Abstract
A 0.9-V input discontinuous-conduction-mode (DCM) boost converter delivering 2.5-V and 100-mA output is presented. A novel low-voltage pulse-width modulator is proposed. The modulator can be directly powered from the 0.9-V input instead of using the 2.5-V output as in general modulator designs. Sophisticated low-voltage analog blocks, which normally consume a large amount of power and chip area, are not required in the modulator. The impact of output-voltage ripple and transient-induced output-voltage perturbation on the operation of analog blocks inside the modulator is eliminated. Boost converter start-up sequence is also greatly simplified. A CMOS-control rectifier (CCR) is also proposed to improve converter power efficiency. The CCR is used to replace the conventional rectifying switch to provide adaptive dead-time, which helps to minimize charge-sharing loss and body-diode conduction loss. Corresponding thermal stress on the rectifying switch is hence minimized. The CCR also enables the use of small off-chip inductor and capacitor at sub-MHz switching frequency to improve light-load efficiency. This converter has been implemented in a 0.35-/Km CMOS process. It is designed to operate at ∼667 kHz with a 1 μH inductor and 4.7 μF output capacitor to reduce both switching loss and form factor. Experimental results prove that the converter can be directly powered from 0.9-V input with ∼85% efficiency at 100-mA output.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 4626003 |
| Pages (from-to) | 2036-2046 |
| Number of pages | 11 |
| Journal | IEEE Journal of Solid-State Circuits |
| Volume | 43 |
| Issue number | 9 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 30 Sept 2008 |
Keywords
- Sub-1V
- Boost converter
- Discontinuous-conduction mode
- Adaptive dead-time
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