Throughout this report, there are other losses that were not taken in consideration such as reverse recovery loss of body diode, output capacitance loss of MOSFET, dead time loss, gate charge loss, and IC operation loss. All of these contribute to a certain extent to the total losses. However, our focus in this report is on mid-voltage (3 V to 17 V input), 0.5 MHz to 3 MHz switching frequencies, up to 3 A, 0.4 V to 5.5 V output voltage. For that, the majority of the losses are coming from conduction loss in the high-side MOSFET, conduction loss in the low-side MOSFET, switching-loss in the high-side MOSFET, conduction loss in the inductor, and conduction loss in the input and output capacitor. Looking at the equations provided in the previous sections, the takeaway from this is as follows:
- The RDS(ON) of the high and low side FETs of the converter needs to be as small as possible. There is a trade off for that, as the RDS(ON) becomes smaller, silicon area tends to be bigger and more expensive. There is a balance between cost and RDS(ON). TPS62903 provides a balance between cost and RDS(ON) value. It is 62 mΩ for high-side FET and 22 mΩ for low-side FET and provides a very good efficiency at both high and low load.
- The switching frequency is another important factor and needs to be taken into consideration. Higher switching frequencies lead to higher switching losses. However, if the switching frequency is reduced too much, the inductor current ripple increases with it and thus will require a bigger inductance. A bigger inductor comes with cost, size, and higher DC resistance. Higher DC resistance affects the inductor power loss as described in the previous sections. A good balance between the switching frequency, inductor current ripple, inductance, size, and cost all has to be weighted equally to find the most favorable conditions. In our analysis, a good range of the inductance for the TPS62903 is found at anything between 0.68 µH to 2.2 µH depending on Fsw, VIN, and VOUT.
- The 0.68 µH is recommended for:
- Low VOUT < 1 V applications for 1 MHz
- Low VIN < 10 V applications for 2.5 MHz
- The 1 µH is recommended for:
- Low VOUT < 1.5 V applications for 1 MHz
- All voltages at 2.5 MHz
- The 2.2 µH recommended for both 2.5 MHz and 1 MHz. Lower frequency provides better efficiency in most cases.