Patent classifications
H02M3/077
Switched capacitor converter and driving circuit
A driving circuit for a switched capacitor converter having first and second switched capacitor branches, where the first switched capacitor branch includes first and second switch groups connected between an input voltage and a reference ground, the second switched capacitor branch includes third and fourth switch groups connected between the input voltage and the reference ground, and where each switch group includes an upper power switch and a lower power switch, the driving circuit comprising: a plurality of drivers configured to correspondingly drive each power switch in the switched capacitor converter; a bootstrap capacitor that provides a power supply voltage for each driver that is configured to drive the upper power switches that are connected to the input voltage of the switched capacitor converter; and where a charging voltage for charging the bootstrap capacitor is not greater than the input voltage of the switched capacitor converter.
Multi-phase hybrid converter
A multi-phase hybrid DC-DC converter using a switched-capacitor technique is described. The multi-phase hybrid converter can reduce the volt-seconds on the inductors of the converter, which can allow for a reduction in the size of the inductors. In addition, the multi-phase hybrid converter can utilize inductors as current sources to charge and discharge the flying capacitors, which can reduce the size of the mid capacitor and increase solution density. Because charging and discharging are performed by inductors, the multi-phase hybrid converter can eliminate the capacitor-to-capacitor charge transfer. As such, the multi-phase hybrid converter does not need high capacitance to achieve high efficiency operation, which can further increase solution density.
DC-DC CONVERTER
A DC-DC converter, where a first terminal of the first-phase charge pump conversion branch and a first terminal of the second-phase charge pump conversion branch are respectively connected to an output terminal of the power input circuit, a second terminal of the first-phase charge pump conversion branch and a second terminal of the second-phase charge pump conversion branch are respectively connected to an input terminal of the power output circuit, the first-phase charge pump conversion branch and the second-phase charge pump conversion branch are respectively connected to the control circuit and are separately controlled by the control circuit, and the control circuit generates control signals of the first-phase charge pump conversion branch and the second-phase charge pump conversion branch based on feedback signals output by the converter. This converter can provide higher voltage conversion efficiency and implement flexible operating mode switching.
Switched-capacitor power converters
An apparatus for providing electric power to a load includes a power converter that accepts electric power in a first form and provides electric power in a second form. The power converter comprises a control system, a first stage, and a second stage in series. The first stage accepts electric power in the first form. The control system controls operation of the first and second stage. The first stage is either a switching network or a regulating network. The second stage is a regulating circuit when the first stage is a switching network, and a switching network otherwise.
MICROPHONE ASSEMBLY WITH IMPROVED STARTUP SETTLING
The disclosure relates to a transducer assembly like a microphone including a bias circuit having a charge pump and a filter circuit coupled to a transducer. The filter circuit includes a voltage-controlled resistor located between an output of the charge pump and the transducer, and a capacitor coupled to the voltage-controlled resistor opposite the charge pump, wherein the bias circuit is configured with a larger bandwidth for faster settling during transient operation than during steady-state operation.
Startup Detection for Parallel Power Converters
Circuits/methods for controlling the startup of multiple parallel power converters that avoid inrush current or switch overstress in an added power converter or a power converter having fault conditions. Embodiments include node status detectors coupled to nodes within parallel-connected power converters to monitor voltage/current and configured in some embodiments to work in parallel with an output status detector measuring the startup output voltage of a power converter. With charge pump-based power converters, the node status detectors ensure that the power converter pump capacitors are charged while the output capacitor is charged as well. For such embodiments, a softstart period of startup may be considered finished if both the shared output capacitors and the power converter pump capacitors are charged to target values. Embodiments may also be used for fault detection during steady-state operation.
Interleaved multi-level buck-boost switching power converter with pulse-width modulation
Disclosed is an interleaved buck-boost converter. The interleaved buck-boost converter includes a master switching stage and a slave switching stage that are controlled by a pulse-width-modulation (PWM) controller.
POWER CONVERTER
In an embodiment a power converter includes a first capacitor and a second capacitor coupled in series with the first capacitor, wherein the converter is configured to charge, during a first phase, the first and second capacitors by a supply voltage so that a voltage across terminals of each of the first and second capacitors is substantially equal to half the supply voltage and discharge, during a second phase, the second capacitor to a third capacitor.
Charge pump circuit, corresponding device and method
Charge pump stages are coupled between flying capacitor pairs and arranged in a cascaded between a bottom voltage line and an output voltage line. Gain stages apply pump phase signals having a certain amplitude to the charge pump stages via the flying capacitors. A feedback signal path from the output voltage line to the bottom voltage line applies a feedback control signal to the bottom voltage line. Power supply for the gain stages is provided by a voltage of the feedback control signal in order to control the amplitude of the pump phase signals. An asynchronous logic circuit generates the switching drive signals for the gain stages with a certain switching frequency which is a function of a logic supply voltage derived from the voltage of the feedback control signal.
Voltage generators with charge pumps for switch circuits
Disclosed herein are non-limiting examples of voltage generators that use multiple charge pumps coupled in series to generate a targeted voltage. The charge pumps implement multiple charge pump units that reduce the introduction of noise into a circuit in which they are implemented. The charge pumps units work in parallel on different clock phases to reduce spurious noise. This is in contrast to using a single charge pump with a relatively large flying capacitor or a plurality of charge pumps in series. This can, for example, reduce spurious signals or spurs that arise due at least in part to the characteristics of the clock signal. The disclosed technologies may be particularly advantageous for SOI-based components and circuits.