ZHCSJF8F December 2008 – April 2019 TPS61175
PRODUCTION DATA.
All continuous mode boost converters have a right half plane zero (ƒRHPZ) due to the inductor being removed from the output during charging. In a traditional voltage mode controlled boost converter, the inductor and output capacitor form a small signal double pole. For a negative feedback system to be stable, the fed back signal must have a gain less than 1 before having 180 degrees of phase shift. With its double pole and RHPZ all providing phase shift, voltage mode boost converters are a challenge to compensate. In a converter with current mode control, there are essentially two loops, an inner current feedback loop created by the inductor current information sensed across RSENSE (40mΩ) and the output voltage feedback loop. The inner current loop allows the switch, inductor and modulator to be lumped together into a small signal variable current source controlled by the error amplifier, as shown in Figure 9.
The new power stage, including the slope compensation, small signal model becomes:
Where
And
He(s) models the inductor current sampling effect as well as the slope compensation effect on the small signal response. Note that if Sn > Se, for example, when L is smaller than recommended, the converter operates as a voltage mode converter and the above model no longer holds.
The slope compensation in TPS61175 is shown as follows:
Figure 10 shows a Bode plot of a typical CCM boost converter power stage.
The TPS61175 COMP pin is the output of the internal trans-conductance amplifier. Equation 19 shows the equation for feedback resistor network and the error amplifier.
where
and
Figure 11 shows a typical bode plot for transfer function H(s).
The next step is to choose the loop crossover frequency, fC. The higher in frequency that the loop gain stays above zero before crossing over, the faster the loop response will be and therefore the lower the output voltage will droop during a step load. It is generally accepted that the loop gain cross over no higher than the lower of either 1/5 of the switching frequency, fSW, or 1/3 of the RHPZ frequency, fRHPZ. To approximate a single pole roll-off up to fP2, select R3 so that the compensation gain, KCOMP, at fC on Figure 11 is the reciprocal of the gain, KPW, read at frequency fC from the Figure 10 bode plot, or more simply:
KCOMP(fC) = 20 × log(GEA × R3 × R2/(R2+R1)) = 1/KPW(fC)
This makes the total loop gain, T(s) = GPS(s) × HEA(s), zero at the fC. Then, select C4 so that fZ ≅ fC/10 and optional fP2> fC × 10. Following this method should lead to a loop with a phase margin near 45 degrees. Lowering R3 while keeping fZ ≅ fC/10 increases the phase margin and therefore increases the time it takes for the output voltage to settle following a step load.
In the TPS61175, if the FB pin voltage changes suddenly due to a load step on the output voltage, the error amplifier increases its transconductance for 8-ms in an effort to speed up the IC’s transient response and reduce output voltage droop due to the load step. For example, if the FB voltage decreases 10 mV due to load change, the error amplifier increases its source current through COMP by 5 times; if FB voltage increases 11 mV, the sink current through COMP is increased to 3.5 times normal value. This feature often results in saw tooth ringing on the output voltage, shown as Figure 13. Designing the loop for greater than 45 degrees of phase margin and greater than 10-db gain margin minimizes the amplitude of this ringing. This feature is disabled during soft start.