T
Why? Increasing the case size will increase the series inductance proportionally. Better use multiple small capacitors, particularly reversed form factor (wide and short) low inductance capacitors.Can you confirm that generally the lowest inductance ceramic capacitace is gotten by using the lower capacitance values and the larger case sizes?
even if we increase the external output capacitance from 329uF to 2329uF the ripple stays
2000uF seem to be an electrolytic capacitor.As you’d expect, the ripple frequency is 3MHz
thanks, though this is a 1v5 output, so it was several (twenty inparallel) 100uf, 6v3 SMT ceramics.2000uF seem to be an electrolytic capacitor.
Thanks, yes indeed that is what already exists inside the VTM48' power module.Without series L you need special, very fast capacitor of more than 250uF with less than 0.2mOhms ESR @ 3MHz to significantely reduce the ripple.
We could if we had room.Maybe you could add a series L
Then there's likely something wrong with your measurement. The ripple current should be divided among the output capacitance, so adding more must lower it. Or the capacitors or layout simply aren't suitable for 3MHz.Hello,
We are seeing 30mV of ripple at the output voltage of the VTM48’ module, and even if we increase the external output capacitance from 329uF to 2329uF the ripple stays pretty much at 30mV.
(As you’d expect, the ripple frequency is 3MHz, which is the switching frequency)
There is 310uF of output capacitance internal to the VTM48’ module.
Why would the internal resistance of the source increase the ripple on your filter?So we conclude that we cannot appreciably reduce the output ripple voltage by increasing the output capacitance, because this ripple voltage is mainly caused by the 1 milliohm of internal resistance inside the VTM48’ module. (page 11 of VTM48’ datasheet shows this).
No, inductance is going to be dominated by the length of the package and the routing of the traces. Reversed form factor MLLCs (0306, 0508, 0612, etc) or X2Y packages are an option, but don't generally come in large values, so you would need a ton of them. A well-designed LC filter is more appropriate if layout ESL is the main problem.Therefore, we believe that we should only add some high frequency capacitance at the output of the VTM48’ module. As such we wish to use ceramic capacitance with low internal inductance.
Can you confirm that generally the lowest inductance ceramic capacitace is gotten by using the lower capacitance values and the larger case sizes?
..top of page 11 of the attached VTM module datasheet shows the situation…the 1milliohm of output resistance is what causes most of the output ripple voltage….the internal 310uF capacitor takes most of the 3MHz ripple.Why would the internal resistance of the source increase the ripple on your filter?
Unlikely, why? But 10x 1206,4u7 surely have lower total ESL.d'you think that generally speaking a 1206,4u7 cap would have less ESL than a 1206,47u capacitor
maybe it depends on dielectric type of mlcc...d'you think that generally speaking a 1206,4u7 cap would have less ESL than a 1206,47u capacitor, say?...
we wish to know so we can pick the one with lower ESL.Unlikely, why? But 10x 1206,4u7 surely have lower total ESL.
Certainly not. Just look up the SRF of the two from a manufacturer. This is the reason you'll probably never find a 1206 capacitor in a broadband RF layout. What's the MPN of the capacitors you're using?Thanks, so In general, Surely a 1206, 1nF ceramic SMT capacitor has less inductance than a 0603 1nF ceramic SMT capacitor?, because the smaller case size has to “concertina” the capacitor plates to fit them in the smaller package which means more inductance?
So wait, where exactly are measuring ripple voltage? Is it across the VTM's internal Cout (C1), or is it across your external capacitors (C2)? If there's significant inductance between the two, then adding C2 likely won't decrease ripple at C1. But this has nothing to do with the internal resistance of the VTM.We are trying to reduce the ripple voltage at the output of our Vicor VTM48’ power module as in the attached schematic (VTM48’ datasheet also datasheet attached).
We find that no matter how much higher than 4.7uF we make C1, the output ripple voltage at C1 does not appreciably reduce.
Also, even if C1 is zero Farads (no capacitor at all at C1), then the ripple voltage at C2 is approximately 25mV pkpk , and no matter how much capacitance you put at the C1 position, the Vout ripple voltage at the C2 capacitor stays at approximately 25mV pkpk.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?