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  • What is the design procedure for the LM5080?

    * Question

    What is the design procedure for the LM5080?

    * Answer

    The design procedure for the LM5080, which is a high-voltage synchronous buck controller, typically involves the following key steps:

    1. Define Input and Output Requirements

    • Determine the input voltage range(e.g., 8–75 V).
    • Specify the output voltageand load current.
    • Calculate the required power ratingand efficiency targets.

    2. Select Switching Frequency

    • Choose a switching frequency(e.g., 200 kHz–1 MHz).
    • Trade-off: Higher frequency → smaller inductors/capacitors, but more switching losses.

    3. Inductor Selection

    • Calculate inductance based on:
    • ΔIL = desired inductor ripple current (~20–40% of max load current).
    • Ensure current ratingexceeds peak inductor current.

    4. Output Capacitor Selection

    • Choose output capacitors to meet voltage ripplespecifications:

    • Include ESR contributionfor fast load transient response.

    5. Input Capacitor Selection

    • Select low-ESR capacitorsfor input voltage filtering.
    • Ensure they can handle ripple currentfrom the switching action.

    6. Compensation Network Design

    • Design the error amplifier compensation networkto stabilize the control loop.
    • Consider type II or type III compensationdepending on output voltage and ESR.

    7. MOSFET Selection

    • Choose high-side and low-side MOSFETsbased on:
    • V_DS rating > max input voltage
    • R_DS(on) low for efficiency
    • Gate charge compatible with LM5080 driver capability

    8. Diode (if required)

    • For synchronous operation, diode is optional (used only in fault conditions).
    • If used, select fast recovery Schottkywith appropriate voltage/current rating.

    9. PCB Layout Considerations

    • Minimize high-current loop areato reduce EMI.
    • Place input/output capacitors close to the IC pins.
    • Separate analog and power grounds; use star grounding.

    10. Simulation and Testing

    • Verify load and line regulation, efficiency, and thermal performance.
    • Test short-circuit and over-voltage conditions.
    • Fine-tune compensation and component selection if necessary.

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