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Kemet - 7 Experts on New Approaches for Power Distribution Network Design

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15 impedances, there has been a trend toward increasing current. We are familiar with 100- and 200-amp current requirements, but now we see customers asking for 1,000-amp current or higher. So engineers have to reduce the input resistance of the package not only for the PDN but also for power dissipation and overall system efficiency. One approach is to create more efficient power MOSFETs with integrated drivers, called driver MOSFET (DrMOS). There are basically two types. One uses separate dies for the driver and FETs. It looks like one package, but they are discrete elements inside the package. These provide efficiency advantages, but if you push the frequency on them, you will run into thermal limitations from power loss. A better approach is monolithic DrMOS, where a discrete driver and the power FET occupy the same silicon. Each power cell has a small driver circuit next to it, which minimizes the impedance between the drivers and the power FETs and enables us to push our power stage to 2 megahertz without sacrificing much on the switching loss. • Integrated packaging techniques. Another approach to increasing power density and switching speed is to put a controller, driver, and FET on a substrate inside a compact package. This approach minimizes distance from device to device, which enables us to run the converter at a higher frequency. One example is ADI's LTM4700 power module, a 15-by-22–millimeter part that delivers 2-phase, 100-amp current. It actually cuts the power supply size by at least half. You can greatly reduce PCB interconnect impedance by placing a power module like that on the bottom side of a PCB, directly beneath an ASIC of FPGA on the top side. All these strategies work together to improve system efficiency and reduce both size and cost. '' All these strategies work together to improve system efficiency and reduce both size and cost."

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