Capacitor cross coupled 2-phase buck converter
10903739 ยท 2021-01-26
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H02M3/07
ELECTRICITY
H02M3/18
ELECTRICITY
H02M3/158
ELECTRICITY
G05F1/46
PHYSICS
G05F1/46
PHYSICS
H02M3/158
ELECTRICITY
H02M3/18
ELECTRICITY
H02J4/00
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
A buck converter uses flying capacitors and cross coupling. The flying capacitors reduce the voltage stress across the inductors and the devices, and may provide high efficiency at very low duty cycle ratios. In addition to the high efficiency performance, the converters may provide a significant reduction in area, since smaller inductors can be used compared to typical buck converters. An example of realization shows up to 90% efficiency at 0.5V output and 10 A load from a 3.6V input with small flying capacitors, compared to what is typically used in a switched capacitor converter.
Claims
1. A multi-phase buck converter, comprising: a plurality of power conversion phases, each power conversion phase comprising a high side switch and a low side switch coupled in series between an input voltage and a lower voltage, a flying capacitor coupled between the high side switch and the low side switch, and an inductor having a first end and a second end, with the first end of the inductor and the low side switch and the flying capacitor coupled to a common node, with the second end of the inductor for each of the power conversion phases coupled to each other and a load and an output capacitor in parallel; and a plurality of cross-coupling switches, each cross coupling switch coupling a node between the high side switch and the flying capacitor of one phase to the common node coupling the first end of the inductor and the low side switch and the flying capacitor of another phase.
2. The multi-phase buck converter of claim 1, wherein the plurality of power conversion phases consist of two power conversion phases.
3. The multi-phase buck converter of claim 1, wherein the plurality of power conversion phases consist of four power conversion phases.
4. The multi-phase buck converter of claim 1, wherein the lower voltage is ground.
5. A method of operating a multi-phase buck converter having a plurality of power conversion phases, each of the power conversion phases having a flying capacitor in series between a high side switch and a low side switch, with an inductor having a first end coupled to a node between the flying capacitor and the low side switch and having a second end coupled to a load in parallel to an output capacitor, the method comprising: during one time period, coupling the first end of the inductor of one phase with a node between the high side switch and the flying capacitor of another phase; and during another time period, not coupling the first end of the inductor of one phase with the node between the high side switch and the flying capacitor of the other phase.
6. The method of claim 5, further comprising, during the other time period, coupling the first end of the inductor of the other phase with a node between the high side switch and the flying capacitor of the first phase.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the high side switch of the first phase is closed during the one time period and the high side switch of the other phase is open during the one time period.
8. The method of claim 6, wherein the high side switch of the other phase is closed during the other time period and the high side switch of the first phase is open during the one time period.
9. The method of claim 6, further comprising, during yet another time period, not coupling the first end of the inductor of one phase with the node between the high side switch and the flying capacitor of the other phase and not coupling the first end of the inductor of the other phase with the node between the high side switch and the flying capacitor of the one phase.
10. The method of claim 7, wherein the low side switch of the first phase is open during the one time period and the low side switch of the other phase is closed during the one time period.
11. The method of claim 7, wherein the low side switch of the other phase is open during the one time period and the low side switch of the first phase is closed during the one time period.
12. The method of claim 9, wherein the low side switches of the one phase and the other phase are closed during the yet another time period.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein the high side switches of the one phase and the other phase are open during the yet another time period.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(9) An example topology of a capacitor cross coupled 2-phase buck converter in accordance with aspects of the invention is shown in
(10)
(11) The topology may be considered to be based on maintaining a constant voltage Vin/2 across each flying capacitor (Cfly0, Cfly1) and thus limiting the input voltage to the inductor to Vin/2. For each phase, the inductor takes a certain amount of charge Q=.sub.0.sup.toni.sub.L. dt from a different plate of each flying capacitor, for example as shown in
(12) In some embodiments, a buck converter, for example the buck converter of
(13) The high state for phase 1 is for example illustrated in
(14) The low state for both phases is for example illustrated in
(15) In some embodiments there is a limit to the duty cycle of this converter because the capacitors Cfly0 and Cfly1 are shared by both inductors; with the limit being 50%. In some embodiments, considering the voltage across the flying capacitors is Vin/2, Voutmax=Vin/4 is a maximum output voltage which can be obtained in the capacitive cross coupled configuration. However, in some embodiments if the output voltage is preferred to go higher than Vin/4, this topology could switch to a basic 2 phase buck converter by having the high side and cross side on at the same time. In that case Vin is directly applied to the inductor and the output voltage can go up to Vin/2.
(16) The topology can work with a variety of existing controls for buck converters, for example since it is equivalent to a basic 2 phase buck converter, which sees a Vin/2 voltage input instead of Vin.
(17)
(18) The example of implementation with 3.6V input highlights the switching nodes of the converter (
(19) As comparison to existing topologies, the capacitive cross coupled converter may allow the reduction of voltage stress across the inductor and the switching devices, which leads to high efficiency and smaller inductor compared to a typical buck converter. The capacitive cross coupled converter may also use less switches (same number as a typical buck) compared to multilevel converter, thus reducing die area for the same increase of efficiency. Smaller flying capacitors can be used in some embodiments due to the fast switching in buck converters, so the overall area can be very small compared to both multilevel converters (big flying capacitors) and typical buck converters (bigger inductors requirement).
(20) Although the invention has been discussed with respect to various embodiments, it should be recognized that the invention comprises the novel and non-obvious claims supported by this disclosure.