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Protecting and Powering Automotive Electronics Systems With No Switching Noise and 99.9% Efficiency - Analog Devices

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ing Noise and 99.9% Efficiency | Analog Devices

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Protecting and Powering Automotive Electronics


Systems with No Switching Noise and 99.9%
Efficiency
by David Megaw
Introduction
Powering automotive electronics systems can be challenging due to requirements of high reliability while contending with a
relatively unstable battery voltage. The variety of electrical and mechanical systems that interface with a vehicle’s battery
can cause wild voltage excursions in the nominal 12 V supply. In reality, 12 V can vary from –14 V to +35 V for extended
periods of time and experience voltage spikes with extremes ranging from +150 V to –220 V. Some of these surges and
transients arise from everyday use, others from fault conditions or human error. Regardless of cause, the damage they can
Give Feedback

produce in a vehicle’s electronics system can be difficult to diagnose and expensive to fix.
The experience of automakers over the last century has led to a catalog of electrical conditions and transients that are known
to disrupt operation and cause damage. The International Organization for Standardization (ISO) has compiled this industry
knowledge into the ISO 16750-2 and ISO 7637-2 specifications for road vehicles. At a minimum, the power supply for an
automotive electronic control unit (ECU) should survive these conditions without damage. For critical systems, functionality
and tolerances must be maintained. This requires that the power supply regulates the output voltage through the transient to
preserve ECU operation. Ideally, a complete power solution avoids the need for fuses, minimizes power dissipation, and
features low quiescent current to support always-on systems without draining the battery.
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ISO 16750-2 Conditions for Automotive Electronics Systems


Analog Devices has several publications covering the ISO 7637-2 and ISO 16750-2 specifications in detail, along with how to
simulate them using LTspice®.1,2,3,4
In its latest iteration, the ISO 7637-2 electromagnetic compatibility specification focuses on high amplitude (>100 V), short
duration (150 ns to 2 ms) transients from relatively high impedance sources (2 Ω to 50 Ω). These voltage spikes can often be
mitigated with passive components. Figure 1 shows ISO 7637-2 pulse 1 as defined and with an added 330 µF bypass
capacitor. The capacitance reduces the spike’s amplitude from –150 V to –16 V, well within the range of reverse battery
protection circuitry. ISO 7367-2 pulses 2a, 3a, and 3b have significantly lower energy than pulse 1 and require less
capacitance to suppress.

Figure 1. ISO 7637-2: pulse 1 with and without a 330 µF bypass capacitor.

ISO 16750-2 focuses on longer duration pulses from low impedance sources. These transients cannot easily be filtered and
frequently require active, regulator-based solutions. Some of the more challenging tests include the load dump (test 4.6.4),
the reverse battery condition (test 4.7), the superimposed alternating voltage test (test 4.4), and the engine starting profile
(test 4.6.3). Figure 2 gives a visual overview of these test pulses. The variety of conditions presented in ISO 16750-2, along
with the voltage and current requirements of the ECU, frequently require a combination of approaches in order to satisfy
them all.

Figure 2. Overview of some of the tougher ISO 16750-2 tests.

Load Dump
A load dump (ISO 16750-2: test 4.6.4) is a severe overvoltage transient that models a battery disconnect while the alternator
is sourcing substantial current. The peak voltage during a load dump is classified as either suppressed or unsuppressed,
depending on whether avalanche diodes are used on the outputs of the 3-phase alternator. A suppressed load dump pulse is
limited to 35 V, whereas an unsuppressed pulse peak ranges from 79 V to 101 V. In either case, it can take up to 400 ms to
recover due to the large amount of magnetic energy stored in the alternator’s stator windings. While most automakers utilize
avalanche diodes, increasing reliability demands are driving some manufacturers to require that ECUs satisfy peak load dump
Give Feedback

voltages approaching that of the unsuppressed case.


One solution for facing load dumps is adding a transient voltage suppressor (TVS) diode to locally clamp the ECU supply. A
more compact and tighter tolerance approach is to use an active surge stopper, such as the LTC4364, which linearly controls
a series N-channel MOSFET to clamp the maximum output voltage to a user-programmed level (for example, 27 V). Surge
stoppers add the ability to disconnect the output, allowing programmable current limit and undervoltage lockout, and often
provide reverse battery protection when back-to-back NFETs are used.

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The concern with any linearly regulated power device such as a surge stopper is the potential for significant power
dissipation in the N-channel MOSFET(s) when limiting the output voltage during a load dump, or when limiting current with a
shorted output. The safe operating area (SOA) constraints of the power MOSFET ultimately limit the maximum current
possible with a surge stopper. It also puts a time limit (typically set with a programmable timer pin) on how long regulation
can be maintained before the N-channel MOSFET must be shut off to avoid damage. These SOA imposed limitations become
more acute at higher operating voltages, making surge stopper use trickier for 24 V and 48 V systems.
A more scalable approach is to use a buck regulator capable of operating with a 42 V input, such as the LT8640S. A
switching regulator doesn’t have the MOSFET SOA limitations of a linear regulator, but it is certainly more complex. The
efficiency of a buck regulator allows for very high current operation, and its top switch permits output disconnect and current
limiting. Concerns about buck regulator quiescent current have been put to rest with the latest generation of parts that draw
only a few microamps while in regulation under no load conditions. Switching noise has also improved substantially with
Silent Switcher® technology and spread spectrum frequency modulation techniques.
Additionally, some buck regulators are able to operate at 100% duty cycle such that the top switch is on continuously,
passing the input voltage to the output through the inductor. Switching operation is triggered during overvoltage or
overcurrent conditions to limit output voltage or current, respectively. These buck regulators, such as the LTC7862, act as
switching surge stoppers, achieving low noise, low loss operation while still retaining the robustness of a switch-mode power
supply.
Reverse Voltage
A reverse voltage condition (also known as a reverse battery condition) occurs when battery terminals or jumper cables are
connected backward due to operator error. The relevant ISO 16750-2 pulse (test 4.7) applies –14 V to the DUT for 60 second
durations, repeatedly. Some manufacturers add their own dynamic versions of this test where the part is initially powered (for
example, VIN = 10.8 V) before a reverse bias (–4 V) is abruptly applied.
A quick survey of data sheets shows that few ICs are designed to tolerate negative biases, with IC absolute minimum pin
voltages typically limited to –0.3 V. Voltages more than a diode below ground can cause excessive current flow through
internal junctions such as ESD protection devices as well as body diodes of power MOSFETs. Polarized bypass capacitors
such as aluminum electrolytics may also be damaged during the reverse battery condition.
A Schottky diode can prevent reverse currents, but this approach leads to significant power loss at higher forward currents in
normal operation. A simple protection scheme based on series P-channel MOSFET shown in Figure 3 reduces this loss, but
may not work well at low input voltages (for example, engine start) due to the device threshold voltage. A more efficient
approach is to use an ideal diode controller, such as the LTC4376, which drives a series N-channel MOSFET that cuts off
input voltages below ground. In normal operation, an ideal diode controller regulates the source to drain the voltage of the N-
channel MOSFET to 30 mV or less, reducing forward voltage drop and power dissipation by more than an order of magnitude
compared to a Schottky diode.

Figure 3. Different approaches to solving difficult ISO 16750-2 tests.

Superimposed Alternating Voltage


The superimposed alternating voltage test (ISO 16750-2: test 4.4) models the impact of the ac output of the vehicle’s
alternator. As the name implies, a sinusoidal signal is superimposed on the battery rail with peak-to-peak amplitude of 1 V, 2
Give Feedback

V, or 4 V, depending on severity level classification. For all severity levels, the maximum input voltage is 16 V. The frequency
of the sinusoid is swept logarithmically from 50 Hz to 25 kHz and then back to 50 Hz over 120 seconds and repeated a total
of five times.
This test causes large amplitude current and voltage swings in any connected filter network with a resonance below 25 kHz.
It can also cause problems for switching regulators where loop bandwidth limitations make it a struggle to regulate through
high frequency input signals. One solution is an intermediate rectifying element such as a power Schottky diode, but as with
reverse voltage protection, this is a poor way to solve the problem.

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An ideal diode controller will not work here like it did for reverse voltage protection because it cannot switch the N-channel
MOSFET sufficiently fast to keep up with the input. The limiting factor is the gate pull-up strength, which is typically limited to
20 µA or so by an internal charge pump. While the ideal diode controller can quickly turn the MOSFET off, turn on is painfully
slow, unsuitable for rectification of anything beyond very low frequencies.
A more elegant approach is to use the LT8672 active rectifier controller, which can toggle an N-channel MOSFET fast enough
to rectify the input voltage at frequencies up to 100 kHz. An active rectifier controller is an ideal diode controller with two
important additions: a large reservoir of charge boosted up from the input voltage and a powerful gate driver to toggle the N-
channel MOSFET both on and off quickly. This method can reduce power loss by more than 90% compared to a Schottky.
The LT8672 also protects downstream circuitry from a reverse battery condition just as an ideal diode controller would.
Starting Profile
The engine starting profile (ISO 16750-2: test 4.6.3) is an extreme undervoltage transient, sometimes referred to as the cold
crank pulse because the worst-case battery droop occurs at lower temperatures. Specifically, when the starter turns over,
the 12 V battery voltage can momentarily drop to 8 V, 6 V, 4.5 V, or 3 V, depending on severity level classification (I, IV, II, III,
respectively).
In some systems, a low dropout (LDO) linear regulator or switching buck regulator is sufficient to allow power rails to ride
through this transient, provided that ECU voltages are less than the lowest input voltage. For example, if the highest ECU
output voltage is 5 V, and it must satisfy severity level IV (minimum input voltage of 6 V), then a regulator with a dropout
voltage less than 1 V is enough. The lowest voltage segment of an engine starting profile lasts for only 15 ms to 20 ms, so a
rectifying element (Schottky diode, ideal diode controller, active rectifier controller) followed by a large bypass capacitor may
be able to ride through this portion of the pulse if the voltage headroom briefly dips below the regulator dropout.
If, however, the ECU must support voltages higher than the lowest input voltage, then a boost regulator is required. Boost
regulators can efficiently maintain a 12 V output voltage from inputs less than 3 V at high current levels. There is one problem
with a boost regulator, though: the diode path from input to output prevents disconnect, so current is not naturally limited at
startup or due to a short. To prevent current runaway, specialized boost regulators, such as the LTC3897 controller,
incorporate a surge-stopper front end to allow output disconnect and current limiting, as well as provide reverse voltage
protection when back-to-back N-channel MOSFETs are used. This solution can address the load dump, engine start, and
reverse battery conditions with a single integrated circuit, but available current is limited by the SOA of the surge-stopper
MOSFET.
A 4-switch buck-boost regulator lifts this constraint by combining a synchronous buck regulator and a synchronous boost
regulator through a shared inductor. This approach can satisfy both the load dump and engine starting profile tests without
MOSFET SOA limitations on current level or pulse duration, while retaining the ability to disconnect the output and limit
current.
The switching operation of a buck-boost regulator depends on the relationship between the input and output voltages. If the
input is significantly higher than the output, the boost top switch turns on continuously while the buck power stage steps
down the input. Similarly, when the input is significantly lower than the output, the buck top switch turns on continuously
while the boost power stage steps up the output. When the input and output are roughly equal (within 10% to 25%), the buck
and boost power stages switch simultaneously in an interleaved fashion. In this way, efficiency is maximized in the various
switching regions (buck, buck-boost, boost) by limiting switching to only the MOSFETs required for regulation for input
voltages above, roughly equal to, or below the output, respectively.
ISO 16750-2 Solution Summary
Figure 3 summarizes the various solutions to addressing the load dump, reverse input voltage, superimposed alternating
voltage, and engine starting profile tests along with the pros and cons of each approach. Several key take-aways begin to
emerge:
A series N-channel MOSFET with its drain facing the input is extremely desirable because it can be used to limit current
and disconnect the output whether it’s used as a switch (for example, in a buck power stage) or linearly controlled (for
example, in a surge stopper).
In the case of reverse input protection and superimposed alternating voltage, using an N-channel MOSFET as the
rectifying element (source facing the input) significantly reduces power loss and voltage drop compared to a Schottky
diode.
A switch-mode power supply is preferable to a linear regulator because it alleviates the reliability concerns and output
Give Feedback

current restrictions that come with operating within the SOA of the power device. It can regulate at input voltage
extremes indefinitely, whereas linear regulator and passive solutions have inherent time limitations that complicate
design.
A boost regulator may or may not be necessary depending on the severity classification of the starting profile and the
details of the ECU (what’s the highest voltage it must provide).
If boost regulation is called for, then a 4-switch buck-boost regulator combines the above desirable traits into a single part. It
can efficiently regulate through severe undervoltage and overvoltage transients at high current levels for extended periods of
time. This makes it the most robust and straightforward approach, from an applications standpoint, despite the increased
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design complexity. Nevertheless, a typical 4-switch buck-boost regulator has some drawbacks. For one, reverse battery
protection is not naturally provided and must be addressed with additional circuitry.
The primary shortcoming of the 4-switch buck-boost regulator is that it spends much of its operational life in the lower
efficiency, noisier buck-boost switching region. When the input voltage is nearly equal to the output (VIN ~ VOUT) all four N-
channel MOSFETs are actively switching to maintain regulation. Efficiency drops as a result of increased switching losses and
application of maximum gate drive current. Radiated and conducted EMI performance suffer in this region as both the buck
and boost power-stage hot loops are active and the regulator input and output currents are discontinuous.
A 4-switch buck-boost regulator can regulate through occasional large amplitude undervoltage and overvoltage transients,
but at the price of operating with high quiescent current, lower efficiency, and increased noise in the far more common,
nominal conversion region.
Pass-Thru Operating Mode Brings High Efficiency and EMI Performance Buck-Boost Region
The LT8210 is a 4-switch buck-boost dc-to-dc controller that can operate conventionally with a fixed output voltage and also
features a new Pass-ThruTM operating mode (Figure 4), which eliminates the switching losses and EMI through a
programmable input voltage window. It operates from 2.8 V to 100 V, allowing it to regulate through the most severe battery
drop during engine start to the peak amplitude of an unsuppressed load dump. It comes with built-in reverse battery
protection to –40 V, which is implemented with the addition of a single N-channel MOSFET (DG in Figure 5).

Figure 4. Buck-boost controller with Pass-Thru mode solves many of the problems imposed by automotive standards tests.

Figure 5. This 3 V to 100 V input buck-boost controller operates with 8 V to 17 V Pass-Thru outputs.

In Pass-Thru mode, the output voltage is regulated to the edges of a voltage window when the input voltage is outside the
window. The top of the window and the bottom are programmed via the FB2 and FB1 resistor dividers. When the input
voltage is within this window, the top switches (A and D) turn on continuously, passing the input voltage directly to the
output. In this nonswitching state, the total LT8210 quiescent current drops to tens of microamps. The absence of switching
means no EMI and no switching losses, enabling efficiencies of greater than 99.9%.
Give Feedback

For those who want the best of both worlds, the LT8210 allows transitioning between its different operating modes on-the-fly
by toggling the MODE1 and MODE2 pins. In other words, the LT8210 can operate as a conventional buck-boost regulator with
fixed output voltage (in CCM, DCM, or Burst Mode™) in some situations and then change to Pass-Thru mode as the
conditions in the application change. This can be a useful feature for always-on systems and in start-stop applications.

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Pass-Thru Performance
The Pass-Thru solution in Figure 5 passes the input to output in the window between 8 V and 17 V. When the input voltage is
above the Pass-Thru window, the LT8210 bucks it down to a regulated 17 V output. If the input drops below 8 V, the LT8210
boosts the output to 8 V. As a protection feature, switching operation is triggered within the Pass-Thru window to control
current if either the inductor current limit or programmed average current limit (via the IMON pin) are exceeded.
Figure 6, Figure 7, and Figure 8 show the response of the LT8210 circuit to the load dump, reverse voltage, and starting
profile tests, respectively. Figure 9 and Figure 10 demonstrate the efficiency improvement and low current operation possible
while in the Pass-Thru window (it’s amazing how efficient doing nothing can be). Figure 11 shows the dynamic transition
between Pass-Thru mode and CCM operation. An LTspice simulation of this circuit along with sped up versions of the
toughest ISO 16750-2 test pulses is available at analog.com/media/en/simulation-models/LTspice-demo-
circuits/LT8210_AutomotivePassThru.asc.

Figure 6. Pass-Thru response to unsuppressed load dump.

Figure 7. LT8210 response to reverse battery condition.


Give Feedback

Figure 8. Pass-Thru response to engine cold crank.

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Figure 9. Efficiency for CCM and Pass-Thru operation.

Figure 10. No load input current in Pass-Thru mode (VIN = 12 V).

Figure 11. Dynamic transition between Pass-Thru and CCM operation.

Conclusion
When designing a power supply for an automotive electronic system, the LT8210 4-switch buck-boost dc-to-dc controller
offers a superior solution with its 2.8 V to 100 V input operating range, built-in reverse battery protection, and its new Pass-
Thru operating mode. Pass-Thru mode improves upon buck-boost operation, achieving no switching noise, no switching
losses, and ultralow quiescent current while regulating the output to a user-programmed window rather than a fixed voltage.
The output voltage minimum and maximum values are bounded during large amplitude transients such as load dump and cold
crank without MOSFET SOA concerns, or the current or timing limitations that come from linear solutions.
Give Feedback

The novel LT8210 control scheme results in clean and fast transitions between the different switching regions (boost, buck-
boost, buck, and nonswitching) allowing it to regulate through large signal, high frequency ac voltage on the input. For more
details, please refer to the video at analog.com/en/education/educationlibrary/videos/6136638907001.html. The LT8210 can
be toggled between Pass-Thru operation and conventional, fixed output voltage, buck-boost operating modes (CCM, DCM,
or Burst Mode) while running, and the fixed output can be set to any voltage within the Pass-Thru window (for example, VOUT
= 12 V for an 8 V-to-16 V window). This flexibility allows the user to alternate between Pass-Thru and normal buck-boost
operation to trade the low noise, low IQ, high efficiency operation of Pass-Thru mode for the tighter regulation and improved
transient response in CCM, DCM, or Burst Mode.

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References
1 Dan Eddleman. “Low Quiescent Current Surge Stopper: Robust Automotive Supply Protection for ISO 7637-2 and ISO
16750-2 Compliance.” LT Journal of Analog Innovation, January 2017.
2 Christian Kueck. “Distilled Automotive Electronics Design.” Analog Devices, Inc., April 2013.
3 Bin Wu and Zhongming Yi. “Comprehensive Power Supply System Designs for Harsh Automotive Environments Consume
Minimal Space, Preserve Battery Charge, Feature Low EMI.” Analog Dialogue, Vol. 53, August 2019.
4 Dan Eddleman. “LTspice: Models of ISO 7637-2 and ISO 16750-2 Transients.” Analog Devices, Inc., 2019.

ISO 7637-2:2011. International Organization of Standardization, March 2011.


ISO 16750-2:2012. International Organization of Standardization, November 2012.
Author
David Megaw
David Megaw is a Senior Design Engineer with ADI.

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