10
LT1576/LT1576-5
finite inductor size, maximum load current is reduced by
one-half peak-to-peak inductor current. The following
formula assumes continuous mode operation, implying
that the term on the right is less than one-half of I
P
.
I
OUT(MAX)
=
Continuous Mode
For the conditions above and L = 15µH,
I
A
OUT MAX
()
=−
()
()
()()
()
=−=
143
58 5
2 15 10 200 10 8
143 031 112
63
.
••
...
At V
IN
= 15V, duty cycle is 33%, so I
P
is just equal to a fixed
1.5A, and I
OUT(MAX)
is equal to:
15
515 5
2 15 10 200 10 15
15 056 094
63
.
••
.. .
()
()
()()
()
=− =
A
Note that there is less load current available at the higher
input voltage because inductor ripple current increases.
This is not always the case. Certain combinations of
inductor value and input voltage range may yield lower
available load current at the lowest input voltage due to
reduced peak switch current at high duty cycles. If load
current is close to the maximum available, please check
maximum available current at both input voltage
extremes. To calculate actual peak switch current with a
given set of conditions, use:
II
VVV
LfV
SW PEAK
OUT
OUT IN OUT
IN
()
=+
()
()()( )
2
For lighter loads where discontinuous operation can be
used, maximum load current is equal to:
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
WUU
U
The internal circuitry which forces reduced switching
frequency also causes current to flow out of the feedback
pin when output voltage is low. The equivalent circuitry is
shown in Figure 2. Q1 is completely off during normal
operation. If the FB pin falls below 0.7V, Q1 begins to
conduct current and reduces frequency at the rate of
approximately 1kHz/µA. To ensure adequate frequency
foldback (under worst-case short-circuit conditions), the
external divider Thevinin resistance must be low enough
to pull 35µA out of the FB pin with 0.5V on the pin (R
DIV
14.3k).
The net result is that reductions in frequency and
current limit are affected by output voltage divider imped-
ance. Although divider impedance is not critical, caution
should be used if resistors are increased beyond the
suggested values and short-circuit conditions will occur
with high input voltage.
High frequency pickup will
increase and the protection accorded by frequency and
current foldback will decrease.
MAXIMUM OUTPUT LOAD CURRENT
Maximum load current for a buck converter is limited by
the maximum switch current rating (I
P
) of the LT1576.
This current rating is 1.5A up to 50% duty cycle (DC),
decreasing to 1.3A at 80% duty cycle. This is shown
graphically in Typical Performance Characteristics and as
shown in the formula below:
I
P
= 1.5A for DC 50%
I
P
= 1.67 – 0.18 (DC) – 0.32(DC)
2
for 50% < DC < 90%
DC = Duty cycle = V
OUT
/V
IN
Example: with V
OUT
= 5V, V
IN
= 8V; DC = 5/8 = 0.625, and;
I
SW(MAX)
= 1.67 – 0.18 (0.625) – 0.32(0.625)
2
= 1.43A
Current rating decreases with duty cycle because the
LT1576 has internal slope compensation to prevent cur-
rent mode subharmonic switching. For more details, read
Application Note 19. The LT1576 is a little unusual in this
regard because it has nonlinear slope compensation which
gives better compensation with less reduction in current
limit.
Maximum load current would be equal to maximum
switch current
for an infinitely large inductor
, but with
I
P
()
()
()()( )
VVV
LfV
OUT IN OUT
IN
2
11
LT1576/LT1576-5
I
OUT(MAX)
=
Discontinuous mode
Example: with L = 5µH, V
OUT
= 5V, and V
IN(MAX
) = 15V,
IA
OUT MAX
()
=
()
()
()
()
=
1 5 200 10 5 10 15
2 5 15 5
034
2
36
.•
.
The main reason for using such a tiny inductor is that it is
physically very small, but keep in mind that peak-to-peak
inductor current will be very high. This will increase output
ripple voltage. If the output capacitor has to be made larger
to reduce ripple voltage, the overall circuit could actually
wind up larger.
CHOOSING THE INDUCTOR AND OUTPUT CAPACITOR
For most applications the output inductor will fall in the
range of 15µH to 60µH. Lower values are chosen to reduce
physical size of the inductor. Higher values allow more
output current because they reduce peak current seen by
the LT1576 switch, which has a 1.5A limit. Higher values
also reduce output ripple voltage, and reduce core loss.
Graphs in the Typical Performance Characteristics section
show maximum output load current versus inductor size
and input voltage. A second graph shows core loss versus
inductor size for various core materials.
When choosing an inductor you might have to consider
maximum load current, core and copper losses, allowable
component height, output voltage ripple, EMI, fault cur-
rent in the inductor, saturation, and of course, cost. The
following procedure is suggested as a way of handling
these somewhat complicated and conflicting requirements.
1. Choose a value in microhenries from the graphs of
maximum load current and core loss. Choosing a small
inductor may result in discontinuous mode operation
at lighter loads, but the LT1576 is designed to work
well in either mode. Keep in mind that lower core loss
means higher cost, at least for closed core geometries
like toroids. The core loss graphs show both absolute
loss and percent loss for a 5W output, so actual percent
losses must be calculated for each situation.
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
WUU
U
Assume that the average inductor current is equal to
load current and decide whether or not the inductor
must withstand continuous fault conditions. If maxi-
mum load current is 0.5A, for instance, a 0.5A inductor
may not survive a continuous 1.5A overload condition.
Dead shorts will actually be more gentle on the induc-
tor because the LT1576 has foldback current limiting.
2. Calculate peak inductor current at full load current to
ensure that the inductor will not saturate. Peak current
can be significantly higher than output current, espe-
cially with smaller inductors and lighter loads, so don’t
omit this step. Powdered iron cores are forgiving
because they saturate softly, whereas ferrite cores
saturate abruptly. Other core materials fall somewhere
in between. The following formula assumes continu-
ous mode of operation, but it errs only slightly on the
high side for discontinuous mode, so it can be used for
all conditions.
II
VVV
fLV
PEAK OUT
OUT IN OUT
IN
=+
()
()()( )
2
V
IN
= Maximum input voltage
f = Switching frequency, 200kHz
3. Decide if the design can tolerate an “open” core geom-
etry like a rod or barrel, with high magnetic field
radiation, or whether it needs a closed core like a toroid
to prevent EMI problems. One would not want an open
core next to a magnetic storage media, for instance!
This is a tough decision because the rods or barrels are
temptingly cheap and small and there are no helpful
guidelines to calculate when the magnetic field radia-
tion will be a problem.
4. Start shopping for an inductor (see representative
surface mount units in Table 2) which meets the require-
ments of core shape, peak current (to avoid saturation),
average current (to limit heating), and fault current (if
the inductor gets too hot, wire insulation will melt and
cause turn-to-turn shorts). Keep in mind that all good
things like high efficiency, low profile, and high tempera-
ture operation will increase cost, sometimes dramati-
cally. Get a quote on the cheapest unit first to calibrate
yourself on price, then ask for what you really want.
IfLV
VVV
PIN
OUT IN OUT
()()()( )
()
()
2
2
12
LT1576/LT1576-5
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
WUU
U
5. After making an initial choice, consider the secondary
things like output voltage ripple, second sourcing, etc.
Use the experts in the Linear Technology’s applica-
tions department if you feel uncertain about the final
choice. They have experience with a wide range of
inductor types and can tell you about the latest devel-
opments in low profile, surface mounting, etc.
Table 2
SERIES CORE
VENDOR/ VALUE DC CORE RESIS- MATER- HEIGHT
PART NO. (
µ
H) (Amps) TYPE TANCE(
) IAL (mm)
Coiltronics
CTX15-2 15 1.7 Tor 0.059 KMµ 6.0
CTX33-2 33 1.4 Tor 0.106 KMµ 6.0
CTX68-4 68 1.2 Tor 0.158 KMµ 6.4
CTX15-1P 15 1.4 Tor 0.087 52 4.2
CTX33-2P 33 1.3 Tor 0.126 52 6.0
CTX68-4P 68 1.1 Tor 0.238 52 6.4
Sumida
CDRH74-150 15 1.47 SC 0.081 Fer 4.5
CDH115-330 33 1.68 SC 0.082 Fer 5.2
CDRH125-680 68 1.5 SC 0.12 Fer 6
CDH74-330 33 1.45 SC 0.17 Fer 5.2
Coilcraft
DO3308P-153 15 2 SC 0.12 Fer 3
DO3316P-333 33 2 SC 0.1 Fer 5.21
DO3316P-683 68 1.4 SC 0.18 Fer 5.21
Pulse
PE-53602 35 1.4 Tor 0.166 Fer 9.1
PE-53604 73 1.3 Tor 0.290 Fer 9.1
PE-53632 22 2.7 Tor 0.063 Fer 9.1
PE-53633 40 2.7 Tor 0.085 Fer 10
Gowanda
SMP3316-152K 15 3.5 SC 0.041 Fer 6
SMP3316-332K 33 2.3 SC 0.092 Fer 6
SMP3316-682K 68 1.7 SC 0.178 Fer 6
Tor = Toroid
SC = Semi-closed geometry
Fer = Ferrite core material
52 = Type 52 powdered iron core material
KMµ = Kool Mµ
Output Capacitor
The output capacitor is normally chosen by its Effective
Series Resistance (ESR), because this is what determines
output ripple voltage. To get low ESR takes
volume
, so
physically smaller capacitors have high ESR. The ESR
range for typical LT1576 applications is 0.05 to 0.2. A
typical output capacitor is an AVX type TPS, 100µF at 10V,
with a guaranteed ESR less than 0.1. This is a “D” size
surface mount solid tantalum capacitor. TPS capacitors
are specially constructed and tested for low ESR, so they
give the lowest ESR for a given volume. The value in
microfarads is not particularly critical, and values from
22µF to greater than 500µF work well, but you cannot
cheat mother nature on ESR. If you find a tiny 22µF solid
tantalum capacitor, it will have high ESR, and output ripple
voltage will be terrible. Table 3 shows some typical solid
tantalum surface mount capacitors.
Table 3. Surface Mount Solid Tantalum Capacitor ESR
and Ripple Current
E Case Size ESR (Max.,
) Ripple Current (A)
AVX TPS, Sprague 593D 0.1 to 0.3 0.7 to 1.1
AVX TAJ 0.7 to 0.9 0.4
D Case Size
AVX TPS, Sprague 593D 0.1 to 0.3 0.7 to 1.1
C Case Size
AVX TPS 0.2 (typ) 0.5 (typ)
Many engineers have heard that solid tantalum capacitors
are prone to failure if they undergo high surge currents.
This is historically true, and type TPS capacitors are
specially tested for surge capability, but surge ruggedness
is not a critical issue with the
output
capacitor. Solid
tantalum capacitors fail during very high
turn-on
surges,
which do not occur at the output of regulators. High
discharge
surges, such as when the regulator output is
dead shorted, do not harm the capacitors.
Unlike the input capacitor, RMS ripple current in the
output capacitor is normally low enough that ripple cur-
rent rating is not an issue. The current waveform is
triangular with a typical value of 200mA
RMS
. The formula
to calculate this is:

LT1576IS8-5SYNC#PBF

Mfr. #:
Manufacturer:
Analog Devices / Linear Technology
Description:
Switching Voltage Regulators 1.5A, 200KHz Stepdn Reg,5V Out
Lifecycle:
New from this manufacturer.
Delivery:
DHL FedEx Ups TNT EMS
Payment:
T/T Paypal Visa MoneyGram Western Union