Maker Pro
Maker Pro

Low RDSon Logic CMOS Gate

  • Thread starter Klaus Kragelund
  • Start date
K

Klaus Kragelund

Jan 1, 1970
0
Hi

I need a CMOS gate with low voltage drop at about 30mA current source and sink. The tiny logic NL27WZ14 has 600mV drop at 32mA which equates to 18ohm RDS on.

I am searching for a device with less than 5-10 ohms and it would need to be ok to parallel to get lower resistance. Also, it must not have to much crossover shoot-through (so probably schmitt trigger type) and must have low dissipation at high operational frequency (1-10MHz)

Any one have a part in mind?

Thanks

Klaus
 
K

Klaus Kragelund

Jan 1, 1970
0
I don't think that will fix shoot-thru. 'HC14 only fixes slow inputs,

so maybe the simple-minded solution is to simply slow down the input

to get firm turn-off of drive-low before drive-high (and vice-versa)

is activated... say take 10-20ns to get thru the hysteresis ?:)



Or maybe a 1/2-H bridge driven by non-overlapping drives... as

demonstrated recently with my delay block?

Been through some posts, but did not find it. Can you point me in the rightdirection? :)

Regards

Klaus
 
F

Fred Bartoli

Jan 1, 1970
0
Klaus Kragelund a écrit :
Hi

I need a CMOS gate with low voltage drop at about 30mA current source and sink. The tiny logic NL27WZ14 has 600mV drop at 32mA which equates to 18ohm RDS on.

I am searching for a device with less than 5-10 ohms and it would need to be ok to parallel to get lower resistance. Also, it must not have to much crossover shoot-through (so probably schmitt trigger type) and must have low dissipation at high operational frequency (1-10MHz)

Any one have a part in mind?

Thanks

Klaus

Mucho thanks for posting this...

In an attempt to answer I had a look at a recent design and noticed that
a 5V powered LVC14 escaped all the design reviews :-(

It survived all the stress test: 27MHz switching, with PCB temp=100°C
while driving a 250pF Ciss Mosfet...

How did you know ?-)
 
K

Klaus Kragelund

Jan 1, 1970
0
Use something like an HC14, with one section buffering the input, then

driving several other sections, up to 5, in parallel.



More extreme on speed - sub ns edges - would be an NL37WZ17US, again

with one section buffering the input to drive the other two.

I found maybe a slightly better one, the NC7SZ14. The device lists CPD of 24 (Power dissipation capacitance, but no information on the unit. Icc = Cpd * V * f.

(page 5 of http://www.fairchildsemi.com/ds/NC/NC7SZ14.pdf)

I guess it's in pC (pico coloumb), which corresponds to 100uA/MHz.

Regards

Klaus
 
W

whit3rd

Jan 1, 1970
0
I need a CMOS gate with low voltage drop at about 30mA current source and sink. The tiny logic NL27WZ14 has 600mV drop at 32mA which equates to 18ohm RDS on.

I am searching for a device with less than 5-10 ohms

One can use discrete complementary MOSFETs to make a CMOS-like inverter,
of course. Ferrite beads can help with the shoot-through problem, your
frequency of interest seems low enough not to care. It may matter what
voltage you're powering from, as well. At 5V, there's more options than
at 2V.
 
K

Klaus Kragelund

Jan 1, 1970
0
This is the way I generate precise delays (on-chip)...



http://www.analog-innovations.com/SED/DelayCircuitForNarrowPulseWidths.pdf



This delayed signal is then used to create non-overlapping drives for

such things as full-H bridges, and commutating switches used in

synchronous rectification and integrate control loops.



Analysis is left as an exercise for the student ;-)



Hints:



(1) These are 10ps inverters (TSMC 0.18u process)

(2) This is internal to a monolithic chip, so no ESD to get in your

way, so left end of the cap flys above VDDD and below GNDD without

clamping or consequence.



This snap-shot is from a chip I designed last fall when I did an

extended stay :)-) on Long Island and met Martin Riddle.



Designed entirely on my laptop, the chip worked perfectly to

specifications first pass thru the foundry, as do ALL of my designs...

I never do "designs" without component values >:)



Klaus, I'll see if I can excise a clip showing how it inputs into the

H-bridge without breaking any NDA restrictions.



Is your posted E-mail address valid?

Hi Jim

Thank you for taking time to elaborate on this ;-)

The email is:

[email protected]

It is valid and hotmail spamfilter works, I hardly get spam any more...

Regards

Klaus
 
K

Klaus Kragelund

Jan 1, 1970
0
Klaus Kragelund a écrit :




Mucho thanks for posting this...



In an attempt to answer I had a look at a recent design and noticed that

a 5V powered LVC14 escaped all the design reviews :-(



It survived all the stress test: 27MHz switching, with PCB temp=100°C

while driving a 250pF Ciss Mosfet...



How did you know ?-)

That's a secret ;-)

Funny how some circuit work when they are not supposed to and other circuits that look clean and nice has "gotchas"....

Cheers

Klaus
 
K

Klaus Kragelund

Jan 1, 1970
0
One can use discrete complementary MOSFETs to make a CMOS-like inverter,

of course. Ferrite beads can help with the shoot-through problem, your

frequency of interest seems low enough not to care. It may matter what

voltage you're powering from, as well. At 5V, there's more options than

at 2V.

I have 3.3V, can make 5V if I need to. This is for a high efficiency device, so any powerloss is critical. Shoot through if a FET pair can easily go up to several amps, which won't be noticed if you are not looking.

Cheers

Klaus
 
F

Fred Bartoli

Jan 1, 1970
0
Klaus Kragelund a écrit :
I found maybe a slightly better one, the NC7SZ14. The device lists CPD of 24 (Power dissipation capacitance, but no information on the unit. Icc = Cpd * V * f.

(page 5 of http://www.fairchildsemi.com/ds/NC/NC7SZ14.pdf)

I guess it's in pC (pico coloumb), which corresponds to 100uA/MHz.

Regards

Klaus

The unit is pF.
Multiply by 1/2 Vsupply^2 and you have the energy quantum lost at each
switching.

Total power loss is PL = f x Cpd x Vsupply^2
 
N

Nico Coesel

Jan 1, 1970
0
Klaus Kragelund said:
Hi

I need a CMOS gate with low voltage drop at about 30mA current source and s=
ink. The tiny logic NL27WZ14 has 600mV drop at 32mA which equates to 18ohm =
RDS on.

Maybe look for a MOSFET driver chip.
 
Hi

I need a CMOS gate with low voltage drop at about 30mA current source andsink. The tiny logic NL27WZ14 has 600mV drop at 32mA which equates to 18ohm RDS on.

I am searching for a device with less than 5-10 ohms and it would need tobe ok to parallel to get lower resistance. Also, it must not have to much crossover shoot-through (so probably schmitt trigger type) and must have low dissipation at high operational frequency (1-10MHz)

Any one have a part in mind?

Thanks

Klaus

http://www.intersil.com/en/products...ches/switches-muxs-crosspoints/ISL43L210.html

(from John Devereux, earlier this year)

Break-before-make.

DigiKey had competing parts, too.
 
J

Jamie

Jan 1, 1970
0
John said:
But look at the capacitances! There's no free lunch.
Talking about Digikey, they getting any better at stocking more of what
they advertise? I have been leaning towards the other parts suppliers
lately..

Jamie
 
Maybe look for a MOSFET driver chip.

that was my first thought, something like fan3111, but..

datasheet doesn't say what the dropout is, it maybe a bit slow for
10MHz and who
knows how much power it will use

maybe a buffer/linedriver

-Lasse
 
If a CMOS gate's input is roughly midway between Vcc and ground, both
p-channel and n-channel fets can be partially turned on in the front
end. Current "shots through" the fets from Vcc to ground. That can
draw a lot of supply current and potentially heat up the chip. It
always happens briefly when a normal, fast input transitions, but it
can get much worse if an input transitions slowly, or parks at an
intermediate voltage. Schmitt-trigger gates are designed for slow
inputs, so generally have moderate peak shoot-through currents.

Paralleling Schmitts is interesting. At some input voltage, some of
the gates will see a "1" and some may see a "0", so their paralleled
outputs will fight one another and pull a *lot* of supply current.
Running the signal through one Schmitt section, and then driving a
bunch more sections in parallel, is safer.

We almost fried some Tiny Logic gates, powering them from +5 but
driving them from 3.3 volt logic from an FPGA. They got really hot.

HC or HCT ?

http://www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/sn74hct04.pdf
http://www.nxp.com/documents/data_sheet/74HC_HCT04.pdf

TI <3mA per pin at 2.4Vin
NXP <590uA at 2.9Vin

that shouldn't be a problem driven with a 3.3V output

-Lasse
 
W

whit3rd

Jan 1, 1970
0
I have 3.3V, can make 5V if I need to. This is for a high efficiency device, so any powerloss is critical. Shoot through if a FET pair can easily go up to several amps, which won't be noticed if you are not looking.

A dual MOSFET (P-channel/N-channel pair) like Rohm EM6M2 can easily handle the task.
If you add a couple of 2 ohm drain resistors, it limits the shoot-through to well under one
amp, but the output resistance only gets two ohms drop (still well below your 5 ohm
goal for 3.3V power supplies). Note the PFET has rather high capacitance, that's
required to get the low on-resistance.

For best shoot-through limit, it gets complicated (you need something more than
a logic drive, it takes turn-on delayed but turn-off prompt).
 
K

Klaus Kragelund

Jan 1, 1970
0
A dual MOSFET (P-channel/N-channel pair) like Rohm EM6M2 can easily handle the task.

If you add a couple of 2 ohm drain resistors, it limits the shoot-through to well under one

amp, but the output resistance only gets two ohms drop (still well below your 5 ohm

goal for 3.3V power supplies). Note the PFET has rather high capacitance, that's

required to get the low on-resistance.

...Snip..

The EM6M2 has 1nC of gate charge. Running that at 5V and 200kHz will consume 1mW. I was trying to reduce the gate charge losses by using a logic IC

On that subject, anyone know the value of the gate charge for a run-of-the-mill gate inside a chip?

Regards

Klaus
 
But look at the capacitances! There's no free lunch.

For sure there are higher Rds(on) parts with lower capacitances,
right? I was just throwing out an extreme example, since I'm an
extremist :).

I suspect the make-before-break convenience, integration, and
capacitances in other switches will be attractive.

I didn't have time to screen parts--I mostly have to post and run
these days.

James
 
This problem is greatly overstated.
While ago I tested static cross conduction of HCT04 gate powered at +5V.
The worst case was about 4mA, at 0.9V at the input.

Vladimir Vassilevsky
DSP and Mixed Signal Consultantwww.abvolt.com

I've destroyed 74AC parts that way. Smoked 'em.
 
I've destroyed 74AC parts that way. Smoked 'em.

HCT stuff isn't tuned for speed so has little crossover current (none,
ideally). AC logic is a whole different kettle. Better decouple AC gates
well. ;-)
 
Top