1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to power-regulation techniques. More specifically, the present invention relates to a power-regulator circuit having load-dependent operating modes.
2. Related Art
Recent increases in the computational performance and functionality of electronic devices have resulted in commensurate increases in power consumption and associated heat generation of these devices. Consequently, managing the ‘thermal load’ associated with the power consumption to maintain acceptable internal and external operating temperatures has become a considerable challenge. In addition, many electronic devices, such as portable electronic devices (for example, laptop computers or notebook PCs, cellular telephones, and personal digital assistants) are powered by batteries that can only store a limited amount of charge. As the power consumption of these devices increases, this limited charge storage capability results in reduced operating time between recharges. Therefore, reducing power consumption in such electronic devices has become increasingly important design consideration.
Most electronic devices include multiple power-regulator circuits to provide regulated voltages (such as DC voltages) to integrated circuits or chips within the devices. For example,
Typically, power-regulator circuit 112 is designed to reduce power loss under heavy load conditions which occur during normal operation of portable electronic device 100. However, when the portable electronic device 100 is in the OFF or SLEEP operating modes, most of the additional power-regulator circuits are turned off or under very light load.
Unfortunately, the efficiency of many power-regulator circuits, such as power-regulator circuit 112, under such light load conditions is very poor. This is shown in
Hence, what is needed are power-regulation techniques that overcome the problems listed above.
One embodiment of the present invention provides a power-regulator circuit having two operating modes. This power-regulator circuit includes control logic that is configured to select a given operating mode based on a load condition of the power-regulator circuit. Note that, during a first operating mode, the control logic provides a first signal that operates the power-regulator circuit as a linear regulator. Moreover, during a second operating mode, the control logic provides a second signal and a third signal that operate the power-regulator circuit as a switch-mode regulator.
In some embodiments, the power-regulator circuit includes a linear regulator circuit, a switch-mode regulator circuit and a first power transistor coupled to a first node of the power-regulator circuit (which is configured to receive an input voltage). It also includes a switch, which is coupled to the control logic, the linear-regulator circuit and the switch-mode regulator circuit. This switch selectively couples the first signal from the linear regulator circuit to the first power transistor during the first operating mode and selectively couples the second signal from the switch-mode regulator circuit to the first power transistor during the second operating mode.
In some embodiments, the linear regulator circuit includes a low-dropout regulator circuit and/or the switch-mode regulator circuit includes a buck regulator circuit. Moreover, the second signal from the switch-mode regulator circuit may include a pulse-width modulated signal.
In some embodiments, the power-regulator circuit includes a second power transistor coupled in series with the first power transistor and coupled to a second node of the power-regulator circuit which is configured to couple to a reference voltage, such as ground or a virtual ground. Moreover, an inverter, coupled to the control logic, selectively provides the third signal to the second power transistor during the second operating mode, where the third signal is the inverse of the second signal.
Note that the output from the inverter may be selectively disabled during the first operating mode. For example, during the first operating mode, the output from the inverter may be selectively set to a lower impedance than during the second operating mode.
In some embodiments, the first power transistor is shared during the first operating mode and the second operating mode. Moreover, the second power transistor may be inactive during the first operating mode.
In some embodiments, the power-regulator circuit provides an output voltage at a third node between the first power transistor and the second power transistor.
Note that the load condition may correspond to a current at the third node. Moreover, the first operating mode may have a higher efficiency, which corresponds to the input voltage and the output voltage, than the second operating mode for values of the current less than a threshold, such as approximately 100 mA. In some embodiments, the output voltage may be provided by at most the first power transistor and the second power transistor during the two operating modes.
In some embodiments, the power-regulator circuit is included in a portable electronic device, such as a laptop computer.
In some embodiments, the power-regulator circuit is disposed on an integrated circuit.
Another embodiment provides the portable electronic device.
Another embodiment provides a computer-readable medium containing data representing the power-regulator circuit.
Another embodiment provides a method for regulating power using a power-regulator circuit that has two operating modes. During the method, a load condition of the power-regulator circuit is monitored and a given operating mode is selected based on a load condition. Then, one or more signals to operate the power-regulator circuit are generated. Note that, during a first operating mode, the one or more signals include a first signal that operates the power-regulator circuit as a linear regulator. Moreover, during a second operating mode, the one or more signals include a second signal and a third signal that operate the power-regulator circuit as a switch-mode regulator.
Note that like reference numerals refer to corresponding parts throughout the drawings.
The following description is presented to enable any person skilled in the art to make and use the invention, and is provided in the context of a particular application and its requirements. Various modifications to the disclosed embodiments will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art, and the general principles defined herein may be applied to other embodiments and applications without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Thus, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the embodiments shown, but is to be accorded the widest scope consistent with the principles and features disclosed herein.
Embodiments of a power-regulator circuit, a computer system and/or a portable electronic device that includes the power-regulator circuit, and a method for regulating power are described. This power-regulator circuit is configured to operate as a linear regulator or a switch-mode regulator based on a load condition of the power-regulator circuit. In particular, when the power-regulator circuit is subject to a light load condition (such as a load current less than 100 mA), the power-regulator circuit may be operated as a linear regulator (e.g., a low dropout regulator). However, when the load current exceeds a threshold (such as 100 mA), the power-regulator circuit may be operated as a switch-mode regulator (such as a buck regulator).
This configuration may allow the power-regulator circuit to utilize fewer components and, thus, to have a reduced cost. For example, the two operating modes may share one or more power transistors. Moreover, in some embodiments the output from the power-regulator circuit is provided using only two power transistors.
Additionally, by adapting the operating mode based on the load condition, the power-regulator circuit may have significantly improved efficiency, especially at low load conditions. This increase in efficiency may reduce power loss, which may increase the operating time for a given battery charge in portable electronic devices, such as laptop computers.
Note that the computer system and/or the portable electronic device may include: a server, a laptop computer, a personal computer, a work station, a mainframe computer, a digital signal processor, a portable-computing device, a personal organizer, a cellular telephone, a personal digital assistant, a game console, an MP3 player, a device controller, and/or a computational engine within an appliance.
We now describe embodiments of the power-regulator circuit.
In an exemplary embodiment, the linear regulator circuit 310 includes a low dropout regulator (LDO) and the switch-mode regulator circuit 312 includes a buck regulator circuit.
Note that LDO circuit 400 operates in linear mode. Moreover, note that the efficiency of LDO circuit 400 can be expressed as
which is independent of the load current.
Moreover, the switching of FETs 518 results in a square-wave pulse signal, phase 526, having an amplitude equal to Vin 410 and a width controlled by the pulse width of Ugate 524 and Lgate 528. This pulse is filtered by inductor 520 and capacitor 512-2 to provide DC voltage Vout 414 relative to ground (GND) 514. Note that capacitor 512-1 filters Vin 410, and that diodes 516 restrict the back-emf voltage across FETs 518.
In switch-mode regulator 500, FETs 518 operate in switching mode. Moreover, the power-converting efficiency can be expressed as
i.e., output power over input power (which equals the output power plus power loss). Note that the power loss of a buck regulator includes switching loss and conduction loss. Switching loss is a function of the switching frequency and the charge on the gates of FETs 518, both of which are determined by the circuit design and are not directly related to the load current. However, the conduction loss is determined by the load current. As noted previously, at high load currents a buck regulator can have a high power-converting efficiency. Unfortunately, at low load currents the power-converting efficiency is very low. By combining an LDO circuit 400 with a switch-mode regulator 500, power-regulator circuit 300 (
We now describe exemplary embodiments of the power-regulator circuit.
During the second operating mode, control logic 626 configures switch 620 so that the Ugate 524 signal applied to the gate of FET 518-1 is pulse-width-modulated (PWM) signal 624 provided by PWM circuit 622. Moreover, inverter 628 provides Lgate 528 signal (which is the inverse of PWM signal 624) to the gate of FET 518-2 (and more generally, to the gate of a second power transistor). Thus, during the second operating mode, dual-mode circuit 610 provides a second signal, Ugate 524, and a third signal, Lgate 528, that operate the power-regulator circuit 600 as a switch-mode regulator which outputs Vout 414 relative to GND 514.
Note that during the first operating mode, inverter 628 may be selectively disabled by control logic 626. For example, an output node of inverter 628 may be selectively set to a low impedance, such as ground. Moreover, note that FET 518-2 may be inactive during the first operating mode.
In addition to providing high efficiency over a wide range of load conditions, power-regulator circuit 600 uses fewer components than separate implementations of the LDO circuit and the switch-mode regulator circuit and, therefore, reduces cost. In particular, FET 518-1 is shared in the two operating modes. Additionally, in some embodiments power-regulator circuit 600 only includes two FETs 518 or, more generally, two power transistors, to provide Vout 414.
In an exemplary embodiment, threshold 710 is approximately 100 mA. At high load currents 212 (i.e., those greater than 100 mA) the efficiency 210 approaches 96%, and at low load currents 212 (i.e., those less than 100 mA) the efficiency 210 is 76.4%.
In some embodiments, power-regulator circuit 300 (
Components and/or functionality illustrated in these embodiments may be implemented using analog circuits and/or digital circuits. Moreover, power transistors may be bipolar or FETs, and may used PMOS and/or NMOS. Furthermore, components and/or functionality in either of these communication circuits may be implemented using hardware and/or software.
We now describe embodiments of a portable device.
We now describe embodiments of a process for regulating power.
In some embodiments, there may be additional or fewer operations. Moreover, the order of the operations may be changed and/or two or more operations may be combined into a single operation.
Devices and circuits described herein may be implemented using computer-aided design tools available in the art, and embodied by computer-readable files containing software descriptions of such circuits. These software descriptions may be: at behavioral, register transfer, logic component, transistor and layout geometry-level descriptions. Moreover, the software descriptions may be stored on storage media or communicated by carrier waves.
Data formats in which such descriptions may be implemented include, but are not limited to: formats supporting behavioral languages like C, formats supporting register transfer level (RTL) languages like Verilog and VHDL, formats supporting geometry description languages (such as GDSII, GDSIII, GDSIV, CIF, and MEBES), and other suitable formats and languages. Moreover, data transfers of such files on machine-readable media or carrier waves may be done electronically over diverse media on the Internet or, for example, via email. Note that physical files may be implemented on machine-readable media such as: 4 mm magnetic tape, 8 mm magnetic tape, 3½ inch floppy media, CDs, DVDs, and so on.
Memory 1024 may store a circuit compiler 1026 and circuit descriptions 1028. Circuit descriptions 1028 may include descriptions of the circuits, or a subset of the circuits discussed above with respect to
In some embodiments, system 1000 includes fewer or additional components. Moreover, two or more components may be combined into a single component and/or a position of one or more components may be changed.
The foregoing descriptions of embodiments of the present invention have been presented for purposes of illustration and description only. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the present invention to the forms disclosed. Accordingly, many modifications and variations will be apparent to practitioners skilled in the art. Additionally, the above disclosure is not intended to limit the present invention. The scope of the present invention is defined by the appended claims.