal and a gate for receiving the inverted first front-end driver signal to trigger the current source charging the capacitor so as to generate a set turn-on signal, a comparator including a negative input terminal coupled to a reference voltage, a positive input terminal coupled to the second resistor and the current source, and an output terminal for comparing the reference voltage with the set turn-on signal to output a comparison result, and an SR-latch including a reset input terminal coupled to the output terminal of the comparator and a set input terminal coupled to the trigger signal, and an output terminal for outputting a turn-on signal to a driver stage circuit of the buck converter according to the trigger signal and the comparison result, a driver stage circuit coupled to the output terminal of the SR-latch for generating a phase signal according to the turn-on signal, and an output stage circuit for generating the output voltage to an output load according to the phase signal.
These and other objectives of the present invention will no doubt become obvious to those of ordinary skill in the art after reading the following detailed description of the preferred embodiment that is illustrated in the various figures and drawings.
Please refer to
In operation, when the high-side switch HS is turned off, the inverted first front-end driver signal UG is at a high voltage to turn on the transistor M0, such that the capacitor C is shorted to the ground terminal and discharged, and the cross voltage VC and the set turn-on signal STONSET are both set to zero voltage accordingly. The trigger signal CPOUT may be an impulse signal, the turn-on signal STON outputted by the SR-latch 209 is set to be at a high voltage once the impulse of trigger signal CPOUT rises. The turn-on signal STON is transferred to be the first front-end driver signal UG by the front-end driver 106 to turn on the high-side switch HS. Then, since the high-side switch HS is turned on, the inverted first front-end driver signal UG is at a low voltage (or zero voltage) to turn off the transistor M0, such that the current source CS starts charging the capacitor C, and the cross voltage VC and the set turn-on signal STONSET begin increasing until the first front-end driver signal UG turns on the transistor M0 again, so the capacitor C is short to the ground terminal again. As a result, the capacitor C is periodically charged and discharged to generate the set turn-on signal STONSET having a triangle waveform. In other words, the current source CS and the capacitor C are cascaded to form a voltage integrator, and the transistor M0 triggers the voltage integrator to start performing integration according to the first front-end driver signal UG.
When the reference voltage VK
In a viewpoint of circuit analysis, a relation between the capacitor C and a charge current I may be written as
wherein the current I is generated by the current source CS and may be written as
Assume a charge time of the capacitor C is equal to the turn-on time TON, which may be written as:
Besides, the duty cycle D of the buck converter 10 is
and the switch frequency FSW of the buck converter 10 is:
Substitute the duty cycle D into formula (2) to obtain the switch frequency FSW:
Substitute formula (1), i.e. the turn-on time TON, into formula (3) and rearrange to obtain the ideal switch frequency FSW:
As can be seen from formula (4), the ideal switch frequency FSW may be determined by a duty frequency
of the COT generation circuit 204, wherein the constant K is used for adjusting the switch frequency FSW according to different practical requirements.
Please refer to
TON′=K*R1*C*D+ΔT (5)
And the real switch frequency FSW′ is:
As can be seen form formula (6), if the K, R1, C are constant and the duty cycle D is variant, the non-ideal delay time ΔT causes the real switch frequency FSW′ of the buck converter 10 varies as the duty cycle D varies.
Please refer to
the real turn-on time TON′ is 1.19μ seconds and the delay time ΔT of the high-side switch HS is 22.9 n seconds, so the delay time ΔT takes 1.92% of the turn-on time TON′. In comparison, when the duty cycle D is
the real turn-on time TON′ is 158n seconds and the delay time ΔT of the high-side switch HS is 23.1n seconds, so the delay time ΔT takes 14.62% of the turn-on time TON′. As a result, the delay time ΔT is substantially a constant, the lower the duty cycle D, the more significant influence the delay time ΔT is to the turn-on time TON′. In the low duty cycle D, the buck converter 10 may not be able to provide a sufficient power efficiency to the load due to its low switch frequency FSW′.
Therefore, in order to compensate the delay time ΔT, the present invention further provides a COT generation circuit, by increasing a start-voltage of the set turn-on signal STONSET, the set turn-on signal STONSET may reach the reference voltage VK
Please refer to
In the viewpoint of circuit analysis, since the resistor R2 are included in the COT generation circuit 504 to compensate for the delay time ΔT, a compensated turn-on time TON
Substitute
into formula (7) and rearrange formula (7) to obtain:
Assume ΔT=R2*C, so the turn-on time TON
TON
And a compensated switch frequency FSW
As a result, as can be seen from formulas (8) and (9), the compensated turn-on time TON
Please refer to
Please refer to
the higher percentage the delay time ΔT of the turn-on time TON′, and the more significant influence on the switch frequency FSW′. In comparison, the switch frequency FSW
To sum up, the present invention is to improve the problem of the delay time ΔT of the high-side switch HS causing the switch frequency FSW′ varying as the duty cycle D varies. By increasing a start-voltage of the set turn-on signal STONSET, the set turn-on signal STONSET may reach the reference voltage VK
Those skilled in the art will readily observe that numerous modifications and alterations of the device and method may be made while retaining the teachings of the invention. Accordingly, the above disclosure should be construed as limited only by the metes and bounds of the appended claims.
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101110761 A | Mar 2012 | TW | national |
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