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Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 1
Driving High-Brightness LEDs in High-Power
Industrial Lighting Fixtures Steve Mappus
Abstract — High-power, industrial Light Emitting Diode (LED)
fixtures use series-parallel strings of High Brightness (HB) LEDs to
produce superior lighting fixtures compared to traditional, “ballast-
based” systems. HB-LEDs are configured in series or series-parallel
strings and require Constant-Current, Constant-Voltage (CC-CV)
power supplies, typically operating within the range of 50 W-200 W.
Voluntary and mandated industry requirements; such as the need for
Power Factor Correction (PFC), extended universal input voltage
range, high efficiency, current accuracy, load control, and dimming;
are all met with the usual challenges of reducing cost, size, and
design complexity. This paper addresses some of the specific
challenges designers face when considering power supply design
solutions for these unique LED lighting applications.
A 100 W, dual-stage, quasi-resonant flyback converter is
presented and shown to meet specifications typical of a high-power
industrial LED lighting fixture. The converter operates from an
extended universal input range of 85VRMS<VAC<308VRMS with a
peak efficiency of 92%. The design also demonstrates a Power Factor
(PF) greater than 0.9 over the entire input voltage range while
meeting EN61000-3-2 Class-C lighting limits for Total Harmonic
Distortion (THD) and is compatible with analog and PWM dimming.
Current sharing accuracy is better than ±2%, exceeding that of
competing LED load control techniques at this power level.
I. INTRODUCTION
High-power industrial lighting fixtures are found in
airports, tunnels, bridges, highways, parking lots,
walkways, high and low bays, sporting arenas, “big-box”
retail establishments, and industrial manufacturing
complexes. Compared to competing light sources, such
as linear fluorescent, High-Intensity Discharge (HID),
and sodium or mercury vapor lamps; a properly designed
LED industrial lighting system can offer the following
improvements:
Efficiency – LEDs require less power to produce
higher luminous output than traditional light sources.
Reliability – Industrial LED fixtures have lifetime
ratings of 50,000 hours or higher compared to less
than 20,000 hours for traditional light fixtures.
Maintenance – LEDs require almost no maintenance
and therefore save on associated labor costs.
Instant On – LEDs are solid-state devices, instantly
responding to changes in forward current, allowing
the exact amount of light to be used when needed.
Dimming – LEDs can be dimmed, without flicker,
using analog DC or digital PWM input signals.
Temperature – Conventional light sources waste
more energy in heat than LEDs. Indoor industrial
facilities can save air conditioning costs using LEDs.
Light Quality – LEDs maintain a warm or cool light
quality that is consistent over the life of the fixture.
Contrary to fluorescent light fixtures, LEDs do not
degrade over their life-cycle.
UV Free – Ultraviolet light rays can cause
degradation to food and textiles. LED fixtures can
help keep produce and meats fresher longer.
Mercury Free – HID and fluorescent fixtures include
small amounts of mercury. When these light fixtures
break, mercury is released as a toxic vapor. LED
fixtures contain no mercury and do not require glass
in their construction.
Given the long list of LED advantages, the reasons to
upgrade are compelling. However, while the
development of industrial LED fixtures that outperform
existing lighting systems is rapidly evolving, one of the
biggest barriers toward full acceptance is the associated
upfront costs.
One similarity shared across all industrial lighting
sources is that they require a specific type of power source
where electrical energy is converted into light output. HID
and fluorescent lamps use a ballast capable of producing a
high “starting voltage” (i.e. 10 kV) to ignite a plasma
reaction between two electrodes. After the internal gasses
ignite, the ballast must provide a voltage (i.e. 120 V)
capable of sustaining the plasma reaction.
LED power supply requirements are quite different.
Since a single HB-LED die cannot produce the
illuminance expected from an industrial lighting fixture,
many individual HB-LEDs are arranged in series or
series-parallel combinations. Typical HB-LEDs used in
these types of applications have a 1 W-5 W power rating
and arrangements of such HB-LEDs can easily consume
50 W-200 W of power, depending on the specific
assembly. The first step to designing an LED power
supply, or any power supply, is understanding the source
being connected and the load being powered.
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 2
Offline power supplies are often designed to operate
worldwide and therefore must be able to handle a
universal input range of 85 VRMS < VAC < 265 VRMS. A
universal input power supply is beneficial because a
manufacturer can limit producing different power
supplies specific to certain regions of the world. In some
US installations, utility feeds for industrial lighting can
be as high as 308 VRMS (upper limit of 277 VRMS
industrial single phase). In other cases, industrial
lighting fixtures might be installed in facilities using a
115 VRMS dedicated lighting feed. The extended
operating voltage range for industrial lighting should be
considered 85 VRMS < VAC < 308 VRMS, where 308 VRMS
is the upper limit of 277 VRMS industrial single phase.
Designing an efficient LED power supply with PFC
capable of meeting THD over such a wide input range
poses a definite challenge, but has become a real
industry requirement.
The LED load requires a power supply capable of
producing a tightly regulated Constant-Current (CC)
during normal operation. In the event that the LED
voltage exceeds a set maximum limit, the power supply
should shift to Constant-Voltage (CV) regulation with
current fold-back or at least limit the maximum
allowable LED string voltage. A more thorough
understanding can be gained by examining the
characteristics and drive requirements of the HB-LED.
II. HB-LED CHARACTERISTICS
HB-LEDs are non-linear, P-N junction devices with
exponential current and voltage (IV) characteristics
similar to a diode.
VF, Forward Voltage (V)
I F, F
orw
ard
Cu
rre
nt
(mA
)
0 0.5 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
0
200mA
100 °C
25 °C
Fig. 1. 1 A, LED typical IV curve, temperature variation
Assuming a constant voltage of 3.5 V used to drive a
single 1 A, HB-LED with typical IV characteristics, such
as those shown in Fig. 1; a 200 mA change in forward
current can be seen as a function of operating
temperature. VF can vary by as much as 20%, making it
difficult to maintain equal branch currents when driving
parallel LEDs from a voltage source. Slight variations
between parallel branch currents translate into gross
variations in LED light color and intensity. This can lead
to an overall degradation in light quality as well as a
decrease in reliability.
The task of paralleling LEDs is complicated by their
negative temperature coefficient (NTC). As LED
junction temperature increases, VF decreases, which
increases IF and further raises junction temperature.
Current sharing between series-connected, parallel LED
strings can be a difficult, but necessary requirement for
designing high-power industrial LED lighting fixtures.
Maintaining high reliability requires an acceptable
amount of de-rating applied to the maximum allowable
forward current. The de-rating curve shown in Fig. 2
highlights the important fact that maximum LED current
must be limited in accordance with a properly designed
thermal heat sink. While the discussion of LED thermal
management is beyond the scope of this paper, HB-
LEDs generate a large amount of heat that must be
properly managed to avoid device failures.
Ambient Temperature (°C)
Ma
xim
um
Cu
rre
nt
(mA
)
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160
200
400
600
800
1000
1200
0
ΘJA = 5°C/W
ΘJA = 10°C/W
ΘJA = 15°C/W
Fig. 2. 1 A, LED typical de-rating curve
When considering the LED characteristics shown in
Fig. 1 and Fig. 2, it becomes apparent that LED loads,
especially series-parallel industrial loads, need be driven
with a tightly regulated, CC source. A DC-DC or AC-
DC, CC power supply dedicated to driving LED loads is
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 3
commonly referred to as an “LED driver” (or driver).
Drivers used in industrial LED lighting fixtures are just
one of three important functional blocks that define a
well-designed LED lighting system.
III. HB-LED SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
An industrial LED lighting system operating from a
universal, offline AC voltage must include the ability to
maintain high power factor over a wide range of input
and output operating conditions. For example, meeting
the Department of Energy (DOE), Energy Star Program
for solid-state lighting explicitly requires a minimum
power factor of 0.7 and 0.9, respectively, for residential
and commercial fixtures greater than 5 W. In addition,
the European standard, EN61000-3-2, for Class C
lighting equipment imposes stringent THD limits most
easily met using active power factor correction.
The AC-DC power block shown in Fig. 3 is
representative of the input EMI filter, AC rectifier, and
active PFC circuitry. There are several widely accepted
control methods used for achieving PFC. For power
conditioning in the range of 25 W < POUT < 200 W, the
optimal choice for meeting EN61000-3-2 and
maintaining high efficiency would generally call for a
Boundary Conduction Mode (BCM) PFC. BCM PFC
benefits from the use of a smaller, more efficient boost
inductor and exploits the use of Zero-Voltage Switching
(ZVS) and Zero-Current Switching (ZCS) to maintain
high efficiency. From a power-conditioning point of
view, the goal of a PFC circuit used in LED lighting is
no different from most other AC-DC power applications,
such as computing for example.
AC-DC DC-DCCCCV
LOAD
CONTROLAC
ANALOG
DIM
PWM
DIM
LED DRIVER
PFC
EMI
BIAS
(OPTIONAL)
Fig. 3. Industrial LED lighting, simplified system block diagram
The LED driver is comprised of the DC-DC converter;
load control; LED-specific functions, such as dimming;
and any necessary protection functions. The primary
function of the driver is power conversion. The DC-DC
converter provides safety isolation from the AC mains
while converting the high-voltage PFC output to a DC
current suitably matched to the requirements of the LED
load. The LED load control is necessary for current
sharing when several, series-parallel LED strings are
used in high-power LED fixtures. In some cases, the
DC-DC and load control blocks, shown in Fig. 3, can be
combined where the load control provides CC-CV
feedback information to the DC-DC converter. Under
normal operation, the LED driver should operate in CC
regulation; however, there may be times when the driver
should operate in CV mode. For example, if the LED
string voltage increases beyond some maximum rated
value, the driver needs to respond quickly by changing
from CC to CV mode to protect the DC-DC converter
power-stage components. When the driver is operating
in CV mode, the LED current should be limited or
folded back, providing over-current protection to the
LED load. In addition to power conversion, a secondary
function of the driver is to enable dimming capability.
There are many different configurations for operating
dimmable LED light fixtures. Industrial LED lighting
systems typically use an analog or PWM dimming
interface in conjunction with occupancy sensors,
daylight sensors, and other controls to optimize the most
efficient light use. Analog dimming uses a 1-10 V (or 0-
10 V), DC control voltage to linearly adjust LED
brightness by controlling the LED DC current. A 1-10 V
control voltage adjusts the LED dimming range from
100% (10 V) to 10% (1 V). Because the light output can
only dim down to 10%, a separate switch is required for
ON/OFF control. Similarly, a 0-10 V control voltage
should result in 100% LED brightness at 10 V and any
voltage less than 1 V produces “minimum” brightness.
Minimum brightness is the lowest current level that the
driver can manage. Some drivers’ minimum output is
OFF, while other drivers’ minimum can be as high as
10%. Incompatible 0-10 V operation among different
drivers is one of the disadvantages of analog dimming.
Also, since the LED current level is directly affected, the
LED light output can experience a visible color shift.
Analog dimming is therefore not preferred in
applications where accurate color temperature is critical.
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 4
PWM dimming adjusts LED brightness by varying the
amount of time forward current is flowing through the
LED. The LED is switched ON and OFF at a frequency
greater than 100 Hz. 100 Hz is considered a high enough
frequency that most people cannot detect the presence of
LED flicker. The human eye “averages” the switching
LED current and perceives a change in brightness
proportional to the on-time of the LED. Many
controllers used in LED drivers have dedicated PWM
dimming inputs compatible with a wide range of PWM
frequencies and amplitudes. Pulsing the current allows
the LED to be on at full rated current during the time
that the PWM signal is HIGH. The advantage this has
over analog dimming is that the color temperature is
accurately preserved and no color shift is detected during
dimming. Whether using analog or PWM dimming, the
input signal can come from the DC-DC converter
directly or remotely, as shown in Fig. 3, by the ORing
function feeding each of the dimming blocks.
IV. HIGH-POWER HB-LED TOPOLOGIES
The flyback and LLC power topologies are two
popular choices commonly used in LED lighting
systems in the 25 W < POUT < 200 W range. In general,
the flyback is a simple, low-cost option for less than
100 W; while the LLC is a more sophisticated, high-
efficiency choice covering LED loads greater than
100 W. However, advanced LED lighting requirements
have blurred the line where each topology fits best.
The flyback converter can be designed using a single-
stage approach, as shown in Fig. 4. A single-stage refers
to the single power stage and controller used to handle
the PFC, isolation, and power conversion.
AC-DC
AC
EMI
PFC
FL7930B/C
CCCVFB
Fig. 4. Single-stage CC-CV PFC flyback
Since a flyback is really just an isolated boost
converter, a natural controller choice is to use a BCM
PFC controller, as shown in Fig. 4. When operating with
a boost converter, these controllers use a constant on-
time, variable-frequency control algorithm for sinusoidal
input current shaping. However, when used in a flyback
topology, the BCM controller must be forced to operate
with a fixed frequency, fixed duty-cycle[6]
to draw
sinusoidal input current. Changing from variable- to
fixed-frequency operation requires additional external
circuitry for the BCM PFC flyback to maintain high
power factor. The single-stage flyback also suffers from
higher voltage stress on the switching MOSFET, making
it difficult to optimize a design for high efficiency across
a wide input voltage range. Because the output ripple
voltage occurs at twice the line frequency (<120 Hz),
large output filter capacitors are required. Since LED
loads are sensitive to even small changes in LED
voltage, secondary post regulators are used to decrease
voltage variations caused by excessive ripple. The
combined requirements of high PF, low THD, extended
universal input range, and high efficiency can quickly
exceed the limitations of a single-stage flyback
converter. The single-stage flyback approach is best
reserved for LED lighting applications around 50 W or
slightly higher power when the input voltage range is
restricted to low-line or high-line only.
Although more complex, a two-stage design can
overcome many of the problems associated with single-
stage designs. A typical two-stage design includes an
AC-DC, PFC boost converter whose output is the input
to a downstream DC-DC converter. Since the output of
the PFC tends to be a regulated, high-voltage DC bus;
the LLC converter is a natural choice for a high-
efficiency DC-DC stage.
AC-DC
AC
EMI
PFC
FL7930B/C
FAN7621S
or
FLS Series
CCCVFB
VBULK=460VDC
30VDC<VLED<60VDC
Fig. 5. Two-stage, BCM PFC and CC-CV LLC
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 5
The two-stage design shown in Fig. 5 highlights a PFC
boost regulator operating in BCM mode. For extended
universal input range, the maximum peak input voltage
can be as high as 435 VPK (308 VRMS). Allowing for at
least 5% margin, the PFC output voltage should be set to
about 460 VDC. Adding a dedicated PFC stage allows
near unity PF over a wide input range, but hinders
overall efficiency. For example, achieving 90% system
efficiency with a two-stage design requires each stage
operate at 95% efficiency. Since the LLC converter is
operating from a regulated DC input voltage, the
efficiency is optimized and has been shown to reach a
peak of near 97% in an application such as this.
Similarly, the BCM PFC can reach very high efficiency
at high line, but is penalized at low-line due to the higher
peak switching currents and large input-to-output
conversion ratio. For industrial LED applications above
100 W, the two-stage PFC LLC solution can meet all the
system requirements mentioned in Section III and is a
popular choice where high efficiency is most important.
Two-stage designs can reach overall system efficiencies
approaching 95% at high line, but can fall below 90%
during low-line operation.
It can help increase low-line efficiency to operate the
PFC stage as a “boost-follower” instead of a regulated
output voltage. The PFC output of a boost follower
regulates to a fixed value during low-line operation, but
tracks (follows) the input as VIN is increased above some
set value. As long as the output voltage is always greater
than the input voltage, the conditions for the boost
regulator are satisfied. For example, if the PFC output is
250 VDC for 85 VRMS < VAC < 160 VRMS, the boost
conversion ratio is smaller and the PFC sees an
efficiency increase. For 160 VRMS < VAC < 308 VRMS, the
PFC output can follow the input, plus some headroom,
of say, 5%. This means the PFC output is always 5%
higher than the AC peak input for 160 VRMS < VAC <
308 VRMS. The downstream converter of the two-stage
design also sees an efficiency benefit, operating from a
lower DC input voltage during low-line AC operation.
The one major drawback of using the boost follower
with the LLC DC-DC converter is that the input voltage
to the LLC is no longer a fixed, regulated DC voltage.
Using a 2:1 input range and a varying output voltage
range is unacceptable for an LLC. However, the flyback
can handle wide input voltage variations, but has
difficulty maintaining high PF when used as single-stage
converter. Using a flyback in a two-stage design allows
the BCM PFC to operate as a boost follower, while
removing the burden of PFC from the flyback stage. If
the LLC converter shown in Fig. 5 is replaced with a
DC-DC flyback and the PFC is operated as a boost
follower, can comparable performance be achieved?
FLYBACK
FAN6300
HVIC
FAN7382
CCCVFB
250VDC<VBULK<460VDC
30VDC<VLED<60VDC
AC-DC
AC
EMI
PFC
FL7930B/C
Fig. 6. Two-stage, BCM PFC, CC-CV two-switch, quasi-resonant flyback
The proposed two-stage topology shown in Fig. 6,
illustrates a BCM PFC operating as a boost follower and
a two-switch flyback DC-DC converter. The drain-
source voltage stress for each MOSFET used in a two-
switch flyback is half that of its single-switch
counterpart. Reducing the maximum drain-source
voltage by half allows the use of more efficient, lower-
voltage MOSFETs for the flyback stage. The cost
incurred is that there are two primary switches and the
need for a high-side gate drive. While this is significant
compared to a single-switch flyback, it is on par with the
requirements for the LLC and a necessary step for
achieving high efficiency. In addition, since the
transformer primary is diode clamped between VIN and
GND, any energy clamped is re-circulated and used to
process power to the secondary. Therefore, there is no
need for a dissipative snubber normally found on a
single-switch flyback converter. Precise gate drive
timing requirements are also less critical with a two-
switch flyback. With the LLC, the potential for
damaging shoot-through current exists if the two
primary MOSFETs inadvertently conduct
simultaneously. The flyback controller must be a
variable frequency, Quasi-Resonant (QR) controller
capable of achieving high efficiency and lower EMI
through valley-switching during MOSFET turn-on.
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 6
Valley-switching reduces MOSFET switching loss by
turning on when the drain-source voltage is minimal.
Optimizing the circuit shown in Fig. 6 is no simple
task considering the wide variation of AC input voltage,
PFC output voltage, and LED voltage. The design details
of the two-switch flyback are shown with measured
verification in sections VI and IX.
V. LOAD CONTROL FOR HB-LEDS
High-power industrial LED fixtures consist of tens or
even hundreds of individual LEDs arranged in series or
series-parallel combinations. With series-parallel strings,
the main challenge is controlling the individual string
currents to achieve high current sharing accuracy.
Placing all the LEDs into a single series string is a
simple way to guarantee equal current through each
individual LED.
VCS
VLEDIF
VF
VF
VF
VF
CC LED
DRIVER
OUT
FB
GND
Fig. 7. High-voltage series LED string
Referring to the series LED string shown in Fig. 7, the
LED driver is representative of a switching regulator
operating in CC mode. Consider a given design
specification using IF=500 mA and VF=3.5 V with a total
of 60 LEDs in series. Assuming typical VF values for
every LED, the total string voltage is
VLED=60×3.5V=210 V (neglecting VCS), with a total
output power of 105 W. The cost of this high output
voltage comes at the expense of having to use LED
driver components with higher voltage ratings, which
can have a negative impact on driver efficiency.
Secondly, when considering that each VF can vary by as
much as 20%, the more LEDs placed in series, the wider
the variation on VLED, resulting in having to over-design
the power stage. While the current regulation can be
very accurate, additional circuitry is required to limit the
maximum output voltage. If any LED in the string fails
open, VLED could increase beyond the driver’s maximum
component ratings. Finally, from a safety point of view,
a 210-V output may not be acceptable for certain
industrial lighting applications. For example, compliance
with the UL 1310 safety standard limits the LED driver
maximum output voltage to 60 V. In addition, the
maximum LED current must be <5 A and the output
power <100 W. In summary, the higher the number of
LEDs required by a given application, the more thought
that should be given to a series-parallel configuration.
Driving a series-parallel LED arrangement solves the
high-voltage problem associated with a much larger
single series string, but introduces the need for current
balancing between parallel strings. Current balancing is
an important parameter because it affects the overall
light quality, as well as the long-term reliability of the
LEDs. Using a direct parallel connection might seem
like a simple approach, but this arrangement is plagued
with trouble. As shown in Fig. 8, the total LED current is
regulated by the CC LED driver and it is assumed that
the individual string currents share equally. Due to wide
variations in VF however, this is rarely the case. The
more series LED connections placed in a string, the
greater the current variation between strings.
CC LED
DRIVER
OUT
FB
GND VCS
VLEDIF1
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
IF2 IFN
ILED
RB1 RB2 RBN
Fig. 8. Series-parallel LED strings with balance resistors
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 7
Balancing resistors placed in series with each LED
string can help, but this also has a negative impact on
efficiency, especially at higher current levels. The circuit
does not account for faults, such as an open LED. If any
string fails due to an open LED, the CC driver continues
to source the regulated LED current, ILED; causing the
current in the remaining strings to increase accordingly.
The light output of the remaining lit LEDs increases
dramatically or may fail if the additional load current
exceeds the maximum LED current rating. While this
configuration is simple and inexpensive, it is not a viable
approach for most industrial LED lighting systems.
Accurate current balance requires the current in each
LED string to be regulated independently. In
applications where string currents might be <200 mA,
simple CC linear regulators can be used, as shown in
Fig. 9. This circuit uses a voltage pre-regulator to
provide a regulated DC voltage designed to source the
desired amount of total LED current. The current in each
string can be precisely set to the desired level and is
independent of VF variations. Also, if a single LED fails
open, the remaining strings continue to regulate at their
set LED current level. While this approach is straight-
forward for regulating parallel string currents, it suffers
from several shortcomings.
VOLTAGE
PRE-REG
OUT
FB
GND
VBUSIF1
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
IF2 IFN
ILED
CC
REG
CC
REG
CC
REG
Fig. 9. Series-parallel LED strings with CC linear regulators
The additional pre-regulator voltage necessary to
cover VF variations is dropped across the linear
regulators, which has a negative impact on efficiency.
The most “efficient” way to implement this circuit
depends upon using LEDs with matched VF, which
increases LED cost. The maximum current and power
dissipation ratings associated with these types of linear
regulators limits their use in many higher power
industrial LED lighting fixtures. One way to overcome
the inefficiency of linear current regulators is to replace
them with more efficient switching regulators.
For LED strings where the maximum string voltage is
<80 V, the LED voltage is usually less than the
minimum DC voltage from the pre-regulator, VBUS.
These types of applications can use a CC buck topology
switching regulator in each string, as shown in Fig. 10.
The buck regulator requires the output voltage be less
than the input voltage and it operates most efficiently
when the ratio of VOUT/VIN (duty cycle) is closest to 1.
Depending upon input and output conditions, the
efficiency of the CC buck regulator can be as much as
20%-30% higher compared to the CC linear regulators
used in Fig. 9. Each individual LED string current is
sensed by a dedicated current-sense resistor, RCS, used to
accurately regulate the current. Since the current is
sensed on every switching cycle, these regulators have
the ability to provide cycle-by-cycle current limit. These
types of CC buck regulators are primarily chosen based
on their input and output voltage ratings, switching
frequency capability, and maximum allowable duty
cycle. CC buck regulators targeting the LED market can
also contain unique features required by LED lighting
applications. Analog or PWM dimming capability and
open- and short-LED protections are important for high
power industrial LED lighting systems.
In spite of the many advantages CC buck regulators
have over their linear counterparts, the obvious
consequence of their use is higher component count and
cost. For the purpose of simplicity, the diagram shown in
Fig. 10 fails to illustrate most of the supporting
components required to complete each buck regulator.
To minimize the size of inductors and capacitors, CC
buck regulators need to operate at switching frequencies
in the range of several-hundred KHz. Operating
multiple, high-frequency, switching regulators
independently can generate random and unpredictable
Electromagnetic Interference (EMI) emissions. Higher
levels of EMI have a second order impact on efficiency
when considering the size of the front-end EMI filter
design. Finally, current sharing accuracy is hindered by
cumulative differences between component and set point
tolerances among individual CC buck regulators.
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 8
Achieving an overall current balance variation better
than 5% is considered successful using this approach.
Nonetheless, the popularity of using CC buck regulators
for current balance in high-power LED systems is
evident by the number of controllers in the market today.
VOLTAGE
PRE-REG
OUT
FB
GND
VBUS
IF1
VF
VF
VF
VF
ILED
SW
CSVIN
GND
RCS1
CC BUCK
IF2
VF
VF
VF
VF
SW
CSVIN
GND
RCS2
CC BUCK
IFN
VF
VF
VF
VF
SW
CSVIN
GND
RCSN
CC BUCK
Fig. 10. Series-parallel LED strings with CC switching regulators
A better current balancing approach would require
fewer components, use linear load control to minimize
EMI, offer better than 5% current sharing accuracy, and
include all of the LED functions typically required by a
high-performance, industrial lighting fixture.
FAN7346
CURRENT
BALANCE
OVR
FB1
GND VCS1
VLEDIF1
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
IF2 IFN
ILED
VCS2 VCSN
FB2
FBN
CC-CV
LED
DRIVER
OUT
GND
FB FB OUT1
OUT2
OUTN
CH1
CH2
CHN
ADIM
PWMN
FO
Q1
Q2
QN
VMINNC
Fig. 11. FAN7346, 4-channel LED current balance controller
The FAN7346 LED current balance controller can
manage up to four, 100-V parallel LED strings with
±1.5% current-sharing accuracy. As shown in Fig. 11, a
CC-CV LED driver provides the required LED current,
ILED. The control and feedback to determine CC or CV
regulation is provided by the FAN7346 in this case.
Each sensed LED string current uses an internal
comparator and precision reference to control the drain
voltage of the external MOSFET. The gate voltage of
each MOSFET is adjusted to precisely maintain 1 V on
the drain. As a result, the external MOSFETs are
operated in their linear region and are not switching, so
there is no additional EMI generated with this control
scheme. When regulating in CC mode, the FAN7346
uses a feedback signal, FB, to precisely control the
minimum required amount of headroom voltage, VLED,
necessary to maintain 1 V on the drain of each external
MOSFET. Minimizing the drain voltage on the control
MOSFETs is important for reducing power dissipation.
The FB signal can be connected directly to a secondary-
side CC-CV driver (as shown in Fig. 11) or, more
commonly, connected to a primary-side CC-CV driver
via an optocoupler.
For applications that might require more than four
strings, two or more FAN7346 controllers can be
paralleled using a “master / slave” arrangement, such as
the one shown in Fig. 12.
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 9
FAN7346
CURRENT
BALANCE
OVR
FB1
GND VCS1
IF1
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
IF2 IFN
ILED
VCS2 VCSN
FB2
FBN
CC-CV
LED
DRIVER
OUT
GND
FB FB OUT1
OUT2
OUTN
CH1
CH2
CHN
ADIM
PWMN
FO
Q1
Q2
QN
FAN7346
CURRENT
BALANCE
OVR
FB1
GND VCS5
VLEDIF5
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
VF
IF6 IFN
VCS6 VCSN
FB2
FBNFB OUT1
OUT2
OUTN
CH1
CH2
CHN
ADIM
PWMN
FO
Q5
Q6
QN
NC
VMINVMIN
MASTER SLAVE
Fig. 12. FAN7346, 4-channel LED current balance controller, master / slave configuration
As shown in Fig. 12, the FAN7346 master FB pin
provides the CC-CV feedback information to the PWM
controller for the LED driver. The FAN7346 slave FB is
left open. The VMIN pin acts as synchronization pin;
therefore, the VMIN pins must be connected together.
During single FAN7346 operation, the VMIN is left
open, as shown in Fig. 11. The FO pins are also
connected together so that any LED fault occurring in
any string generates a fault output.
Control inputs for analog and PWM dimming are also
included. The analog dimming function requires a 0-5 V
DC input to dim all four LED channels simultaneously
from 100% to 12% minimum. For PWM dimming, each
LED string has a dedicated PWM input. This allows
each channel to be dimmed independently or
simultaneously from 100% down to 0.5% brightness.
The controller includes open-LED, short-LED, and over-
current protection for each string. In the event of a fault,
an open-drain Fault Output (FO) signal is generated and
can be used as a flag to signal that an LED fault has
occurred. During fault modes or dimming, perfect
current balance is accurately retained.
For CV operation, the maximum allowable LED
voltage, VLED, is set by a resistor divider. In the event
that VLED reaches the set value, the FAN7346 switches
from current regulation to voltage regulation. As the
LED load is driven deeper into voltage regulation, ILED
reduces accordingly. For industrial LED lighting
applications, none of the other methods discussed herein
can match the current-sharing accuracy, efficiency,
reduced EMI, reduced component count, or performance
features of the FAN7346 LED load control solution.
VI. DESIGN EXAMPLE
A design example for a general-purpose industrial
LED lighting driver is detailed. The primary design
goals for the design are:
Wide input 85 VRMS < VAC < 308 VRMS
Maximize efficiency over a wide operating range
Configurable for single-channel or 4-channel LED
operation
Compatible with 0 V-10 V analog dimming and 0%-
100% PWM dimming
Lowest possible design profile
Designing for the single string operation and four
series-parallel strings is achieved by using one of two
controller cards that can be inserted into a main power
board common to both options. The targeted design
specifications are summarized in Table 1.
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 10
TABLE 1. DESIGN EXAMPLE SPECIFICATIONS
Parameter Min. Typ. Max.
BCM PFC Stage
VAC (VRMS) 85 308
fVIN(AC) (Hz) 50 60 65
VOUT_PFC (V) Fixed Regulation 440 450 465
VOUT_PFC(V) Boost Follower 245 VIN(PK)+30 465
POUT_PFC (W) 120
fSW_PFC (kHz) 40 300
tSOFT_START (ms) 50
tON_OVERSHOOT (V) 10
η_PFC 0.9 0.95
Two-Switch Flyback DC-DC LED Stage
VIN (V) 250 460
VOUT_LED (V) 30 60
IOUT_LED (A) Single Channel 2
IOUT_LED (mA) 4-Channel (Per Channel) 350
POUT_LED (W) 100
fSW_LED (kHz) 50 150
η_LED 0.9 0.95
Total System
η_120V 0.90
η_230V 0.90
Parameter Min. Typ. Max.
PF_120V 0.95 0.99
PF_230V 0.95
Mechanical and Thermal
Height (mm) 30
TJ (°C) 60
BCM PFC DESIGN
PFC boost power converters are operated in
Continuous Conduction Mode (CCM), Discontinuous
Conduction Mode (DCM), or Boundary Conduction
Mode (BCM). For power levels less than about 200 W,
BCM control offers higher efficiency due to ZCS, VDS
valley switching, and the smaller physical size of the
boost inductor. A BCM PFC design using the FL7930C
Boundary-Mode PFC Controller is shown in Fig. 13.
The PFC converter must operate over the full input
voltage range of 85 VRMS < VAC < 308 VRMS and includes
a configurable option for boost follower circuitry.
FL7930C1
2
3
4 5
6
7
8
OUT
VCC
GND
ZCDCS
COMP
RDY
INV PBIAS
ZCD
ZCD
ACEMI
FILTER
RDY
(TO FLYBACK)
BF
ON
OFF
VOUT
(TO FLYBACK)
1
2
3
R5
R6
C4
C5
R7
R8
R9
R10 R11
D6
D7 Q3
Q4
Q5
L1
D8
C6
C7
NB
NAUX
VIN
RZCD
RCS
J1
Fig. 13. FL7930C BCM PFC with boost follower
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 11
The fundamental waveforms of the BCM PFC
converter are shown in Fig. 14. Each switching period,
TS, is made of three distinct time intervals, tOFF, tRES, and
tON. During tOFF; the MOSFET, Q3 is OFF; the boost
diode, D8 is conducting; and the inductor current is
ramping downward from IL(PK) to 0 A. During tRES; the
MOSFET drain voltage, VDS, resonates from VOUT down
to some minimum value equal to 2×(VOUT -VIN). When
Q3 is turned on at the VDS minimum value, this is called
“valley switching.” For VOUT=2xVIN, the minimum VDS
voltage resonates to 0 V or lower, setting up the
condition for ZVS. Q3 turn-on is determined by an
auxiliary (AUX) winding coupled to the main L1 boost
winding. A Zero-Current Detect (ZCD) signal is
generated from VAUX. During tRES, ZCD resonates below
a 1.4-V threshold, triggering the internal gate drive turn-
on command. Since the ZCD detection occurs while the
inductor current is negative, a 150 ns ZCD delay is
introduced, allowing Q3 turn-on under ZCS conditions.
0V
VDS
tREStOFF tON
TS
0V
VAUX
0V
VZCD
0.65V
0A
IL
0V
VGS
VIN
VOUT
2x(VOUT – VIN)
1.4V
t
ZCD Delay
(150ns)
NAUX
NB
x (VOUT – VIN)
NAUX
NB
x VIN
1.5V
IL(PK)
Fig. 14. BCM PFC fundamental waveforms
BCM control relies on a constant on-time, variable-
frequency control algorithm for maintaining near unity
PF. Constant on-time control requires the MOSFET on-
time remain constant within a full line cycle. Since the
MOSFET is turned on at zero current and the on-time is
constant, the peak inductor current is proportional to the
line voltage. The waveforms shown in Fig. 15 highlight
the BCM operation within a half line cycle. The
switching frequency is shown much slower than normal
to illustrate the waveforms and frequency variation. The
average current is derived from half the value of each
triangular inductor current peak and is therefore
proportional to the AC line voltage. The maximum
switching frequency occurs near the zero crossing of the
AC line voltage, while the peak voltage coincides with
minimum switching frequency.
t
VGS
IL
t
FS
t
Fig. 15. BCM constant on time, variable frequency waveforms
The PFC efficiency benefits from ZCS, ZVS, and valley
switching are critical for achieving high system-level
efficiency. However, efficiency for all PFC boost
converters tends to decrease at low-line. This is mostly
due to the fact that boost converters process power more
efficiently at lower duty cycle corresponding to higher
input voltage. Generally, the PFC output voltage is fixed
at 400 V, resulting in a maximum power conversion
ratio during low-line operation. The BCM boost can be
operated in a boost follower mode with input and output
voltage characteristics, as shown in Fig. 16.
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 12
The rectified AC voltage represents the peak values
expected for 85 VRMS < VAC < 308 VRMS. The boost
follower output should be fixed at 250 V for low-line
operation. For VAC > 160 VRMS, the PFC output voltage
should follow the input voltage to within VAC(PK) + 30 V,
up to 308 VRMS. Allowing the boost follower to track the
input voltage down to 85 VRMS benefits the low-line
efficiency of the PFC, but the downstream flyback
converter is penalized by having to handle such a wide
input voltage range of 3:1. Setting the boost follower
output voltage to track between 250 V < VOUT < 465 V
offers a good compromise between PFC and flyback
efficiency, while limiting the flyback converter input
voltage range to 2:1. J1, shown in the boost follower
circuitry in Fig. 13, can be configured in one of three
ways: (1) BF-ON enables boost follower mode, 250 V <
VOUT < 460 V; (2) BF-OFF regulates the PFC output
voltage to 465 V; and (3) BF-OPEN regulates the PFC
output voltage to 250 V.
time (ms)
Vo
lta
ge
(V
)
0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140 160
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
450
0
500
180 200
VOUT=465V
250V<VOUT<475V
85VRMS<VAC<308VRMS
Fig. 16. PFC boost follower voltage characteristics
A circuit for achieving the boost follower voltage
profile of Fig. 16 is shown in Fig. 17. R4 and R5 form the
output voltage divider that is always present for any
voltage regulated PFC converter. In this case, the divider
is set to the minimum boost follower output voltage, VO1
= 250 V. R5 is chosen by setting I2 to 150 µA when the
FL7930C is in regulation and is calculated by:
𝑅5 =𝑉𝑅𝐸𝐹
𝐼2 (1)
=2.5𝑉
150𝜇𝐴= 16.7𝑘Ω
R4 is calculated by:
𝑅4 =𝑅5 × (𝑉𝑂1 − 𝑉𝑅𝐸𝐹)
𝑉𝑅𝐸𝐹 (2)
=16.7𝑘Ω × (250𝑉 − 2.5𝑉)
2.5𝑉= 1.65𝑀Ω
R1
R2
Vf
Vbe
R3
R4
R5
1
3COMP
INV VREF
(2.5V)
FL7930C
85VRMS<VAC<308VRMS
VO1=250VDC
VO2=475VDC
Vctrl
VbI1 I2
R6 C1
I3
I4
EA
Q1
D1
Fig. 17. Boost follower circuitry
The boost follower circuitry is comprised of R1, R2,
R3, D1, Q1, and R6 with C1 forming a low-pass filter. The
low-pass filter should be sized to attenuate 120 Hz.
When properly biased, Q1 allows a current, I1, to flow
through R3, pulling additional current through R4. I1 is
linearly proportional to I2 according to the boost
follower voltage gain defined by VO2 and VO1 as:
𝐼1 = 0𝐴, 𝑓𝑜𝑟 𝑉𝐴𝐶 < 160𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆
𝐼1 = 𝐼2 × [𝑉𝑂2
𝑉𝑂1− 1] , 𝑓𝑜𝑟 𝑉𝐴𝐶 = 308𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆
(3)
= 150µA × [475V
250V− 1] = 135µA, 𝑓𝑜𝑟 𝑉𝐴𝐶 = 308𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆
From Eq (3), an additional current of I1=135µA is
required when VOUT=475 V. The boost follower control
voltage, Vctrl, is fixed according to the base voltage, Vb.
Vb must be must be carefully chosen so as not to saturate
Q1 during high-line operation:
𝑉𝑐𝑡𝑟𝑙 = 𝑉𝑏 − 𝑉𝑏𝑒 , 𝑓𝑜𝑟 𝑉𝐴𝐶 = 308𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆 (4)
= 2𝑉 − 0.7𝑉 = 1.3𝑉, 𝑓𝑜𝑟 𝑉𝐴𝐶 = 308𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 13
For Vctrl=1.3 V during VAC=308 V, R3 can then be
calculated as:
𝑅3 =𝑉𝑐𝑡𝑟𝑙
𝐼1 (5)
=1.3𝑉
135𝜇𝐴= 9.53𝑘Ω
The VAC divider formed by R1 and R2 is sized to set
Vb=2 V at VAC=308 VRMS. R2 is calculated by choosing
I4 as 1 mA:
𝑅2 =𝑉𝑏 + 𝑉𝑓
𝐼4 (6)
=2𝑉 + 0.5𝑉
1𝑚𝐴= 2.5𝑘Ω
And R1 can now be determined by:
𝑅1 =𝑅2 × [√2 × 𝑉𝐴𝐶(𝑀𝐴𝑋) − (𝑉𝑏 + 𝑉𝑓)]
𝑉𝑏 + 𝑉𝑓 (7)
=2.5𝑘Ω × [√2 × 308𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆 − (2𝑉 + 0.5𝑉)]
2𝑉 + 0.5𝑉= 433𝑘Ω
Ideal calculated component values used in Eq (1)–Eq
(7) provide a reasonable starting point. However, actual
component values may need to be modified due to
inaccuracies in estimating Vbe and Vf. Using ideal
component values, the calculated dynamic range for Vctrl
can be plotted over the full AC line range of 85 VRMS <
VAC < 308 VRMS. The boost follower control voltage as a
function of AC line voltage is given as:
𝑉𝑐𝑡𝑟𝑙(𝑉𝐴𝐶) = (𝑅2
𝑅1 + 𝑅2) × √2 × 𝑉𝐴𝐶 − (𝑉𝑓 + 𝑉𝑏𝑒) (8)
Eq (8) is used to create the plot shown in Fig. 18. As
determined from Eq (4), Vctrl = 1.3 V for VAC =
308 VRMS. For VAC < 150 VRMS, Vctrl = 0 V and VOUT is
determined from the R4, R5 divider and I2. The
breakpoint at which the boost follower output begins
tracking the AC input occurs near VAC = 150 VRMS.
Fig. 18. Vctrl vs. VAC
Vctrl, I1, and I2 for the most critical values of VAC are
summarized in TABLE 2. Additional details and variations
of the boost follower implementation are highlighted in
Equation [9].
TABLE 2. BOOST FOLLOWER CONTROL VARIABLES
VAC (VRMS) Vctrl (mV) I1 (µA) I2 (µA)
85 0 0 150
150 19 2 150
160 95 10 150
308 1287 135 150
Designing the PFC power stage begins with
calculating the peak and RMS inductor current, where a
20% design margin is applied to POUT:
𝐼𝐿(𝑃𝐾) =4 × 𝑃𝑂𝑈𝑇
𝜂 × √2 × 𝑉𝐴𝐶(𝑀𝐼𝑁)
(9)
=4 × 144𝑊
0.95 × √2 × 85𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆
= 5𝐴𝑃𝐾
𝐼𝐿(𝑅𝑀𝑆) =𝐼𝐿(𝑃𝐾)
√6 (10)
𝐼𝐿(𝑅𝑀𝑆) =5𝐴𝑃𝐾
√6= 2𝐴𝑅𝑀𝑆
The boost inductor is determined by output power and
minimum operating frequency. A typical starting point is
between 40~50 kHz, which is above the maximum
audible frequency of 20 kHz. Because the boost follower
output voltage varies, the inductor is calculated for
maximum high-line (308 VRMS) and maximum low-line
(160 VRMS) and the lowest value is selected.
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 14
𝐿𝐻𝐿
=𝜂 × (√2 × 𝑉𝐴𝐶(𝑀𝐴𝑋))
2
4 × 𝐹𝑀𝐼𝑁 × 𝑃𝑂𝑈𝑇 × (1 +√2 × 𝑉𝐴𝐶(𝑀𝐴𝑋)
𝑉𝑂𝑈𝑇 − √2 × 𝑉𝐴𝐶(𝑀𝐴𝑋)
)
(11)
=0.9 × (√2 × 308𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆)
2
4 × 45𝑘𝐻𝑧 × 144𝑊 × (1 +√2 × 308𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆
460𝑉 − √2 × 308𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆
)
𝐿𝐻𝐿 = 350𝜇𝐻
𝐿𝐿𝐿
=𝜂 × (√2 × 𝑉𝐴𝐶(𝑀𝐼𝑁))
2
4 × 𝐹𝑀𝐼𝑁 × 𝑃𝑂𝑈𝑇 × (1 +√2 × 𝑉𝐴𝐶(𝑀𝐼𝑁)
𝑉𝑂𝑈𝑇 − √2 × 𝑉𝐴𝐶(𝑀𝐼𝑁)
)
(12)
=0.9 × (√2 × 160𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆)
2
4 × 45𝑘𝐻𝑧 × 144𝑊 × (1 +√2 × 160𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆
250𝑉 − √2 × 160𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆
)
𝐿𝐿𝐿 = 168𝜇𝐻
𝐿𝐿𝐿 < 𝐿𝐻𝐿 ∴
𝐿 = 𝐿𝐿𝐿 ≅ 170𝜇𝐻
For the calculated peak current corresponding to the
calculated inductor value, maximum on-time is given by:
𝑡𝑂𝑁(𝑀𝐴𝑋) = 𝐿 ×𝐼𝐿(𝑃𝐾)
√2 × 𝑉𝐴𝐶(𝑀𝐼𝑁)
(13)
= 170𝜇𝐻 ×5𝐴𝑃𝐾
√2 × 85𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆
= 7𝜇𝑠
The result is less than the minimum; maximum on-
time from the FL7930C datasheet of 35 µs.
The inductor core selected is a low-profile EFD30
with properties shown in Table 4. The estimated air gap
length to achieve 170 µH is given by Eq (42) as:
𝑙𝑔 =4π × 10−7 𝐻
𝑚× 41𝑇2 × 69𝑚𝑚2
170𝜇𝐻= 0.9𝑚
The number of turns, NB, for the boost winding is
calculated by:
𝑁𝐵 =𝐿 × 𝐼𝐿(𝑃𝐾)
𝐵𝑃𝐾 × 𝐴𝑒 (14)
=170𝜇𝐻 × 5𝐴𝑃𝐾 × 108
3000𝐺 × 0.69𝑐𝑚2 = 41𝑇
The auxiliary (AUX) winding must produce enough
voltage to cross the 1.5 V ZCD threshold. The minimum
number of AUX turns is:
𝑁𝐴𝑈𝑋 =1.5𝑉 × 𝑁𝐵
𝑉𝑂𝑈𝑇 − √2 × 𝑉𝐴𝐶(𝑀𝐴𝑋)
(15)
=1.5𝑉 × 41𝑇
460𝑉 − √2 × 308𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆
= 3𝑇
The boost inductor winding stack is shown in Table 3.
AC copper losses are minimized in the boost winding by
using Litz wire. The benefits and use of Litz wire for
designing high-frequency magnetic components are
discussed in the “Two-Switch Flyback Design” section.
TABLE 3. PFC BOOST INDUCTOR WINDING TABLE
Winding Pins (S→F) Wire Layers Turns
Boost 6→1 40/38, Served Litz 2 41
AUX 9→10 2/38, Bifilar 1 3
During VIN = 308 VRMS, the peak voltage seen by the
MOSFET is 435 VPK. When VIN = 85 VRMS, the peak
drain current is IL(PK) = 5 APK. The RMS drain current is
1.6 ARMS as determined by Eq (20). FCP190N60 is a
600 V, 20 A device and is chosen for the PFC boost
MOSFET, Q3. The boost output diode rectifier must
withstand a maximum blocking voltage of 460 V. ES3J
is a 600 V, 3 A, fast recovery diode and is chosen as the
PFC boost rectifier, D8.
Most LED lighting applications do not have a hold-up
requirement, so the output capacitor is sized strictly to
limit the amount of output voltage ripple. If the output
ripple voltage, ΔVOUT, is limited to about 5% of the
minimum boost follower output voltage, the output
capacitance can be calculated by:
𝐶𝑂𝑈𝑇 ≥𝑃𝑂𝑈𝑇
𝑉𝑂𝑈𝑇(𝑀𝐼𝑁) × 2𝜋 × 𝐹𝐿(𝑀𝐼𝑁) × ΔV𝑂𝑈𝑇 (16)
≥144𝑊
250𝑉 × 2𝜋 × 50𝐻𝑧 × (0.05 × 250𝑉)= 150𝜇𝐹
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 15
The voltage rating for COUT is 460 V. High-voltage,
low-profile, bulk capacitors are limited to about
450 VDC. Therefore, to achieve the required voltage
rating; two 330-µF, 250-V rated aluminum electrolytic
capacitors are used in series for C4 and C5 in Fig. 13.
Configuring the FL7930C begins with setting the ZCD
resistor value. The ZCD signal is internally clamped to
0.65 V, as shown in Fig. 14. The minimum ZCD resistor
for clamping is chosen to satisfy Eq (17):
𝑅𝑍𝐶𝐷(1) ≥
𝑁𝐴𝑈𝑋
𝑁𝐵× √2 × 𝑉𝐴𝐶(𝑀𝐴𝑋) − 0.65𝑉
3𝑚𝐴 (17)
≥
3𝑇41𝑇
× √2 × 308𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆 − 0.65𝑉
3𝑚𝐴= 10.5𝑘Ω ≅ 11kΩ
The ZCD resistor also influences the FL7930C control
range by setting the maximum on-time. From a control
point of view, the ZCD resistor is calculated as:
𝑅𝑍𝐶𝐷(2) ≥28𝜇𝑠
Δ𝑡𝑂𝑁(𝑀𝐴𝑋)×
√2 × 𝑉𝐴𝐶(𝑀𝐴𝑋) × 𝑁𝐴𝑈𝑋
0.469𝑚𝐴 × 𝑁𝐵 (18)
≥28𝜇𝑠
35µs − 7µs×
√2 × 308𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆 × 3𝑇
0.469𝑚𝐴 × 41𝑇= 68.1𝑘Ω
To guarantee enough dynamic control range to cover
the wide input range and variable output voltage, a ZCD
resistor close to the value of RZCD(2) is used.
𝑅𝑍𝐶𝐷 = 𝑅𝑍𝐶𝐷(2) = 68.1𝑘Ω
The current-sense resistor, RCS, is used for Over-
Current Protection (OCP) only and is calculated by:
𝑅𝐶𝑆 =𝑉𝐶𝑆(𝐿𝐼𝑀)
𝐼𝐿(𝑃𝐾)
(19)
=0.7𝑉
5𝐴𝑃𝐾= 140𝑚Ω
The RMS current through RCS is the same as the
MOSFET RMS current and is given by:
𝐼𝐷(𝑅𝑀𝑆) = 𝐼𝐿(𝑃𝐾) × √1
6−
4 × √2 × 𝑉𝐴𝐶(𝑀𝐼𝑁)
9𝜋 × 𝑉𝑂𝑈𝑇 (20)
= 5𝐴𝑃𝐾 × √1
6−
4 × √2 × 85𝑉𝑅𝑀𝑆
9𝜋 × 250𝑉= 1.6𝐴𝑅𝑀𝑆
The power dissipated in RCS is given by:
𝑃𝑅𝐶𝑆 = 𝐼𝐷(𝑅𝑀𝑆)2 × 𝑅𝐶𝑆 (21)
𝑃𝑅𝐶𝑆 = 1.6𝐴𝑅𝑀𝑆2 × 140𝑚Ω = 360𝑚𝑊
Two 280 mΩ, 1210, surface-mount resistors rated for
500 mW each are used in parallel to meet the 360 mW
power requirement.
The FL7930C also includes a ready (RDY) function,
as shown in Fig. 13. The RDY function is used to
disable the downstream, two-switch flyback until the
PFC output reaches 89% of the set regulated voltage.
TWO-SWITCH FLYBACK DESIGN
The two-switch, QR flyback design uses the
FAN6300H current mode PWM controller as the control
integrated circuit (IC) and the FAN7382 high-voltage IC
(HVIC) to develop the dual gate drives. Much of the
design procedure is fundamental for the flyback and is
covered in various application notes. Therefore, this
design example focuses on aspects important for high
efficiency and functionality applicable to industrial LED
lighting. The critical power-stage components and gate
drive circuitry are shown in Fig. 19.
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 16
CC
CVFB
FAN6300H1
2
3
4 5
6
7
8
NC
HV
VDD
GATEGND
CS
FB
DET
FAN73821
2
3
4 5
6
7
8
HO
VB
VS
LOCOM
LIN
HIN
VCCPBIAS
VIN
R1
R2
R3
Q1
Q2
D1
D2
D3
D4D5
ACIN
R4
C1
VA
VLED
VHS
C2
C3
(FROM PFC)
(FROM PFC)
RDY
PBIAS
Fig. 19. Simplified two-switch flyback power stage and gate drive circuitry
The basic operation can best be explained by referring
to the key switching waveforms shown in Fig. 20. QR
flyback converters use variable-frequency control to
maintain operation at the boundary of CCM and DCM.
In a two-switch QR flyback, there are two primary
referenced MOSFETs switching synchronously, as
indicated by VGS(HS) and VGS(LS). Matching exact timing
between the two gate drives is not so critical because
there is no direct connection between the high-side (HS)
and low-side (LS). However, the primary transformer is
only energized during the time that both MOSFETs are
conducting. A switching period, TS, is made of three
distinct time intervals: (1) tON where both primary
MOSFETs are conducting and the transformer primary
is energized, (2) tOFF where both primary MOSFETs are
OFF and power is transferred to the secondary, and (3) tf
where the drain voltage resonates down to some
minimum value. The gate drive turn-on command is
initiated when the DET pin sources a current, IDET >
30 µA, as determined by the AUX winding voltage, VA,
and the DET resistor divider, R1 and R2. The gate turn-
on signal is triggered 200 ns after IDET > 30 µA. The gate
turn-on coincides with the minimum VDS valley voltage,
reducing COSS x VDS2 power loss. Extended valley
switching occurs if the first valley is not detected. In this
case, turn-on can occur at any subsequent valley.
Switching losses are further reduced by ZCS achieved at
turn-on since ID always starts from 0 A. The DET
voltage is diode clamped to within 0.7 V when VA < 0 V
and the DET resistor divider is set to maintain less than
2.5 V during normal operation. After a 5 µs blanking
period, if the 2.5 V threshold is crossed, output Over-
Voltage Protection (OVP) is enabled. OVP is latching
and reset only by VDD < UVLO.
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 17
0V
VDS
0A
IDS
tftOFF tON
TS
0A
ID
VA VA
0V
0V
VDET
0V
VIN
PBIAS
VIN+VHS
VGS(HS)
VGS(LS)
0.7V
5µs
2.5V
VO
OVP
IDET(SOURCE)>30µA
tDELAY=200ns
VRO
2
VRO
2
VIN
2
VIN
2
Fig. 20. Two-switch flyback key switching waveforms
The design procedure starts with the power-stage
components. The theoretical duty cycle limit is 0.5, but
allowing for rise and fall delays and some additional
design margin, the maximum duty cycle is limited to
0.45. The drain-source resonant fall-time, tf, is estimated
to be 600 ns and verified using Eq (28) once the power
stage components are determined. The output rectifier
forward voltage drop, Vf, is assumed to be 2 V.
Calculate the required transformer turns ratio, n, as:
𝑛 =𝑉𝐼𝑁(𝑀𝐼𝑁) × 𝐷𝑀𝐴𝑋
(1 − 𝐹𝑀𝐼𝑁 × 𝑡𝑓) − 𝐷𝑀𝐴𝑋
×1
𝑉𝑂 + 𝑉𝑓 (22)
=250𝑉 × 0.45
(1 − 50𝑘𝐻𝑧 × 600𝑛𝑠) − 0.45×
1
60𝑉 + 2𝑉= 3.48
Round n to 3.5 and calculate the reflected output
voltage, VRO, and the maximum drain-source voltage
stress for each of the primary MOSFETs:
𝑉𝑅𝑂 =𝑛 × (𝑉𝑂 + 𝑉𝑓)
2 (23)
=3.5 × (60𝑉 + 2𝑉)
2= 108.5𝑉
𝑉𝐷𝑆(𝑀𝐴𝑋) =𝑉𝐼𝑁(𝑀𝐴𝑋)
2+ 𝑉𝑅𝑂 (24)
=460𝑉
2+ 108.5 = 338.5𝑉
Calculate the transformer primary magnetizing
inductance, LM:
𝐿𝑀 =(𝑉𝐼𝑁(𝑀𝐼𝑁) × 𝐷𝑀𝐴𝑋)
2
2 ×𝑃𝑂
𝑛× 𝐹𝑀𝐼𝑁
(25)
=(250𝑉 × 0.45)2
2 ×100𝑊
0.9× 50𝑘𝐻𝑧
= 1.14𝑚𝐻
Design for LM=1 mH and calculate the maximum peak
and RMS MOSFET currents as:
𝐼𝐷𝑆(𝑃𝐾) =𝑉𝐼𝑁(𝑀𝐼𝑁) × 𝐷𝑀𝐴𝑋
𝐿𝑀 × 𝐹𝑀𝐼𝑁 (26)
=250𝑉 × 0.45
1.14𝑚𝐻 × 50𝑘𝐻𝑧= 2𝐴𝑃𝐾
𝐼𝐷𝑆(𝑅𝑀𝑆) = √𝐷𝑀𝐴𝑋
3× 𝐼𝐷𝑆(𝑃𝐾) (27)
= √0.45
3× 2𝐴𝑝𝑘 = 775𝑚𝐴𝑅𝑀𝑆
For a two-switch flyback, each primary MOSFET is in
series with the transformer primary. So the current
flowing through all three is equal. Therefore, choose an
N-channel MOSFET with a maximum voltage rating
greater than 338.5 V and a current rating able to handle
the average current as defined by Eq (27). FDP22N50 is
a 500 V, 22 A device with excellent high-frequency
switching characteristics. From the datasheet, the typical
output capacitance, COSS, for the FDP22N50 is 351 pF.
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 18
When valley switching operation occurs, it takes half the
resonant period for the drain voltage to fall from
VDS(MAX) to the first minimum valley. This resonant fall-
time was originally estimated as 600 ns, but can now be
calculated as:
𝑡𝑓 = 𝜋 × √𝐿𝑀 ×𝐶𝑂𝑆𝑆
2 (28)
= 𝜋 × √1𝑚𝐻 ×351𝑝𝐹
2= 1.3𝜇𝑠
Since the error between the estimated tf of 600 ns and
the calculated tf of 1.3 µs is about 2:1, a slight decrease
in DMAX can be expected. Rearranging Eq (22) and
solving for DMAX gives:
𝐷𝑀𝐴𝑋 =𝑉𝑂 − [(𝑉𝑂 + 𝑉𝑓) × 𝐹𝑀𝐼𝑁 × 𝑡𝑓]
𝑉𝐼𝑁(𝑀𝐼𝑁)
𝑛+ (𝑉𝑂 + 𝑉𝑓)
(29)
=60𝑉 − [(60𝑉 + 2𝑉) × 50𝑘𝐻𝑧 × 1.3𝜇𝑠]
250𝑉3.5
+ (60𝑉 + 2𝑉)= 0.42
The new value for maximum duty cycle is calculated
to be 0.42 and can probably be increased to 0.45. Using
DMAX=0.45 and tf=1.3 µs, the transformer turns ratio, n,
can be recalculated using Eq (22). The new value for n is
3.7 and shall be used for the transformer design. The
“area product” method for estimating transformer core
size is commonly used for core selection.
𝐴𝑒 × 𝐴𝑤 =𝑃𝑂 × 108 × 𝐹𝐾
2 × 𝐹𝑀𝐼𝑁 × 𝐵𝑃𝐾 × 𝑊𝐹 × 𝐶𝐷 × 𝑈𝐹 (30)
=100𝑊 × 108 × 1
2 × 50𝑘𝐻𝑧 × 3000𝐺 × 0.25 × 350 × 1
= 0.38𝑐𝑚2𝑐𝑚2
where:
FK = Cooling Factor (1=no cooling, 0.3=100 CFM)
BPK = AC Flux Density (Gauss)
WF = Window Factor (<1, practical<0.5)
CD = Current Density (250<CD<550, CM/A)
UF = Magnetization (1=single-end, 2=double-end)
The result of the area product calculation, estimated
that a core with an area product greater than
0.38 cm2cm
2 should have enough cross-sectional area
and window area to support the design. To meet the
30 mm maximum height requirement, horizontal low-
profile ferrite cores should be considered. From the
manufacturer’s datasheets:
TABLE 4. LOW-PROFILE FERRITE CORE CHOICES
Core Ae Aw AwAe Height
EFD30 0.69 cm2 0.63 cm
2 0.44 cm
2cm
2 14 mm
EER28L 0.81 cm2 0.97 cm
2 0.79 cm
2cm
2 25 mm
The area product is usually not directly specified for a
given core and bobbin set. However, the core cross-
section, Ae, and the window area, Aw, are listed on the
core and bobbin datasheets and can be multiplied to get
AeAw. The EFD30 core is very low-profile, but has an
area product only slightly greater than 0.38 cm2cm
2. It is
marginally acceptable, but the smaller window area is
not ideal for copper utilization, forcing the use of smaller
gauge wire and a larger number of turns. Consequently,
the EER28L core set available from numerous
manufacturers is chosen for this application. Suitable
high-frequency, ferrite materials such as 3F3, PC90, or
N49 are readily available from different vendors and
work well within the range of 200 kHz < f <500 kHz.
The required number of primary turns is calculated as:
𝑁𝑃 =𝐿𝑀 × 𝐼𝐷𝑆(𝑃𝐾) × 108
𝐵𝑃𝐾 × 𝐴𝑒 (31)
=1𝑚𝐻 × 2𝐴𝑃𝐾 × 108
3000𝐺 × 0.81𝑐𝑚2 = 82𝑇
The number of primary turns is determined to be 82
and this can now be used to calculate the number of
secondary turns. The transformer requires two secondary
turns. The main secondary, NLED, is for the LED output
voltage. Two primary referenced secondary windings,
NA and NHS, are also needed for the FAN6300 DET
function and high-side drive. The DET voltage, VDET,
needs to be set to 12 V at VIN(MIN).
𝑁𝐿𝐸𝐷 =𝑁𝑃
𝑛 (32)
=82𝑇
3.7= 22𝑇
𝑁𝐴 = 𝑁𝐿𝐸𝐷 ×𝑉𝐷𝐸𝑇
𝑉𝑂 + 𝑉𝑓 (33)
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 19
= 22𝑇 ×12𝑉
60𝑉 + 2𝑉= 4𝑇
𝑁𝐻𝑆 = 𝑁𝐿𝐸𝐷 ×𝑉𝐻𝑆
𝑉𝑂 + 𝑉𝑓 (34)
= 22𝑇 ×8𝑉
60𝑉 + 2𝑉= 3𝑇
The primary wire gauge used for NP is selected based
on a desired current density, CD, of 350 CM/A (Circular
Mils per Amp). A general rule is to design for
250 CM/A < CD < 550 CM/A. The required number of
CMs is given by:
𝐶𝑀 = 350𝐶𝑀
𝐴× 𝐼𝐷𝑆(𝑅𝑀𝑆) (35)
350𝐶𝑀
𝐴× 775𝑚𝐴𝑅𝑀𝑆 = 271𝐶𝑀
Referring to the American Wire Gauge (AWG) lookup
table shown in Table 5, the closest wire gauge to
271 CM is AWG#26 specified at 254 CM. AWG#26 can
handle the 775 mARMS current, but it is limited to an
effective frequency of 107 kHz. Since this design can
operate up to 200 kHz, stranded or Litz wire is used to
minimize AC resistance, lowering high-frequency
copper losses.
TABLE 5. AWG TABLE
Gauge Diameter DiameterCircular
MilsArea Resistance Weight Skin Depth
(AWG) (inches) (mm) CM (inches2)(Ohms/100
0 ft.)
(lbs./100
0 ft.)
Max. Freq. for
100% Skin
Depth- Solid
Copper
19 0.0359 0.91186 1288 0.001012 8.0512 3.8991 21 kHz
20 0.032 0.8128 1021 0.000802 10.1524 3.0921 27 kHz
21 0.0285 0.7239 810 0.000636 12.8019 2.4522 33 kHz
22 0.0253 0.64262 642 0.000505 16.1429 1.9447 42 kHz
23 0.0226 0.57404 509 0.0004 20.3558 1.5422 53 kHz
24 0.0201 0.51054 404 0.000317 25.6682 1.223 68 kHz
25 0.0179 0.45466 320 0.000252 32.367 0.9699 85 kHz
26 0.0159 0.40386 254 0.0002 40.814 0.7692 107 kHz
27 0.0142 0.36068 201 0.000158 51.4655 0.61 130 kHz
28 0.0126 0.32004 160 0.000126 64.8968 0.4837 170 kHz
29 0.0113 0.28702 127 9.95E-05 81.8334 0.3836 210 kHz
30 0.01 0.254 100 7.89E-05 103.19 0.3042 270 kHz
31 0.0089 0.22606 80 6.26E-05 130.1202 0.2413 340 kHz
32 0.008 0.2032 63 4.96E-05 164.0786 0.1913 430 kHz
33 0.0071 0.18034 50 3.94E-05 206.8992 0.1517 540 kHz
34 0.0063 0.16002 40 3.12E-05 260.8951 0.1203 690 kHz
35 0.0056 0.14224 32 2.48E-05 328.9827 0.0954 870 kHz
36 0.005 0.127 25 1.96E-05 414.8395 0.0757 1100 kHz
37 0.0045 0.1143 20 1.56E-05 523.1029 0.06 1350 kHz
38 0.004 0.1016 16 1.23E-05 659.6206 0.0476 1750 kHz
39 0.0035 0.0889 12 9.8E-06 831.7663 0.0377 2250 kHz
40 0.0031 0.07874 10 7.8E-06 1048.8379 0.0299 2900 kHz
AC skin depth for a single copper conductor is
calculated as:
𝛿 =65𝑚𝑚
√𝐹𝑀𝐴𝑋
(36)
=65𝑚𝑚
√200𝑘𝐻𝑧= 0.145𝑚𝑚
For full AC current penetration, multiply the skin
depth by two and choose the closest wire gauge less than
0.290 mm diameter. AWG#29 or smaller is suited for
200 kHz operation. However, AWG#29 is only rated for
127 CM. From Eq (35), 271 CM is required. To meet
AC and DC current requirements, multiple strands of
AWG#29 are needed. 271 CM / 127 CM implies the
need for at least three parallel strands of AWG#29.
Additional parallel strands can be used to lower the DC
resistance, but must be checked against available
window area. Litz wire is sold in bundled strands and is
specified as strands/AWG#. Numerous combinations
exist, but available lab stock for this design allows the
use of 15/38, served Litz wire with 141.76 mΩ/m
(43.21 Ω / 1000 ft) resistance and 0.559 mm outer
diameter. AWG#38 is rated for 16 CM and 15 parallel
strands yield 15 x 16 CM = 240 CM, which is close to
the 271 CM result from Eq (35).
From the manufacturer’s datasheet, the EER28L
bobbin specifies an average length per turn, lW, as
51.7 mm/T and a window width, WW, of 21.8 mm.
Using the entire bobbin width implies no safety
isolation. Depending on the type of wire insulation
chosen, barrier tape is sometimes used to meet creepage
and clearance specifications. The use of barrier tape
reduces the amount of available window width and
would therefore have to be subtracted from the
manufacturers specified bobbin width. For this design
example, the use of barrier tape is neglected and the DC
resistance is calculated by estimating the total length of
wire needed as:
𝑇/𝐿𝑎𝑦𝑒𝑟 =𝑊𝑊
𝐷𝑖𝑎𝑚𝑒𝑡𝑒𝑟 (37)
=21.8𝑚𝑚
0.559𝑚𝑚= 38 𝑇/𝐿𝑎𝑦𝑒𝑟
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 20
𝐿𝑎𝑦𝑒𝑟𝑠 =𝑁𝑃
𝑇/𝐿𝑎𝑦𝑒𝑟 (38)
=82𝑇
38𝑇/𝐿𝑎𝑦𝑒𝑟= 2.2𝐿𝑎𝑦𝑒𝑟𝑠
𝐿𝑒𝑛𝑔𝑡ℎ = 𝑀𝐿𝑇 × 𝑁𝑃 (39)
= 51.7𝑚𝑚
𝑇× 82𝑇 = 4,239𝑚𝑚 = 4.24𝑚
𝑅𝐷𝐶(𝑃𝑅𝐼) = 𝑅𝐴𝑊𝐺 × 𝐿𝑒𝑛𝑔𝑡ℎ (40)
= 141.76𝑚Ω
𝑚× 4.24𝑚 = 600𝑚Ω
RDC and IDS(RMS) can be used to calculate the DC
copper loss in the primary winding as:
𝑃𝐷𝐶(𝑃𝑅𝐼) = 𝐼𝐷𝑆(𝑅𝑀𝑆)2 × 𝑅𝐷𝐶 (41)
𝑃𝐷𝐶(𝑃𝑅𝐼) = 7752𝑚𝐴𝑅𝑀𝑆 × 600𝑚Ω = 360mW
The AC resistance normally calculated for using a
single conductor is neglected here. Since full AC current
penetration is assumed for the 15/38 Litz wire chosen,
the AC resistance is mitigated for the frequencies in the
range of this design.
From Eq (35), the 2 A LED secondary requires a
current density of 700 CM, which is close to an
equivalent AWG#22. Since the secondary experiences
the same frequency as the primary, AWG#38 is used for
the LED secondary winding. 700 CM / 16 CM implies at
least 44 strands of AWG#38. AWG#38 has 71 mΩ/m
(21.61 Ω / 1000 ft) resistance and 0.787 mm outer
diameter. Two secondary windings in parallel with 30/38
served Litz give 60 equivalent strands equal to 960 CM.
22 turns fits onto a single winding layer, so the full LED
secondary requires 2x22T (or two layers). The total wire
length, DC resistance, and power loss is again calculated
using Eq (37)-(41) and given as:
𝐿𝑒𝑛𝑔𝑡ℎ = 51.7𝑚𝑚
𝑇× 22𝑇 = 1,137𝑚𝑚 = 1.14𝑚
𝑅𝐷𝐶(𝐿𝐸𝐷) = 71𝑚Ω
𝑚× 1.14𝑚 = 81𝑚Ω, per winding
For two secondary windings in parallel, the equivalent
DC resistance is 40.5 mΩ.
𝑃𝐷𝐶(𝐿𝐸𝐷) = 22𝐴𝑅𝑀𝑆 × 40.5𝑚Ω = 162mW
The transformer core gap is applied to the center leg
only and is estimated to be:
𝑙𝑔 =𝜇Ο × 𝑁𝑃
2 × 𝐴𝑒
𝐿𝑀
(42)
𝑙𝑔 =4π × 10−7 𝐻
𝑚× 82𝑇2 × 81𝑚𝑚2
1𝑚𝐻= 0.7𝑚𝑚
The final transformer design is detailed in Fig. 21 and
Table 6.
1
NP(2-3)=38TNLED=22T
4
3
11
9
NHS(1-2)=3T2
5
6
NP(3-4)=44T
NDET(6-5)=4T
NLED=22T
12
10
Fig. 21. Flyback transformer
The DET and HS windings carry minimal current, so
two strands of AWG#38 can be used for each winding.
The LED secondary is interleaved between the primary
to reduce leakage inductance.
TABLE 6. FLYBACK TRANSFORMER WINDING TABLE
Winding Pins
(S→F) Wire Layers Turns
½ Primary 2→3 15/38, Served Litz 1 38
Secondary (LED) 9→11 30/38, Served Litz 1 22
Secondary (LED) 10→12 30/38, Served Litz 1 22
½ Primary 3→4 15/38, Served Litz 1+ 44
Secondary (DET) 6→5 2/38, Bifilar 1 4
Secondary (HS) 2→1 2/38, Bifilar 1 3
The output capacitance must be correctly sized to
minimize the amount of peak to peak voltage ripple, ΔV,
seen by the LED load. A secondary requirement is that
number of output capacitors must be rated to handle the
full RMS current.
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 21
𝐶𝑂 > 𝐼𝑂 ×4 × 𝑡𝑂𝑁(𝑀𝐴𝑋)
∆𝑉 (43)
𝑡𝑂𝑁(𝑀𝐴𝑋) =𝐷𝑀𝐴𝑋
𝐹𝑀𝐼𝑁 (44)
=0.45
50𝑘𝐻𝑧= 9𝜇𝑠
The minimum LED voltage is specified as 30 V.
Limiting the LED ripple voltage to less than 0.5% and,
allowing for 20% capacitor tolerance, gives:
𝐶𝑂 > 2𝐴 ×4 × 9𝜇𝑠 × 1.2
0.005 × 30𝑉= 576𝜇𝐹
The secondary peak current is also the current seen by
the output rectifier diode and is determined from the
primary peak current, IDS(PK), multiplied by the
transformer turns ratio, n:
𝐼𝐷(𝑃𝐾) = 𝐼𝐷𝑆(𝑃𝐾) × 𝑛 (45)
= 2𝐴𝑃𝐾 × 3.7 = 7.4𝐴𝑃𝐾
The secondary RMS current is:
𝐼𝐷(𝑅𝑀𝑆) = 𝐼𝐷(𝑃𝐾) × √1 − 𝐷𝑀𝐴𝑋
3 (46)
= 7.4𝐴𝑃𝐾 × √1 − 0.45
3= 3.17𝐴𝑅𝑀𝑆
Finally, the output capacitor RMS current is:
𝐼𝐶𝐴𝑃(𝑅𝑀𝑆) = √(𝐼𝐷(𝑅𝑀𝑆))2 − 𝐼𝑂2 (47)
= √3.17𝐴𝑅𝑀𝑆2 − 2𝐴2 = 2.5𝐴𝑅𝑀𝑆
The required RMS current can be reduced by using
NCAP number of parallel capacitors and assuming each
carries a proportional amount of the RMS current. For
two parallel capacitors, the minimum required equivalent
series resistance (ESR) is calculated by:
𝑅𝐸𝑆𝑅 <𝑁𝐶𝐴𝑃 × ∆𝑉
𝐼𝐶𝐴𝑃(𝑅𝑀𝑆) (48)
<2 × 0.005 × 30𝑉
2.5𝐴𝑅𝑀𝑆= 120𝑚Ω
Two Panasonic EEU-FC1J471L capacitors rated at
470 µF, 63 VDC, 2.09 ARMS, and 55 mΩ in parallel meet
the electrical and mechanical requirements.
From Eq (46), the output rectifier diode must have a
forward current rating greater than 3.17 ARMS and a
reverse voltage rating greater than:
𝑉𝐷 = 𝑉𝑂(𝑀𝐴𝑋) +𝑉𝐼𝑁(𝑀𝐴𝑋)
𝑛 (49)
= 60𝑉 +460𝑉
3.7= 185𝑉
Since the converter is operating at the boundary of
CCM and DCM, reverse recovery losses in the output
rectifier should be negligible. Therefore, a fast recovery
or better switching diode can be used. FFPF20UP40S
20 A, 400 V ultra-fast diode is selected.
The gate drive circuit uses a FAN7382 HVIC that is
intended for driving a half-bridge power stage. In a half-
bridge, the two inputs, primary MOSFETs Q1, and Q2
are driven asynchronously and the VS node is always
switching, which allows PBIAS to charge C2.
Conversely, the two-switch flyback drives Q1 and Q2
synchronously, as shown in Fig. 20. As a result, the
operating principle is notably different. Fig. 22 shows
the FAN7382 inputs connected together and driven
synchronously from the PWM.
FAN73821
2
3
4 5
6
7
8
HO
VB
VS
LOCOM
LIN
HIN
VCCPBIAS
VIN
R1
R2
R3
Q1
Q2
D1
D2
D4D5
VA
VHS
C2
C3
DETPWM
(FROM PFC)
Fig. 22. Two-switch flyback gate drive
The high-side drive for Q1 is based on the principal
that the boot capacitor, C2, is floating 12-V (PBIAS)
above VIN. The red line in Fig. 22 indicates that PBIAS
can only charge C2 during the time that Q1 is OFF and
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 22
Q2 is conducting, but this is contrary to normal operation
of the two-switch flyback. During steady-state operation,
C2 is charged from VHS. However, an interesting
situation arises during startup or when the converter
comes in or out of burst mode.
0V
0V
0V
PBIAS
VHS
UVLO
VGS(HS)
VGS(LS)
Fig. 23. Gate drive startup waveforms
The FAN7382 is pre-biased with PBIAS before
switching begins. When VC2 (or VHS) is less than UVLO,
the high-side MOSFET is OFF, as shown in Fig. 23; but
the low-side MOSFET is always driven by PBIAS. With
only the low-side MOSFET conducting, the transformer
primary is not being energized, but C2 is charged from
PBIAS. Within the next switching cycle, the high-side
begins switching, but C2 may give up enough charge to
again cross UVLO. Although this startup sequence
appears unusual, the high-side winding voltage, VHS,
tracks the LED output voltage and continues to supply
the necessary charge to C2 during steady-state operation.
The FAN7882 and FAN6300H configuration is
addressed in the respective datasheets and various
application notes and is not repeated here. The details for
setting the DET resistor divider, current sense, and high-
voltage startup should be closely followed according to
the procedure shown in the datasheet[8]
.
LED LOAD CONTROL
The design includes two options for closing the
feedback loop of the two-switch flyback converter.
Option 1 is for CC-CV LED load control of a single
string, rated for VLED=50 V and ILED=2 A. The circuit
shown in Fig. 24 can be used to regulate CC-CV and can
be applied to the output of any DC-DC converter.
VL
SBIAS
2.5VREF
FB
R12
R13
R14
R15
R16
R17
R18
R19
R20R21
R22
D8
D9
30V<VLED<50V
C8
C9
ILED=2A
U1a
U1b
FAN4274
FAN4274
FOD817AU2
VAO
Fig. 24. Option 1 - single LED string CC-CV load control
The feedback compensation is comprised of two error
amplifiers, U1a and U1b. During CC mode, U1a regulates
the LED current to 2 A for 30 V < VLED < 50 V. If the
LED voltage exceeds 50 V, U1b takes over and regulates
the LED voltage while the current is reduced. The
outputs of the current amplifier and voltage amplifier are
diode OR’ed together so that the amplifier with the
highest output dominates. The error amplifier(s) output
drives an optocoupler, with R20 limiting the current on
the secondary side. R21 limits the FB current sourced
from the FAN6300H and can be used to adjust the
secondary to primary current gain, if necessary. A 0.5%
shunt regulator sets the 2.5 V reference voltage used for
each amplifier. 2 A of LED current flowing through R12
should result in a voltage drop of about 200 mV, a good
trade-off between resistor size and noise immunity. All
calculated resistor and capacitor values are rounded to
the closest standard component values.
The FAN6300H is designed for peak current mode
control. The peak primary current through a current
sense resistor, R3 in Fig. 19, is converted to a voltage
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 23
and used as the control signal at the non-inverting input
of the FAN6300H internal PWM. The value of the
current sense resistor, R3 is calculated by:
𝑅3 =𝑉𝐹𝐵 − 1.2𝑉
3 × 𝐼𝐷𝑆(𝑃𝐾) (50)
And the normal operating control range for the
feedback voltage is designed for 1.2 V < VFB < 3 V:
𝑅3 =3𝑉 − 1.2𝑉
3 × 2𝐴𝑃𝐾= 300𝑚Ω
The optocoupler selected is FOD817A with current
transfer ratio, 80% < CTR < 160%. The saturation
voltage for the FOD817A photo-transistor is given as
VCE(SAT) = 100 mV and the diode forward voltage is
specified as VF(OPTO) = 1.2 V. Accounting for worst-case
CTR and allowing for some additional headroom,
2.25 mA of optocoupler diode current should be enough
to meet the control range of FB current,
800 µA < IFB < 2 mA, corresponding to the feedback
voltage control range, 1.2 V < VFB < 3 V. From the
FAN6300H datasheet, the condition where IFB = 2 mA
and VFB = 1.2 V corresponds to zero duty cycle. For a
desired optocoupler diode current, IOPTO = 2.25 mA, the
optocoupler biasing resistor, R20 is calculated by:
𝑅20 =(𝑉𝐴𝑂 − 𝑉𝐹(𝑂𝑃𝑇𝑂)) × 𝐶𝑇𝑅𝑀𝐼𝑁
𝐼𝑂𝑃𝑇𝑂 (51)
=(3𝑉 − 1.2𝑉) × 0.8
2.25𝑚𝐴= 649Ω
The LED current is set by calculating R12 as:
𝑅12 =200𝑚𝑉
𝐼𝐿𝐸𝐷 (52)
=200𝑚𝑉
2𝐴= 100𝑚𝛺
The power dissipated in R12 is:
𝑃𝑅12 = 𝐼𝐿𝐸𝐷2 × 𝑅12 (53)
𝑃𝑅12 = 2𝐴2 × 100𝑚Ω = 400𝑚𝑊
Two 0.2 Ω 1812-size resistors are used in parallel to
handle the 400 mW power dissipation. The inverting
input of U1a is set to 200 mV by the R13, R14 resistor
divider. Since R12 is much smaller compared to R13+R14,
R12 is neglected and R13 is chosen as 1 kΩ. R14 is
calculated by:
𝑅14 =𝑅13 × (𝑉𝑅𝐸𝐹 − 200𝑚𝑉)
200𝑚𝑉 (54)
𝑅14 =1𝑘Ω × (2.5𝑉 − 200𝑚𝑉)
200𝑚𝑉= 11.5𝑘Ω
Because LED current is a constant load, designing for
fast transient response is not a primary concern and U1a
can be set for relatively low bandwidth of approximately
1 kHz (1 ms response) with a mid-band absolute gain of
about 5. R13 is 1 kΩ; therefore, R18 is chosen as
5 x 1 kΩ = 4.99 kΩ and C8 is determined by:
𝐶8 =1
2𝜋 × R18 × 1kHz (55)
=1
2𝜋 × 4.99kΩ × 1kHz= 33𝑛𝐹
For the voltage amplifier, the R16, R17 resistor divider
on the non-inverting input is set to 50 V by Eq (56):
𝑅17 =𝑅16 × 𝑉𝑅𝐸𝐹
𝑉𝐿𝐸𝐷 − 𝑉𝑅𝐸𝐹 (56)
And if the current through R16+R17 is arbitrarily
limited to about 500 µA:
𝑅17 =𝑉𝐿𝐸𝐷 − (500𝜇𝐴 × 𝑅16)
500𝜇𝐴 (57)
Solving Eq (56) and Eq (57) for R16 gives:
𝑅16 =𝑉𝐿𝐸𝐷 − 𝑉𝑅𝐸𝐹
500𝜇𝐴 (58)
=50𝑉 − 2.5𝑉
500𝜇𝐴= 95.3𝑘Ω
Putting the result of Eq (58) back into Eq (56) gives
the value for R17 as:
𝑅17 =95.3𝑘Ω × 2.5𝑉
50𝑉 − 2.5𝑉= 4.99𝑘Ω
R19 and C9 are selected based on maintaining low gain
bandwidth. Similar to the current amplifier feedback, the
bandwidth is chosen as 1 kHz and R19 arbitrarily selected
as 1 kΩ. C9 is calculated as:
𝐶9 =1
2𝜋 × R19 × 1kHz (59)
𝐶9 =1
2𝜋 × 1kΩ × 1kHz= 180𝑛𝐹
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 24
The single string controller calculated values give an
approximate starting point for designing a stable CC-CV
control loop. The loop gain and phase ultimately need to
be measured in the lab, where final optimization of
component values can be made. For this design example,
the circuit shown in Fig. 24 was built on a daughter card
that could be inserted into the main power board,
allowing single-string CC-CV control.
Option 2 is for CC-CV LED load control of four
individual LED strings, rated for VLED=50 V and
ILED=350 mA per string. The circuit shown in Fig. 25
uses the FAN7346 4-channel LED current balance
controller to close the feedback loop around the
FAN6300H PWM controller.
FAN73461
2
3
4 25
26
27
28GND
VMIN
CMP
FB
OVR
21
22
23
24
17
18
19
20
15
16
8
7
6
5
12
11
10
9
14
13
PWM2
PWM3
PWM4
FO
SLPR
ADIM
ENA
PWM1
VCC
REF
FB1
OUT1
CH1
CH3
FB2
OUT2
CH2
OUT4
CH4
FB3
OUT3
FB4
VDD
VL
SBIAS
ADIM
ON
OFF 1
2
3
SBIAS
ADIM
PWM1
PWM2
PWM3
PWM4
ADIM
FB
FOD817AU2
30V<VLED<50V
ICH1 ICH2 ICH3 ICH4
RS1 RS2 RS3 RS4
R23
R24
R25
R26R27
R28
R29
R30R21
R32
R33
R34
R35
C10
Fig. 25. Option 2 – four-string CC-CV load control
Each of the four LED string currents, ICHx, is
individually sensed through a dedicated feedback
resistor. The LED string current is controlled by FBx
and internally compared to one-tenth the ADIM voltage,
as shown in Fig. 26. Consequently, VADIM is used as the
CC reference as well as analog dimming control. The
range of VADIM is 0.5 V < VADIM < 4 V and the range of
VREF(LED) is 50 mV < VREF(LED) < 400 mV. VADIM is
internally clamped to 0.5 V and 4 V and the maximum
voltage on ADIM is limited to 6 V. Therefore, even
when analog dimming is not being used, a voltage of 4 V
< VADIM < 5 V must be present on the ADIM pin for full
LED brightness. The ADIM resistor divider is formed by
R25 and R26 and SBIAS is 13 V. If R26 is arbitrarily
chosen as 4.99 kΩ, R25 is calculated as:
𝑅25 =𝑅26 × (𝑆𝐵𝐼𝐴𝑆 − 𝑉𝐴𝐷𝐼𝑀)
𝑉𝐴𝐷𝐼𝑀 (60)
=4.99𝑘Ω × (13𝑉 − 4.5𝑉)
4.5𝑉= 9.53𝑘Ω
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 25
The LED current-sense resistors for each string are
calculated by:
𝑅𝑆𝑥 =𝑉𝐴𝐷𝐼𝑀
10 × ICHx (61)
=4𝑉
10 × 350mA= 1.143Ω
The power dissipated in Rsx is:
𝑃𝑅𝑆𝑥 = 𝐼𝐶𝐻𝑥2 × 𝑅𝑆𝑥 (62)
= 350𝑚𝐴2 × 1.143Ω = 140𝑚𝑊
Two 1206 resistors, rated for 250 mW, used in parallel
(2.32 Ω // 2.26 Ω = 1.145 Ω), handle the 140 mW power
dissipation and allow accurate current setting.
If FBx is higher than 1 V for 20 µs, then over-current
protection (OCP) for that particular CHx is enabled and
the LED current in that string is latched off. If an
individual channel, CHx, is in OCP, the remaining
channels continue to regulate. The OCP level for each
channel is given by:
𝐼𝑂𝐶𝑃 =𝑉𝑂𝐶𝑃(𝑇𝐻)
𝑅𝑆𝑥 (63)
=1𝑉
1.145Ω= 874𝑚𝐴
RSx
VADIM/10
1V
Vf
VDS
VS
Gm
OVR
DCDC
OUT
FB
CMP
FB
CHx
OUTx
FBxFAN7346
ICHx
1.42V
ILED
50mV<VREF(LED)<400mV
Qx
VLED
VF
VF
VF
VF
Fig. 26. FAN7346 control block diagram
The drain voltage of Qx is sensed by CHx and
compared to the Gm amplifier 1 V reference. The
transconductance error amplifier generates an error
voltage proportional to maintaining 1 V on the drain of
Qx. The Gm amplifier can be externally compensated via
the CMP pin. The error voltage drives the FB pin,
varying the optocoupler cathode voltage, which sends
the control signal to the primary-side PWM feedback.
VLED is set to the minimum value necessary to regulate
Qx(VD) to 1 V. Since Qx is operated in its linear region, it
is selected based on DC current and power dissipation.
The power dissipated in Qx is dominated by VDS×ID and
can be estimated by:
𝑃𝑄𝑥 = [1𝑉 − (𝐼𝐶𝐻𝑥 × 𝑅𝑆𝑥)] × 𝐼𝐶𝐻𝑥 (64)
= [1𝑉 − (350𝑚𝐴 × 1.145Ω)] × 350𝑚𝐴 = 210𝑚𝑊
FDT86256 is a 150 V, 1.2 A N-channel MOSFET in a
SOT-223 package with a junction-to-ambient thermal
resistance, RΘJA, of 55˚C/W. The expected temperature
rise is:
𝑇𝑟 = (𝑅Θ𝐽𝐴 × 𝑃𝑄𝑥) + 𝑇𝐴 (65)
= (55℃/𝑊 × 210𝑚𝑊) + 25℃ = 36.55℃
When the non-inverting input of the OVR amplifier
exceeds 1.42 V, the FB pin is proportionally pulled
LOW, reducing ICHx, while regulating VLED according to
the OVR voltage. The maximum VLED voltage for this
design is set for 50 V. Selecting the upper OVR resistor,
R23, as 100 kΩ allows calculation of the lower OVR
resistor, R24, as:
𝑅24 =1.42𝑉 × 𝑅23
𝑉𝐿𝐸𝐷 − 1.42𝑉 (66)
=1.42𝑉 × 100𝑘Ω
50𝑉 − 1.42𝑉= 2.94𝑘Ω
The FAN7346 also includes open-LED and short-LED
protections. If one LED in any string is shorted, Vf
decreases and the drain voltage on Qx increases. If Qx(VD)
exceeds the LED short threshold voltage, VSLP(th), for
20 µs; that LED string is forced off and the remaining
strings continue to regulate ICHx. VSLP(th) is defined by the
voltage applied to the SLPR pin in Fig. 25 as:
𝑉𝑆𝐿𝑃(𝑡ℎ) = 10 × 𝑉𝑆𝐿𝑃 (67)
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 26
The range of VSLP is 0 V < VSLP < 45 V and is set by
the R34, R35 resistor divider. If VSLP(th) is set high, the
power dissipation in Qx can become much higher than
the 210 mW estimated by Eq (64). Setting VSLP(th) to 5 V
enables detection for two shorted LEDs (Vf=3 V). For
VSLP(th)= 5 V, VSLP must be set to 0.5 V. The R34, R35
resistor divider is given by:
𝑅35 =𝑉𝑆𝐿𝑃𝑅 × 𝑅34
𝑉𝑅𝐸𝐹 − 𝑉𝑆𝐿𝑃𝑅
(68)
If R34 is selected as 10 kΩ, R35 is calculated as:
𝑅35 =0.5𝑉 × 10𝑘Ω
5𝑉 − 0.5𝑉= 1.1𝑘Ω
If any LED in a string fails open, the Qx drain voltage
is pulled to ground. The FAN7346 open-LED protection
(OLP) detection threshold is 0.3 V. If CHx is lower than
0.3 V for 20 µs, that channel’s contribution to FB is
removed and FB is controlled by the remaining normal
operating LED strings.
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 27
VII. DESIGN SCHEMATICS
Fig. 27. Power board - BCM PFC schematic
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 28
Fig. 28. Power board – two-switch flyback
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 29
Fig. 29. Power board – high-voltage flyback bias supply
Fig. 30. Option 1 – 50 V, 2 A, single-string, CC-CV controller card
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 30
Fig. 31. Option 2 – 50 V, 350 mA / CH, 4-channel, multi-string controller card
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 31
VIII. DESIGN BUILD
Fig. 32. Power board profile, 25 mm (0.99 in), (H)
Fig. 33. Power board partitioning, 229 mm (9 in) × 76 mm (3 in), (L×W)
AC Input, EMI Filter, Inrush Current Limiting
Flyback Bias Regulator (SBIAS, PBIAS)
BCM PFC
Two-Switch, QR Flyback
Removable Controller Card (FAN7346 Multi-String
Controller Shown Inserted)
PWM Dimmer Circuits
LED Output Terminal Block
Fig. 34. Option 1 & 2, CC-CV controller cards
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 32
IX. LED DRIVER PERFORMANCE
BCM PFC
Graphical representation of efficiency vs. output
power highlights the low-line efficiency benefit of using
the boost follower. A 1.8% efficiency improvement can
be seen at 20% load and the peak low-line. Boost
follower efficiency was measured as 97% at 90% load.
Fig. 35. BCM PFC boost follower efficiency gain
The measured PF vs. output power is shown in Fig.
36, for VAC = 120 VRMS and 230 VRMS. The area shown
between the dashed lines highlights the expected LED
power range with respect to the PFC converter. The low-
line peak PF is 0.994 and PF > 0.9 for low-line and high-
line over the entire LED power range.
Fig. 36. PF vs. POUT
The boost follower also offers an efficiency benefit to
the downstream DC-DC converter. The two-switch
flyback efficiency vs. input voltage (PFC output voltage)
curve is shown in
Fig. 37 and shows a 0.68% efficiency improvement at
low-line. For the boost follower, VIN=250 V corresponds
to VAC<160 VRMS and this is compared to the efficiency
when the input voltage (PFC output voltage) is regulated
to a fixed 450 V.
Fig. 37. Boost follower benefit to two-switch flyback
The measured PFC boost follower voltage profile is
shown in Fig. 38 and can be compared to the predicted
graph of Fig. 16. The boost follower output linearly
“follows” (tracks) VAC at VAC + 30 V for 150 VRMS < VAC
< 308 VRMS.
Fig. 38. Boost Follower VOUT vs. VAC
94.02%,
250V
93.34%,
450V
Δƞ=1.8%,
@20% POUT
LED Power Range
Δƞ=0.68%
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 33
ZVS and ZCS are two important characteristics of
BCM PFC converters, as highlighted in Fig. 39. The
steady-state operating waveforms show that VDS
resonates to zero (ZVS) when VIN < ½ VOUT, (120 VPK <
125 V). The inductor current at full load is also shown to
start from 0 A at every switching cycle (ZCS) and
reaches a peak value of 5 APK, as calculated by Eq (9).
Fig. 39. CH1-VGS, CH2-VDS, CH3-ZCD, CH4-IL; VIN=85 VRMS,
POUT=120 W
The steady-state operating waveforms seen in Fig. 40
show the PFC gate drive operating at very narrow duty
cycle and the inductor current measured as 2 APK for
VAC=300 VRMS. Since VIN > ½ VOUT, (425 VPK > 230 V),
ZVS is lost and VDS resonates to some minimum value
(valley switching).
Fig. 40. CH1-VGS, CH2-VDS, CH3-IL; VIN=300 VRMS, POUT=120 W
Fig. 41 shows the boost follower PFC output voltage
responding to a positive 115 VRMS to 300 VRMS, VAC line
transient. As can be seen, the boost follower follows the
line transient by adjusting VOUT from 250 V to 460 V.
Fig. 41. CH1-VAC, CH2-BFVOUT; VIN=115 VRMS to 300 VRMS
Fig. 42 shows the boost follower PFC output voltage
responding to a negative 300 VRMS to 115 VRMS, VAC line
transient. As can be seen, the boost follower follows the
line transient by adjusting VOUT from 460 V to 250 V.
Compared to the positive AC line transient, the boost
follower output voltage tracking is not as fast due to the
additional energy stored in the PFC bulk capacitance
Fig. 42. CH1-VAC, CH2-BFVOUT; VIN=300 VRMS to 115 VRMS
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 34
Two-Switch Flyback
The FAN6300H two-switch flyback, low-side, VDS
and VGS waveforms are shown in Fig. 43 for VIN=250 V
(85 VRMS < VAC < 150 VRMS). At POUT = 70 W, the duty
cycle and frequency is measured as D = 40% and
f = 65 kHz, respectively.
Fig. 43. CH1-VGS(LO), CH2-VDS(LO); VIN=250 VDC, POUT=70 W, f=65 kHz,
D=40%
When VIN=460 V, the duty cycle and frequency is
measured as D=23% and f=95 kHz at POUT=70 W as
shown in Fig. 44. In Fig. 43 and Fig. 44, the LED output
voltage is 50 V for each case. Since VOUT < ½ VIN, valley
switching always occurs for all LED voltages less than
125 V (at VIN=250 V).
Fig. 44. CH1-VGS(LO), CH2-VDS(LO); VIN=460 VDC, POUT=70 W, f=95 kHz,
D=23%
In Fig. 45, POUT is increased to 85 W and the duty
cycle and frequency are measured as D=42% and
f=63 kHz. For POUT=100 W, the maximum duty cycle
was measured as D=45%, which agrees with the chosen
D value used in Eq (22).
Fig. 45. CH1-VDS(LO), CH3-VGS(LO); VIN=250 VDC, POUT=85 W, f=63 kHz,
D=42%, valley switching
During dimming or light-load operation, there may be
instances where the FAN6300H is forced to operate at
its internally set minimum off-time, tOFF(MIN)=13 µs.
Under these specific conditions, gate drive turn-on at the
first minimum VDS valley may not be possible. The
FAN6300H then reverts to “extended valley switching”
shown in Fig. 46. It is important to note that extended
valley switching can occur at any multiple with respect
to the first valley. In Fig. 46, extended valley switching
occurs at the fifth valley of VDS.
Fig. 46. CH1-VDS(LO), CH3-VGS(LO); VIN=250 VDC, POUT=24 W (analog
dimming), f=68 kHz, D=11%, extended valley switching
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 35
The FAN7382 startup waveform, shown in Fig. 47,
verifies the theoretical waveform of Fig. 23. Several
low-side gate drive pulses initially occur without any
simultaneous high-side pulses. This continues until the
high-side boot capacitor and boot winding from the
flyback transformer reach steady state.
Fig. 47. CH1-VGS(HO), CH2-VGS(LO), CH3-V(CBOOT); FAN7382 gate drive
startup
Further examination of the FAN7382 gate-drive
during startup, reveals three distinct periods (highlighted
in Fig. 48) where the low-side gate is switched on, while
the high-side gate is missing. Once the boot capacitor is
fully charged, normal switching results where the high-
side and low-side gate drive signals are coincident.
Fig. 48. CH1-VGS(HO), CH2-VGS(LO), CH3-V(CBOOT); FAN7382 gate drive
startup to steady-state operation
System Performance
The importance of the FAN7930C RDY (ready) signal
can be seen in the Fig. 49 startup waveform. PBIAS
supplies 12 VDD to the FAN7930C. After the PFC output
voltage reaches 89% of its set regulated value, PBIAS is
applied to the FAN6300H (two-switch flyback) via the
RDY signal. This bias sequencing is important in two-
stage power converters because it limits power drawn
from the PFC bulk capacitors during startup. The result
is a smooth monotonic startup of LED voltage, VLED.
Fig. 49. CH1-PBIAS, CH2-RDY, CH3-VOUT(PFC), CH4-VLED; VIN=115VRMS,
POUT=70W, Start-Up
The shutdown sequence is shown in Fig. 50, where the
RDY signal terminates as soon as the PFC output
voltage falls below 89% of the set regulation value.
Fig. 50. CH1-PBIAS, CH2-RDY, CH3-VOUT(PFC), CH4-VLED; VIN=115VRMS,
POUT=70 W, shutdown
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 36
The AC line current and voltage are shown in Fig. 51
for VIN=85 VRMS, POUT=85 W. The voltage and current
appear in phase and since the line current is near
maximum (a favorable operating condition for high PF)
the power factor is measured near unity at PF=0.994.
Fig. 51. CH1-VIN(AC), CH2-IIN(AC); VIN=85 VRMS, POUT=85 W, PF=0.994
Conversely, for VIN=300 VRMS and POUT=85 W, the
AC line current shows significant distortion, as seen in
Fig. 52. The voltage and current appear in phase and,
since the line current is near minimum (an unfavorable
operating condition for high PF), the power factor
decreases to PF=0.915.
Fig. 52. CH1-VIN(AC), CH2-IIN(AC); VIN=300 VRMS, POUT=85 W, PF=0.915
Since VIN and VOUT are directly coupled, all PFC
boost converters suffer from excessive inrush current
during startup. Limiting the inrush current is important
for long-term reliability. The waveforms shown in Fig.
53 indicate a 15.25 APK inrush current spike the instant
VAC is applied. Although the LED voltage appears
unaffected, the PFC bulk capacitor absorbs this high
current every time the converter is initially powered.
Fig. 53. CH1-VIN(AC), CH2-IIN(AC), CH3-VLED; VIN=120 VRMS, POUT=70 W,
I(PK)=15.25 A, inrush circuit disabled
The LED driver design presented here includes an
inrush current-limiting circuit comprised of R7, R12 and
associated shorting circuitry shown in Fig. 27. The
beneficial performance of this circuit is shown in Fig.
54, where the inrush current spike is measured as
3.18 APK. A comparative 79.2% inrush current spike
reduction is achieved.
Fig. 54. CH1-VIN(AC), CH2-IIN(AC), CH3-VLED; VIN=120 VRMS, POUT=70 W,
I(PK)=3.18 A, inrush circuit enabled, 79.2% reduction
PWM dimming measurements are shown in Fig. 55.
The design includes two on-board adjustable PWM
dimmer circuits, shown in Fig. 28. Each circuit produces
a 5 V, 250 Hz, PWM signal with an adjustable duty
cycle variation between 1% < D < 99.9%. PDIM1
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 37
controls LED strings 1 and 2, while PDIM2 controls
LED strings 3 and 4. The FAN7346 allows each of the
four LED strings to be dimmed independently. The
measured waveforms below correspond to string 1 and 2
dimmed to 35 mA and string 3 dimmed to 176 mA.
String 4 (not shown) is left undimmed at 350 mA. Under
these varying dimming conditions, the measured
efficiency and power factor were η=87.02% and
PF=0.971 with no visible LED flicker.
Fig. 55. CH1-PWM(CH3), CH2-PWM(CH1,2), CH3-ILED(CH3), CH4-
ILED(CH1,2); ILED(CH1,2)=35 mA, ILED(CH3)=176 mA, ILED(CH4)=350 mA,
PF=0.971, η=87%, FAN7346 PWM dimming mode
Fig. 56 shows the linearity of the FAN7346 dimming
capability. All four LED strings dim simultaneously
from 0% to 100% full brightness. 0% brightness (fully
off) is only achievable when the PWM dimming pin for
a corresponding string is pulled LOW.
Fig. 56. FAN7346 PWM dimming
The test results for analog dimming are shown in Fig.
57. All four LED strings are dimmed simultaneously, as
the ADIM voltage is varied from 0 V to 5 V. The
FAN7346 ADIM function only allows dimming down to
12% minimum brightness. The ADIM pin is internally
clamped to 4 V, corresponding to 100% / full brightness.
Fig. 57. FAN7346 analog dimming; four strings dim simultaneously;
minimum dimming = 12%
The CC-CV curve for four-channel operation is shown
in Fig. 58. The minimum LED bus voltage for stable
operation measured at 30 V for 1.4 A CC. The FAN7346
over-voltage regulation (OVR) is set to 52 V for 50 V,
1.4 A operation.
Fig. 58. FAN7346 CC-CV load line, VLED(MIN)=30 V
The current harmonics for VAC=115 VRMS
(VOUT(PFC)=250 V) are shown in Fig. 59, along with the
EN61000-3-2 Class-C limit for lighting fixtures with
PIN>25 W. The LED driver is operated in boost follower
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 38
mode with measured efficiency and harmonic distortion
given as η=91% and THD=8.91%.
Fig. 59. η=91.1%, THD=8.91%, BF mode (115VRMS=250VOUT)
Similarly, the current harmonics for VAC=230 VRMS
(VOUT(PFC)=400 V) are shown in Fig. 60, along with the
EN61000-3-2 Class-C limit for lighting fixtures with
PIN>25 W. The LED driver is operated in boost follower
mode with measured efficiency and harmonic distortion
measured as η=91.5% and THD=21.52%.
Fig. 60. η=91.5%, THD=21.5%, BF mode (230 VRMS=400 VOUT)
The total system efficiency vs. AC input voltage is
plotted in Fig. 61, comparing the PFC boost follower
mode to a fixed 450 V PFC output. The efficiency data
supports expectations that the boost follower enables
greater efficiency improvement at low-line. An overall
efficiency improvement of 1% was measured at low-line
with a peak efficiency of 91.8%. The efficiency data
considers all aspects of the entire system, including the
EMI line filter and bias power supply.
Fig. 61. BF yields 1.2% overall peak efficiency gain
The total system efficiency vs. AC input voltage is
plotted in Fig. 62, comparing output power of 70 W to
85 W. Both cases operate in boost follower mode.
Measured efficiency for POUT=85 W is greater than 90%
over the entire AC line range.
Fig. 62. Efficiency measurements include EMI filter and flyback bias
supply; both cases operating in BF mode, 91.8% peak
The measured system power factor for POUT=85 W,
was PF>0.9 over the entire AC line range of 85 VRMS <
VAC < 308 VRMS. The PF data shown in Fig. 63 was
taken while operating in boost follower mode.
Interestingly, a comparison of PF between fixed-PFC
output voltage (450 V) and boost follower mode showed
no measurable difference in PF.
Fairchild Semiconductor Power Seminar 2013-2014 39
Fig. 63. PF(PK)=0.996, PF>0.9 for 85 VRMS < VAC <308 VRMS, for
POUT>85 W
X. CONCLUSION
Several power topologies and LED load control
methods suitable for use in high-power industrial
lighting fixtures were reviewed. A scalable, 100 W,
dual-stage, QR flyback, LED driver was designed, built,
and tested. Maximizing efficiency and PF over an
extended input range was achieved by operating the
BCM PFC in boost follower mode and optimizing both
power stages. Design calculations for proper selection of
power-stage components and high-frequency
transformer design critical for achieving high efficiency
were shown. Design techniques were explained leading
to a higher level of performance than generally
encountered with flyback converters. The design was
shown to be configurable for single-string CC-CV or
multi-string operation using the FAN7346 LED
controller. Various LED protection functions and
dimming techniques were also presented. All
calculations were verified by experimental test results.
REFERENCES
[1] “FL7930C – Single-Stage Flyback and Boundary-Mode PFC Controller
for Lighting,” Datasheet, Fairchild Semiconductor, March 2011.
[2] “FAN6300H – Highly Integrated Quasi-Resonant Current Mode PWM Controller,” Datasheet, Fairchild Semiconductor, December 2009.
[3] “FAN7382 – High- and Low-Side Gate Driver,” Datasheet, February
2007.
[4] “FAN7346 – 4-Channel LED Current Balance Controller,” Datasheet,
Fairchild Semiconductor, May 2011.
[5] “FSL138MRT – Green-Mode Fairchild Power Switch (FPS™) for High Input Voltage,” Datasheet, Fairchild Semiconductor, May 2012.
[6] M. Weirich, “A High Power Factor Flyback with Constant-Current
Output for LED Lighting Applications,” Fairchild Power Seminar 2010-2011. Available for download at
http://www.fairchildsemi.com/support/resources/onlineseminars/
[7] “AN-9732 – LED Application Design Guide Using BCM Power Factor Correction (PFC) Controller for 200 W Lighting System,” Fairchild
Semiconductor, March 2011.
[8] “AN-9736 – Design Guideline of AC-DC Converter Using FL6961 & FL6300A for 70 W LED Lighting,” Fairchild Semiconductor,
April 2011.
[9] L. Balogh, “AN-8021 – Building Variable Output Voltage Boost PFC with the FAN9612 Interleaved BCM PFC Controller,” Fairchild
Semiconductor, June 2010.
Steve Mappus is a principal Systems Engineer working in Fairchild Semiconductor’s Power Conversion group
located in Bedford, NH, USA. In his current role, he is responsible for new product development of power-
supply control and MOSFET gate drive ICs. He has more
than 22 years of power supply design experience, including ten years designing military and commercial
power systems for avionic applications. He has spent the last twelve years
working within the field of power-management semiconductors, specializing
in systems and applications engineering. His areas of interest include high-
power converter topologies, soft-switching converters, synchronous
rectification, high-frequency power conversion, and power factor correction.