How Bootstrap Capacitors Work in Switching Regulators
How Bootstrap Capacitors Work in Switching Regulators
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Switching regulators are susceptible to a particular form of ine�ciency known as switching
losses. One of the challenges in switching regulator design is to balance the various sources
of radiated and conducted noise against system complexity and switching/conduction ×
losses. Simple tricks like running at higher frequency, interleaving/multi-phasing, and using
better MOSFETs will help increase power conversion e�ciency. Another simple option is use
of a capacitor in the switching stage, also known as a bootstrap capacitor.
This capacitor is often connected across two terminals on integrated switching regulators TOP
that include a gate drive stage integrated onto the semiconductor die. If you are building a
DC/DC converter from discrete components, a bootstrap capacitor can also be used to
provide reduced switching losses.
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The placement across the switching node and driver input ensures that the gate driver
voltage remains above the input voltage during switching. This ensures that the high-side
MOSFET remains fully ON during switching, which decreases switching losses. This works
because the reference voltage for the bootstrap capacitor is the switching node, not the
ground node.
Bootstrapping Process
Bootstrap capacitors operate in three stages:
Charging phase: When the low-side MOSFET is ON (high-side is OFF), the bootstrap
capacitor charges. One side of the bootstrap capacitor is connected to a fixed voltage source
(usually the input voltage or a derived voltage), and the other side is connected to the
switching node, which is essentially ground when the low-side MOSFET is on. So, the
bootstrap capacitor charges up to the fixed voltage.
Bootstrap phase: When the low-side MOSFET turns OFF and the high-side MOSFET turns
ON, the switching node voltage rises. As long as the capacitor maintains a nearly constant
voltage, the voltage seen at the other terminal of the bootstrap capacitor (connected to the
high-side gate driver) also rises. The driver rails out at this elevated voltage as it drives the
high-side MOSFET gate.
Discharging phase: The bootstrap capacitor discharges slowly to supply the necessary gate
charge to the high-side MOSFET. The high-side MOSFET remains ON as long as the bootstrap
capacitor can maintain a voltage high enough to keep it in saturation. ×
This process repeats with each switching cycle as the high-side and low-side MOSFETs
switch ON and OFF.
This exact amount of charge required (QG) depends on the construction of the MOSFET and
it is generally determined through measurement in PMICs or DC/DC converter ICs. Typically it
will be on the order of 1-10 nF for integrated DC/DC converters, but it could be much greater
for physically larger discrete power MOSFETs. The ID term is the discharge current from the
capacitor during switching between HIGH and LOW sides, D is the duty cycle, and f is the
switching frequency.
VBS is the minimum value the gate voltage is required to be above the input voltage during
switching to maintain the MOSFET in saturation. Typically, datasheets for DC/DC converter
ICs will provide a lower limit on the capacitor as a function of VBS. You may also find some ×
measurement data in the datasheet that provides a better idea of expected performance.
The above calculation assumes that the bootstrap capacitor has minimal inductance and
resistance along the discharge path and in the body of the capacitor. Therefore, bootstrap
capacitors are usually placed as small-case SMD ceramic capacitor (e.g., 0402 with C0G or
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X7R dielectric). For integrated buck converters that have BOOT pins, the inductance and
resistance will almost always be minimal along the discharge path as long as the bootstrap
capacitor is placed close to the BOOT pin.
No matter how you want to control power sequencing and on-o� timing for your devices,
you can create and evaluate your circuits with the complete set of simulation tools in PSpice
from Cadence. PSpice users can access a powerful SPICE simulator as well as specialty
design capabilities like model creation, graphing and analysis tools, and much more.
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