SLOA284A january   2020  – may 2023 AFE5832 , AFE5832LP , ISO7741 , ISOW7841 , LM25037 , LM25180 , LM5180 , LM5181 , LM5181-Q1 , TX7316 , TX7332

 

  1.   1
  2.   Designing Bipolar High Voltage SEPIC Supply for Ultrasound Smart Probe
  3.   Trademarks
  4. 1Introduction
    1. 1.1 Key Design Challenges
    2. 1.2 Potential Topologies for Generating High Voltage Supply
  5. 2Design of high voltage circuit using SEPIC topology
    1. 2.1 TI HV Supply Architecture Using SEPIC Topology
  6. 3Test Results
    1. 3.1 Efficiency and Load Regulation
    2. 3.2 Output Ripple Measurement
    3. 3.3 Load Transient Test
    4. 3.4 Noise Measurement
    5. 3.5 Thermal Performance
  7. 4Possible Variants of the Design
    1. 4.1 Option 1: Programmable Output Voltage
    2. 4.2 Option 2: Support Input From 1S Li-Ion Battery
    3. 4.3 Option 3: Output Voltage Up to ±100 V
  8. 5Layout Guidelines
  9. 6Clock Synchronization
  10. 7Summary
  11. 8References
  12. 9Revision History

Abstract

Medical imaging, specifically ultrasound, is undergoing a significant transformation. A smart probe ultrasound scanner is a handheld device that visualizes internal organs of the human body and their size using advanced technology. The high degree of integration in front-and back-end units within a handheld device brings the designers face-to-face with challenges like power dissipation, thermal performance, size constraints and noise immunity. This application note provides a solution to efficiently power ultrasound transmitters. This design generates bipolar programmable high voltage (HV) up to ±80 V from a very low voltage source. It can deliver continuous average power of 2-W on each rail. A Single-Ended Primary-inductor Converter (SEPIC) topology with uncoupled inductors is preferred over transformer based flyback converter in order to accomplish the critical height requirement (<5 mm). It features symmetric rails (<1%) and load regulation of <2%. It can be synchronized to an external clock to help filter out beat frequencies. This application report also provides a solution to generate programmable output voltage of up to ±100 V by the introduction of an intermediate boost stage.