11.1 Layout Guidelines
The performance of any switching converter depends as much upon the layout of the PCB as it does on the component selection. Follow these simple guidelines to maximize noise rejection and minimize the generation of EMI within the circuit.
Figure 44 shows a sample layout and the associated current loops.
- Discontinuous currents are the type of current most likely to generate EMI. Be careful when routing these paths.
- The main path for discontinuous current contains the input capacitor (CIN), the recirculating diode (D1), the internal MOSFET (DRN pin to SW pin), and the sense resistor (RSENSE) shown as LOOP2. Make LOOP2 as small as possible.
- Make the connections between all three components short and thick to minimize parasitic inductance. In particular, the switch node (where L1, D1 and the SW pin connect, shown as LOOP1). Make them large enough to connect the components without producing excessive heat from the current it carries.
- The IADJ, COFF, CSN and VIN pins are all high-impedance control inputs, therefore minimize the loops containing these high impedance nodes. The most sensitive loop contains the sense resistor (RSENSE) Place the sense resistor as close as possible to the CSN and VIN pins to maximize noise rejection.
- Place the OFF-time capacitor (connected from the COFF pin to ground) close to the COFF and GND pins to maximize noise rejection.
- External resistors (if used) bias the IADJ pin. Place them close to the IADJ and GND pins and use a small capacitor to decouple.
- In some applications the LED load can be far away (several inches or more) from the device, or on a separate PCB connected by a wiring harness. When an output capacitor is used and the LED load is large or separated from the main converter, place the output capacitor close to the LEDs to reduce the effects of parasitic inductance on the AC impedance of the capacitor.