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

Inductor Selection

The inductor for the IBB is selected based on the desired ripple current, much like any other DC/DC converter. Typically a value of between 20% and 40% of the load current is used for ΔIL. Equation 8 and Equation 4 can then be used to determine the value of L along with the maximum inductor current. This information is used to select a standard inductor that is suitable for the application.

Equation 8. GUID-24E81A69-A75C-423E-A3E4-6A2434E79A14-low.gif

where

  • Fs = Switching frequency (Hz)