This invention relates to voltage regulators, and in particular to lowdrop out (LDO) regulators.
The conventional arrangement described with reference to
A problem arises when complex electronic systems, such as the system shown in
One current approach to addressing the sequencing problem described above is to use discrete diodes and multiple regulators to provide the necessary sequence. However, this approach is inconvenient and expensive.
What is needed is a LDO regulator that addresses the sequencing problem described above without requiring multiple discrete components.
The present invention addresses the sequencing problem described above by providing a dual input linear (e.g., LDO) regulator structure that includes two linear regulator circuits and an internal priority logic scheme that favors generating a regulated output voltage using a regulated supply voltage over an unregulated supply voltage. The unregulated supply voltage is applied to a first input terminal from, for example, a battery or other raw voltage source, and is supplied to the first linear regulator circuit. The regulated supply voltage is applied to a second input terminal from, for example, a switching regulator, and is supplied to the second linear regulator circuit. First and second output devices (e.g., bipolar transistors) are respectively connected between the first and second input terminals and the LDO output terminal. A first control circuit controls the first output device to supply the desired regulated output voltage during startup (e.g., while the regulated supply voltage is too low to allow regulation). This arrangement allows the LDO circuit to begin operation as soon as the unregulated supply voltage is available, thus providing the desired regulated output voltage before the slower (but more efficient) switching regulator is able to generate the regulated supply voltage. Once the regulated supply voltage is high enough to allow regulation, the internal priority logic scheme disables the first regulator circuit, whereby the desired regulated output voltage is generated solely by the second regulator circuit. Because the voltage level of regulated supply voltage is closer to regulated output voltage than the unregulated voltage, utilizing the second regulator circuit to generate the regulated output voltage after the startup period allows the LDO circuit to operate at greater efficiency by reducing power consumption and preventing unnecessary heating.
These and other features, aspects and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with regard to the following description, appended claims, and accompanying drawings, where:
The present invention relates to an improvement in voltage regulators. The following description is presented to enable one of ordinary skill in the art to make and use the invention as provided in the context of a particular application and its requirements. As used herein, the term “connected” is used herein to describe the direct connective relationship between two circuit elements (i.e., by way of a conductive wire or trace without an intervening circuit element), and is distinguished from the term “coupled”, which indicates two circuit elements that are connected in a signal path but may be separated by zero or more electrical elements. Various modifications to the preferred embodiment will be apparent to those with skill in the art, and the general principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments. Therefore, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the particular embodiments shown and described, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and novel features herein disclosed.
System 100 is similar to the conventional arrangement described above in that BUCK regulator 20 supplies a relatively high regulated voltage VI/O (e.g., 3.3V) to the I/O circuitry of FPGA 30, and LDO regulator 101 provides a relatively low regulated voltage VCORE (e.g., 2.5V) to the core logic circuitry of FPGA 30. In addition, similar to the system shown in
The system shown in
In accordance with an aspect of the present invention, LDO regulator 101 includes an internal priority logic scheme, which is represented by a prioritizing circuit 130, that allows controls LDO circuit 101 such that regulated output voltage VCORE will be generated from either of regulator circuits 110 or 120 (i.e., from either unregulated input voltage VRAW received at input terminal A, or regulated input voltage VI/O received at input terminal B), but is biased to utilize regulator circuit 120 when regulated input voltage VI/O is present on input terminal B. In particular, the internal priority logic scheme of LDO regulator 101 disables control circuit 115 of first regulator circuit 110 (i.e., to turn off NPN transistor M1) when regulated input voltage VI/O is at a sufficient voltage level (e.g., above a predetermined minimum voltage level) to generate regulated output voltage VCORE by way of regulator circuit 120. As depicted in
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, because regulator circuit 110 is only operated for a brief period until regulated voltage VI/O is available, and because regulator circuit 120 operates continuously, once regulated voltage VI/O is available, at a voltage level closer to the dropout voltage, NPN transistor M1 has a smaller size (i.e., reduced width because of larger voltage drop) than NPN transistor M2. In one embodiment, a ratio between the sizes (areas) associated with NPN transistor M1 and M2 is in the range of 5 to 1 (where VA is much larger than VB), and more particularly in the range of 1.5 to 1 if the two voltages are more similar.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, both regulator circuits 110A and 120A include error amplifiers operating from a single reference signal VREF that is generated by reference signal circuit 240. First regulator circuit 110A includes a first error amplifier 215 having an inverting input terminal (−) coupled to output terminal O by way of a resistor divider formed by resistors RB and RC, and a non-inverting input terminal (+) coupled to reference source 240 by way of a first resistor RD. Second regulator circuit 120A includes a second error amplifier 225 having an inverting input terminal (−) coupled to output terminal O by way of the resistor divider formed by resistors RB and RC, and a non-inverting input terminal (+) coupled to reference source 240 by way of a second resistor RD. Nominal values for resistors RB, RC and RD are 10K to 100 k, with ratios appropriate to the reference voltage and output voltage for the particular design. Values of RZ and CZ are selected to maximize stability and transient performance for a given load range and output capacitor. In particular, RZ and CZ must provide sufficient gain and phase margin to prevent oscillation under a range of load conditions, and should be chosen to minimize transient undershoots and overshoots during step changes in load. In a typical regulator, RZ would be in the range of 50 kΩ to 500 kΩ and CZ would range from 5 pF to 50 pF depending on the particular details of the adjacent circuitry.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, prioritizing circuit 130A includes a differential amplifier 235 having an inverting input terminal (−) coupled to the input terminal B by way of a third resistor RD, a non-inverting input terminal (+) coupled to the reference signal source 240 and to output terminal O by way of fourth and fifth resistor RD, and an output terminal that is coupled to its inverting input terminal by way of a sixth resistor RD, and to the non-inverting input terminal of error amplifier 215 by way of a diode 217.
During operation, differential amplifier 235 determines the operating state of second regulator circuit 120A, and controls the operation of first regulator circuit 110A accordingly.
At startup, when unregulated voltage VRAW is high enough to allow regulation (i.e., greater than target output voltage VCORE plus a dropout voltage), first regulator circuit 110A is enabled and generates output voltage VCORE at the target voltage level, thereby supplying a load that can be used, for example to drive the core logic circuitry of an FPGA (as depicted in
Subsequently, when the regulated voltage VI/O applied to input terminal B rises enough to allow regulation, second regulator circuit 120A takes over (i.e., current is generated through NPN transistor M2 to output terminal O), and differential amplifier 235 pulls down the reference signal supplied to the non-inverting input terminal of first error amplifier 215, thereby turning off NPN transistor M1. In particular, differential amplifier is turned off (i.e., generates a low output voltage) when the portion of regulated voltage VI/O applied to the inverting input terminal of differential amplifier 235 rises above the reference voltage supplied to the non-inverting input terminal of differential amplifier 235. The low output voltage from differential amplifier 235 forward biases diode 217, thus causing the reference signal applied to the non-inverting terminal of error amplifier 215 to drop to a low voltage level. This low voltage level on the the non-inverting terminal of error amplifier 215 causes the output voltage generated by error amplifier 215 to switch to a low output voltage, thus turning off PNP transistor M1. Thus, when regulated input voltage VI/O is high enough to allow second regulator circuit 120A to operate, first regulator circuit 110A is shut down.
While the present invention is described with respect to specific embodiments, those skilled in the art will recognize that other circuit structures and methods may be utilized to achieve the spirit and scope of the present invention, all of which are intended to fall within the scope of the present invention. For example, the differential amplifier of LDO regulator 101A (
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6150798 | Ferry et al. | Nov 2000 | A |
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7064531 | Zinn | Jun 2006 | B1 |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20080122416 A1 | May 2008 | US |