Minxiang Gong, Hua Chen, et al.
IEEE JSSC
This paper provides a comprehensive analysis and comparison between 3-level and double-step-down (DSD) integrated power converters, which are two of the most popular topologies for 48V-to-1V point-of-load conversion. Because DSD converters have two inductors, the 3-level topology in this study is also constructed with 2-phase interleaved operation (3L2P) to make the comparison fair. Same chip-area budget, loading conditions and ripples are also ensured, such that comparisons are made under similar bill-of-materials and power density to provide engineers a more practical view of the characteristics of both topologies. Theoretical analysis is provided with similarity in switching behaviors discovered. Transistor-level simulations are conducted in a 180-nm BCD and a commercially available enhancement-mode GaN processes, assuming all power FETs are integrated on-chip. The simulation results agree with our analysis. In conclusion, DSD converters can achieve an overall higher efficiency than 3-level converters at near-same conditions with same or smaller chip-area budget due to the much lower conduction loss. In addition, both topologies, especially the DSD, achieved significantly higher (up to 12%) efficiency in a 200-V GaN process compared to a 55-V BCD process despite being overrated (due to limited available options), because of the much lower switching loss. This makes GaN process worth considering for integrated high-ratio DC-DC converter designs even though the current fabrication cost will be higher.
Minxiang Gong, Hua Chen, et al.
IEEE JSSC
Arnab Neelim Mazumder, Jian Meng, et al.
IEEE JESTCS
Todd Takken, Andrew Ferencz, et al.
VLSI Circuits 2019
Xin Zhang, Andrew Ferencz, et al.
APEC 2017