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[40 Years Ago]
Power Supply Controller Keeps Efficiency High Across All Loads
Using digital regulation, this power controller yields high performance at low loads with unconditional stability.

Ashok Bindra  |   ED Online ID #3494  |   December 3, 2001


Traditional analog and pulse-width-modulated (PWM) power-conversion controllers have adequately served the needs of power-supply designers for decades. Lately, though, they seem to be approaching a "brick" wall. To gain just a 1% improvement in conversion efficiency requires substantial improvement in topology, associated components, and circuit design. Pressured by the demands of the upcoming systems and market needs, power-supply designers now seek more flexibility, robustness, and superior performance across all line and load conditions—and they want all of these enhancements without any additional cost.

Thanks to digital technology from fabless semiconductor startup iWatt Inc., a new breed of power-conversion controllers may accomplish exactly that. Plus, they bring a new level of flexibility and programmability to power supplies not feasible with traditional PWM and other analog methods. These controllers promise to dramatically improve the overall cost and performance of future ac-dc and dc-dc power-converter solutions, both isolated and direct coupled.

The company's developers crafted a proprietary regulation technique known as pulseTrain. Applying this novel way of controlling power, iWatt designers have readied a new line of digital switch-mode power-supply (SMPS) controllers. The company expects them to overcome the drawbacks of the older technology, while paving the path for a new digital trend in power-supply designs.

To demonstrate the efficiency of the new digital controller, measurements have shown an efficiency of 80% to 89% over a full range of line and load conditions, for a 60-W single-stage, single-switch ac-dc converter with active power-factor-correction (PFC) circuitry (Fig. 1). "Unlike conventional PWM, the digital controller can achieve in excess of 85% efficiency across all line and load variations," says Deepak Savadatti, iWatt's senior marketing manager.

This digital controller offers many advantages. Some key benefits include no optocoupler or feedback-loop compensation required due to primary-only feedback control, and the ability to drive any power-supply topology.

With a conventional PWM controller power supply, efficiency drops dramatically at low loads, as does stability. By eliminating the costly optocoupler and associated components, the new pulseTrain technique provides cheaper and slimmer supplies. Unlike an analog approach, the digital approach also offers a built-in active PFC capability in ac-dc applications of up to 250 W. "Only a few binary comparators, a few gates, and a few pins are needed with this digital approach to realize low-cost energy-compliant converters of all popular topologies," asserts Savadatti.

The pulseTrain technique features a pair of pulse generators—a power pulse generator and a sense pulse generator. While the power pulses in this scheme are deployed to affect the transfer of energy across the transformer to the load, sense pulses are employed to monitor the voltage at the load. The optimizer sets the on- and off-time of these pulses. Using the primary side feedback, the pulse-rate controller (PRC) regulates the voltage by gating fixed-width and fixed-period power pulses on a pulse-by-pulse basis (Fig. 2).

In contrast to traditional analog PWM or pulse-frequency-modulated (PFM) converters, wherein each power pulse is sized so as to drive the output voltage precisely onto the target, the pulseTrain converters behave like digital "bang-bang" servomechanisms, explains Mark Telefus, iWatt's chief technology officer. At each cycle, the pulseTrain samples a binary error signal to determine whether or not to pulse the output voltage in the direction of the target. As a result, the output voltage limits cycles within a narrow range around the target voltage. The controller parameters determine this limit cycle envelope. For all practical applications, it's smaller than the ripple obtained with traditional analog regulators that employ filtered error signals.

In essence, the inherently digital pulseTrain controls the output voltage through the presence or absence of power pulses. For instance, if the output voltage goes below the set level, power pulses are emitted continuously until the desired level is achieved. Likewise, when the output voltage is higher than the desired level, sense pulses are sent instead of power pulses. A sense pulse has a much shorter on-time and transfers less energy than a power pulse (Fig. 3).

Interestingly, this technique also decouples the shape of the pulses from the process of regulation. Thus, the on-time and off-time can be set independently to achieve a variety of system optimizations. Consequently, the off-time can be set to ensure that the switch in a flyback converter is turned on when the secondary current drops to zero, assuring critically discontinuous operation. On the other hand, the on-time can be set to ensure a constant peak primary current. Together, these optimizations yield higher efficiency response over the entire range of line and load variations.


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