MOSFET Synchronous Rectifiers Require Attention to Gate Charge
Dec 1, 2001 12:00 PM
By John W. Worman, Fairchild Semiconductor, Mountaintop, Pa.
MOSFET synchronous converter input capacitance affects performance.
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The switching speed of a power MOSFET charge-controlled device depends on the speed with which an associated gate driver circuit can charge its input capacitance. For the last 20 years, many excellent papers have addressed MOSFET switching performance as a function of first quadrant device capacitance and gate charge
Fig. 1 illustrates a typical synchronous rectifier used in today's low voltage dc-dc converter. To reduce voltage drops across the rectifying elements and increase total converter efficiency, power MOSFETs Q1 and Q2 replace the traditional rectifier diodes.
Fig. 2 compares the voltage drop across various rectifying elements as a function of temperature for Schottky diodes and MOSFETs. This graph illustrates why it's desirable to replace passive diodes with active transistors, especially for dc-dc converters with very low output voltages and high currents. A typical silicon rectifier will have a 25°C forward drop on the order of 0.6V, declining at a rate of 1.7 mV/°C. A typical Schottky diode will have a 25°C forward drop on the order of 0.33V, declining at a rate of 1.6 mV/°C. However, the ISL9N310 Power MOSFET (at ½ rated current, 17.5A) has a conduction drop of 0.175V, decreasing at a rate of 56μV/°C. The decreasing voltage drop across the rectifying element directly relates to increased converter efficiency.
As shown in Fig. 1, synchronous rectification requires a gate drive circuit to control the MOSFET switches. Because the MOSFET switches are charge-coupled devices, this gate driver must supply a current capable of charging the MOSFET's input capacitance. The charging current and magnitude determine the charging rate of the device capacitance. These two variables control the turn-on and turn-off times of the MOSFET switch.
Second Quadrant Capacitance
To evaluate the gate drive requirements during synchronous rectification, you must study first and second quadrant capacitance. MOSFET capacitances change as a function of drain voltage, V
Enhancing the channel during negative drain voltage creates an effective input capacitance C
To plot Fig. 4, use:
Where:
Q
V
Third Quadrant Gate Charge
Fig. 5, above, plots third quadrant gate charge, Q
Although 35A represent the maximum continuous drain current in the ISL9N310 data sheet, not all applications operate at maximum drain current. Therefore, we address the specified drain current(s) on a typical data sheet. To answer this we evaluated drain currents of 5A to 35A in 5A steps and found that the gate-voltage wave-forms for each current overlaid each other perfectly. This means the effective input capacitance, C
Specifications of the ISL9N310AD3 gate-threshold voltage, V
Because the effective input capacitance, C
References
Severns, Rudy, Armijos, Jack., MOSPOWER Applications Handbook, Siliconix Incorporated, 1984. ISBN: 0930519000.
Ibid.
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