RT9167/A
7
DS9167/A-29 April 2011 www.richtek.com
PSRR
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
10 100 1000 10000 100000 1000000
Frequency (kHz)
PSRR (dB)
V
OUT
= 3.3V, I
LOAD
= 1mA
C
OUT
= 4.7μF, C
BP
= 10nF
10 100 1K 10K 100K 1M
RT9167/A
8
DS9167/A-29 April 2011www.richtek.com
10.0 15.0 0 5.0
C
BP
= 10nF
Time (ms)
C
BP
= 1nF
Voltage (0.5V / DIV)
V
OUT
=3.0V
Application Information
Capacitor Selection and Regulator Stability
Like any low-dropout regulator, the external capacitors used
with the RT9167/A must be carefully selected for regulator
stability and performance.
Using a capacitor whose value is > 1μF on the RT9167/A
input and the amount of capacitance can be increased
without limit. The input capacitor must be located a
distance of not more than 0.5" from the input pin of the IC
and returned to a clean analog ground. Any good quality
ceramic or tantalum can be used for this capacitor. The
capacitor with larger value and lower ESR (equivalent series
resistance) provides better PSRR and line-transient
response.
The output capacitor must meet both requirements for
minimum amount of capacitance and ESR in all LDOs
application. The RT9167/A is designed specifically to work
with low ESR ceramic output capacitor in space-saving
and performance consideration. Using a ceramic capacitor
whose value is at least 1μF with ESR is > 5mΩ on the
RT9167/A output ensures stability. The RT9167/A still
works well with output capacitor of other types due to the
wide stable ESR range. Figure 1. shows the curves of
allowable ESR range as a function of load current for various
output voltages and capacitor values. Output capacitor of
larger capacitance can reduce noise and improve load-
transient response, stability, and PSRR. The output
capacitor should be located not more than 0.5" from the
V
OUT
pin of the RT9167/A and returned to a clean analog
ground.
Note that some ceramic dielectrics exhibit large
capacitance and ESR variation with temperature. It may
be necessary to use 2.2μF or more to ensure stability at
temperatures below 10°C in this case. Also, tantalum
capacitors, 2.2μF or more may be needed to maintain
capacitance and ESR in the stable region for strict
application environment.
Tantalum capacitors maybe suffer failure due to surge
current when it is connected to a low-impedance source
of power (like a battery or very large capacitor). If a tantalum
capacitor is used at the input, it must be guaranteed to
have a surge current rating sufficient for the application
by the manufacture.
Use a 10nF bypass capacitor at BP for low output voltage
noise. The capacitor, in conjunction with an internal 200kΩ
resistor, which connects bypass pin and the band-gap
reference, creates an 80Hz low-pass filter for noise
reduction. Increasing the capacitance will slightly decrease
the output noise, but increase the start-up time. The
capacitor connected to the bypass pin for noise reduction
must have very low leakage. This capacitor leakage current
causes the output voltage to decline by a proportional
amount to the current due to the voltage drop on the internal
200kΩ resistor. Figure 2 shows the power on response.
Figure 1
Figure 2
0 5.0 10.0 15.0
Voltage (0.5V/Div)
C
BP
= 10nF
C
BP
= 10nF
V
OUT
= 3V
Region of Stable C
OUT
ESR vs. Load Current
0.001
0.010
0.100
1.000
10.000
100.000
0 50 100 150 200 250 300
Load Current (mA)
C
OUT
ESR ( )
10
1
0.1
0.01
0.001
C
OUT
= 1μF
Unstable Region
Stable Region
Unstable Region
100
(Ω)
RT9167/A
9
DS9167/A-29 April 2011 www.richtek.com
VIN
VOUT
VIN
VOUT
Figure 3
Figure 4
Load-Transient Considerations
The RT9167/A load-transient response graphs (see Typical
Operating Characteristics) show two components of the
output response: a DC shift from the output impedance
due to the load current change, and the transient response.
The DC shift is quite small due to the excellent load
regulation of the IC. Typical output voltage transient spike
for a step change in the load current from 0mA to 50mA is
tens mV, depending on the ESR of the output capacitor.
Increasing the output capacitor's value and decreasing the
ESR attenuates the overshoot.
Shutdown Input Operation
The RT9167/A is shutdown by pulling the EN input low,
and turned on by driving the input high. If this feature is
not to be used, the EN input should be tied to VIN to keep
the regulator on at all times (the EN input must not be left
floating).
To ensure proper operation, the signal source used to
drive the EN input must be able to swing above and below
the specified turn-on/turn-off voltage thresholds which
guarantee an ON or OFF state (see Electrical
Characteristics). The ON/OFF signal may come from
either CMOS output, or an open-collector output with pull-
up resistor to the RT9167/A input voltage or another logic
supply. The high-level voltage may exceed the
RT9167/A input voltage, but must remain within the
absolute maximum ratings for the EN pin.
Internal P-Channel Pass Transistor
The RT9167/A features a typical 1.1Ω P-MOSFET pass
transistor. It provides several advantages over similar
designs using PNP pass transistors, including longer
battery life. The P-MOSFET requires no base drive, which
reduces quiescent current considerably. PNP-based
regulators waste considerable current in dropout when the
pass transistor saturates. They also use high base-drive
currents under large loads. The RT9167/A does not suffer
from these problems and consume only 80μA of quiescent
current whether in dropout, light-load, or heavy-load
applications.
Input-Output (Dropout) Voltage
A regulator's minimum input-output voltage differential
(or dropout voltage) determines the lowest usable supply
voltage. In battery-powered systems, this will determine
the useful end-of-life battery voltage. Because the RT9167/
A uses a P-Channel MOSFET pass transistor, the dropout
voltage is a function of drain-to-source on-resistance
[R
DS(ON)
] multiplied by the load current.
Reverse Current Path
The power transistor used in the RT9167/A has an inherent
diode connected between the regulator input and output
(see Figure 3). If the output is forced above the input by
more than a diode-drop, this diode will become forward
biased and current will flow from the V
OUT
terminal to V
IN
.
This diode will also be turned on by abruptly stepping the
input voltage to a value below the output voltage. To prevent
regulator mis-operation, a Schottky diode should be used
in any applications where input/output voltage conditions
can cause the internal diode to be turned on (see Figure4).
As shown, the Schottky diode is connected in parallel
with the internal parasitic diode and prevents it from being
turned on by limiting the voltage drop across it to about
0.3V. < 100mA to prevent damage to the part.

RT9167-33GB

Mfr. #:
Manufacturer:
Description:
IC REG LINEAR 3.3V 300MA SOT23-5
Lifecycle:
New from this manufacturer.
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