W-Gated Trench MOSFET Offers Efficient DC-DC Converters
Sep 1, 2003 12:00 PM
By Mohamed Darwish, Vishay Siliconix, Santa Clara, Calif.
The new W-gated Trench MOSFET offers better trade-off between on-resistance and gate-drain capacitance.
News & Features From Auto Electronics
Committed to improving hybrid electric cars
New Motors for Hybrid Vehicles
Battery Firms Battle for Hybrid Hegemony
Innovative Bipolar Plates for Fuel Cells
See More Headlines
Top Articles
Exploring Current Transformer Applications
Ultracapacitor Technology Powers Electronic Circuits
Buck-Converter Design Demystified
Sensorless Motor Control Simplifies Washer Drives
PET Resources
Buyer's Guide
Conferences
Engineering Jobs
Power Electronics Events
Rent Our Lists
Spotlight on Digital Power
Power demands of computing and telecom applications are driving rapid developments in semiconductor components for power conversion. By looking at next-generation microprocessor requirements — a higher load current slew rate of 2A/ns, an operating frequency of multi-GHz, and a lower input voltage of about 1V — it's easy to see the need for efficient dc-dc conversion.
Optimized W-gated Trench MOSFETs (WFETs) are answering the call. These devices achieve a control switch with a low silicon R
The synchronous buck converter is the most commonly used power stage for the distributed power architecture, The converter in Fig. 1 uses a high-side control switch (Q1), a low-side synchronous switch (Q2), and L and C as a filter. The power losses of the MOSFETs in a buck converter are the components that determine efficiency performance.
The MOSFET of choice for the control and synchronous switches is the trench-gated U-groove MOSFET (UMOSFET)becaue of its ultra-low on-resistance. Lower on-resistance is normally achieved by using higher cell density trench MOSFETs. This presents a challenge in scaling a conventional UMOSFET since its structure suffers from an inherent high gate-drain or Miller capacitance C
The new W-shaped gate trench MOSFET (WFET) addresses this dilemma. The WFET shown in Fig. 4 uses a thin gate oxide along the vertical walls and a thicker oxide at the bottom of the trench. The improvement over state-of-the-art structures is achieved by shaping the gate such that the thicker gate oxide at the bottom of the trench is self-aligned to the P-body/N-epi junction with a gradual transition to a thinner oxide along the trench walls and corners, resulting in a W-shaped gate. A slightly deeper P-body junction than the trench depth results in a lower capacitance as the source-drain voltage starts to increase. The result is a device that combines low specific on-resistance and low switching losses — which translates directly into higher efficiency when the WFET is used as the control and/or synchronous MOSFET in a synchronous buck converter circuit.
In a synchronous buck converter, the power losses in the control MOSFET are given by Equation 1 and are the sum of the losses due to conduction, switching, gate drive, and the loss associated with the output charge:
P
(Eq. 1)
The requirement to minimize conduction losses has driven further reductions in specific on-resistance and the increase in cell density or scaling cell pitch. However, reducing switching and drive losses requires minimizing gate-drain capacitance C
P
(Eq. 2)
where Q
As you can see from Fig. 1, a rapid change in the drain voltage of Q2, resulting from the turn-on of Q1, may result in the turn-on of Q2. To avoid this effect, the ratio of Q
WFET Optimization
Control MOSFET : As a control switch, the WFET has a low R
WFET Synchronous MOSFET: You can also optimize the WFET for use as a synchronous switch. Using the 2.4µm cell pitch, a high cell density greater than 100M cells/in
Synchronous Buck dc-dc Converter Efficiency: The efficiency vs. output current of a PWM switch-mode, synchronous, 4-four-phase, dc-dc buck converter with 19V V
The WFET Advantage
The trade-off between on-resistance and gate-drain capacitance in WFET provides improved control and synchronous switch characteristics. With optimized devices achieving a control switch with a low silicon R
For more information on this article, CIRCLE 335 on Reader Service Card
More on Buck Converters
• Buck-Converter Design Demystified• Optimizing Voltage Selection in Buck Converters
• Power Conversion Synthesis Part 1: Buck Converter Design
• Improving Efficiency in Synchronous Buck Converters

