Patent · US Expired

Switching DC-to-DC converter with discontinuous pulse skipping and continuous operating modes without external sense resistor

US6396252B1 · kind B1 · utility

109Cited by
3References
45Claims
0Family size

Assignee

Inventors

Key dates

Filing dateDec 14, 2000
Grant dateMay 28, 2002
Priority date
Expiry dateDec 14, 2020

Classification

  • Technology area (CPC Y)Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies
  • CPC primaryY02B70/10
  • WIPO fieldElectrical machinery, apparatus, energy
  • WIPO sectorElectrical engineering

Abstract

A switching DC-to-DC converter having at least one power channel including an inductor and a controller which generates at least one power switch control signal for at least one power switch of each power channel. The converter is configured to operate in a continuous mode when the inductor current remains above zero, to enter a discontinuous pulse skipping mode of operation when the inductor current falls to zero (which occurs when the load current is below a threshold value), and to leave the discontinuous pulse skipping mode and resume continuous mode operation when the inductor current rises above zero. The main difference between the continuous and discontinuous pulse skipping modes is that in the continuous mode, a power switch has a duty cycle determined by a feedback signal indicative of the converter's output potential Vout (so that the duty cycle is independent of the current drawn from the converter by the load), and in the discontinuous pulse skipping mode the power switch has a duty cycle which is the longer of a minimum duty cycle and a discontinuous (non-pulse-skipping) mode duty cycle. The discontinuous pulse skipping mode is more efficient than the continuous mode …

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.