SPRAD21I May 2022 – September 2025 AM620-Q1 , AM623 , AM625 , AM625-Q1 , AM625SIP , AM62A1-Q1 , AM62A3 , AM62A3-Q1 , AM62A7 , AM62A7-Q1 , AM62D-Q1 , AM62P , AM62P-Q1
The recommended PMICs for integrated power architecture includes TPS65219. Space, performance, and BOM (bill of materials) optimized power architecture can be designed using PMICs to power the processor and the attached devices.
The TPS65219 PMIC family supports x3 (three) buck outputs and x4 (four) LDO outputs (supply rails based on processor core, and memory (DDR) type) configurations (PMIC version, fixed output (NVM programmed), programmable). The recommendation is to choose the required PMIC configuration (version) based on the selected processor configuration and attached devices. To choose the required PMIC OPN, see the TPS65219 product page. PMIC Schematics and Layout checklist is available for custom board designers to use during the custom board schematics design.
For application notes and information on the output voltage configuration for the available OPNs and recommended connections, see the following links:
Powering the AM62x With the TPS65219 PMIC
Powering the AM625SIP With the TPS65219 PMIC
See the following FAQ:
See the TPS65219 OPN specific technical reference manual (Example: TPS6521901 Technical Reference Manual) for information related to the NVM (output voltages and IO) configuration.
Depending on the application and custom board design architecture, PMIC OPN can be selected. Each of the OPN has a specific NVM configuration (output voltages). For selected OPN, NVM configuration TRM and the full register map, and PMIC data sheet refer TPS65219 product page.
Additionally, see the following application note:
Advantages of Using TPS65219 PMIC to Power AM62 Processor Versus a Discrete Power Design
For information related to residual voltage and detection, see the following FAQ: