A fully-integrated 3-level DC-DC converter for nanosecond-scale DVFS

Citation:

Wonyoung Kim, David Brooks, and Gu Wei. 1/2012. “A fully-integrated 3-level DC-DC converter for nanosecond-scale DVFS.” Solid-State Circuits, IEEE Journal of, 47, 1, Pp. 206–219. Publisher's Version

Abstract:

On-chip DC-DC converters have the potential to offer fine-grain power management in modern chip-multiprocessors. This paper presents a fully integrated 3-level DC-DC converter, a hybrid of buck and switched-capacitor converters, implemented in 130 nm CMOS technology. The 3-level converter enables smaller inductors (1 nH) than a buck, while generating a wide range of output voltages compared to a 1/2 mode switched-capacitor converter. The test-chip prototype delivers up to 0.85 A load current while generating output voltages from 0.4 to 1.4 V from a 2.4 V input supply. It achieves 77% peak efficiency at power density of 0.1 W/mm 2 and 63% efficiency at maximum power density of 0.3 W/mm 2 . The converter scales output voltage from 0.4 V to 1.4 V (or vice-versa) within 20 ns at a constant 450 mA load current. A shunt regulator reduces peak-to-peak voltage noise from 0.27 V to 0.19 V under pseudo-randomly fluctuating load currents. Using simulations across a wide range of design parameters, the paper compares conversion efficiencies of the 3-level, buck and switched-capacitor converters.
Last updated on 04/27/2022