SNVA856B May   2020  – October 2022 LM63615-Q1 , LM63625-Q1 , LM63635-Q1 , LMR33620 , LMR33620-Q1 , LMR33630 , LMR33630-Q1 , LMR33640 , LMR36006 , LMR36015 , TPS54360B , TPS54560B

 

  1.   Working With Inverting Buck-Boost Converters
  2.   Trademarks
  3. Introduction
  4. Inverting Buck-Boost Converter
  5. Basic Operation
  6. Operating Considerations of a Buck Based Inverting Buck-Boost
    1. 4.1 Voltage Stress
    2. 4.2 Current Stress
    3. 4.3 Power Loss and Efficiency
    4. 4.4 Small Signal Behavior
      1. 4.4.1 Measuring IBB Bode Plots
      2. 4.4.2 Testing Load Transients on an IBB
      3. 4.4.3 Simulation
  7. Component Selection for the IBB
    1. 5.1 Inductor Selection
    2. 5.2 Capacitor Selection
    3. 5.3 External Feed-back Divider
  8. General Considerations
  9. Auxiliary Functions
    1. 7.1 Enable Input Level Shift
    2. 7.2 Synchronizing Input Level Shift
    3. 7.3 Power-Good Flag Level Shift
    4. 7.4 Output Clamp
    5. 7.5 Output Noise Filtering
  10. Design Examples
    1. 8.1 Converting +12 V to –5 V at 3 A
    2. 8.2 Converting +5 V to –5 V at 1 A
  11. Summary
  12. 10References
  13. 11Revision History

Output Clamp

Many times the negative supply is used in conjunction with a positive rail to supply a common load such as an op amp. If one of the supplies starts up before the other, it may try to pull the other supply to its level, preventing proper start-up of the slower regulator. Also, with the presence of CIO, the negative output may be momentarily pulled slightly positive when the input supply is turned on. Both of these issues can be solved by placing a diode clamp across the negative output as shown in Figure 7-4.

GUID-B4150CB9-1448-40A1-A507-BCD09DAFC039-low.gif Figure 7-4 Output Clamp Diode