LTC4088EDE-2#TRPBF [Linear]

LTC4088-1/-2 - High Efficiency Battery Charger/USB Power Manager with Regulated Output Voltage; Package: DFN; Pins: 14; Temperature Range: -40°C to 85°C;
LTC4088EDE-2#TRPBF
型号: LTC4088EDE-2#TRPBF
厂家: Linear    Linear
描述:

LTC4088-1/-2 - High Efficiency Battery Charger/USB Power Manager with Regulated Output Voltage; Package: DFN; Pins: 14; Temperature Range: -40°C to 85°C

电池 光电二极管
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LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
High Efficiency Battery  
Charger/USB Power Manager  
with Regulated Output Voltage  
DescripTion  
FeaTures  
The LTC®4088-1/LTC4088-2 is a high efficiency USB  
PowerPath™ controller and Li-Ion/Polymer battery char-  
ger. It includes a synchronous switching input regulator,  
n
Switching Regulator Makes Optimal Use of Limited  
Power Available from USB Port to Charge Battery  
and Power Application  
n
n
180mΩ Internal Ideal Diode Plus External Ideal Diode a full-featured battery charger and an ideal diode. De-  
Controller Seamlessly Provide Low Loss Power Path  
When Input Power is Limited or Unavailable  
signed specifically for USB applications, the LTC4088-1/  
LTC4088-2’s switching regulator automatically limits its  
Automatic Charge Current Reduction Maintains 3.6V input current to either 100mA, 500mA or 1A via logic  
Minimum V  
control. The LTC4088-1 powers-up with the charger off;  
the LTC4088-2 powers-up with the charger on.  
OUT  
n
n
Full Featured Li-Ion/Polymer Battery Charger  
V
Operating Range: 4.25V to 5.5V (7V Absolute  
BUS  
The switching input stage provides power to V  
where  
OUT  
Maximum—Transient)  
power sharing between the application circuit and the  
battery charger is managed. Charge current is automati-  
n
n
n
n
n
1.2A Maximum Input Current Limit  
1.5A Maximum Charge Current with Thermal Limiting  
Bat-Track™ Adaptive Output Control  
Slew Control Reduces Switching EMI  
Low Profile (0.75mm) 14-Lead 4mm × 3mm DFN Package  
cally reduced to maintain a regulated 3.6V V  
during  
OUT  
low-battery conditions. As the battery is charged, V  
OUT  
tracks V  
for high efficiency charging. This feature al-  
BAT  
lows the LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2 to provide more power  
to the application and eases thermal issues in constrained  
applications.  
applicaTions  
n
Media Players  
An ideal diode ensures that system power is available  
from the battery when the input current limit is reached  
or if the USB or wall supply is removed.  
n
Digital Cameras  
n
GPS  
PDAs  
Smart Phones  
n
n
The LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2 is available in the low profile  
14-Lead 4mm × 3mm × 0.75mm DFN surface mount  
package.  
L, LT, LTC, LTM, Linear Technology and the Linear logo are registered trademarks and  
PowerPath and Bat-Track are tradmearks of Linear Technology Corporation. All other trademarks  
are the property of their respective owners. Protected by U.S. Patents, including 6522118.  
Typical applicaTion  
Switching Regulator Efficiency to  
System Load (POUT/PBUS  
)
High Efficiency Battery Charger/USB Power Manager  
100  
90  
80  
70  
60  
50  
40  
30  
20  
10  
3.3µH  
WALL  
SYSTEM  
LOAD  
BAT = 4.2V  
USB  
V
D0  
D1  
D2  
V
OUT  
V
OUTS  
GATE  
SW  
BUS  
10µF  
BAT = 3.3V  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
CHRG  
BAT  
CLPROG  
PROG C/X GND NTC  
10µF  
+
8.2Ω  
0.1µF  
Li-Ion  
V
I
= 5V  
BUS  
2.94k  
499Ω  
= 0mA  
BAT  
408812 TA01a  
10x MODE  
0
0.01  
0.1  
(A)  
1
I
408812 TA01b  
OUT  
40881fc  
1
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
absoluTe MaxiMuM raTings  
pin conFiguraTion  
(Note 1)  
TOP VIEW  
V
V
(Transient) t < 1ms, Duty Cycle < 1%.. –0.3V to 7V  
BUS  
BUS  
NTC  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
14 D1  
13 D0  
12 SW  
(Static), BAT, CHRG, NTC, D0,  
CLPROG  
D1, D2.......................................................... –0.3V to 6V  
V
OUTS  
D2  
I
I
....................................................................3mA  
CLPROG  
PROG C/X  
15  
11  
10  
9
V
V
BUS  
OUT  
, I ................................................................2mA  
C/X  
PROG  
BAT  
I
I
I
......................................................................75mA  
CHRG  
OUT  
SW  
CHRG  
8
GATE  
.............................................................................2A  
..............................................................................2A  
.............................................................................2A  
DE PACKAGE  
14-LEAD (4mm × 3mm) PLASTIC DFN  
I
BAT  
T
JMAX  
= 125°C, θ = 37°C/W  
JA  
EXPOSED PAD (PIN 15) IS GND, MUST BE SOLDERED TO PCB  
Maximum Operating Junction Temperature .......... 125°C  
Operating Temperature Range .................–40°C to 85°C  
Storage Temperature Range .................. –65°C to 125°C  
orDer inForMaTion  
LEAD FREE FINISH  
LTC4088EDE-1#PBF  
LTC4088EDE-2#PBF  
TAPE AND REEL  
PART MARKING  
40881  
PACKAGE DESCRIPTION  
TEMPERATURE RANGE  
LTC4088EDE-1#TRPBF  
LTC4088EDE-2#TRPBF  
14-Lead (4mm x 3mm x 0.75mm) Plastic DFN  
14-Lead (4mm x 3mm x 0.75mm) Plastic DFN  
–40°C to 85°C  
–40°C to 85°C  
40882  
Consult LTC Marketing for parts specified with wider operating temperature ranges.  
Consult LTC Marketing for information on nonstandard lead based finish parts.  
For more information on lead free part markings, go to: http://www.linear.com/leadfree/  
For more information on tape and reel specifications, go to: http://www.linear.com/tapeandreel/  
elecTrical characTerisTics The l denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating  
temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. VBUS = 5V, BAT = 3.8V, RCLPROG = 2.94k, unless otherwise noted.  
SYMBOL  
PARAMETER  
CONDITIONS  
MIN  
TYP  
MAX  
UNITS  
Input Power Supply  
l
V
Input Supply Voltage  
Total Input Current  
4.35  
5.5  
V
BUS  
l
l
l
l
l
I
1x Mode  
92  
445  
815  
0.32  
1.6  
97  
100  
500  
1000  
0.5  
mA  
mA  
mA  
mA  
mA  
BUS(LIM)  
5x Mode  
470  
877  
0.39  
2.05  
10x Mode  
Low Power Suspend Mode  
High Power Suspend Mode  
2.5  
I
(Note 4)  
Input Quiescent Current  
1x Mode  
6
mA  
mA  
mA  
mA  
mA  
BUSQ  
5x Mode  
14  
10x Mode  
Low Power Suspend Mode  
High Power Suspend Mode  
14  
0.038  
0.038  
h
(Note 4) Ratio of Measured V  
Current to  
BUS  
1x Mode  
224  
1133  
2140  
11.3  
59.4  
mA/mA  
mA/mA  
mA/mA  
mA/mA  
mA/mA  
CLPROG  
CLPROG Program Current  
5x Mode  
10x Mode  
Low Power Suspend Mode  
High Power Suspend Mode  
40881fc  
2
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
elecTrical characTerisTics The l denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating  
temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. VBUS = 5V, BAT = 3.8V, RCLPROG = 2.94k, unless otherwise noted.  
SYMBOL  
PARAMETER  
Current Available Before  
CONDITIONS  
MIN  
TYP  
MAX  
UNITS  
I
V
1x Mode, BAT = 3.3V  
5x Mode, BAT = 3.3V  
10x Mode, BAT = 3.3V  
Low Power Suspend Mode  
High Power Suspend Mode  
135  
672  
1251  
0.32  
2.04  
mA  
mA  
mA  
mA  
mA  
OUT  
OUT  
Discharging Battery  
0.26  
1.6  
0.41  
2.46  
V
V
V
V
CLPROG Servo Voltage in Current Limit 1x, 5x, 10x Modes  
Suspend Modes  
1.188  
100  
V
CLPROG  
mV  
V
Undervoltage Lockout  
Rising Threshold  
Falling Threshold  
4.30  
4.00  
4.35  
V
V
UVLO  
BUS  
3.95  
3.5  
V
to BAT Differential Undervoltage  
Rising Threshold  
Falling Threshold  
200  
50  
mV  
mV  
DUVLO  
OUT  
BUS  
Lockout  
V
Voltage  
1x, 5x, 10x Modes, 0V < BAT ≤ 4.2V,  
OUT  
BAT + 0.3  
4.7  
V
OUT  
I
= 0mA, Battery Charger Off  
USB Suspend Modes, I  
= 250µA  
4.5  
1.8  
4.6  
4.7  
2.7  
V
MHz  
Ω
OUT  
f
Switching Frequency  
2.25  
0.18  
0.30  
OSC  
R
PMOS On Resistance  
NMOS On Resistance  
Peak Inductor Current Clamp  
PMOS  
NMOS  
PEAK  
R
Ω
I
1x, 5x Modes  
10x Mode  
2
3
A
A
R
SUSP  
Suspend LDO Output Resistance  
15  
Ω
Battery Charger  
V
BAT Regulated Output Voltage  
Constant-Current Mode Charge Current  
Battery Drain Current  
4.179  
4.165  
4.200  
4.200  
4.221  
4.235  
V
V
FLOAT  
0°C ≤ T ≤ 85°C  
A
I
I
R
PROG  
R
PROG  
= 1k  
= 5k  
980  
196  
1030  
206  
1080  
220  
mA  
mA  
CHG  
V
> V , PowerPath Switching  
UVLO  
3.5  
5
µA  
BAT  
BUS  
Regulator On, Battery Charger Off,  
I
= 0µA  
OUT  
V
= 0V, I  
= 0µA (Ideal Diode Mode)  
OUT  
23  
35  
µA  
V
BUS  
V
V
PROG Pin Servo Voltage  
1.000  
0.100  
PROG  
PROG Pin Servo Voltage in Trickle  
Charge  
BAT < V  
V
PROG,TRKL  
TRKL  
h
Ratio of I to PROG Pin Current  
1031  
2.85  
135  
–100  
4.0  
mA/mA  
V
PROG  
BAT  
V
Trickle Charge Threshold Voltage  
Trickle Charge Hysteresis Voltage  
Recharge Battery Threshold Voltage  
Safety Timer Termination Period  
Bad Battery Termination Time  
BAT Rising  
2.7  
3.0  
TRKL  
mV  
ΔV  
TRKL  
RECHRG  
TERM  
V
Threshold Voltage Relative to V  
–80  
3.2  
0.4  
85  
–120  
4.8  
mV  
FLOAT  
t
t
I
Timer Starts When V = V  
Hour  
Hour  
BAT  
FLOAT  
BAT < V  
0.5  
0.6  
BADBAT  
C/X  
TRKL  
Battery Charge Current at Programmed  
End of Charge Indication  
R
C/X  
R
C/X  
= 1k  
= 5k  
100  
20  
115  
mA  
mA  
V
C/X Threshold Voltage  
100  
1031  
65  
mV  
mA/mA  
mV  
C/X  
h
C/X  
Battery Charge Current Ratio to C/X  
CHRG Pin Output Low Voltage  
CHRG Pin Input Current  
V
I
= 5mA  
100  
1
CHRG  
CHRG  
CHRG  
I
BAT = 4.5V, V  
= 5V  
0
µA  
CHRG  
40881fc  
3
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
elecTrical characTerisTics The l denotes the specifications which apply over the full operating  
temperature range, otherwise specifications are at TA = 25°C. VBUS = 5V, BAT = 3.8V, RCLPROG = 2.94k, unless otherwise noted.  
SYMBOL  
PARAMETER  
CONDITIONS  
= 200mA  
MIN  
TYP  
MAX  
UNITS  
R
Battery Charger Power FET  
On-Resistance (Between V  
I
0.18  
Ω
ON_CHG  
BAT  
and BAT)  
OUT  
T
Junction Temperature in Constant  
Temperature Mode  
110  
°C  
LIM  
NTC  
V
COLD  
V
HOT  
V
DIS  
Cold Temperature Fault Threshold  
Voltage  
Rising Threshold  
Hysteresis  
75.0  
33.4  
0.7  
76.5  
1.5  
78.0  
36.4  
2.7  
%V  
%V  
BUS  
BUS  
Hot Temperature Fault Threshold  
Voltage  
Falling Threshold  
Hysteresis  
34.9  
1.5  
%V  
%V  
BUS  
BUS  
NTC Disable Threshold Voltage  
Falling Threshold  
Hysteresis  
1.7  
50  
%V  
BUS  
mV  
I
NTC Leakage Current  
V
NTC  
= V = 5V  
BUS  
–50  
50  
nA  
NTC  
Ideal Diode  
V
Forward Voltage Detection  
I
= 10mA  
= 0V, I  
15  
2
mV  
mV  
FWD  
OUT  
BUS  
V
= 10mA  
OUT  
R
Internal Diode On-Resistance, Dropout  
Diode Current Limit  
I
= 200mA  
0.18  
Ω
DROPOUT  
OUT  
I
2
A
MAX  
Logic (D0, D1, D2)  
V
Input Low Voltage  
0.4  
V
V
IL  
IH  
V
Input High Voltage  
1.2  
I
PD  
Static Pull-Down Current  
V
PIN  
= 1V  
2
µA  
Note 1: Stresses beyond those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings  
may cause permanent damage to the device. Exposure to any Absolute  
Maximum Rating condition for extended periods may affect device  
reliability and lifetime.  
Note 2: The LTC4088E-1/LTC4088E-2 is guaranteed to meet performance  
specifications from 0°C to 85°C. Specifications over the 40°C to 85°C  
operating temperature range are assured by design, characterization and  
correlation with statistical process controls.  
Note 3: The LTC4088E-1/ LTC4088E-2 includes overtemperature  
protection that is intended to protect the device during momentary  
overload conditions. Junction temperature will exceed 125°C when  
overtemperature protection is active. Continuous operation above the  
specified maximum operating junction temperature may impair device  
reliability.  
Note 4: Total input current is the sum of quiescent current, I  
, and  
BUSQ  
measured current given by V  
/R  
• (h  
+ 1).  
CLPROG CLPROG  
CLPROG  
40881fc  
4
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted.  
Typical perForMance characTerisTics  
Ideal Diode Resistance  
Output Voltage vs Output Current  
(Battery Charger Disabled)  
4.50  
Ideal Diode V-I Characteristics  
vs Battery Voltage  
1.0  
0.8  
0.6  
0.4  
0.2  
0
0.25  
0.20  
0.15  
0.10  
0.05  
0
V
= 5V  
INTERNAL IDEAL DIODE  
WITH SUPPLEMENTAL  
EXTERNAL VISHAY  
Si2333 PMOS  
BUS  
V
= 4V  
BAT  
5x MODE  
4.25  
4.00  
3.75  
3.50  
3.25  
INTERNAL IDEAL  
DIODE  
INTERNAL IDEAL  
DIODE ONLY  
V
= 3.4V  
BAT  
INTERNAL IDEAL DIODE  
WITH SUPPLEMENTAL  
EXTERNAL VISHAY  
Si2333 PMOS  
V
V
= 0V  
= 5V  
BUS  
BUS  
0
0.04  
0.08  
0.12  
0.16  
0.20  
2.7  
3.0  
3.3  
3.6  
3.9  
4.2  
0
200  
400  
600  
800  
1000  
FORWARD VOLTAGE (V)  
BATTERY VOLTAGE (V)  
OUTPUT CURRENT (mA)  
408812 G01  
408812 G02  
408812 G03  
USB Limited Battery Charge  
Current vs Battery Voltage  
USB Limited Battery Charge  
Current vs Battery Voltage  
Battery Drain Current  
vs Battery Voltage  
150  
125  
25  
20  
15  
10  
5
700  
600  
I
= 0µA  
OUT  
V
BUS  
= 0V  
V
R
R
= 5V  
BUS  
500  
400  
300  
200  
100  
0
V
R
R
= 5V  
BUS  
= 1k  
PROG  
CLPROG  
100  
75  
= 1k  
PROG  
CLPROG  
= 2.94k  
= 2.94k  
50  
25  
0
V
= 5V  
BUS  
(SUSPEND MODE)  
1x USB SETTING,  
BATTERY CHARGER SET FOR 1A  
5x USB SETTING,  
BATTERY CHARGER SET FOR 1A  
0
3.0  
3.3  
3.6  
4.2  
3.0  
3.6  
BATTERY VOLTAGE (V)  
2.7  
3.9  
2.7 3.0 3.3 3.6  
BATTERY VOLTAGE (V)  
3.9  
4.2  
2.7  
3.3  
3.9  
4.2  
BATTERY VOLTAGE (V)  
408812 G04  
408812 G05  
408812 G06  
Battery Charging Efficiency vs  
Battery Voltage with No External  
PowerPath Switching Regulator  
Efficiency vs Output Current  
VBUS Current vs VBUS Voltage  
(Suspend)  
Load (PBAT/PBUS  
)
100  
90  
80  
70  
60  
50  
40  
90  
88  
86  
84  
82  
80  
50  
40  
30  
20  
10  
0
V
= 3.8V  
I
= 0mA  
R
R
I
= 2.94k  
BAT  
OUT  
CLPROG  
PROG  
OUT  
5x, 10x MODE  
= 1k  
1x MODE  
= 0mA  
5x CHARGING  
EFFICIENCY  
1x CHARGING  
EFFICIENCY  
0.01  
0.1  
OUTPUT CURRENT (A)  
1
2.7  
3.0  
3.3  
3.6  
3.9  
4.2  
1
2
3
4
5
6
BATTERY VOLTAGE (V)  
V
VOLTAGE (V)  
BUS  
408812 G07  
408812 G08  
408812 G09  
40881fc  
5
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
Typical perForMance characTerisTics  
Output Voltage vs Output Current  
in Suspend  
VBUS Current vs Output Current  
in Suspend  
Battery Charge Current vs VOUT  
600  
500  
2.5  
2.0  
1.5  
1.0  
0.5  
0
5.0  
4.5  
4.0  
3.5  
3.0  
2.5  
R
= 2k  
V
V
R
= 5V  
PROG  
BUS  
BAT  
5x MODE  
= 3.3V  
= 2.94k  
CLPROG  
5x MODE  
400  
300  
1x MODE  
200  
100  
0
V
V
R
= 5V  
BUS  
BAT  
1x MODE  
1.5  
= 3.3V  
= 2.94k  
CLPROG  
3.1  
3.2  
3.3  
V
3.4  
(V)  
3.5  
3.6  
85  
85  
0
0.5  
1
2
2.5  
0
0.5  
1
1.5  
2
2.5  
OUTPUT LOAD CURRENT (mA)  
OUT  
OUTPUT CURRENT (mA)  
408812 G12  
408812 G11  
408812 G10  
Battery Charge Current  
vs Temperature  
Battery Charger Float Voltage  
vs Temperature  
Low-Battery (Instant-On) Output  
Voltage vs Temperature  
3.68  
3.66  
3.64  
3.62  
3.60  
4.21  
4.20  
4.19  
4.18  
4.17  
600  
500  
400  
300  
200  
100  
0
R
= 2k  
V
= 2.7V  
PROG  
BAT  
I
= 100mA  
OUT  
5x MODE  
THERMAL REGULATION  
60 80  
20 40  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
–40  
–15  
35  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
60  
–40 –20  
0
100 120  
–40  
–15  
10  
35  
60  
85  
10  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
408812 G15  
408812 G13  
408812 G14  
Oscillator Frequency  
vs Temperature  
VBUS Quiescent Current  
vs Temperature  
Quiescent Current in Suspend  
vs Temperature  
2.35  
2.30  
2.25  
2.20  
2.15  
2.10  
15  
12  
9
46  
44  
V
I
= 5V  
= 0mA  
V
I
= 5V  
= 0µA  
BUS  
BUS  
OUT  
5x MODE  
OUT  
SUSP HI  
42  
40  
38  
36  
34  
1x MODE  
6
3
–40  
–15  
10  
35  
60  
85  
–40  
–15  
35  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
60  
85  
–40  
–15  
10  
35  
60  
10  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
408812 G16  
408812 G17  
408812 G18  
40881fc  
6
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted.  
Typical perForMance characTerisTics  
CHRG Pin Current vs Voltage  
(Pull-Down State)  
Suspend LDO Transient Response  
(500µA to 1mA)  
100  
V
V
= 5V  
= 3.8V  
BUS  
BAT  
I
80  
60  
40  
20  
0
OUT  
500µA/DIV  
0mA  
V
OUT  
20mV/DIV  
AC-COUPLED  
408812 G20  
500µs/DIV  
0
1
2
3
4
5
CHRG PIN VOLTAGE (V)  
408812 G19  
pin FuncTions  
NTC (Pin 1): Input to the NTC Thermistor Monitoring  
Circuits. The NTC pin connects to a negative temperature  
coefficient thermistor which is typically co-packaged with  
the battery pack to determine if the battery is too hot or  
too cold to charge. If the battery’s temperature is out of  
range, chargingispauseduntilthebatterytemperaturere-  
enters the valid range. A low drift bias resistor is required  
V
(Pin 3): Output Voltage Sense. The V  
pin is  
OUTS  
OUTS  
used to sense the voltage at V  
when the PowerPath  
OUT  
switching regulator is in operation. V  
be connected directly to V  
should always  
OUTS  
.
OUT  
D2(Pin4):ModeSelectInputPin. D2, incombinationwith  
the D0 pin and D1 pin, controls the current limit and bat-  
tery charger functions of the LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2. The  
LTC4088-1 and LTC4088-2 differ only in the functionality  
of the D2 pin default (0, 0, 0) state (see Table 1). This pin  
is pulled low by a weak current sink.  
from V  
to NTC and a thermistor is required from NTC  
BUS  
to ground. If the NTC function is not desired, the NTC pin  
should be grounded.  
CLPROG (Pin 2): USB Current Limit Program and Monitor  
C/X(Pin5):EndofChargeIndicationProgramPin.Thispin  
is used to program the current level at which a completed  
charge cycle is indicated by the CHRG pin.  
Pin. A 1% resistor from CLPROG to ground determines  
the upper limit of the current drawn from the V  
pin.  
BUS  
, is sent  
A precise fraction of the input current, h  
CLPROG  
PROG (Pin 6): Charge Current Program and Charge Cur-  
rent Monitor Pin. Connecting a 1% resistor from PROG  
to ground programs the charge current. If sufficient input  
powerisavailableinconstant-currentmode,thispinservos  
to 1V. The voltage on this pin always represents the actual  
charge current by using the following formula:  
to the CLPROG pin when the high side switch is on. The  
switching regulator delivers power until the CLPROG  
pin reaches 1.188V. Therefore, the current drawn from  
V
will be limited to an amount given by h  
and  
BUS  
CLPROG  
R
. There are several ratios for h  
available,  
CLPROG  
CLPROG  
two of which correspond to the 500mA and 100mA USB  
specifications. A multilayer ceramic averaging capacitor  
is also required at CLPROG for filtering.  
V
PROG  
IBAT  
=
1031  
RPROG  
40881fc  
7
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
pin FuncTions  
CHRG (Pin 7): Open-Drain Charge Status Output. The  
CHRG pin indicates the status of the battery charger. Four  
possible states are represented by CHRG: charging, not  
charging (or float charge current less than programmed  
endofchargeindicationcurrent),unresponsivebatteryand  
battery temperature out of range. CHRG is modulated at  
35kHz and switches between a low and a high duty cycle  
foreasyrecognitionbyeitherhumansormicroprocessors.  
CHRG requires a pull-up resistor and/or LED to provide  
indication.  
if the load exceeds the allotted power from V  
or if the  
BUS  
V
power source is removed. V  
should be bypassed  
BUS  
OUT  
with a low impedance multilayer ceramic capacitor.  
V
(Pin 11): Input voltage for the switching PowerPath  
BUS  
controller. V  
will usually be connected to the USB port  
BUS  
of a computer or a DC output wall adapter. V  
should  
BUS  
be bypassed with a low impedance multilayer ceramic  
capacitor.  
SW (Pin 12): The SW pin delivers power from V  
to  
BUS  
V
via the step-down switching regulator. An inductor  
OUT  
GATE (Pin 8): Ideal Diode Amplifier Output. This pin con-  
trols the gate of an external P-channel MOSFET transistor  
used to supplement the internal ideal diode. The source  
of the P-channel MOSFET should be connected to V  
and the drain should be connected to BAT.  
should be connected from SW to V . See the Applica-  
OUT  
tions Information section for a discussion of inductance  
value and current rating.  
OUT  
D0 (Pin 13): Mode Select Input Pin. D0, in combina-  
tion with the D1 pin and the D2 pin, controls the current  
limit and battery charger functions of the LTC4088-1/  
LTC4088-2 (see Table 1). This pin is pulled low by a weak  
current sink.  
BAT (Pin 9): Single Cell Li-Ion Battery Pin. Depending on  
availablepowerandload,aLi-IonbatteryonBAT willeither  
deliver system power to V  
be charged from the battery charger.  
through the ideal diode or  
OUT  
D1 (Pin 14): Mode Select Input Pin. D1, in combination  
with the D0 pin and the D2 pin, controls the current limit  
andbatterychargerfunctionsoftheLTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
(see Table 1). This pin is pulled low by a weak current sink.  
V
(Pin 10): Output voltage of the switching PowerPath  
OUT  
controller and input voltage of the battery charger. The  
majority of the portable product should be powered from  
V
.TheLTC4088-1/LTC4088-2willpartitiontheavailable  
OUT  
power between the external load on V  
and the internal  
Exposed Pad (Pin 15): GND. Must be soldered to the  
PCB to provide a low electrical and thermal impedance  
connection to ground.  
OUT  
battery charger. Priority is given to the external load and  
any extra power is used to charge the battery. An ideal  
diodefromBAT toV  
ensuresthatV  
ispoweredeven  
OUT  
OUT  
40881fc  
8
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
block DiagraM  
40881fc  
9
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
operaTion  
Introduction  
regulator. To meet the USB maximum load specification,  
the switching regulator contains a measurement and  
control system that ensures that the average input cur-  
rent remains below the level programmed at CLPROG.  
TheLTC4088-1/LTC4088-2includesaPowerPathcontrol-  
ler,batterycharger,internalidealdiode,externalidealdiode  
controller and a SUSPEND LDO. Designed specifically for  
USBapplications,thePowerPathcontrollerincorporatesa  
precisionaverageinputcurrentlimitedstep-downswitch-  
ing regulator to make maximum use of the allowable USB  
power. Because power is conserved, the LTC4088-1/  
LTC4088-2 allows the load current on V  
current drawn by the USB port without exceeding the USB  
load specifications.  
V
drives the combination of the external load and the  
OUT  
battery charger.  
If the combined load does not cause the switching power  
supply to reach the programmed input current limit, V  
OUT  
to exceed the  
will track approximately 0.3V above the battery voltage.  
By keeping the voltage across the battery charger at this  
low level, power lost to the battery charger is minimized.  
Figure 1 shows the power path components.  
OUT  
Theswitchingregulatorandbatterychargercommunicate  
to ensure that the average input current never exceeds the  
USB specifications.  
If the combined external load plus battery charge current  
is large enough to cause the switching power supply to  
reach the programmed input current limit, the battery  
charger will reduce its charge current by precisely the  
amount necessary to enable the external load to be satis-  
fied. Even if the battery charge current is programmed to  
exceed the allowable USB current, the USB specification  
for average input current will not be violated; the battery  
charger will reduce its current as needed. Furthermore, if  
The ideal diodes from BAT to V  
power is always available to V  
ficient or absent power at V  
guarantee that ample  
even if there is insuf-  
OUT  
OUT  
.
BUS  
Finally, to prevent battery drain when a device is con-  
nected to a suspended USB port, an LDO from V to  
BUS  
V
OUT  
provides either low power or high power suspend  
current to the application.  
Input Current Limited Step Down Switching Regulator  
The power delivered from V to V is controlled  
the load current at V  
exceeds the programmed power  
OUT  
from V , load current will be drawn from the battery via  
BUS  
the ideal diodes even when the battery charger is enabled.  
BUS  
OUT  
The current at CLPROG is a precise fraction of the V  
BUS  
by a 2.25MHz constant frequency step-down switching  
current. When a programming resistor and an averaging  
SYSTEM LOAD  
SW  
TO USB  
OR WALL  
ADAPTER  
V
BUS  
3.5V TO  
11  
12  
3
(BAT + 0.3V)  
V
OUTS  
I
/N  
SWITCH  
V
OUT  
PWM AND  
GATE DRIVE  
10  
8
IDEAL  
DIODE  
EXTERNAL  
IDEAL DIODE  
PMOS  
+
GATE  
BAT  
CONSTANT CURRENT  
CONSTANT VOLTAGE  
BATTERY CHARGER  
OV  
+
15mV  
+
+
+
0.3V  
CLPROG  
1.188V  
2
+
9
3.6V  
AVERAGE INPUT  
CURRENT LIMIT  
CONTROLLER  
AVERAGE OUTPUT  
VOLTAGE LIMIT  
CONTROLLER  
+
SINGLE CELL  
Li-Ion  
408812 F01  
Figure 1  
40881fc  
10  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
operaTion  
capacitorareconnectedfromCLPROGtoGND,thevoltage  
on CLPROG represents the average input current of the  
switching regulator. As the input current approaches the  
programmed limit, CLPROG reaches 1.188V and power  
delivered by the switching regulator is held constant.  
Several ratios of current are available which can be set  
to correspond to USB low and high power modes with a  
single programming resistor.  
charging and power availability at V . These modes  
OUT  
will typically be used when there is line power available  
from a wall adapter.  
While not in current limit, the switching regulator’s  
Bat-Track feature will set V  
to approximately 300mV  
OUT  
above the voltage at BAT. However, if the voltage at BAT  
is below 3.3V, and the load requirement does not cause  
the switching regulator to exceed its current limit, V  
OUT  
The input current limit is programmed by various com-  
binations of the D0, D1 and D2 pins as shown in Table 1.  
The switching input regulator can also be deactivated  
(USB Suspend).  
will regulate at a fixed 3.6V as shown in Figure 2. This will  
allow a portable product to run immediately when power  
is applied without waiting for the battery to charge.  
If the load does exceed the current limit at V , V  
will  
BUS OUT  
The average input current will be limited by the CLPROG  
programming resistor according to the following expres-  
sion:  
range between the no-load voltage and slightly below the  
batteryvoltage,indicatedbytheshadedregionofFigure 2.  
4.5  
4.2  
3.9  
VCLPROG  
IVBUS = IBUSQ  
+
h  
(
+ 1  
)
CLPROG  
RCLPROG  
NO LOAD  
3.6  
where I  
is the quiescent current of the LTC4088-1/  
BUSQ  
LTC4088-2, V  
300mV  
is the CLPROG servo voltage in  
is the value of the programming  
CLPROG  
3.3  
current limit, R  
CLPROG  
3.0  
2.7  
2.4  
resistor and h  
is the ratio of the measured current  
CLPROG  
at V  
to the sample current delivered to CLPROG. Refer  
BUS  
totheElectricalCharacteristicstableforvaluesofh  
,
CLPROG  
3.6  
4.2  
2.4  
2.7  
3.0  
3.3  
3.9  
V
and I  
. Given worst-case circuit tolerances,  
CLPROG  
BUSQ  
BAT (V)  
the USB specification for the average input current in 1x  
408812 F02  
or 5x mode will not be violated, provided that R  
2.94k or greater.  
is  
CLPROG  
Figure 2. VOUT vs BAT  
Table 1 shows the available settings for the D0, D1 and  
D2 pins.  
For very low-battery voltages, the battery charger acts like  
a load and, due to limited input power, its current will tend  
topullV belowthe3.6VInstantOnvoltage.To prevent  
OUT  
Table 1. Controlled Input Current Limit  
4088-1 4088-2 CHARGER  
V
from falling below this level, an undervoltage circuit  
automatically detects that V  
OUT  
is falling and reduces the  
OUT  
D0  
0
D1  
0
D2  
0
D2  
1
STATUS  
Off  
I
BUS(LIM)  
100mA (1x)  
100mA (1x)  
battery charge current as needed. This reduction ensures  
that load current and voltage are always prioritized and yet  
delivers as much battery charge current as possible. (See  
OverProgrammingtheBatteryChargerintheApplications  
Information section).  
0
0
1
0
On  
0
1
0
1
Off  
500mA (5x)  
0
1
1
0
On  
500mA (5x)  
1
0
0
1
Off  
1A (10x)  
1
0
1
0
On  
1A (10x)  
1
1
1
1
0
1
1
0
Off  
Off  
2.5mA (Susp High)  
500µA (Susp Low)  
The voltage regulation loop compensation is controlled by  
the capacitance on V . An MLCC capacitor of 10µF is  
OUT  
required for loop stability. Additional capacitance beyond  
this value will improve transient response.  
Notice that when D0 is high and D1 is low, the switching  
regulator is set to a higher current limit for increased  
40881fc  
11  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
operaTion  
Ideal Diode from BAT to V  
drain should be connected to BAT. Capable of driving a  
1nF load, the GATE pin can control an external P-channel  
MOSFET transistor having an on-resistance of 30mΩ or  
OUT  
The LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2 has an internal ideal diode as  
well as a controller for an external ideal diode. Both the  
internal and the external ideal diodes are always on and  
lower. When V  
is unavailable, the forward voltage of  
BUS  
the ideal diode amplifier will be reduced from 15mV to  
nearly zero.  
will respond quickly whenever V  
drops below BAT.  
OUT  
If the load current increases beyond the power allowed  
from the switching regulator, additional power will be  
pulled from the battery via the ideal diodes. Furthermore,  
Suspend LDO  
The LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2 provides a small amount of  
if power to V  
(USB or wall power) is removed, then  
BUS  
power to V  
in SUSPEND mode by including an LDO  
OUT  
OUT  
all of the application power will be provided by the bat-  
tery via the ideal diodes. The ideal diodes will be fast  
from V  
to V . This LDO will prevent the battery from  
BUS  
running down when the portable product has access to a  
suspended USB port. Regulating at 4.6V, this LDO only  
becomes active when the switching converter is disabled.  
To remain compliant with the USB specification, the input  
to the LDO is current limited so that it will not exceed the  
lowpowerorhighpowersuspendspecification. Iftheload  
enough to keep V  
from drooping with only the stor-  
OUT  
age capacitance required for the switching regulator. The  
internal ideal diode consists of a precision amplifier that  
activates a large on-chip MOSFET transistor whenever  
the voltage at V  
is approximately 15mV (V ) below  
OUT  
FWD  
the voltage at BAT. Within the amplifier’s linear range, the  
small-signal resistance of the ideal diode will be quite low,  
keeping the forward drop near 15mV. At higher current  
levels, the MOSFET will be in full conduction. An external  
P-channel MOSFET transistor should be added from BAT  
on V  
exceeds the suspend current limit, the additional  
OUT  
currentwillcomefromthebatteryviatheidealdiodes. The  
suspend LDO sends a scaled copy of the V current to  
BUS  
theCLPROGpin,whichwillservotoapproximately100mV  
inthismode.Thus,thehighpowerandlowpowersuspend  
settings are related to the levels programmed by the same  
resistor for 1x and 5x modes.  
toV .TheGATEpinoftheLTC4088-1/LTC4088-2drives  
OUT  
the gate of the external P-channel MOSFET transistor for  
automatic ideal diode control. The source of the external  
P-channel MOSFET should be connected to V  
and the  
OUT  
V
BUS  
Undervoltage Lockout (UVLO)  
AninternalundervoltagelockoutcircuitmonitorsV and  
BUS  
2200  
keepstheswitchingregulatoroffuntilV  
risesabovethe  
VISHAY Si2333  
BUS  
2000  
EXTERNAL  
risingUVLOthreshold(4.3V).IfV  
fallsbelowthefalling  
1800  
IDEAL DIODE  
BUS  
UVLO threshold (4V), system power at V  
will be drawn  
1600  
OUT  
1400  
1200  
1000  
800  
600  
400  
200  
0
LTC4088-1/  
LTC4088-2  
IDEAL DIODE  
from the battery via the ideal diodes. The voltage at V  
BUS  
must also be higher than the voltage at BAT by approxi-  
mately170mVfortheswitchingregulatortooperate.  
ON  
Battery Charger  
SEMICONDUCTOR  
MBRM120LT3  
The LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2 includes a constant-current/  
constant-voltagebatterychargerwithautomaticrecharge,  
automatic termination by safety timer, low voltage trickle  
charging, bad cell detection and thermistor sensor input  
for out of temperature charge pausing.  
V
= 5V  
BUS  
0
120 180 240 300 360 420 480  
FORWARD VOLTAGE (mV) (BAT – V  
60  
)
OUT  
408812 F03  
Figure 3. Ideal Diode V-I Characteristics  
40881fc  
12  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
operaTion  
When a battery charge cycle begins, the battery charger  
safety timer will also restart if the V  
UVLO cycles low  
BUS  
first determines if the battery is deeply discharged. If the  
and then high (e.g., V  
is removed and then replaced)  
BUS  
batteryvoltageisbelowV  
,typically2.85V,anautomatic  
or if the charger is momentarily disabled using the D2 pin.  
TRKL  
trickle charge feature sets the battery charge current to  
10% of the programmed value. If the low voltage persists  
for more than 1/2 hour, the battery charger automatically  
terminatesandindicates,viatheCHRGpin,thatthebattery  
was unresponsive.  
Charge Current  
The charge current is programmed using a single resistor  
from PROG to ground. 1/1031th of the battery charge cur-  
rent is delivered to PROG, which will attempt to servo to  
1.000V. Thus, the battery charge current will try to reach  
1031 times the current in the PROG pin. The program  
resistor and the charge current are calculated using the  
following equations:  
Once the battery voltage is above V  
, the charger be-  
TRKL  
gins charging in full power constant-current mode. The  
current delivered to the battery will try to reach 1031V/  
R . Depending on available input power and external  
PROG  
load conditions, the battery charger may or may not be  
able to charge at the full programmed rate. The external  
load will always be prioritized over the battery charge  
current. The USB current limit programming will always  
be observed and only additional power will be available to  
charge the battery. When system loads are light, battery  
charge current will be maximized.  
1031V  
ICHG  
1031V  
RPROG  
RPROG  
=
, ICHG =  
Ineithertheconstant-currentorconstant-voltagecharging  
modes, the voltage at the PROG pin will be proportional  
to the actual charge current delivered to the battery. The  
chargecurrentcanbedeterminedatanytimebymonitoring  
the PROG pin voltage and using the following equation:  
Charge Termination  
V
PROG  
RPROG  
IBAT  
=
1031  
The battery charger has a built-in safety timer. Once the  
voltage on the battery reaches the pre-programmed float  
voltage of 4.200V, the charger will regulate the battery  
voltagethereandthechargecurrentwilldecreasenaturally.  
Once the charger detects that the battery has reached  
4.200V, the 4-hour safety timer is started. After the safety  
timer expires, charging of the battery will discontinue and  
no more current will be delivered.  
In many cases, the actual battery charge current, I  
,
BAT  
will be lower than the programmed current, I , due  
CHG  
to limited input power available and prioritization to the  
system load drawn from V  
.
OUT  
Charge Status Indication  
The CHRG pin indicates the status of the battery charger.  
Four possible states are represented by CHRG which  
include charging, not charging (or float charge current  
less than programmed end of charge indication current),  
unresponsivebatteryandbatterytemperatureoutofrange.  
Automatic Recharge  
Once the battery charger terminates, it will remain off  
drawing only microamperes of current from the battery.  
If the portable product remains in this state long enough,  
thebatterywilleventuallyselfdischarge.To ensurethatthe  
battery is always topped off, a charge cycle will automati-  
The signal at the CHRG pin can be easily recognized as  
one of the above four states by either a human or a mi-  
croprocessor. An open-drain output, the CHRG pin can  
drive an indicator LED through a current limiting resistor  
for human interfacing or simply a pull-up resistor for  
microprocessor interfacing.  
cally begin when the battery voltage falls below V  
RECHRG  
(typically4.1V).Intheeventthatthesafetytimerisrunning  
when the battery voltage falls below V , it will reset  
RECHRG  
back to zero. To prevent brief excursions below V  
RECHRG  
fromresettingthesafetytimer,thebatteryvoltagemustbe  
belowV formorethan1.5ms. Thechargecycleand  
RECHRG  
40881fc  
13  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
operaTion  
To make the CHRG pin easily recognized by both humans  
and microprocessors, the pin is either a DC signal of ON  
for charging, OFF for not charging or it is switched at high  
frequency(35kHz)toindicatethetwopossiblefaults.While  
switching at 35kHz, its duty cycle is modulated at a slow  
rate that can be recognized by a human.  
pin gives the battery fault indication. For this fault, a hu-  
manwouldeasilyrecognizethefrantic6.1Hzfastblinkof  
the LED while a microprocessor would be able to decode  
either the 12.5% or 87.5% duty cycles as a bad cell fault.  
BecausetheLTC4088-1/LTC4088-2isa3-terminalPower-  
Pathproduct,systemloadisalwaysprioritizedoverbattery  
charging. Due to excessive system load, there may not  
be sufficient power to charge the battery beyond the bad  
cell threshold voltage within the bad cell timeout period.  
In this case the battery charger will falsely indicate a bad  
cell. System software may then reduce the load and reset  
the battery charger to try again.  
When charging begins, CHRG is pulled low and remains  
lowforthedurationofanormalchargecycle.Whencharg-  
ing is complete, as determined by the criteria set by the  
C/X pin, the CHRG pin is released (Hi-Z). The CHRG pin  
does not respond to the C/X threshold if the LTC4088-1/  
LTC4088-2isinV  
currentlimit. Thispreventsfalseend  
BUS  
of charge indications due to insufficient power available to  
the battery charger. If a fault occurs while charging, the  
pin is switched at 35kHz. While switching, its duty cycle  
is modulated between a high and low value at a very low  
frequency. The low and high duty cycles are disparate  
enough to make an LED appear to be on or off thus giv-  
ing the appearance of “blinking”. Each of the two faults  
has its own unique “blink” rate for human recognition as  
well as two unique duty cycles for machine recognition.  
Although very improbable, it is possible that a duty cycle  
reading could be taken at the bright-dim transition (low  
duty cycle to high duty cycle). When this happens the  
duty cycle reading will be precisely 50%. If the duty cycle  
reading is 50%, system software should disqualify it and  
take a new duty cycle reading.  
C/X Determination  
The current exiting the C/X pin represents 1/1031th of  
the battery charge current. With a resistor from C/X to  
ground that is X/10 times the resistor at the PROG pin,  
the CHRG pin releases when the battery current drops to  
Table 2 illustrates the four possible states of the CHRG  
pin when the battery charger is active.  
Table 2. CHRG Signal  
C/X. For example, if C/10 detection is desired, R should  
C/X  
MODULATION  
FREQUENCY (BLINK) FREQUENCY  
DUTY  
CYCLES  
STATUS  
be made equal to R  
PROG  
state is given by:  
. For C/20, R would be twice  
. The current threshold at which CHRG will change  
PROG  
C/X  
Charging  
0Hz  
0Hz  
0Hz (Low Z)  
0Hz (Hi-Z)  
100%  
0%  
R
I
< C/X  
BAT  
NTC Fault  
35kHz  
35kHz  
1.5Hz at 50%  
6.1Hz at 50%  
6.25% or 93.75%  
12.5% or 87.5%  
VC/X  
RC/X  
IBAT  
=
1031  
Bad Battery  
Notice that an NTC fault is represented by a 35kHz pulse  
trainwhosedutycycletogglesbetween6.25%and93.75%  
at a 1.5Hz rate. A human will easily recognize the 1.5Hz  
rate as a “slow” blinking which indicates the out of range  
battery temperature while a microprocessor will be able  
to decode either the 6.25% or 93.75% duty cycles as an  
NTC fault.  
With this design, C/10 detection can be achieved with only  
one resistor rather than a resistor for both the C/X pin and  
the PROG pin. Since both of these pins have 1/1031 of  
the battery charge current in them, their voltages will be  
equal when they have the same resistor value. Therefore,  
rather than using two resistors, the C/X pin and the PROG  
pin can be connected together and the resistors can be  
paralleledtoasingleresistorof1/2oftheprogramresistor.  
If a battery is found to be unresponsive to charging (i.e.,  
its voltage remains below 2.85V for 1/2 hour), the CHRG  
40881fc  
14  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
operaTion  
NTC Thermistor  
Thermal Regulation  
Thebatterytemperatureismeasuredbyplacinganegative  
temperature coefficient (NTC) thermistor close to the bat-  
terypack.TheNTCcircuitryisshownintheBlockDiagram.  
To prevent thermal damage to the IC or surrounding  
components, an internal thermal feedback loop will  
automatically decrease the programmed charge current  
if the die temperature rises to approximately 110°C.  
Thermal regulation protects the LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
from excessive temperature due to high power operation  
or high ambient thermal conditions, and allows the user  
to push the limits of the power handling capability with  
a given circuit board design without risk of damaging  
the LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2 or external components. The  
benefit of the LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2 thermal regulation  
loop is that charge current can be set according to actual  
conditions rather than worst-case conditions for a given  
application with the assurance that the charger will au-  
tomatically reduce the current in worst-case conditions.  
To use this feature, connect the NTC thermistor, R  
,
,
NTC  
betweentheNTCpinandgroundandabiasresistor,R  
NOM  
from V  
to NTC. R  
should be a 1% resistor with  
BUS  
NOM  
a value equal to the value of the chosen NTC thermistor  
at 25°C (R25). A 100k thermistor is recommended since  
thermistor current is not measured by the LTC4088-1/  
LTC4088-2 and will have to be considered for USB com-  
pliance.  
The LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2 will pause charging when the  
resistance of the NTC thermistor drops to 0.54 times the  
value of R25 or approximately 54k (for a Vishay “Curve  
1” thermistor, this corresponds to approximately 40°C).  
If the battery charger is in constant voltage (float) mode,  
the safety timer also pauses until the thermistor indicates  
a return to a valid temperature. As the temperature drops,  
theresistanceoftheNTCthermistorrises.TheLTC4088-1/  
LTC4088-2 is also designed to pause charging when the  
value of the NTC thermistor increases to 3.25 times the  
value of R25. For a Vishay “Curve 1” thermistor, this  
resistance, 325k, corresponds to approximately 0°C. The  
hot and cold comparators each have approximately 3°C  
of hysteresis to prevent oscillation about the trip point.  
Grounding the NTC pin disables all NTC functionality.  
Shutdown Mode  
The input switching regulator is enabled whenever V  
BUS  
is above the UVLO voltage and the LTC4088-1/LTC4088-  
2 is not in one of the two USB suspend modes (500µA  
or 2.5mA).  
The ideal diode is enabled at all times and cannot be  
disabled.  
40881fc  
15  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
applicaTions inForMaTion  
CLPROG Resistor and Capacitor  
the synchronous rectifier as current approaches zero.  
This comparator will minimize the effect of current  
reversal on the average input current measurement.  
For some low inductance values, however, the inductor  
current may reverse slightly. This value depends on the  
speed of the comparator in relation to the slope of the  
As described in the Step-Down Input Regulator section,  
the resistor on the CLPROG pin determines the average  
input current limit in each of the six current limit modes.  
The input current will be comprised of two components,  
the current that is used to drive V  
and the quiescent  
OUT  
current waveform, given by V /L, where V is the voltage  
L
L
current of the switching regulator. To ensure that the USB  
specificationisstrictlymet, bothcomponentsofinputcur-  
rent should be considered. The Electrical Characteristics  
table gives the typical values for quiescent currents in all  
settings as well as current limit programming accuracy.  
To get as close to the 500mA or 100mA specifications as  
possible, a precision resistor should be used.  
across the inductor (approximately –V ) and L is the  
OUT  
inductance value.  
An inductance value of 3.3µH is a good starting value. The  
ripple will be small enough for the regulator to remain in  
continuousconductionat100mAaverageV  
current.At  
BUS  
lighter loads the current-reversal comparator will disable  
thesynchronousrectifieratacurrentslightlyabove0mA.As  
theinductanceisreducedfromthisvalue,thepartwillenter  
discontinuous conduction mode at progressively higher  
An averaging capacitor is required in parallel with the  
resistor so that the switching regulator can determine  
the average input current. This capacitor also provides  
the dominant pole for the feedback loop when current  
limit is reached. To ensure stability, the capacitor on  
CLPROG should be 0.47µF or larger. Alternatively, faster  
transient response may be obtained with 0.1µF in series  
with 8.2Ω.  
loads. Ripple at V  
will increase, directly proportionally  
OUT  
to the magnitude of inductor ripple. Transient response,  
however, will be improved. The current mode controller  
controls inductor current to exactly the amount required  
by the load to keep V  
in regulation. A transient load  
OUT  
steprequirestheinductorcurrenttochangetoanewlevel.  
Choosing the Inductor  
Since inductor current cannot change instantaneously,  
the capacitance on V  
delivers or absorbs the differ-  
Becausetheaverageinputcurrentcircuitdoesnotmeasure  
OUT  
ence in current until the inductor current can change to  
meet the new load demand. A smaller inductor changes  
its current more quickly for a given voltage drive than a  
larger inductor, resulting in faster transient response. A  
largerinductorwillreduceoutputrippleandcurrentripple,  
but at the expense of reduced transient performance (or  
reverse current (i.e., current from V  
to V ), cur-  
OUT  
BUS  
rent reversal in the inductor at light loads will contribute  
an error to the V current measurement. The error is  
BUS  
conservative in that if the current reverses, the voltage  
at CLPROG will be higher than what would represent the  
actual average input current drawn. The current available  
for charging and the system load is thus reduced. The  
USB specification will not be violated.  
more C  
required) and a physically larger inductor  
VOUT  
package size.  
The input regulator has an instantaneous peak current  
clamp to prevent the inductor from saturating during tran-  
sient load or start-up conditions. The clamp is designed  
so that it does not interfere with normal operation at  
highloadswithreasonableinductorripple.Itwillprevent  
inductor current runaway in case of a shorted output.  
This reduction in available V  
current will happen when  
BUS  
the peak-peak inductor ripple is greater than twice the  
average current limit setting. For example, if the average  
current limit is set to 100mA, the peak-peak ripple should  
notexceed200mA. Iftheinputcurrentislessthan100mA,  
the measurement accuracy may be reduced, but it does  
not affect the average current loop since it will not be in  
regulation.  
The DC winding resistance and AC core losses of the  
inductor will affect efficiency, and therefore available  
output power. These effects are difficult to characterize  
The LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2 includes a current-reversal  
comparatorwhichmonitorsinductorcurrentanddisables and vary by application. Some inductors which may be  
suitable for this application are listed in Table 3.  
40881fc  
16  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
applicaTions inForMaTion  
Table 3. Recommended Inductors for the LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
L
(µH)  
MAX I  
(A)  
MAX DCR  
SIZE IN mm  
(L × W × H)  
DC  
INDUCTOR TYPE  
(Ω)  
MANUFACTURER  
LPS4018  
3.3  
2.2  
0.08  
Coilcraft  
www.coilcraft.com  
3.9 × 3.9 × 1.7  
D53LC  
DB318C  
3.3  
3.3  
2.26  
1.55  
0.034  
0.070  
Toko  
www.toko.com  
5 × 5 × 3  
3.8 × 3.8 × 1.8  
WE-TPC Type M1  
3.3  
1.95  
0.065  
Würth Elektronik  
www.we-online.com  
4.8 × 4.8 × 1.8  
CDRH6D12  
CDRH6D38  
3.3  
3.3  
2.2  
3.5  
0.0625  
0.020  
Sumida  
www.sumida.com  
6.7 × 6.7 × 1.5  
7 × 7 × 4  
VBUS and VOUT Bypass Capacitors  
There are several types of ceramic capacitors avail-  
able each having considerably different characteristics.  
Forexample,X7Rceramiccapacitorshavethebestvoltage  
and temperature stability. X5R ceramic capacitors have  
apparentlyhigherpackingdensitybutpoorerperformance  
over their rated voltage and temperature ranges. Y5V  
ceramic capacitors have the highest packing density,  
but must be used with caution, because of their extreme  
nonlinearcharacteristicofcapacitanceversusvoltage.The  
actualin-circuitcapacitanceofaceramiccapacitorshould  
be measured with a small AC signal and DC bias as is  
expectedin-circuit.Manyvendorsspecifythecapacitance  
verse voltage with a 1VRMS AC test signal and, as a result,  
over state the capacitance that the capacitor will present  
in the application. Using similar operating conditions as  
the application, the user must measure or request from  
the vendor the actual capacitance to determine if the  
selected capacitor meets the minimum capacitance that  
the application requires.  
The style and value of capacitors used with the  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2 determine several important  
parameters such as regulator control-loop stability and  
inputvoltageripple.BecausetheLTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
uses a step-down switching power supply from VBUS  
to VOUT, its input current waveform contains high fre-  
quency components. It is strongly recommended that  
a low equivalent series resistance (ESR) multilayer ce-  
ramic capacitor be used to bypass VBUS. Tantalum and  
aluminum capacitors are not recommended because  
of their high ESR. The value of the capacitor on VBUS  
directly controls the amount of input ripple for a given  
load current. Increasing the size of this capacitor will  
reduce the input ripple. The USB specification allows a  
maximum of 10µF to be connected directly across the  
USB power bus. If additional capacitance is required  
for noise performance, a soft-connect circuit may be  
required to limit inrush current and avoid excessive  
transient voltage drops on the bus (see Figure 5).  
Overprogramming the Battery Charger  
To prevent large VOUT voltage steps during transient  
load conditions, it is also recommended that a ceramic  
capacitor be used to bypass VOUT. The output capacitor  
is used in the compensation of the switching regula-  
The USB high power specification allows for up to 2.5W  
to be drawn from the USB port. The switching regulator  
transforms the voltage at VBUS to just above the voltage  
at BAT with high efficiency, while limiting power to less  
than the amount programmed at CLPROG. The charger  
should be programmed (with the PROG pin) to deliver the  
maximumsafechargingcurrentwithoutregardtotheUSB  
specifications. If there is insufficient current available to  
charge the battery at the programmed rate, it will reduce  
charge current until the system load on VOUT is satisfied  
and the VBUS current limit is satisfied. Programming the  
tor. At least 10µF with low ESR are required on VOUT  
.
Additional capacitance will improve load transient  
performance and stability.  
Multilayer ceramic chip capacitors typically have excep-  
tional ESR performance. MLCCs combined with a tight  
boardlayoutandanunbrokengroundplanewillyieldvery  
good performance and low EMI emissions.  
40881fc  
17  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
applicaTions inForMaTion  
charger for more current than is available will not cause  
theaverageinputcurrentlimittobeviolated. Itwillmerely  
allow the battery charger to make use of all available  
power to charge the battery as quickly as possible, and  
with minimal power dissipation within the charger.  
R1 = Optional temperature range adjustment resistor  
(see Figure 4b)  
The trip points for the LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2’s tempera-  
ture qualification are internally programmed at 0.349 •  
V
for the hot threshold and 0.765 • V  
for the cold  
BUS  
threshold.  
BUS  
Alternate NTC Thermistors and Biasing  
Therefore, the hot trip point is set when:  
RNTC|HOT  
The LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2 provides temperature quali-  
fied charging if a grounded thermistor and a bias resistor  
are connected to NTC. By using a bias resistor whose  
value is equal to the room temperature resistance of the  
thermistor (R25) the upper and lower temperatures are  
pre-programmed to approximately 40°C and 0°C, respec-  
tively (assuming a Vishay “Curve 1” thermistor).  
V  
= 0.349 V  
BUS  
BUS  
RNOM + RNTC|HOT  
and the cold trip point is set when:  
RNTC|COLD  
V  
= 0.765 V  
BUS  
BUS  
RNOM + RNTC|COLD  
The upper and lower temperature thresholds can be ad-  
justed by either a modification of the bias resistor value  
or by adding a second adjustment resistor to the circuit.  
If only the bias resistor is adjusted, then either the upper  
or the lower threshold can be modified but not both. The  
other trip point will be determined by the characteristics  
of the thermistor. Using the bias resistor in addition to an  
adjustmentresistor,boththeupperandthelowertempera-  
ture trip points can be independently programmed with  
the constraint that the difference between the upper and  
lower temperature thresholds cannot decrease. Examples  
of each technique are given below.  
Solving these equations for R  
results in the following:  
and R  
NTC|HOT  
NTC|COLD  
R
= 0.536 • R  
NTC|HOT  
NOM  
and  
R
= 3.25 • R  
NTC|COLD  
NOM  
By setting R  
equal to R25, the above equations result  
NOM  
= 0.536 and r  
in r  
= 3.25. Referencing these ratios  
HOT  
COLD  
to the Vishay Resistance-Temperature Curve 1 chart gives  
a hot trip point of about 40°C and a cold trip point of about  
0°C. The difference between the hot and cold trip points  
is approximately 40°C.  
NTC thermistors have temperature characteristics which  
areindicatedonresistance-temperatureconversiontables.  
The Vishay-Dale thermistor NTHS0603N01N1003, used  
in the following examples, has a nominal value of 100k  
and follows the Vishay “Curve 1” resistance-temperature  
characteristic.  
Byusingabiasresistor,R ,differentinvaluefromR25,  
NOM  
the hot and cold trip points can be moved in either direc-  
tion. The temperature span will change somewhat due to  
the non-linear behavior of the thermistor. The following  
equations can be used to easily calculate a new value for  
the bias resistor:  
In the explanation below, the following notation is used.  
R25 = Value of the Thermistor at 25°C  
rHOT  
0.536  
rCOLD  
RNOM  
RNOM  
=
=
R25  
R25  
R
R
= Value of thermistor at the cold trip point  
NTC|COLD  
= Value of the thermistor at the hot trip point  
NTC|HOT  
3.25  
r
r
= Ratio of R  
to R25  
COLD  
NTC|COLD  
= Ratio of R  
to R25  
where r  
and r  
are the resistance ratios at the de-  
COLD  
HOT  
NTC|COLD  
HOT  
sired hot and cold trip points. Note that these equations  
R
NOM  
=Primarythermistorbiasresistor(seeFigure4a)  
are linked. Therefore, only one of the two trip points can  
40881fc  
18  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
applicaTions inForMaTion  
be chosen, the other is determined by the default ratios  
designed in the IC. Consider an example where a 60°C  
hot trip point is desired.  
the nearest 1% value is 105k:  
R1 = 0.536 • 105k – 0.4368 • 100k = 12.6k  
the nearest 1% value is 12.7k. The final solution is shown  
in Figure 4b and results in an upper trip point of 45°C and  
a lower trip point of 0°C.  
FromtheVishayCurve1R-Tcharacteristics,r is0.2488  
HOT  
at 60°C. Using the above equation, R  
should be set to  
, the cold trip point is about  
NOM  
46.4k. With this value of R  
NOM  
16°C. Notice that the span is now 44°C rather than the  
previous40°C. Thisisduetothedecreaseintemperature  
gainofthethermistorasabsolutetemperatureincreases.  
USB Inrush Limiting  
TheUSBspecificationallowsatmost1Fofdownstream  
capacitance to be hot-plugged into a USB hub. In most  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2 applications, 10µF should be  
The upper and lower temperature trip points can be inde-  
pendentlyprogrammedbyusinganadditionalbiasresistor  
asshowninFigure4b. Thefollowingformulascanbeused  
enough to provide adequate filtering on V . If more  
BUS  
capacitance is required, the following circuit can be used  
to compute the values of R  
and R1:  
NOM  
to soft-connect additional capacitance.  
rCOLD rHOT  
MP1  
Si2333  
RNOM  
=
R25  
2.714  
V
BUS  
R1= 0.536 RNOM rHOT R25  
C1  
100nF  
5V USB  
INPUT  
LTC4088-1/  
LTC4088-2  
USB CABLE  
C2  
For example, to set the trip points to 0°C and 45°C with  
a Vishay Curve 1 thermistor choose:  
R1  
40k  
GND  
3.266 – 0.4368  
408812 F05  
RNOM  
=
100k = 104.2k  
2.714  
Figure 5. USB Soft-Connect Circuit  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
NTC BLOCK  
V
V
BUS  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
NTC BLOCK  
V
V
BUS  
BUS  
BUS  
0.765 • V  
0.765 • V  
BUS  
BUS  
R
R
NOM  
105k  
NTC  
NOM  
+
100k  
TOO_COLD  
TOO_COLD  
TOO_HOT  
NTC  
1
+
1
R
R1  
12.7k  
NTC  
T
100k  
+
+
TOO_HOT  
0.349 • V  
0.349 • V  
BUS  
BUS  
R
NTC  
T
100k  
+
+
NTC_ENABLE  
NTC_ENABLE  
0.1V  
0.1V  
408812 F04a  
408812 F04b  
(a)  
(b)  
Figure 4. NTC Circuits  
40881fc  
19  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
applicaTions inForMaTion  
In this circuit, capacitor C1 holds MP1 off when the cable  
is first connected. Eventually the bottom plate of C1 dis-  
chargestoGND, applyingincreasinggatesupporttoMP1.  
The long time constant of R1 and C1 prevent the current  
from building up in the cable too fast, thus dampening  
out any resonant overshoot.  
outputcapacitorbeasclosetotheLTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
as possible and that there be an unbroken ground plane  
under the LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2 and all of its external  
high frequency components. High frequency currents,  
such as the input current on the LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2,  
tend to find their way on the ground plane along a mirror  
path directly beneath the incident path on the top of the  
board. If there are slits or cuts in the ground plane due to  
other traces on that layer, the current will be forced to go  
aroundtheslits. Ifhighfrequencycurrentsarenotallowed  
to flow back through their natural least-area path, exces-  
sivevoltagewillbuildupandradiatedemissionswilloccur  
(see Figure 6). There should be a group of vias directly  
under the grounded backside leading directly down to an  
internal ground plane. To minimize parasitic inductance,  
the ground plane should be as close as possible to the  
top plane of the PC board (layer 2).  
Voltage overshoot on V  
may sometimes be observed  
BUS  
whenconnectingtheLTC4088-1/LTC4088-2toalabpower  
supply. This overshoot is caused by long leads from the  
power supply to V . Twisting the wires together from  
BUS  
the supply to V  
can greatly reduce the parasitic induc-  
BUS  
tance of these long leads, and keep the voltage at V  
to  
BUS  
safe levels. USB cables are generally manufactured with  
the power leads in close proximity, and thus fairly low  
parasitic inductance.  
Board Layout Considerations  
The GATE pin for the external ideal diode controller has  
extremely limited drive current. Care must be taken to  
minimize leakage to adjacent PC board traces. 100nA of  
leakage from this pin will introduce an additional offset  
to the ideal diode of approximately 10mV. To minimize  
leakage, the trace can be guarded on the PC board by  
The Exposed Pad on the backside of the LTC4088-1/  
LTC4088-2 package must be securely soldered to the PC  
board ground. This is the only ground pin in the pack-  
age, and it serves as the return path for both the control  
circuitry and the synchronous rectifier.  
Furthermore,duetoitshighfrequencyswitchingcircuitry,  
it is imperative that the input capacitor, inductor, and  
surrounding it with V  
connected metal, which should  
OUT  
generally be less than one volt higher than GATE.  
408812 F06  
Figure 6. Ground Currents Follow Their Incident Path  
at High Speed. Slices in the Ground Plane Cause High  
Voltage and Increased Emissions  
40881fc  
20  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
applicaTions inForMaTion  
Battery Charger Stability Considerations  
In constant-current mode, the PROG pin is in the feed-  
back loop rather than the battery voltage. Because of the  
additional pole created by any PROG pin capacitance,  
capacitance on this pin must be kept to a minimum. With  
no additional capacitance on the PROG pin, the charger  
is stable with program resistor values as high as 25k.  
However, additional capacitance on this node reduces the  
maximumallowedprogramresistor.Thepolefrequencyat  
the PROG pin should be kept above 100kHz. Therefore, if  
TheLTC4088-1/LTC4088-2’sbatterychargercontainsboth  
aconstant-voltageandaconstant-currentcontrolloop.The  
constant-voltage loop is stable without any compensation  
when a battery is connected with low impedance leads.  
Excessive lead length, however, may add enough series  
inductance to require a bypass capacitor of at least 1µF  
from BAT to GND.  
High value, low ESR multilayer ceramic chip capacitors  
reduce the constant-voltage loop phase margin, possibly  
resulting in instability. Ceramic capacitors up to 22µF  
may be used in parallel with a battery, but larger ceramics  
should be decoupled with 0.2Ω to 1Ω ofseries resistance.  
the PROG pin has a parasitic capacitance, C  
, the fol-  
PROG  
lowing equation should be used to calculate the maximum  
resistance value for R  
:
PROG  
1
RPROG  
2π 100kHz CPROG  
Furthermore, a4.7µF capacitorinserieswitha0.2Ω to1Ω  
resistor from BAT to GND is required to prevent oscillation  
when the battery is disconnected.  
Typical applicaTion  
High Efficiency Battery Charger/USB Power Manager  
with NTC Qualified Charging and Reverse Input Protection  
L1  
WALL  
USB  
3.3µH  
M2  
V
SW  
V
LOAD  
BUS  
OUT  
D0  
D1  
D2  
CHRG  
V
OUTS  
R1  
100k  
LTC4088-1/  
LTC4088-2  
GATE  
M1  
µC  
C1  
10µF  
0805  
C3  
10µF  
0805  
BAT  
NTC  
CLPROG PROG C/X GND  
+
Li-Ion  
R2  
T
C2  
0.1µF  
0603  
R5  
8.2Ω  
R3  
2.94k  
100k  
R4  
499Ω  
408812 TA02  
C1, C3: MURATA GRM21BR61A106KE19  
C2: MURATA GRM188R71C104KA01  
L1: COILCRAFT LPS4018-332MLC  
M1, M2: SILICONIX Si2333  
R2: VISHAY-DALE NTHS0603N01N1003  
40881fc  
21  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
package DescripTion  
Please refer to http://www.linear.com/designtools/packaging/ for the most recent package drawings.  
DE Package  
14-Lead Plastic DFN (4mm × 3mm)  
(Reference LTC DWG # 05-08-1708 Rev B)  
0.70 ±0.05  
3.30 ±0.05  
1.70 ±0.05  
3.60 ±0.05  
2.20 ±0.05  
PACKAGE  
OUTLINE  
0.25 ±0.05  
0.50 BSC  
3.00 REF  
RECOMMENDED SOLDER PAD PITCH AND DIMENSIONS  
APPLY SOLDER MASK TO AREAS THAT ARE NOT SOLDERED  
R = 0.115  
TYP  
0.40 ±0.10  
4.00 ±0.10  
(2 SIDES)  
8
14  
R = 0.05  
TYP  
3.30 ±0.10  
3.00 ±0.10  
(2 SIDES)  
1.70 ±0.10  
PIN 1 NOTCH  
R = 0.20 OR  
PIN 1  
TOP MARK  
(SEE NOTE 6)  
0.35 × 45°  
CHAMFER  
(DE14) DFN 0806 REV B  
7
1
0.25 ±0.05  
0.75 ±0.05  
0.200 REF  
0.50 BSC  
3.00 REF  
0.00 – 0.05  
BOTTOM VIEW—EXPOSED PAD  
NOTE:  
1. DRAWING PROPOSED TO BE MADE VARIATION OF VERSION (WGED-3) IN JEDEC  
PACKAGE OUTLINE MO-229  
2. DRAWING NOT TO SCALE  
3. ALL DIMENSIONS ARE IN MILLIMETERS  
4. DIMENSIONS OF EXPOSED PAD ON BOTTOM OF PACKAGE DO NOT INCLUDE  
MOLD FLASH. MOLD FLASH, IF PRESENT, SHALL NOT EXCEED 0.15mm ON ANY SIDE  
5. EXPOSED PAD SHALL BE SOLDER PLATED  
6. SHADED AREA IS ONLY A REFERENCE FOR PIN 1 LOCATION ON THE  
TOP AND BOTTOM OF PACKAGE  
40881fc  
22  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
revision hisTory (Revision history begins at Rev C)  
REV  
DATE  
DESCRIPTION  
PAGE NUMBER  
C
05/12 Clarified USB Limited Battery Charge Current curves.  
Clarified thermistor part number.  
5
18, 21  
40881fc  
Information furnished by Linear Technology Corporation is believed to be accurate and reliable.  
However, no responsibility is assumed for its use. Linear Technology Corporation makes no representa-  
tion that the interconnection of its circuits as described herein will not infringe on existing patent rights.  
23  
LTC4088-1/LTC4088-2  
relaTeD parTs  
PART NUMBER  
Battery Chargers  
LTC4057  
DESCRIPTION  
COMMENTS  
Lithium-Ion Linear Battery Charger  
Up to 800mA Charge Current, Thermal Regulation, ThinSOT™ Package  
C/10 Charge Termination, Battery Kelvin Sensing, 7% Charge Accuracy  
2mm × 2mm DFN Package, Thermal Regulation, Standalone Operation  
Automatic Switching Between DC Sources, Load Sharing,  
Replaces ORing Diodes  
LTC4058  
Standalone 950mA Lithium-Ion Charger in DFN  
750mA Linear Lithium-Ion Battery Charger  
LTC4065/LTC4065A  
LTC4411/LTC4412  
Low Loss Single PowerPath Controllers in  
ThinSOT  
LTC4413  
Dual Ideal Diodes  
3mm × 3mm DFN Package, Low Loss Replacement for ORing Diodes  
Power Management  
LTC3406/LTC3406A  
600mA (I ), 1.5MHz, Synchronous  
95% Efficiency, V : 2.5V to 5.5V, V  
= 0.6V, I = 20µA, I < 1µA,  
Q SD  
OUT  
IN  
OUT  
Step-Down DC/DC Converter  
ThinSOT Package  
LTC3411  
LTC3455  
1.25A (I ), 4MHz, Synchronous Step-Down  
95% Efficiency, V : 2.5V to 5.5V, V  
= 0.8V, I = 60µA, I < 1µA,  
Q SD  
OUT  
IN  
OUT  
DC/DC Converter  
MS10 Package  
Dual DC/DC Converter with USB Power Manager  
and Li-Ion Battery Charger  
Seamless Transition Between Power Sources: USB, Wall Adapter and  
Battery; 95% Efficient DC/DC Conversion  
LTC3557/LTC3557-1 USB Power Manager with Li-Ion/Polymer Charger, Complete Multi-Function PMIC: Linear Power Manager and Three Buck  
Triple Synchronous Buck Converter + LDO  
Regulators, Charge Current Programmable Up to 1.5A from Wall Adapter  
Input, Thermal Regulation, Synchronous Buck Converters Efficiency: >95%,  
ADJ Outputs: 0.8V to 3.6V at 400mA/400mA/600mA, Bat-Track Adaptive  
Output Control, 200mΩ Ideal Diode, 4mm × 4mm QFN-28 Package.  
LTC4055  
LTC4066  
LTC4085  
USB Power Controller and Battery Charger  
USB Power Controller and Battery Charger  
Charges Single-Cell Li-Ion Batteries Directly from a USB Port, Thermal  
Regulation, 200mΩ Ideal Diode, 4mm × 4mm QFN-16 Package  
Charges Single-Cell Li-Ion Batteries Directly from a USB Port, Thermal  
Regulation, 50mΩ Ideal Diode, 4mm × 4mm QFN-24 Package  
USB Power Manager with Ideal Diode Controller  
and Li-Ion Charger  
Charges Single-Cell Li-Ion Batteries Directly from a USB Port, Thermal  
Regulation, 200mΩ Ideal Diode with <50mΩ Option, 4mm × 3mm  
DFN-14 Package  
LTC4088  
High Efficiency USB Power Manager and Battery  
Charger  
Maximizes Available Power from USB Port, Bat-Track, “Instant-On”  
Operation, 1.5A Max Charge Current, 180mΩ Ideal Diode with <50mΩ  
Option, 3.3V/25mA Always-On LDO, 4mm × 3mm DFN-14 Package  
LTC4089/LTC4089-5 USB Power Manager with Ideal Diode Controller  
and High Efficiency Li-Ion Battery Charger  
High Efficiency 1.2A Charger from 6V to 36V (40V Max) Input. Charges  
Single-Cell Li-Ion/Polymer Batteries Directly from a USB Port, Thermal  
Regulation, 200mΩ Ideal Diode with <50mΩ Option, 4mm × 3mm DFN-14  
Package. Bat-Track Adaptive Output Control (LTC4089), Fixed 5V Output  
(LTC4089-5)  
40881fc  
LT 0512 REV C • PRINTED IN USA  
LinearTechnology Corporation  
1630 McCarthy Blvd., Milpitas, CA 95035-7417  
24  
LINEAR TECHNOLOGY CORPORATION 2007  
(408) 432-1900 FAX: (408) 434-0507 www.linear.com  

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