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Power Management
Texas Instruments Incorporated
TPS6108x: A boost converter with
extreme versatility
By Jeff Falin
Senior Applications Engineer
Introduction
The TPS61080 and TPS61081 are
highly integrated boost converters
that have adjustable outputs of up
to 27 V with input voltages as low
as 2.5 V. The difference between
the two versions is the current-
limit rating of the integrated power
switches (typically 0.5 A and 1.3 A,
respectively). The TPS6108x boost
converters have a traditional
current-mode-control scheme and
a constant pulse-width-modulation
(PWM) frequency for low-noise
operation. The switching frequency
can be configured to either 600 kHz
for light-load efficiency or 1.2 MHz
for smaller, external components.
With integrated feedback compen-
sation, internal power switches,
and fast PWM switching, the
3 × 3-mm QFN package enables an
extremely small boost converter for
a wide variety of applications. An
example is a 12- or 24-V industrial
power rail from a 3.3- or 5-V bus.
Additional features include high
efficiency, an adjustable reference
voltage, and redundant protection
circuits—all of which make the
TPS6108x ideal for boosting the
3.6-V Li-ion battery voltage used in
most portable applications. The
converters also support the higher
voltages needed for powering thin-
film-transistor (TFT) LCDs, OLED
displays, WLED backlights, or
camera flashlights.
Powering displays
Figure 1 shows the converter in a typical boost configura-
tion that provides a regulated output voltage. When up to
20 V and 100 mA are required to drive each column of a
passive-matrix OLED (PMOLED), the 1.3-A switch rating
makes the TPS61081 the best choice. When less than 10 V
and only tens of milliamps per column for the active-matrix
OLED (AMOLED) are provided, the 0.5-A switch rating of
the TPS61080 may be more appropriate. In either case,
Figure 1. Typical application for a 12-V boosted output
L1: 4.7 µH
TPS61081
V
3.6 V
IN
L
V IN
SW
OUT
V OUT
12 V
260 mA
EN
FSW
R1
442 k
C2
82 pF
C1
4.7 µF
Ω
FB
SS
GND
C3
4.7 µF
C S
47 nF
R3
100
R2
50 k
PGND
Ω
Ω
Figure 2. Efficiency with V IN
= 3.6 V
90
80
70
60
50
40
30 0
50
100
150
200
250
Output Current, I
(mA)
O
the low-R DS(on) internal switches and the choice of switch-
ing frequency provide optimal supply efficiency. Figure 2
shows efficiency data for a 12-V output when a Li-ion bat-
tery with a typical 3.6-V source voltage is used.
To support the gates of the TFT drivers for active-matrix
LCDs or OLED displays, the high-voltage rail must be
capable of fast transients. The TPS61080 has current-mode
control and optimized internal compensation; and it can
operate at 1.2 MHz with a 4.7-µH inductor, making it ideal
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Analog Applications Journal
High-Performance Analog Products
3Q 2007
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Texas Instruments Incorporated
Power Management
for fast-transient response. Figure 3 shows the tran-
sient response of the TPS61080, which was config-
ured as shown in Figure 1 except for an additional
4.7-µF output capacitor.
WLED-display backlight driver
As shown in Figure 4, most boost converters can be
used to power WLEDs if the voltage-feedback net-
work is replaced with the WLED strings and a series
current-sense resistor, R3. The TPS6108x can be
used to drive several series WLEDs in parallel for
backlighting larger displays.
The voltage across the current-sense resistor is fed
back to provide regulation. Traditional boost convert-
ers use 1.2-V feedback voltages; therefore, the power
loss due to R3 is P LOST = I WLED 2
Figure 3. Transient response of TPS61080
12-VDC V OUT (100 mV/div)
I
(100 mA/div)
OUT
× R3 = 1.2 V × I WLED .
The TPS6108x converters have an SS pin that is used
to provide variable soft startup for boosted voltage-
regulation applications. The SS pin can also be used
to lower the FB-pin reference voltage and to reduce
sense-resistor power loss in a WLED current-regulation
application. Simply connecting a resistor, R1, from the SS
pin to GND will lower the FB-pin reference voltage. The
reference voltage equates to the resistance of R1 times the
SS-pin bias current (I SS = 5 µA typical), resulting in the
WLED current calculation:
Time (50 µs/div)
inrush current during startup, and excessive short-circuit
current. To address these issues, the TPS6108x has an inte-
grated isolation switch that opens during shut-down mode
to prevent a possible current path. This isolation switch and
the soft-start circuitry also control inrush current during
startup to prevent the input supply from drooping and
possibly causing system instability. The TPS6108x keeps
the isolation FET off until the EN pin is pulled high and V IN
rises above the undervoltage-lockout threshold. The Vgs of
the isolation FET is clamped so that its high on-resistance
limits the inrush current related to charging the output
capacitor to V IN . When the output capacitor reaches V IN , the
IC fully turns on the low R DS(on) isolation FET and activates
soft start as programmed by the soft-start capacitor on the
SS pin. In the event that V OUT stays below V IN for more
than 2 ms, indicating a short-circuit condition, the isolation
I
×
R
1
SS
I
=
WLED
R
3
A second resistor, R2, in series with the FET and Q1 and
in parallel with R1 provides analog dimming by lowering
the regulated FB-pin voltage across the sense resistor.
Protection
Two of the most common boost-converter design challenges
are how to handle the conduction path from input to out-
put and how to prevent overvoltage. The conduction path
creates three problems: leakage voltage under shutdown,
Figure 4. TPS61081 WLED backlight driver circuit
L1
4.7 µH
10 Strings
10.5 V/200 m A
TPS61081
V
5V
IN
L
V IN
SW
OUT
C1
4.7 µF
EN
FSW
C2
4.7 µF
SS
GND
FB
R2
80 k Ω
R1
PGND
R3
1
80 k Ω
Ω
PWM
Signal
15
Analog Applications Journal
3Q 2007
High-Performance Analog Products
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Power Management
Texas Instruments Incorporated
FET turns off and the IC will not restart until the EN pin
toggles or V IN goes through power-on reset (POR).
The TPS6108x also has pulse-by-pulse overcurrent limit-
ing, which turns off the power switch once the inductor
current reaches a preset value (0.7 A for the TPS61080 and
1.6 A for the TPS61081). The power switch turns back on
at the beginning of the next switch cycle. When the induc-
tor current stays above the short-circuit current limit for
more than 13 µs or the V OUT -pin voltage goes 1.4 V below
V IN , the IC assumes that there is a short-circuit condition
and turns off the isolation FET. After 57 ms, the IC attempts
to restart. If a momentary short is cleared, the output
returns to its regulation voltage and switches normally. For
a permanent short, the isolation FET turns off again and
waits for POR or EN-pin toggling. Although the isolation
switch has a low R DS(on) for minimum power loss, shorting
the V IN and L pins can bypass the switch and further
enhance the efficiency.
When the TPS61081 is configured for regulated current
output as shown in Figure 4, the output voltage could run
away if the output impedance becomes too high (i.e., if a
WLED burns out or the load is disconnected). To prevent
the power switch from exceeding its maximum voltage
rating, the overvoltage-protection (OVP) circuit turns off
the power switch when the output voltage exceeds the OVP
threshold. When the output voltage falls below the OVP
threshold, the converter resumes normal PWM operation.
Conclusion
This extremely versatile, integrated-FET boost converter
is ideal for industrial, medical, telecom, and consumer
applications that require boosted voltages. Features such
as variable-reference voltage and multiple-protection
circuitry make the TPS6108x also well-suited for powering
LCDs and OLED displays.
Reference
For more information related to this article, you can down-
load an Acrobat Reader file at www-s.ti.com/sc/techlit/
litnumber and replace “litnumber” with the TI Lit. # for
the materials listed below.
Document Title
TI Lit. #
1. “High Voltage DC/DC Boost Converter with
0.5-A/1.3-A Integrated Switch,” TPS61080/1
Datasheet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .slvs644
Related Web sites
16
Analog Applications Journal
High-Performance Analog Products
3Q 2007
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SLYT279
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