ZHCSG87E February 2017 – August 2019 TPS61178
PRODUCTION DATA.
A boost converter normally requires two main passive components for storing the energy during the power conversion: an inductor and an output capacitor. The inductor affects the steady state efficiency ( including the ripple and efficiency ) as well as the transient behavior and loop stability, which makes the inductor to be the most critical component in application.
When selecting the inductor, as well as the inductance, the other parameters of importance are:
Choosing the inductor ripple current with the low ripple percentage of the average inductor current results in a larger inductance value, maximizes the converter’s potential output current and minimizes EMI. The larger ripple results in a smaller inductance value, and a physically smaller inductor, improves transient response but results in potentially higher EMI.
The rule of thumb to choose the inductor is that to make the inductor ripple current (ΔIL) is a certain percentage (Ripple % = 20 – 30 %) of the average current. The inductance can be calculated by Equation 5, Equation 6, and Equation 7:
where
The current flowing through the inductor is the inductor ripple current plus the average input current. During power-up, load faults, or transient load conditions, the inductor current can increase above the peak inductor current calculated.
The TPS61178x has built-in slope compensation to avoid sub-harmonic oscillation associated with the current mode control. If the inductor value is too low and makes the inductor peak-to-peak ripple higher than 4 A, the slope compensation may not be adequate, and the loop can be unstable. Therefore, it is recommended to make the peak-to-peak current ripple below 4 A when selecting the inductor.
Inductor values can have ± 20% or even ± 30% tolerance with no current bias. When the inductor current approaches the saturation level, its inductance can decrease 20% to 35% from the value at 0-A bias current depending on how the inductor vendor defines saturation. When selecting an inductor, make sure its rated current, especially the saturation current, is larger than its peak current during the operation.
The inductor peak current varies as a function of the load, the switching frequency, the input and output voltages and it can be calculated by Equation 8 and Equation 9.
where
The input DC current is determined by the output voltage, the output current and efficiency can be calculated by :
where
While the inductor ripple current depends on the inductance, the frequency, the input voltage and duty cycle calculated by Equation 5, replace Equation 5, Equation 9 into Equation 8 and get the inductor peak current:
where
The heat rating current (RMS) is as below:
where
It is important that the peak current does not exceed the inductor saturation current and the RMS current is not over the temperature related rating current of the inductors.
For a given physical inductor size, increasing inductance usually results in an inductor with lower saturation current. The total losses of the coil consists of the DC resistance ( DCR ) loss and the following frequency dependent loss:
For a certain inductor, the larger current ripple (smaller inductor) generates the higher DC and also the frequency-dependent loss. An inductor with lower DCR is basically recommended for higher efficiency. However, it is usually a tradeoff between the loss and foot print.
The following inductor series in Table 2 from the different suppliers are recommended. 74437368033 from Würth is used for this application case with balancing the size and power loss.
PART NUMBER | L (μH) | DCR Typ (mΩ) Max | SATURATION CURRENT / Heat Rating Current (A) | SIZE (L × W × H mm) | VENDOR(1) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
744325180 | 1.8 | 3.5 | 18 | 5 x 10 x 4 | Würth |
74437368033 | 3.3 | 11.8 | 23 / 8 | 10 x 10 x 3.8 | Würth |
DFEH10040D-3R3M# | 3.3 | 12 | 10 / 10 | 10.9 x 10 x 4 | Murata / TOKO |
PIMB104T-4R7MS | 4.7 | 20.0 | 15 / 8.5 | 10.9 x 10 x 3.8 | Cyntec |
74437368068 | 6.8 | 17.5 | 14 | 11 x 10 x 3.8 | Würth |
74437368100 | 10 | 27 | 12.5 | 11 x 10 x 3.8 | Würth |