POWER MANAGEMENT
August 30 - September 3, 2010
EPFL Premises, Lausanne, Switzerland

DC-DC Converters, Topologies & Control Techniques
Richard Redl, Consultant

Basic nonisolated dc/dc converter topologies, waveforms, and operating modes. Derivative nonisolated converters (two-switch buck-boost, SEPIC, Cuk, coupled-inductor buck). Isolated and multi-output converters. Synchronous rectification. Control techniques: single-loop (constant- frequency and variable-frequency voltage-mode control, voltage regulation without error amplifier), multiple-loop [constant-frequency and variable frequency current-mode control, feedforward control (input-voltage feedforward for line-transient rejection and for frequency stabilization, load-current feedforward), Vsquare control]. Control for improving efficiency at light load. Overload protection techniques.

Converter Modeling and Feedback Loop Design
Richard Redl, Consultant

Averaged small-signal and large-signal models (state-space averaging, direct circuit averaging, method of injected/absorbed currents). Transfer-function block models. Control-to-output and input-to-output transfer functions of voltage-mode-controlled and current-mode-controlled converters. The right-half-plane (RHP) zero. Fundamentals of stability analysis. Feedback loop design for phase/gain margin using the K factor. Practical design examples.

Fundamentals of Switched-Mode Power Supplies for Portable Applications
Eduard Alarcon, UPC

Review of power management requirements of key IC building blocks in current and future portable applications, comparison of on-chip power conversion methods and topologies: Magnetic switching converters vs switched-capacitor converters (charge-pumps) vs linear power converters (LDO) / Efficiency optimization / Trends in fully monolithic integration of switching power converters: on-chip reactive components for switchers: IC-compatible power inductors and low ESR on-chip capacitors, Power MOSFET switches, efficient switch drivers in standard CMOS technologies / Power management subsystems in an SoC environment.

Control Techniques and their Integrated Circuit Implementation for Switched-Mode Converters in Portable Application
Eduard Alarcon, UPC

Review of control requirements / Voltage-mode and current-mode circuit techniques for analog controllers / IC architecture and block design details of analog controller for sliding-mode control, one-cycle control and neurofuzzy control/ Integration of PFM or pulse-skipping control for light-load efficiency improvements/ Description of several practical implementations of analog IC controllers / Digital versus analog control of switching power converters / IC architecture and block design details of digital PWM controller / design of A-D converters / Area and power efficient implementation of digital pulse width modulators (DPWM): hybrid and segmented architectures / Quantization and limit-cycle phenomena in digitally controlled switchers.

Adaptive Power Management Techniques for Portable Applications
Eduard Alarcon, UPC

Adaptive power supplies for RF power amplifiers/ Slow envelope tracking / Fast Envelope Elimination and Restoration (EER) technique / Specifications for EDGE, IS95 and 3GPP-WCDMA modulations / Adaptive voltage and threshold scaling for low-power microprocessor and DSP supply/ Description of several practical implementations of adaptive power management.

Bandgap References
Barrie Gilbert, Analog Devices.

Voltage references derived from the base-emitter voltage of bipolar transistors, and why they are generally known as "Bandgaps." Fundamental ideas related to most circuits, including noise, temperature behavior and trimming, curvature and curvature correction, and sensitivity to component variability. Some basic circuits and the practical issues related to their use in power management. Additional examples which illustrate the use of parasitic bipolar transistors to derive a reference voltage on CMOS circuits.

CMOS Linear Regulators, Design and Case Studies
Maher Kayal, EPFL

Summary of conventional CMOS fully integrated linear voltage regulators. Review of CMOS OTA design trade-offs, output stage for Low Dropout Regulator (LDO) and non Low Dropout Regulator. Stability conditions. Overview of main techniques for efficiency and stability improvement. Case studies and practical implementations in CMOS technology of common drain (LDO) with depletion output transistor and battery charger for mobile phone using shunt regulator.

Battery Charging Techniques and Circuits
for Notebook Computers and Cellular Phones
Thomas Szepesi, PMChip

NiCad, NiMH, LiIOn, Li-Metal and Li-Polimer batteries and their properties. Charging and charge termination techniques for the different battery chemistries. Off-line, DC/DC and linear battery charger circuits.

Transistor-Level Off-Line DC-DC Controller Design
Robert Blauschild, Consultant

Typical application and design of a current-mode off-line, switched-mode power supply. Review of the application diagram and general theory of operation. Start-up and bias techniques. The design of critical blocks, including voltage references, oscillators, error amplifiers, protection circuits, and output drive, with emphasis on design tradeoffs and performance in bipolar and CMOS technologies.

Switched-Capacitor Power Supplies
Jesper Steensgaard, Linear Technology

General overview of switched-capacitor (SC) power supplies: topologies and properties. Efficiency analysis, and circuit techniques that may be used to improve the efficiency. How to design and evaluate CMOS switches for SC power supplies. Step by step design of a voltage doubler. Analysis and several practical examples of how to design voltage multipliers.

Power CMOS and BCD Linear Amplifier Design
Vadim Ivanov, Texas Instruments

Output stage, CMOS and all-NMOS size of the power transistors, class AB circuits. Current limit for amplifier and for load protection. Number of the gain stages, compensation and linearity. Input stage, gain boost and slew rate boost. Biasing and temperature protection. Layout, package and wirebonding.

Circuit Techniques for Integrated Switching Regulators
Vadim Ivanov, Texas Instruments

Power switches: static and dynamic power loss, switch sizing, wire bonds and their inductance, parasitic vertical PNP and lateral NPN structures, substrate noise, signal grounding and isolation of the control circuitry. Switch Control: Low and high-side gate drivers, use of the bootstrap capacitors with charge regeneration, transfer of the control signal to the high-side. Low and high-side synchronous rectifiers: comparator design, minimization of delays, elimination of shoot-through currents. Feedback and frequency compensation: continuous and discontinuous operation, current and voltage mode; inductor current sensing with and without external elements; oscillator and PWM circuits; error amplifier.