SLVAFD0B may   2022  – september 2023 AM620-Q1 , AM623 , AM625 , AM625-Q1 , TPS65219 , TPS65219-Q1 , TPS65220

 

  1.   1
  2.   Abstract
  3.   Trademarks
  4. 1Introduction
  5. 2TPS65219 Overview
    1. 2.1 TPS65219 Functional Block Diagram
  6. 3TPS65219 Variants
    1. 3.1 TPS65219 NVMs for Industrial Applications
    2. 3.2 TPS65219-Q1 NVMs for Automotive Applications
  7. 4TPS6521905 User-Programmable NVM
  8. 5AM62x Core Voltage Selection
  9. 6VSYS Voltage Ramp
  10. 7Power Block Diagrams
    1. 7.1 TPS6521901 Powering AM62x
    2. 7.2 TPS6521902 Powering AM62x
    3. 7.3 TPS6521903 Powering AM62x
    4. 7.4 TPS6521904 Powering AM62x
    5. 7.5 TPS6521907 Powering AM62x
    6. 7.6 TPS6521908 Powering AM62x
    7. 7.7 TPS6521920W-Q1 Powering AM62x-Q1
  11. 8References
  12. 9Revision History

TPS6521901 Powering AM62x

VSYS = 5 V | Memory: DDR4 | VDD_CORE = 0.75 V

Figure 7-1 shows the TPS6521901 variant powering the AM62x processor on a system with 5 V input supply and DDR4 memory. The 5 V coming from the pre-regulator is connected to the main input supply for reference system (VSYS) and to the power input of the buck converters (PVIN_Bx). Buck1, Buck2 and Buck3 are used to supply VDD_CORE at 0.75 V, 3.3 V VDDSHVx IO and DDR IO respectively. Since Buck2 (3.3 V PMIC rail) is programmed to ramp up first in the power-up sequence, it can be used as the input supply for some of the LDOs to minimize power dissipation. LDO1, configured as bypass, allows dynamic SD card voltage changes between 3.3 V and 1.8 V. This voltage change on LDO1 can be triggered setting the VSEL_SD pin high (LDO1=3.3 V) or low (LDO1=1.8 V). LDO2, is used to supply the VDDR_CORE. LDO3 supports the 1.8 V analog domain and LDO4 supports the 2.5 V VPP for the DDR4 memory. This power solution requires an external discrete buck regulator to supply the 1.8 V VDDSHV IO domain. This external discrete can be enabled using the GPO1 of the PMIC. TPS6521901 comes pre-programmed to enable GPO1 in the second slot of the power-up sequence. The external discrete must have active discharge and ramp up to an stable output voltage before the PMIC starts powering up the rails in the next slot. The remaining two general purpose pins (GPIO and GPO2) are free digital resources that are disabled by default but can be enabled through I2C after the PMIC completes the power-up sequence (after nRSTOUT is released).

Note: Refer to the TPS6521901 Technical Reference Manual for a description of the NVM settings and power-up/power-down sequence diagrams.
GUID-20230123-SS0I-XNKX-9XW4-6SQJCQJCJZHH-low.svg Figure 7-1 TPS6521901 Powering AM62