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1.5-V Devices C51012-1.1 Introduction The CycloneTM FPGA family provides the best solution for high-volume, cost-sensitive
14. Designing with 1.5-V Devices C51012-1 C51012-1.1 Introduction The CycloneTM FPGA family provides the best solution for high-volume, cost-sensitive applications. Stratix® and Cyclone devices are fabricated on a leading-edge 1.5-V, 0.13-µm, all-layer copper SRAM process. Using a 1.5-V operating voltage provides the following advantages: Lower power consumption compared to 2.5-V or 3.3-V devices. Lower operating temperature. Less need for fans and other temperature-control elements. Since many existing designs are based on 5.0-V, 3.3-V and 2.5-V power supplies, a voltage regulator may be required to lower the voltage supply level to 1.5-V. This document provides guidelines for designing with Stratix and Cyclone devices in mixed-voltage and single-voltage systems and provides examples using voltage regulators. This document also includes information on: Power Sequencing & Hot Socketing Power Sequencing & Hot Socketing Using MultiVolt I/O Pins Voltage Regulators 1.5-V Regulator Application Examples Board Layout Because 1.5-V Cyclone FPGAs can be used in a mixed-voltage environment, they have been designed specifically to tolerate any possible power-up sequence. Therefore, the VCCIO and VCCINT power supplies may be powered in any order. You can drive signals into Cyclone FPGAs before and during power up without damaging the device. In addition, Cyclone FPGAs do not drive out during power up since they are tri-stated during power up. Once the device reaches operating conditions and is configured, Cyclone FPGAs operate as specified by the user. f Altera Corporation January 2005 See the Stratix FPGA Family Data Sheet and the Cyclone FPGA Family Data Sheet for more information. 141 Using MultiVolt I/O Pins Using MultiVolt I/O Pins Cyclone FPGAs require a 1.5-V VCCINT and a 3.3-V, 2.5-V, 1.8-V, or 1.5-V I/O supply voltage level (VCCIO). All pins, including dedicated inputs, clock, I/O, and JTAG pins, are 3.3-V tolerant before and after VCCINT and VCCIO are powered. When VCCIO is connected to 1.5-V, the output is compatible with 1.5-V logic levels. The output pins can be made 1.8-V, 2.5-V, or 3.3-V compatible by using open-drain outputs pulled up with external resistors. You can use external resistors to pull open-drain outputs up with a 1.8-V, 2.5-V, or 3.3-V VCCIO. Table 141 summarizes Cyclone MultiVolt I/O support. Table 141. Cyclone MultiVolt I/O Support Note (1) Input Signal VCCIO (V) 1.5-V 1.8-V Output Signal 1.5-V 1.8-V 2.5-V 3.3-V v v v (2) v (2) v v v (3) v v v (5) v (5) v v (7) v (7) v (7) v v 2.5-V v 3.3-V v (4) v 5.0-V v (6) 1.5-V 1.8-V 2.5-V 3.3-V 5.0-V v v (8) Notes to Table 141: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) (8) The PCI clamping diode must be disabled to drive an input with voltages higher than VCCIO. When VCCIO = 1.5-V and a 2.5-V or 3.3-V input signal feeds an input pin, higher pin leakage current is expected. When VCCIO = 1.8-V, a Cyclone device can drive a 1.5-V device with 1.8-V tolerant inputs. When VCCIO = 3.3-V and a 2.5-V input signal feeds an input pin, the VCCIO supply current will be slightly larger than expected. When VCCIO = 2.5-V, a Cyclone device can drive a 1.5-V or 1.8-V device with 2.5-V tolerant inputs. Cyclone devices can be 5.0-V tolerant with the use of an external resistor and the internal PCI clamp diode. When VCCIO = 3.3-V, a Cyclone device can drive a 1.5-V, 1.8-V, or 2.5-V device with 3.3-V tolerant inputs. When VCCIO = 3.3-V, a Cyclone device can drive a device with 5.0-V LVTTL inputs but not 5.0-V LVCMOS inputs. 142 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Altera Corporation January 2005 Designing with 1.5-V Devices Figure 141 shows how Cyclone FPGAs interface with 3.3-V and 2.5-V devices while operating with a 1.5-V VCCINT to increase performance and save power. Figure 141. Cyclone FPGAs Interface with 3.3-V & 2.5-V Devices 3.3 V 2.5 V 1.5 V Cyclone Device 3.3-V TTL 3.3-V Device 3.3-V CMOS Voltage Regulators VCCINT = 1.5 V VCCIO1 = 2.5 V VCCIO2 = 3.3 V 2.5-V TTL 2.5-V Device 2.5-V CMOS This section explains how to generate a 1.5-V supply from another system supply. Supplying power to the 1.5-V logic array and/or I/O pins requires a 5.0-V- or 3.3-V-to-1.5-V voltage regulator. A linear regulator is ideal for low-power applications because it minimizes device count and has acceptable efficiency for most applications. A switching voltage regulator provides optimal efficiency. Switching regulators are ideal for high-power applications because of their high efficiency. This section will help you decide which regulator to use in your system, and how to implement the regulator in your design. There are several companies that provide voltage regulators for low-voltage devices, such as Linear Technology Corporation, Maxim Integrated Products, Intersil Corporation (Elantec), and National Semiconductor Corporation. Altera Corporation January 2005 143 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Voltage Regulators Table 142 shows the terminology and specifications commonly encountered with voltage regulators. Symbols are shown in parentheses. If the symbols are different for linear and switching regulators, the linear regulator symbol is listed first. Table 142. Voltage Regulator Specifications & Terminology (Part 1 of 2) Specification/Terminology Description Input voltage range (VIN,VCC) Minimum and maximum input voltages define the input voltage range, which is determined by the regulator process voltage capabilities. Line regulation (line regulation, VOUT) Line regulation is the variation of the output voltage (VOUT) with changes in the input voltage (VIN). Error amplifier gain, pass transistor gain, and output impedance all influence line regulation. Higher gain results in better regulation. Board layout and regulator pin-outs are also important because stray resistance can introduce errors. Load regulation (load regulation, VOUT) Load regulation is a variation in the output voltage caused by changes in the input supply current. Linear Technology regulators are designed to minimize load regulation, which is affected by error amplifier gain, pass transistor gain, and output impedance. Output voltage selection Output voltage selection is adjustable by resistor voltage divider networks, connected to the error amplifier input, that control the output voltage. There are multiple output regulators that create 5.0-, 3.3-, 2.5-, 1.8- and 1.5-V supplies. Quiescent current Quiescent current is the supply current during no-load or quiescent state. This current is sometimes used as a general term for a supply current used by the regulator. Dropout voltage Dropout voltage is the difference between the input and output voltages when the input is low enough to cause the output to drop out of regulation. The dropout voltage should be as low as possible for better efficiency. Current limiting Voltage regulators are designed to limit the amount of output current in the event of a failing load. A short in the load causes the output current and voltage to decrease. This event cuts power dissipation in the regulator during a short circuit. Thermal overload protection This feature limits power dissipation if the regulator overheats. When a specified temperature is reached, the regulator turns off the output drive transistors, allowing the regulator to cool. Normal operation resumes once the regulator reaches a normal operating temperature. Reverse current protection If the input power supply fails, large output capacitors can cause a substantial reverse current to flow backward through the regulator, potentially causing damage. To prevent damage, protection diodes in the regulator create a path for the current to flow from VOUT to VIN. Stability The dominant pole placed by the output capacitor influences stability. Voltage regulator vendors can assist you in output capacitor selection for regulator designs that differ from what is offered. 144 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Altera Corporation January 2005 Designing with 1.5-V Devices Table 142. Voltage Regulator Specifications & Terminology (Part 2 of 2) Specification/Terminology Description Minimum load requirements A minimum load from the voltage divider network is required for good regulation, which also serves as the ground for the regulator's current path. Efficiency Efficiency is the division of the output power by the input power. Each regulator model has a specific efficiency value. The higher the efficiency value, the better the regulator. Linear Voltage Regulators Linear voltage regulators generate a regulated output from a larger input voltage using current pass elements in a linear mode. There are two types of linear regulators available: one using a series pass element and another using a shunt element (e.g., a zener diode). Altera recommends using series linear regulators because shunt regulators are less efficient. Series linear regulators use a series pass element (i.e., a bipolar transistor or MOSFET) controlled by a feedback error amplifier (see Figure 142) to regulate the output voltage by comparing the output to a reference voltage. The error amplifier drives the transistor further on or off continuously to control the flow of current needed to sustain a steady voltage level across the load. Figure 142. Series Linear Regulator VOUT VIN Error Amplifier + Reference Altera Corporation January 2005 145 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Voltage Regulators Table 143 shows the advantages and disadvantages of linear regulators compared to switching regulators. Table 143. Linear Regulator Advantages & Disadvantages Advantages Disadvantages Requires few supporting components Low cost Requires less board space Quick transient response Better noise and drift characteristics No electromagnetic interference (EMI) radiation from the switching components Tighter regulation Less efficient (typically 60%) Higher power dissipation Larger heat sink requirements You can minimize the difference between the input and output voltages to improve the efficiency of linear regulators. The dropout voltage is the minimum allowable difference between the regulator's input and output voltage. Linear regulators are available with fixed, variable, single, or multiple outputs. Multiple-output regulators can generate multiple outputs (e.g., 1.5- and 3.3-V outputs). If the board only has a 5.0-V power voltage supply, you should use multiple-output regulators. The logic array requires a 1.5-V power supply, and a 3.3-V power supply is required to interface with 3.3- and 5.0-V devices. However, fixed-output regulators have fewer supporting components, reducing board space and cost. Figure 143 shows an example of a three-terminal, fixed-output linear regulator. Figure 143. Three-Terminal, Fixed-Output Linear Regulator Linear Regulator VIN IN OUT 1.5 V ADJ Adjustable-output regulators contain a voltage divider network that controls the regulator's output. Figure 144 shows how you can also use a three-terminal linear regulator in an adjustable-output configuration. 146 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Altera Corporation January 2005 Designing with 1.5-V Devices Figure 144. Adjustable-Output Linear Regulator Linear Regulator VIN IN + OUT ADJ C1 VOUT = [VREF × (1 + + VREF R1 R1 R2 )] + (IADJ × R1) C2 IADJ R2 Switching Voltage Regulators Step-down switching regulators can provide 3.3-V-to-1.5-V conversion with up to 95% efficiencies. This high efficiency comes from minimizing quiescent current, using a low-resistance power MOSFET switch, and, in higher-current applications, using a synchronous switch to reduce diode losses. Switching regulators supply power by pulsing the output voltage and current to the load. Table 144 shows the advantages and disadvantages of switching regulators compared to linear regulators. For more information on switching regulators, see Application Note 35: Step Down Switching Regulators from Linear Technology. Table 144. Switching Regulator Advantages & Disadvantages Advantages Highly efficient (typically >80%) Reduced power dissipation Smaller heat sink requirements Wider input voltage range High power density Disadvantages Generates EMI Complex to design Requires 15 or more supporting components Higher cost Requires more board space There are two types of switching regulators, asynchronous and synchronous. Asynchronous switching regulators have one field effect transistor (FET) and a diode to provide the current path while the FET is off (see Figure 145). Altera Corporation January 2005 147 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Voltage Regulators Figure 145. Asynchronous Switching Regulator MOSFET Switch Node VIN VOUT High-Frequency Circulating Path LOAD Synchronous switching regulators have a voltage- or current-controlled oscillator that controls the on and off time of the two MOSFET devices that supply the current to the circuit (see Figure 146). Figure 146. Voltage-Controlled Synchronous Switching Regulator VIN Voltage-Controlled Oscillator (VCO) VOUT Maximum Output Current Select an external MOSFET switching transistor (optional) based on the maximum output current that it can supply. Use a MOSFET with a low on-resistance and a voltage rating high enough to avoid avalanche breakdown. For gate-drive voltages less than 9-V, use a logic-level MOSFET. A logic-level MOSFET is only required for topologies with a controller IC and an external MOSFET. 148 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Altera Corporation January 2005 Designing with 1.5-V Devices Selecting Voltage Regulators Your design requirements determine which voltage regulator you need. The key to selecting a voltage regulator is understanding the regulator parameters and how they relate to the design. The following checklist can help you select the proper regulator for your design: Do you require a 3.3-V, 2.5-V, and 1.5-V output (VOUT)? What precision is required on the regulated 1.5-V supplies (line and load regulation)? What supply voltages (VIN or VCC) are available on the board? What voltage variance (input voltage range) is expected on VIN or VCC? What is the maximum ICC (IOUT) required by your Altera® device? What is the maximum current surge (IOUT(MAX) that the regulator will need to supply instantaneously? Choose a Regulator Type If required, select either a linear, asynchronous switching, or synchronous switching regulator based on your output current, regulator efficiency, cost, and board-space requirements. DC-to-DC converters have output current capabilities from 1 to 8 A. You can use a controller with an external MOSFET rated for higher current for higher-outputcurrent applications. Calculate the Maximum Input Current Use the following equation to estimate the maximum input current based on the output power requirements at the maximum input voltage: IIN,DC(MAX) = VOUT × IOUT(MAX) × VIN(MAX) Where is nominal efficiency: typically 90% for switching regulators, 60% for linear 2.5-V-to-1.5-V conversion, 45% for linear 3.3-V-to-1.5-V conversion, and 30% for linear 5.0-V-to-1.5-V conversion. Once you identify the design requirements, select the voltage regulator that is best for your design. Tables 145 and 146 list a few Linear Technology and Elantec regulators available at the time this document Altera Corporation January 2005 149 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Voltage Regulators was published. There may be more regulators to choose from depending on your design specification. Contact a regulator manufacturer for availability. Table 145. Linear Technology 1.5-V Output Voltage Regulators Total Number of Components VIN (V) IOUT (A) Special Features Voltage Regulator Regulator Type LT1573 LT1573 Linear 10 2.5 or 3.3 (1) 6 LT1083 LT1083 Linear 5 5.0 7.5 LT1084 LT1084 Linear 5 5.0 5 LT1085 LT1085 Linear 5 5.0 3 Inexpensive solution LTC1649 LTC1649 Switching 22 3.3 15 Selectable output LTC1775 LTC1775 Switching 17 5.0 5 Note to Table 145: (1) A 3.3-V VIN requires a 3.3-V supply to the regulator's input and 2.5-V supply to bias the transistors. Table 146. Elantec 1.5-V Output Voltage Regulators Total Number of Components VIN (V) IOUT (A) Voltage Regulator Regulator Type EL7551C EL7551C Switching 11 5.0 1 EL7564CM EL7564CM Switching 13 5.0 4 EL7556BC EL7556BC Switching 21 5.0 6 EL7562CM EL7562CM Switching 17 3.3 or 5.5 2 EL7563CM EL7563CM Switching 19 3.3 4 Special Features Voltage Divider Network Design a voltage divider network if you are using an adjustable output regulator. Follow the controller or converter IC's instructions to adjust the output voltage. 1.5-V Regulator Circuits This section contains the circuit diagrams for the voltage regulators discussed in this chapter. You can use the voltage regulators in this section to generate a 1.5-V power supply. See the voltage regulator data sheet to find detailed specifications. If you require further information that is not shown in the data sheet, contact the regulator's vendor. 1410 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Altera Corporation January 2005 Designing with 1.5-V Devices Figures 147 through 1412 show the circuit diagrams of Linear Technology voltage regulators listed in Table 145. The LT1573 LT1573 linear voltage regulator converts 2.5-V to 1.5-V with an output current of 6A (see Figure 147). Figure 147. LT1573 LT1573: 2.5-V-to-1.5-V/6.0-A Linear Voltage Regulator LT1573 LT1573 FB LATCH CTIME 0.5 µF (3) + SHDN (2) GND CIN1 COMP + VIN1 2.5 V (1) VOUT VIN RD 6 1/2 W DRIVE RB 200 1/8 W Motorola D45H11 D45H11 VIN2 3.3 V + + CIN2 COUT (4) (1) R1 186 1/8 W VOUT 1.5 V LOAD R2 1k 1/8 W Notes to Figure 147: (1) (2) (3) (4) CIN1 and COUT are AVX 100-µF/10-V F/10-V surface-mount tantalum capacitors. Use SHDN (active high) to shut down the regulator. CTIME is a 0.5-µF capacitor for 100-ms time out at room temperature. CIN2 is an AVX 15-µF/10-V F/10-V surface-mount tantalum capacitor. Use adjustable 5.0- to 1.5-V regulators (shown in Figures 148 through 1410) for 3.0- to 7.5-A low-cost, low-device-count, board-space-efficient solutions. Altera Corporation January 2005 1411 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Voltage Regulators Figure 148. LT1083 LT1083: 5.0-V-to-1.5-V/7.5-A Linear Voltage Regulator VIN IN LT1083 LT1083 ADJ + (1) C1 VOUT = 1.25 V × (1 + OUT R2 R1 ) R1 5 k 10 µF R2 1 k C2 + 10 µF Note to Figure 148: (1) This capacitor is necessary to maintain the voltage level at the input regulator. There could be a voltage drop at the input if the voltage supply is too far away. Figure 149. LT1084 LT1084: 5.0-V-to-1.5-V/5.0-A Linear Voltage Regulator VIN IN LT1083 LT1083 ADJ + (1) C1 10 µF R2 1 k VOUT = 1.25 V × (1 + OUT R2 R1 ) R1 5 k C2 + 10 µF Note to Figure 149: (1) This capacitor is necessary to maintain the voltage level at the input regulator. There could be a voltage drop at the input if the voltage supply is too far away. 1412 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Altera Corporation January 2005 Designing with 1.5-V Devices Figure 1410. LT1085 LT1085: 5.0-V-to-1.5-V/3-A Linear Voltage Regulator VIN IN LT1084 LT1084 ADJ + (1) C1 VOUT = 1.25 V × (1 + OUT R2 R1 ) R1 5 k 10 µF R2 1 k C2 + 10 µF Note to Figure 1410: (1) This capacitor is necessary to maintain the voltage level at the input regulator. There could be a voltage drop at the input if the voltage supply is too far away. Figure 1411 shows a high-efficiency switching regulator circuit diagram. A selectable resistor network controls the output voltage. The resistor values in Figure 1411 are selected for 1.5-V output operation. Figure 1411. LT1649 LT1649: 3.3-V-to-1.5-V/15-A Asynchronous Switching Regulator VIN 3.3 V MBR0530 MBR0530 (1) + RIMAX 50 k 1 µF P VCC1 G2 I MAX SHUTDOWN 10 µF 1 k LTC1649 LTC1649 V IN COMP C+ SS C GND RC 7.5 k Q3 IRF7801 IRF7801 1.5 V (15 A) R1 2.16 k FB SHDN + LEXT (3) 1.2 µH VOUT I FB V CC CIN 3,300 µF G1 P VCC2 22 k Q1, Q2 IRF7801 IRF7801 Two in Parallel (2) + 1 µF COUT 4,400 µF R2 12.7 k CP OUT + 0.1 µF C1 220 pF MBR0530 MBR0530 10 µF 0.33 µF CC 0.01 µF Notes to Figure 1411: (1) (2) (3) MBR0530 MBR0530 is a Motorola device. IRF7801 IRF7801 is a International Rectifier device. See the Panasonic 12TS-1R2HL 12TS-1R2HL device. Altera Corporation January 2005 1413 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Voltage Regulators Figure 1412 shows synchronous switching regulator with adjustable outputs. Figure 1412. LTC1775 LTC1775: 5.0-V-to-1.5-V/5-A Synchronous Switching Regulator RF 1 1 2 CSS 0.1 µF CC1 2.2 nF RC 10 k 3 INTVCC 4 5 CC2 220 pF 6 7 OPEN 8 EXTVCC VIN SYNC TK RUN/SS SW FCB TG ITH SGND VOSENSE VPROG BOOST INTVCC BG PGND 16 15 13 11 CB 0.22 µF DB CMDSH-3 10 9 CIN (1) 15 µF 35 V ×3 CF 0.1 µF 14 12 VIN 5V CVCC 4.7 µF M1 1/2 FDS8936A FDS8936A L1 (2) 6.1 µH D1 MBRS140 MBRS140 M2 1/2 FDS8936A FDS8936A VOUT 1.5 V 5A R2 2.6 k R1 10 k COUT (3) 680 µF 4V ×2 Notes to Figure 1412: (1) (2) (3) This is a KEMETT495X156M035AS KEMETT495X156M035AS capacitor. This is a Sumida CDRH127-6R1 CDRH127-6R1 inductor. This is a KEMETT510X687K004AS KEMETT510X687K004AS capacitor. 1414 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Altera Corporation January 2005 Designing with 1.5-V Devices Figures 1413 through 1417 show the circuit diagrams of Elantec voltage regulators listed in Table 146. Figures 1413 through 1415 show the switching regulator that converts 5.0-V to 1.5-V with different output current. Figure 1413. EL7551C EL7551C: 5.0-V-to-1.5-V/1-A Synchronous Switching Regulator 1 C3 0.1 µF R3 39 k C4 270 pF SGND PGND COSC VREF 3 5 6 FB PGND VDRV LX PGND LX VIN 7 13 12 11 10 VIN R1 1 k L1 10 µH V0 1.5 V 1A C6 0.1 µF C7 47 µF VHI EN VIN 5.0 V R2 539 14 VDD C1 10 µF Ceramic C5 0.1 µF 15 2 4 16 PGND 8 9 EL7551C EL7551C Altera Corporation January 2005 1415 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Voltage Regulators Figure 1414. EL7564CM EL7564CM: 5.0-V-to-1.5-V/4-A Synchronous Switching Regulator 1 20 VREF SGND C5 0.1 µF EN FB COSC PG 2 3 19 18 C4 390 pF R4 22 4 C3 0.22 µF 5 VDD VDRV VTJ VHI C2 2.2 nF 17 16 D1 C6 0.22 µF 6 15 LX PGND 7 14 PGND C1 330 µF 8 VIN 5.0 V 9 10 L1 4.7 µH LX VIN PGND STP PGND PGND STN C7 330 µF R2 539 C10 100 pF V0 1.5 V 4A 13 12 R1 1 k 11 EL7564CM EL7564CM 1416 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Altera Corporation January 2005 Designing with 1.5-V Devices Figure 1415. EL7556BC EL7556BC: 5.0-V-to-1.5-V/6-A Synchronous Switching Regulator R3 50 R4 100 VIN 1 C4 (1) 0.1 µF 2 C7 (1) 39 pF 3 C8 (1) 220 pF R5 5.1 4 5 6 7 8 VIN C12 1.0 µF C9 (5) 660 µF 9 10 11 12 13 14 FB1 FB2 CREF CP CSLOPE C2V COSC VSS VDD VHI VIN LX VSSP LX LX VIN VSSP LX VSSP VSSP VSSP VSSP VSSP VCC2DET OUTEN 28 27 C5 (2) 1 µF R1 20 26 25 22 21 D4 Optional (3), (4) D2 (3) D1 (3) C11 (2) 0.22 µF R6 39.2 24 23 D3 (3) C6 (1) 0.1 µF L1 2.5 µH VOUT R3 = 1.5 V × (1 + ) R4 20 19 18 TEST 17 16 PWRGD 15 OT C10 (6) 1.0 mF EL7556BC EL7556BC Notes to Figures 1413 to 1415: (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) These capacitors are ceramic capacitors. These capacitors are ceramic or tantalum capacitor. These are BAT54S BAT54S fast diodes. D4 is only required for EL7556ACM EL7556ACM. This is a Sprague 293D337X96R3 293D337X96R3 2X330 2X330µF capacitor. This is a Sprague 293D337X96R3 293D337X96R3 3X330 3X330µF capacitor. Altera Corporation January 2005 1417 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Voltage Regulators Figures 1416 and 1417 show the switching regulator that converts 3.3 V to 1.5 V with different output currents. Figure 1416. EL7562CM EL7562CM: 3.3-V to 1.5-V/2-A Synchronous Switching Regulator 1 C3 R3 0.1 µF 39 C4 270 pF 2 3 SGND PGND COSC VREF VDD FB 16 15 C5 0.1 µF 14 D2 4 5 C1 100 µF C2 0.1 µF 6 7 VIN 3.3 V 8 PGND VDRV PGND LX VIN LX VIN VHI EN PGND 13 D3 D4 C8 0.1 µF 12 11 C9 0.1 µF C6 0.1 µF 10 L1 2.5 µH 9 C7 100 µF EL7562CM EL7562CM R2 539 VOUT 1.5 V 2A R1 1 k Figure 1417. EL7563CM EL7563CM: 3.3-V to 1.5-V/4-A Synchronous Switching Regulator C5 0.1 µF 1 2 VREF EN SGND FB COSC PG 20 19 C4 390 pF 3 R4 22 4 C3 0.22 µF C2 2.2 nF 5 VDD VDRV VTJ VHI 18 D2 17 D3 16 C6 0.22 µF 6 C1 330 µF VIN 3.3 V 7 8 9 10 PGND LX PGND LX VIN PGND STP PGND STN PGND D4 D1 C8 0.22 µF C9 0.1 µF 15 14 L1 2.5 µH 13 12 C7 330 µF C10 2.2 nF R2 513 VOUT 1.5 V 4A 11 R1 1 k EL7563CM EL7563CM 1418 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Altera Corporation January 2005 Designing with 1.5-V Devices 1.5-V Regulator Application Examples The following sections show the process used to select a voltage regulator for three sample designs. The regulator selection is based on the amount of power that the Cyclone device consumes. There are 14 variables to consider when selecting a voltage regulator. The following variables apply to Cyclone device power consumption: fMAX Output and bidirectional pins Average toggle rate for I/O pins (togIO) Average toggle rate for logic elements (LEs) (togLC) User-mode ICC consumption Maximum power-up ICCINT requirement Utilization VCCIO supply level VCCINT supply level The following variables apply to the voltage regulator: Output voltage precision requirement Supply voltage on the board Voltage supply output current Variance of board supply Efficiency Different designs have different power consumptions based on the variables listed. Once you calculate the Cyclone device's power consumption, you must consider how much current the Cyclone device needs. You can use the Cyclone power calculator (available at www.altera.com) or the PowerGaugeTM tool in the Quartus II software to determine the current needs. Also check the maximum power-up current requirement listed in the Power Consumption section of the Cyclone FPGA Family Data Sheet because the power-up current requirement may exceed the user-mode current consumption for a specific design. Once you determine the minimum current the Cyclone device requires, you must select a voltage regulator that can generate the desired output current with the voltage and current supply that is available on the board using the variables listed in this section. An example is shown to illustrate the voltage regulator selection process. Altera Corporation January 2005 1419 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 1.5-V Regulator Application Examples Synchronous Switching Regulator Example This example shows a worst-case scenario for power consumption where the design uses all the LEs and RAM. Table 147 shows the design requirements for 1.5-V design using a Cyclone EP1C12 EP1C12 FPGA. Table 147. Design Requirements for the Example EP1C12F324C EP1C12F324C Design Requirement Value Output voltage precision requirement ±5% Supply voltages available on the board 3.3 V Voltage supply output current available for this section (II N , D C ( M A X ) ) 2A Variance of board supply (VIN) ±5% fMAX 150 MHz Average togIO 12.5% Average togLC 12.5% Utilization 100% Output and bidirectional pins 125 VCCIO supply level 3.3 V VCCINT supply level 1.5 V Efficiency 90% Table 148 uses the checklist on page 149 to help select the appropriate voltage regulator. Table 148. Voltage Regulator Selection Process for EP1C12F324C EP1C12F324C Design (Part 1 of 2) Output voltage requirements Supply voltages Supply variance from Linear Technology data sheet Estimated IC C I N T Use Cyclone Power Calculator Estimated IC C I O if regulator powers VC C I O Use Cyclone Power Calculator (not applicable in this example because VC C I O = 3.3 V) Total user-mode current consumption IC C = IC C I N T + IC C I O 1420 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 VOUT = 1.5 V VIN OR VCC = 3.3 V Supply variance = ±5% ICCINT = 620 mA ICCIO = N/A IC C = 620 mA Altera Corporation January 2005 Designing with 1.5-V Devices Table 148. Voltage Regulator Selection Process for EP1C12F324C EP1C12F324C Design (Part 2 of 2) EP1C12 EP1C12 maximum power-up current requirement See Power Consumption section of the Cyclone FPGA Family Data Sheet for other densities IP U C ( M A X ) = 900 mA Maximum output current required Compare IC C with IP U C ( M A X ) IO U T ( M A X ) = 900 mA Voltage regulator selection See Linear Technology LTC 1649 data sheet See Intersil (Elantec) EL7562C EL7562C data sheet LTC1649 LTC1649 IO U T ( M A X ) = 15 A EL7562C EL7562C IO U T ( M A X ) = 2 A LTC1649 LTC1649 Nominal efficiency () Nominal efficiency () = > 90% Line and load regulation Line regulation + load regulation = (0.17 mV + 7 mV)/ 1.5 V × 100% Minimum input voltage (VIN(MIN) (VIN(MIN) = VIN(1 VIN) = 3.3V(1 0.05) Maximum input current IIN, DC(MAX) = (VOUT × IOUT(MAX)/(× VIN(MIN) Line and Load Regulation = 0.478% < 5% (VIN(MIN) = 3.135 V IIN, DC(MAX) = 478 mA < 2 A EL7562C EL7562C Nominal efficiency () Nominal efficiency () = > 95% Line and load regulation Line regulation + load regulation = (0.17 mV + 7 mV)/ 1.5 V × 100% Minimum input voltage (VIN(MIN) (VIN(MIN) = VIN(1 VIN) = 3.3V(1 0.05) Maximum input current IIN, DC(MAX) = (VOUT × IOUT(MAX)/(× VIN(MIN) Board Layout Line and Load Regulation = 0.5% < 5% (VIN(MIN) = 3.135 V IIN, DC(MAX) = 453 mA < 2 A Laying out a printed circuit board (PCB) properly is extremely important in high-frequency (100 kHz) switching regulator designs. A poor PCB layout results in increased EMI and ground bounce, which affects the reliability of the voltage regulator by obscuring important voltage and current feedback signals. Altera recommends using Gerber files predesigned layout filessupplied by the regulator vendor for your board layout. If you cannot use the supplied layout files, contact the voltage regulator vendor for help on re-designing the board to fit your design requirements while maintaining the proper functionality. Altera recommends that you use separate layers for signals, the ground plane, and voltage supply planes. You can support separate layers by using multi-layer PCBs, assuming you are using two signal layers. Altera Corporation January 2005 1421 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Board Layout Figure 1418 shows how to use regulators to generate 1.5-V and 2.5-V power supplies if the system needs two power supply systems. One regulator is used for each power supply. Figure 1418. Two Regulator Solution for Systems that Require 5.0-V, 2.5-V & 1.5-V Supply Levels PCB Regulator 5.0 V 1.5 V 1.5-V Device Altera Cyclone FPGA Regulator 2.5 V 2.5-V Device Figure 1419 shows how to use a single regulator to generate two different power supplies (1.5-V and 2.5-V). The use of a single regulator to generate 1.5-V and 2.5-V supplies from the 5.0-V power supply can minimize the board size and thus save cost. Figure 1419. Single Regulator Solution for Systems that Require 5.0-V, 2.5-V & 1.5-V Supply Levels PCB 1.5-V Device 1.5 V 5.0 V Regulator Altera Cyclone FPGA 2.5 V 2.5-V Device 1422 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Altera Corporation January 2005 Designing with 1.5-V Devices Split-Plane Method The split-plane design method reduces the number of planes required by placing two power supply planes in one plane (see Figure 1420). For example, the layout for this method can be structured as follows: One 2.5-V plane, covering the entire board One plane split between 5.0-V and 1.5-V This technique assumes that the majority of devices are 2.5-V. To support MultiVolt I/O, Altera devices must have access to 1.5-V and 2.5-V planes. Figure 1420. Split Board Layout for 2.5-V Systems With 5.0-V & 1.5-V Devices 5.0 V PCB 2.5-V Device 1.5 V 5.0-V Device 5.0-V Device 2.5-V Device Conclusion Altera Corporation January 2005 1.5-V Device Altera Cyclone FPGA (1.5 V) Regulator 2.5-V Device 1.5-V Device 2.5-V Device With the proliferation of multiple voltage levels in systems, it is important to design a voltage system that can support a low-power device like Cyclone devices. Designers must consider key elements of the PCB, such as power supplies, regulators, power consumption, and board layout when successfully designing a system that incorporates the lowvoltage Cyclone family of devices. 1423 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 References References Linear Technology Corporation. Application Note 35 (Step Down Switching Regulators). Milpitas: Linear Technology Corporation, 1989. Linear Technology Corporation. LT1573 LT1573 Data Sheet (Low Dropout Regulator Driver). Milpitas: Linear Technology Corporation, 1997. Linear Technology Corporation. LT1083/LT1084/LT1085 LT1083/LT1084/LT1085 Data Sheet (7.5 A, 5 A, 3 A Low Dropout Positive Adjustable Regulators). Milpitas: Linear Technology Corporation, 1994. Linear Technology Corporation. LTC1649 LTC1649 Data Sheet (3.3V Input High Power Step-Down Switching Regulator Controller). Milpitas: Linear Technology Corporation, 1998. Linear Technology Corporation. LTC1775 LTC1775 Data Sheet (High Power No Rsense Current Mode Synchronous Step-Down Switching Regulator). Milpitas: Linear Technology Corporation, 1999. Intersil Corporation. EL7551C EL7551C Data Sheet (Monolithic 1 Amp DC:DC StepDown Regulator). Milpitas: Intersil Corporation, 2002. Intersil Corporation. EL7564C EL7564C Data Sheet (Monolithic 4 Amp DC:DC StepDown Regulator). Milpitas: Intersil Corporation, 2002. Intersil Corporation. EL7556BC EL7556BC Data Sheet (Integrated Adjustable 6 Amp Synchronous Switcher). Milpitas: Intersil Corporation, 2001. Intersil Corporation. EL7562C EL7562C Data Sheet (Monolithic 2 Amp DC:DC StepDown Regulator). Milpitas: Intersil Corporation, 2002. Intersil Corporation. EL7563C EL7563C Data Sheet (Monolithic 4 Amp DC:DC StepDown Regulator). Milpitas: Intersil Corporation, 2002. 1424 Stratix Device Handbook, Volume 2 Altera Corporation January 2005