Post on 25-Feb-2016
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Module Flow• 11.1 Circuit Protection Overview • 11.2 Circuit Protection Device Features and Options• 11.3 Common Design Errors• 11.4 Common Test Errors• 11.5 eFuses
– 11.5a eFuse Overview– 11.5b eFuse vs. Fuse– 11.5c eFuse vs. Polyfuse
Circuit Protection Fundamentals
11.1 Circuit Protection Overview
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Circuit Protection – What is it ?• Many things with many names
– Inrush Control– Hotswap– Hotplug– Current Limiting– Electronic Circuit Breaker– Short Circuit Protection– Soft Start– Over Voltage Protection (OVP)– eFuse– Load Power Limiting– FET SOA Limiting ( Protecting the Protector ! )– Reverse Current Protection (ORing)
• Often Required for Agency Rating– UL, CSA – North America– EN, IEC, (CENELEC) – Europe– CCC Mark (CNCA) - China
~ the same functions
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Circuit Protection – What is it ?• Circuits designed specifically to….
– Prevent Fire ! --“Keep the smoke in!”– Keep small problems from growing big
• Minimize damage by quickly isolating failures– Prevent potentially disruptive power bus disturbances
• One small transient can take down/reset an entire system• What Gets Protected ?
LOADPOWER FETCONNECTORSSUPPLY
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Circuit Protection – Where Is It Used ?• Telecom Equipment
• Datacenters / Servers
• Storage / HDD, SSD, Midplanes
• Industrial Control– 24 or 48 V typically
• Tower Mounted Antennas
• Merchant Power
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Circuit Protection – The Basic Parts• Most Common Elements
• Location..– Sometimes on the Load Side of the Connector– Sometimes on the Supply Side of the Connector
PowerSupply
Load= RL + CL
Control IC
LOAD BOARDBACKPLANE
Element for controlling the FET
Element for sensing currentElement for modulating current
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Thank you!
Circuit Protection Fundamentals
11.2 Device Features and Options
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“End customers can’t make you design in protection circuits but they can make you wish you had.” – Design review wisdom
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Device Features/OptionsSome of the Choices• FET
– Internal or External• Inrush control
– dV/dT, or di/dT• Current Limit
– Always, Never, or just at startup• Fault response
– Latch off or Retry• Short Circuit Response
– Latch Off or Retry• Control
– I2C or Analog Control• Outputs
– Power Good, Fault, FET Fault
• ILIMIT Accuracy– 20% Standard, 10% Pretty Good,
5% Very Good• FET SOA protection.. Or not
– Allows use of smaller FET and provides very high survivability
• Current Indicator Output (IMON)– Analog or Digital Output ?– Digital Output requires internal
ADC and typically includes PIV Monitoring
• ORing Control– Linear or Hysteretic
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Device Features/OptionsInternal FET vs. External FET
Internal FET External FET• Highly Integrated- Few External Parts- Internal sense FET- Built it Power Limiting- Extremely well protected
• Compromises are made- FET process vs. Analog process- FET package vs. Analog package
• Require careful thermal design• Generally not found in app > 5 A
• Flexible RDSON (Designers Choice)• More feature options• No limit on upper current limit• Generally more accurate• More external parts- RSENSE, FET- RS, CS for configuration
• Larger foot print
PowerSupply
Load= RL + CL
Control IC
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Device Features/Options FET SOA Protection• One of the least understood but most appreciated features• Allows use of smaller, less expensive FETs
• Analog multiplier calculates PDIS_FET in real time and compares result to PROG pin
• If PLOAD > PROG then gate drive reduced to lower ILOAD and PFET
• TI is now the ONLY manufacturer to offer true Power Limiting !
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Device Features/Options FET SOA Protection• Dynamically adjusts ILIMIT to be approximately proportional to 1/(VDS)2
• Limits PDIS of FET to programmed limit
TPS2420 Startup into 15 Ω, 700 μF
ILOAD
VOUT
TPS2420 Limits FET PDIS < 5 Watts
PDIS
VOUT
ILOAD
Orange = Violet x (VIN – Blue)PDIS = ILOAD x VDS
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Device Features/Options Power Limiting – Startup into overload response• SOA protection keeps FET safe
even when starting up into a severe overload
• Fault timer limits T(ime) factor of SOA
• Some competitive devices will reduce ILIMIT over a limited range and with limited protection.
• ONLY TI has true FET SOA Power Limiting built into the Hotswap Controller !!!
PDIS
VOUT
ILOAD
CT
TPS2420 Startup into overload
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Positive Low Voltage Protection TI Device Portfolio Sample
PART Input Range Package VTHRESH
(mV)ILIMIT
Int. FET SOA OV I2C PG Imon
Acc.
TPS24203 to 20
QFN16 (4x4mm)
Internal FET RDSON = 30 mW
ILIMIT = ±10% @ 2 AAlways Yes Yes No No
Lo 17%@2A
TPS2590 QFN16 (4x4mm) -
N/A
TPS2421-1/2 SOIC8 Lo
TPS247202.5 to 18
QFN16 (3x3) Prog
Startup Only No
Yes Yes
No
Lo Prog
TPS24710/1/2/3 MSOP1025 ± 10%
Yes No l/l/h/hN/A
TPS24700/1 MSOP8 No No Lo
LM25066/A
2.9 to 17
LLP24 (4x5mm) 25 ± 10%
46.5 ± 11.8%
Always No Yes
YesYes
Hi
2.40%
LM25066I/AI LLP24 (4x5mm) 1.00%
LM25069-1/2 MSOP10 50 ± 10%No N/A
LM25061-1/2 MSOP10 50 ± 10%
NoTPS2480/1 9 to 26PW20 50 ± 10% Yes
0.5%
TPS2482/3 9 to 36 0.5%
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Typical Inrush/OCP Design Steps1. Select RSENSE to set ILIMIT and IFASTTRIP
– ILIMIT = VTH/RSENSE - VTH typically 25 – 50 mV• Simplest controllers have fixed VTH
• High VTH → Better Accuracy but Higher I2R Losses– Fast trip – (Short Circuit) threshold usually 1.5x -3x ILIMIT Level
2. Select CFAULT to get desired TFAULT – Set TFAULT long enough to allow all downstream caps to charge (TCHARGE)before time
out• TCHARGE ~ CV/I (C = Bulk Cap, V = VOUT, I= ILIMIT )
– Set TFAULT as short as reasonable to minimize FET stress during overcurrent events– Ensure that TFAULT x VIN X ILIMIT is within SOA curve
3. Select FET that can withstand TFAULT x VIN x ILIMIT x ~1.5 …..SOA !!
4. Set FET SOA Power Limit on devices so equipped– Design tools available for some devices - check webpage– TPS24700/10/20, TPS2490/1/2/3, TPS2480/1, LM5064/6/7/9, LM25061/6/9
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Questions To Ask During Design1. Will a load get plugged into a live socket?2. Will a load get unplugged from a live socket?3. Is it OK for supply to collapse if one load shorts?4. Are multiple loads connected to a common supply?
– OK for all loads to shut off if one load shorts?
5. Do loads need ability to ride through transients?6. Do loads needs protection from voltage surges?7. Do loads have large capacitance on the inputs?8. Are multiple supplies powering the load or bus?
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Thank you!
Circuit Protection Fundamentals
11.3 Common Design Errors
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Common Design Errors• SOA of FET too Small
• Layout Issues
• Inadequate Transient Protection
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SOA of FET Too Small
I DS D
rain
to S
ourc
e C
urre
nt
103
102
101
100
10-1
10-2
10-2 10-1 100 101 102
VDS Drain to Source VoltageVDS_MAX
ID_MAX
R DSON
1 ms
10 ms
100 ms
1 s
DC
• SOA = Safe Operating Area– SOA Chart – Every FET has one– Defines Bounds of FET Operation– VDS_MAX = Vertical Limit– ID_MAX = Horizontal Limit– RDSON limits ID at lower voltages– Theoretical PMAX = 3000 W
• Fault Time Is Critical– Longer Fault time means bigger FET– Shorter Fault Time allows higher
peak power• Most Stressful FET Events
– Startup into short– Shorted load while under full load
Putting FETs in parallel does NOT improve dynamic SOA !!!
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SOA of FET Too SmallExample - 12 V, 50 A Server
103
102
101
100
10-1
10-2
10-2 10-1 100 101 102
VDS Drain to Source Voltage
I DS D
rain
to S
ourc
e C
urre
nt 1 ms
10 ms
100 ms
1 s
DC
• Without Power Limiting– PMAX = ILIMIT x VSUPPLY = 600 W– TSOA_MAX = ~800 us
• With Power Limiting– PMAX_LIMITED = 50 W– As VDS increases ILIMIT is reduced– TSOA_MAX = 10 ms– Smaller FET can be used– @ 50 A will start limiting when
VDS > 1V
• Common Error to Pick FET Too Small12 V
50 A
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Layout Issues - A Little Stray R Can Make a Big Error• Critical Kelvin Connections
– Sense Runs • Critical Short Run
– Ground– Gate
• High Current Runs• Poor Kelvin Runs…
– Inaccurate/variable ILIMIT• Poor High Current Runs
– Voltage droop– Power loss– Overheating
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Inadequate Transient Protection• All wires are inductive
• Inductance stores energy
• When the FET turns off, voltage spikes occur
dtdi
2LIE
2
LOAD CURRENT
LOAD VOLTAGE
Positive Spikes at Input to Switch/FET
Negative Spikes at Output of Switch/FET
dtdiLV
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Inadequate Transient Protection• To squelch inductive spikes from supply / load leads
– Caps and/or TVS at UUT Input to clamp positive spike– Schottky Clamp across output to clamp negative spike– Short, Wide Leads and Runs
PowerSupply
Load= RL + CL
Control IC
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Thank you!
Circuit Protection Fundamentals
11.4 Common Test Errors
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Common Test Error Sources• Current Probes
• Electronic Loads
• Transients From Long Supply Leads
• Supply ILIMIT Too Low
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Current ProbesCurrent Probe Behavior• ↑ Great For Observing Waveform Shapes• ↑ Don’t have to be “In The Loop”…Nice !!
– Simply Clamps around feed or RTN wire• ↓ Need Frequent Degaussing/Cal• ↓ Not So Great for Precise Measurements
– Limited Bandwidth– 1% Accuracy at Best
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Current ProbesFor precise DC current measurements• If ILOAD < 10 Amps use Multimeter on Current Scale
• If ILOAD > 10 Amps Use Shunt and Multimeter– Pick RSENSE so VRSENSE @ ILIMIT = 50-100 mV– Note….Now VOUT_SUPPLY ≠ VIN_LOAD...so measure VLOAD at The Load!
DMM10 Amp Scale
LoadILOAD < 10 A
PowerSupply
RSENSE
DMM~100 mV Scale
LoadILOAD > 10 A
PowerSupply
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Electronic Loads• Good for DC Loading and Automated Tests
• Proper Setup Very Important– Ex. - Constant Current, Constant Power, Constant Resistance
• But…often Have Switch Transients When Stepping Load– Transients Can Cause Premature Trip When Measuring ILIMIT
• So What Do We DO ??
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Electronic LoadsFor Minimal Transients While Adjusting Load
Method 1: Use Power Resistors as Loads
Method 2: Use Power FET as Load
• A bit tedious and Old School… but accurate• A collection of fixed and variable resistors is
best• Apply “Last Half Amp” With Small Wire
Rheostat• Can be effective with eLoads also
• Connect FET and Series Resistor as Load
• Adjust Potentiometer to vary Current
• Make Sure the FET can Handle the power !!!!
RSHUNT
RADJUST
To UUT
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Long Supply Leads• All wires are inductive• Long Supply Leads can have significant L• Lab Test Environment Usually Worse Than Final Application!
– Reason for TVS and diodes on most TI EVMs• When the FET turns off, voltage spikes occur• To counter inductive spikes from supply / load leads
– Caps and/or TVS at UUT Input to clamp positive spike– Schottky Clamp across output to clamp negative spike– Twisted Supply leads
PowerSupply
Load= RL + CL
Control IC
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Supply ILIMIT Too Low• Lab Supply Limit Sometimes Set Slightly Above ILIMIT_LOAD
• VSUPPLY can sag due to I limiting during overload / short circuit testing
• Sagging VSUPPLY can cause UV shutdown before ILOAD reaches IFASTTRIP
• UV Shutdown is typically much slower than Fast trip (SC) Shutdown
• Slow shut down can violate FET SOA, resulting in dead FETs
• Fix 1: Ensure PS set to supply currents ABOVE fast trip level• Fix 2: Attach bulk caps at input of UUT before test is run
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Trends in Circuit Protection• Accuracy
– Current limit, power limit, monitoring• Efficiency
– Low RDSON, low IQ
• High levels of integration– i.e. bring FET, RSENSE into the package
• I2C, PMBus for control and monitoring– Especially PMBus with Intel Grantley processors
• eFuses replacing/augmenting fuses & polyfuses• High Power POE Systems (25-100 Watts)
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Thank you!
Circuit Protection Fundamentals
11.5a eFuse Overview
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Integrated Circuit Protection TypesPower controlling element contained therein
好运
Initial $
Level of
ProtectionWishful Thinking Fuse eFusePolyfuse (PTC)
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What is an eFuse?
An active circuit protection device that…• Will:
– Limit current at inrush– Prevent load or source damage due to OC events– Have an internal FET to control the load current
• Might:– Provide OVP (none, fixed, adjustable)– Have adjustable fault time and/or current limit– Have indicator outputs (Fault, PG, etc.)– Be able to control turn on slew rate– Have a load current indicator output– Be on source side of a connector or load side or..– Be nowhere near a connector
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Typical Applications for eFuse
Enterprise Class SSDSAS HDD
Storage Server Chassis
Set-Top BoxDVD PlayerInternet TV
m-SATA SSD
Appliances
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Brand Damage – A Hidden CostIt’s not fair and that won’t change• Most end users don’t know or care how a product works
– Even fewer know or care about circuit protection• A good fuse design in a bad system can still get the blame
– Dirty power, poor transient control, can cause a fuse to blow– A load with a blown fuse is viewed as the problem…not the faulty source– Blame should go to the source of “bad” power...but rarely does
• END CUSTOMER DOESN’T CARE about power specs !!! – Your board died….now fix it!!!– Replacement board likely to blow a fuse, too– Customer not happy – switches to competitive brand
• Control your products’ destiny !!– Don’t rely on other systems to “do the right thing”– Protect the product, the brand, the profit, your career !
• Someone will pay….don’t let it be you!
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Backend costs of “fuse only” designs• Tangible costs
– Replacement of nonfunctional product– RMA admin costs / time– Shipping broken/new devices from/to customer– Truck rolls, service personnel
• Intangible backend costs– Unhappy retailers– Brand damage– Loss of customer(s)
• In the end, we all want happy customers– It’s that simple, it’s that complicated
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Thank you!
Circuit Protection Fundamentals
11.5b eFuse vs. Fuse
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Why Not Use a Fuse?• Slow
• Inaccurate
• Lossy
• Leave a load unpowered after event
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“Fast Blo Fuse” Trip Time vs. Current eFuse vs. Fuse
Time and trip limit inaccuracies mean bigger power supplies
eFuse Limit !
Fusib
le fus
e trip
rang
e
eFuse trip range
Time (sec.)
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Fuses Are Slow…Even the Fast Ones
eFuse Performance • ILIMIT is programmable, predictable, and stable over temp
• Bus droop and supply stress reduced by tight over current tolerance
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Fuses are Lossy• Higher resistance -> more energy -> more heat -> higher OPEX• 13x more power lost with fuse!
– 800 mV/2A = 400 mΩ vs. eFuse @ 30 m Ω• Lifetime cost of 1 Watt = $2 to $18 ( customer supplied numbers)
– Includes energy cost, distribution infrastructure, HVAC, product life
Little Fuse 231Series
0.120.190.300.480.751.19
Lower Losses using TPS2590 ( 30 mW )
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Fuses are Inaccurate• Fuse makers recommend the INOMINAL< 75% IFUSE_RATED
• Power supplies must be overspec’d– Accommodate fuse derating, fuse tolerance, PFUSE – Bigger supplies = more CAPEX, more OPEX
Seconds
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Fuse’s Behavior is Sloppy and Stressful
During Overload After Overload• Much slower than eFuse• No active current limiting• Uncontrolled turn off time• Bus droop likely• More stress on supplies & load• High I2R losses• 10x+ nom. trip current for 3 ms
• No auto reset • Inoperative system• Module, fuse, or system must be
replaced• Repair costs• Field returns• Unhappy Customers
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Fuse Summary
Challenges Benefits• Slow
• Lossy
• Inaccurate
• Load unpowered after event
• Low Cost
• Can provide Safety Compliance
- UL, IEC, CSA
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Fuses DO Excel in Some Apps!
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Thank you!
Circuit Protection Fundamentals
11.5c eFuse vs. Polyfuse
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eFuse vs. Polyfuse
eFuse (USB Power Switch) Polyfuse• Current based ILIMIT
• Stable, accurate (20% - 30%) ILIMIT
• Fixed or Programmable ILIMIT
• Repeatable ILIMIT0
• Fast ( < 1.5 us typ)• Wide temp range• -40° to +125° C
• Temp based ILIMIT
• Sloppy, variable ILIMIT
• No Programmable ILIMIT
• RON Increases with each event• Slow to trip (several ms)• Not usable above 85° C• Auto-resets after trip event
Polyfuses (PTC Devices) Require Derating
Curve DTPS2420/21, TPS2590/910
DD
eFuse vs. Polyfuse
• Brand conscious Tier 1, 2, 3s use USB Power Switch• Low cost “bottom end” apps may use Polyfuse
True story #2 – Major ODM experiencing Power supply resets during STB short testing. TPS2066C with faster response got designed in and no more resets.
True story #1 – Low end desktop maker melted wireless datacard during a short condition. Three times. Now using USB switches.
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Polyfuse Summary
Challenges Benefits• Slow
• Lossy – 2x regular fuse
• Inaccurate
• Each OC event increases resistance
• Not suitable for high temp.
• R increases with Temp.-
• Resets after OC event
• Low Cost
• Can provide Safety Agency compliance
UL, IEC, CSA
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Thank you!