Electronic Design

  
Reprints     Printer-Friendly    Email this Article    RSS        Font Size     What's This?


[Technology Report]
Integration To Dominate Power-Conversion Design

Arnold Alderman  |   ED Online ID #2401  |   January 6, 2003


Clustering functions in mixed-signal integration is a blossoming trend in several categories—commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) devices, application- and customer-specific ASICs, and multichip (MCM) package integration. That's good news for power-conversion engineers jockeying for market share with designs that promise to reduce cost, component count, and space. After last year's downside, 2003 promises to be a year of significant integration. Emerging architectures and topologies can potentially enable much higher levels of integration in power-conversion designs.

Ironically, mixed-signal technology is getting a big boost from the purely digital side of the tracks as more designs include analog IP. This will nurture the mixed-signal technology much more than the lower volume demand from the analog side. Now at 0.45 µm, what will be the next cost-optimized feature size for mixed-signal? At a lower feature size, IP creation activity is expected to reduce function cost. On the flip side, packaged COTS and ASIC device cost probably won't decrease as more functions are added to a particular device's portfolio.

For power supplies, emerging architectures offer paths to the two- to five-chip designs. Two topologies/architectures, digital control and secondary-side control, might offer paths to significantly lower chip count. For ac-dc power supplies, we can expect a large number of off-line ICs and power ICs for 120-VAC applications and some for 240-VAC off-line designs. For ASIC houses, the voltage ceiling was 80 V until recently. Look for 100-V and higher ASIC technologies to be offered this year.

BiCMOS will continue to be preferred for crafting power ICs. COTS devices and ASIC designs will adopt more high-density, low-power portable electronics IPs.

Are COTS suppliers taking the ASIC approach? Some traditional standard device suppliers are using the ASIC IP approach to provide faster time-to-market for combinational regulator devices (ICs that include one or two synchronous buck regulators and three to four LDOs). Quick design-in demand could drive more of this process adoption by standard IC suppliers.

On another front, both IC and discrete power semiconductor designers will offer unique alternatives to "functional" power ICs. The "startups" have an excellent opportunity here as the traditional suppliers work hard to meld technology adaptations into their less-than-flexible streamlined production lines.

The traditional power IC boundaries of integration will move very little during the year. This is due to two cost sacrifices. The first of these is the large silicon sacrifice posed by lateral BCDMOS MOSFETs. The other sacrifice is the large number of masks required (15 to 18) for 20% of the chip area. BCDMOS continues to be used for MCM power ICs in the low-ampere range. MCM power ICs provide the lowest-cost solution for the higher currents.


Reprints   Printer-Friendly  Email this Article  RSS    Font Size   What's This?


  • Automating Analog IP Process Migration
  • C Tools Accelerate HDV Development On Xilinx FPGAs
  • A New Design Inflection Point
  • Forecasting Industry Growth For 2009 And Beyond
  • EDA Retools To Exploit Multicore Architectures
  • Design And Verification Move Up In Abstraction
  • EDA Retools To Exploit Multicore Architectures
  • A New Design Inflection Point
    1) Transportation Guidelines For Lithium Batteries Get Updated
    (251 views today)
    2) Build A Smart Battery Charger Using A Single-Transistor Circuit
    (235 views today)
    3) The Field Of Energy Harvesting Begins To Ripen
    (117 views today)
    4) Easily Convert Decimal Numbers To Their Binary And BCD Formats
    (104 views today)
    5) 2008 BEST Electronic Design Winners
    (102 views today)
    ALL TOP 20



    POST YOUR COMMENTS HERE
    Name:

    Email:
    Your Comments:

    Enter the text from the image below


    Please refresh the page if you have trouble reading this text.

    Search Electronic Design
         
      
     
    Email Newsletter
    Sponsored By:
    Electronic Design UPDATE provides readers with late-breaking news, opinions from industry experts, and timely technology stories. It's a unique opportunity to get your product message in front of engineers, engineering managers, and corporate managers while they're reading about critical information online.

    Enter Email to Subscribe
      

    Electronic Design Europe Electronic Design China EEPN Power Electronics Auto Electronics Microwaves & RF
    Mobile Dev & Design Schematics Find Power Products Military Electronics EE Events Related Resources