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Monolithic boost regulator ICs integrate the power switch, oscillator, control loop, and protection circuits into a single chip. This reduces external BOM count, saves PCB area, and improves reliability while enabling high-efficiency DC-DC step-up conversion with PFM/PWM mode transitions, UVLO, and thermal safeguards.

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Definition & Fundamentals

Definition. A monolithic boost regulator IC is a DC-DC step-up converter that integrates the power MOSFET, gate driver, control loop, frequency programming, and protections (UVLO/OVP/TSD) in a single package to raise Vin to a higher Vout.

Monolithic Boost Regulator IC
  • Integrated switch FET and protections reduce BOM and board area.
  • Short loops help EMI; PFM at light load improves efficiency.
  • Programmable fSW enables size vs EMI trade-offs.
  • Built-in current limit, thermal shutdown, and UVLO/OVP.
Boost Controller (External FET)
  • External MOSFETs scale output power and thermal headroom.
  • Greater flexibility, but more demanding layout and EMI control.
  • More design effort for protections and compensation networks.
Why choose a monolithic IC
  • Compact footprint; fewer external parts.
  • Predictable EMI with shorter loops and optional spread spectrum.
  • Light-load efficiency via PFM or pulse skipping.
Trade-offs
  • Output current and thermal limits set by internal FET and package.
  • Lower flexibility for extreme Vin/Vout ranges vs controller solutions.

Quick math.

Ideal step-up ratio: Vout ≈ Vin / (1 − D). Inductor ripple: ΔIL ≈ (Vin·D) / (L·fSW). Use these to estimate peak current and choose L and fSW.

Use when
  • Medium power, compact PCB, fast time-to-market.
  • Battery-powered systems need light-load efficiency.
  • Integrated protections simplify qualifications.
Avoid when
  • High current or harsh thermal environment exceeds package limits.
  • Very wide Vin/Vout or special switching elements are required.

Architecture Overview

Power and control paths of a monolithic boost regulator IC with integrated switch FET, PWM/PFM logic, error amplifier with compensation, frequency programming, and UVLO/OVP/TSD blocks.

Monolithic Boost Regulator IC — Block Diagram Integrated switch · Programmable fSW · PFM at light load · UVLO/OVP/TSD Vin Inductor Switch FET Integrated Rectifier Diode / Synchronous Cout Vout Control Path Error Amp Compensation PWM / PFM Logic Light-load transition Gate Driver fSW Programming Resistor / Spread Spectrum Protections UVLO / OVP / TSD / Current Limit FB Network Vout sense to internal FET
Block diagram of a monolithic boost regulator IC. Power path (top) and control path (bottom) with integrated switch FET, PWM/PFM logic, frequency programming, and protections (UVLO/OVP/TSD).
  • Power path: Vin → inductor → internal switch FET → rectifier → Cout → Vout.
  • Control path: Vout → FB network → error amp with compensation → PWM/PFM logic → gate driver.
  • Frequency programming: resistor-set fSW; optional spread spectrum to reduce EMI peaks.
  • PFM at light load: pulse-skipping for efficiency; returns to PWM as load increases.
  • Protections: UVLO, OVP, current limit, and thermal shutdown safeguard startup and faults.
Aspect Monolithic Boost Regulator IC Boost Controller (External FET)
Integration Internal FET, driver, protections built-in External MOSFET, protections often external
EMI/Layout Short loops; spread-spectrum options Longer loops; higher layout sensitivity
Power/Thermal Limited by package and internal FET Scalable with external FETs and cooling
BOM/Size Lower BOM and compact PCB More parts; larger but flexible

Operating Principle

This section explains how a boost converter works from an inductor charge–discharge view, then shows the PFM ↔ PWM transition behavior and how UVLO/OVP/thermal events are handled.

Inductor charge & discharge (On/Off stages)

When the internal switch is ON, the inductor stores energy (approximately VL=Vin). When it turns OFF, the inductor current flows through the rectifier to Cout and the load (VL≈Vin−Vout). Ideally, Vout≈Vin/(1−D), where D is the duty cycle.

On/Off Stages — Inductor Current & Switch Node how boost converter works · inductor charge (ON) and discharge (OFF) Vsw I< tspan baseline-shift="sub" font-size="10">L Vout ON (charge) OFF (discharge)
Inductor current rises during ON and falls during OFF; Vsw pulses; Vout shows small ripple under regulation.

PWM control

The error amplifier and compensation set the duty cycle D to maintain the target Vout. With higher fSW, ripple and magnetics size reduce, while switching loss may increase.

PFM ↔ PWM transition

At light load the controller enters PFM (pulse-skipping) to cut switching loss; when load rises or ripple/thresholds are met it returns to PWM. Proper thresholds avoid audible noise or low-frequency beat.

PFM ↔ PWM Transition PFM reduces switching at light load; PWM resumes as load increases time / load switching density threshold PFM (light load) PWM (heavier load)
In PFM, sparse pulses reduce loss; as load increases beyond the threshold, PWM resumes with dense pulses.

Protection event flows (UVLO / OVP / Thermal)

Each protection follows a three-stage pattern: trigger thresholdaction (gate stop/limit) → recovery (hysteresis/time). This ensures safe startup and fault handling.

Protection Timelines UVLO, OVP, thermal shutdown — trigger → action → recovery UVLO trigger action recovery OVP trigger action recovery Thermal trigger action recovery
UVLO, OVP, and thermal shutdown follow trigger → action → recovery sequences to protect the regulator and load.

Key Features & Functional Advantages

Adjustable switching frequency (fSW) — EMI / efficiency trade-offs

Higher fSW shrinks magnetics and Cout but raises switching loss and high-frequency EMI peaks. Lower fSW eases efficiency yet increases size. Spread-spectrum can flatten peaks to help pre-scan compliance.

fSW Trade-offs size, efficiency, and EMI shift with switching frequency Low fSW Medium fSW High fSW size efficiency EMI Spread-spectrum: reduces peak EMI without changing average fSW
Choose fSW for size vs efficiency; add spread-spectrum to tame EMI peaks when required.

PFM at light load — extends battery life

In PFM, the IC skips pulses to lower switching and driver losses, improving standby/runtime. If audible noise or low-frequency ripple is a concern, lock to forced-PWM or increase minimum load, and review output capacitor ESR and compensation.

Light-load consumption PFM reduces energy per unit time vs forced-PWM at low load load current IC/input power PFM forced-PWM
PFM cuts switching activity at light load, lowering power versus forced-PWM; switch back to PWM when noise or ripple targets require.

Integrated protections & functional safety

Built-in UVLO/OVP/TSD/ILIM provide consistent behavior across lots and temperatures, simplifying validation. For automotive programs, prefer AEC-Q100 variants and align diagnostics with system-level safety goals (ASIL processes). Add input TVS, thermal paths, and Power-Good chaining at the board level.

Tuning fSW

Select fSW by magnetics/size, then apply spread-spectrum to smooth peaks before compliance testing.

PFM noise control

If low-frequency ripple or audible noise appears, force PWM or increase minimum load and review ESR.

Protection margins

Set UVLO above system brown-out; keep OVP headroom for transients; verify TSD hysteresis.

Design Guidelines

Practical rules for inductor/diode/capacitor selection, UVLO setup, suppression of output ringing & overshoot, and loop compensation in a monolithic boost regulator IC.

Inductor selection

  • L targets ΔIL ≈ 20–40% of ILavg.
  • Isat ≥ Ipeak; low DCR; shielded core.
  • ΔIL ≈ (Vin·D)/(L·fSW), Ipeak ≈ Iout·(Vout/Vin)/η + ΔIL/2

Rectifier / diode

  • Schottky (low Vf); check leakage at high T.
  • Iavg ≥ Iout·(Vout/Vin); Vr ≥ Vout + margin.
  • Synchronous variant: confirm ILIM & dead-time.

Output capacitor (ESR & capacity)

  • ΔV ≈ (Iout·D)/(Cout·fSW) + Iout·ESR.
  • MLCC for ripple + modest ESR for damping; watch DC-bias & temp drift.

Input capacitor

  • Place HF MLCC tight to VIN/PGND; add bulk for low-frequency energy.
  • Minimize VIN→switch→PGND loop area.

UVLO setting

  • VUVLO ≈ Vref·(1 + Rtop/Rbot), add hysteresis if available.
  • Place 5–10% above system brown-out; validate cold-crank.

Suppress ringing & overshoot

  • RC snubber at switch node; shortest high di/dt loop.
  • Soft-start; check diode recovery; clean return paths.

Loop compensation

  • Target fc ≈ 0.1–0.2·fSW, PM ≥ 45–60°.
  • Type-II (current-mode) / Type-III (voltage-mode); verify with Bode.
Output ringing & overshoot suppressionBig, readable layout path + snubber + loop hint. Output ringing & overshoot suppression RC snubber · short switch loop · clean return VIN L (shielded) Internal Switch Rectifier Cout RC snubber Minimize switch loop area
Big diagram for readability.
Loop compensation — stability marginLarge axes and thick curves for mobile clarity. Loop compensation — stability margin Target fc ≈ 0.1–0.2·fSW, PM ≥ 45–60° |Gain| frequency → Plant With Type-II/III fc
Large, thick-stroke Bode concept.

Typical Application Scenarios

Where to use a monolithic boost regulator IC: automotive 5/12 V from 3.3 V ECU, portable medical, industrial 24 V stabilization, and drone/robotics power stages.

Automotive sensors — 3.3 V ECU → 5 V/12 V

  • I/O: Vin=3.0–3.6 V; Vout=5/12 V; Iout=0.2–1 A; −40~125 °C.
  • IC: low Iq; PFM; high-temp; AEC-Q100.
  • Board: TVS, PG chain, EMI pre-scan, thermal path.
Automotive ECU 3.3V → 5V/12VLarge boxes and thick arrows for readability. Automotive ECU 3.3V → 5V/12V VIN 3.3V L Boost IC 5V / 12V
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Portable medical — Battery → 5 V / 9 V

  • I/O: Vin=2.7–4.2 V; Vout=5/9 V; Iout=0.5–2 A.
  • IC: low noise; PFM with FPWM option; OVP/short.
  • Board: audible noise care; ESR/comp tuning; medical EMI.
Battery 1-cell → 5V / 9VLarge boxes and thick arrows for readability. Battery 1-cell → 5V / 9V BAT 2.7–4.2V L Boost IC 5V / 9V
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Industrial — 24 V stabilization

  • I/O: Vin=18–30 V; Vout=24–36 V; Iout=0.3–1.5 A.
  • IC: higher voltage; UVLO/OVP; thermal; EMI.
  • Board: surge/ESD; CM noise control; grounding discipline.
24V backbone → regulated 24–36VLarge boxes, thick arrows. 24V backbone → regulated VIN 18–30V L Boost IC 24–36V
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Drone & robotics — 2S–6S → 12–24 V

  • I/O: Vin=2S–6S; Vout=12–24 V; Iout=0.5–3 A.
  • IC: high efficiency; PFM w/ PWM lock; robust ILIM & thermal.
  • Board: shortest switch loop; damp resonances; secure magnetics.
2S–6S → 12–24VLarge boxes, thick arrows. 2S–6S → 12–24V VIN 7.4–25V L Boost IC 12–24V
View IC Selection

Keywords: automotive boost 5V/12V; portable medical boost regulator; industrial 24V stabilization; drone robotics power stage.

Performance Optimization

Practical methods for EMI reduction, burst-mode/PFM noise control, thermal design and PFM ripple management in a monolithic boost regulator IC, including the use of spread spectrum switching frequency (fSW).

EMI (conducted & radiated)

  • Diagnose: identify base fSW and harmonics; separate common-mode vs differential-mode paths.
  • Mitigate: shorten switch loop, use shielded inductor, add input π filter (with damping), optimize return paths.
  • Spread spectrum: enable fSW dither to move energy across bins and lower peak amplitudes.
EMI spectrum — before vs after spread spectrum spread spectrum switching frequency reduces peak amplitudes frequency amplitude before after (spread spectrum)
Enable spread spectrum to lower peak EMI around fSW and harmonics; finish with filter and layout optimizations.

Burst-mode noise & PFM ripple management

  • Diagnose: audible tones or low-frequency ripple at very light load.
  • Mitigate: add minimum load, lock to forced-PWM, increase Cout or adjust ESR, tune compensation, limit minimum on-time.
  • Transition: choose PFM↔PWM thresholds to avoid mode-hopping jitter in the audio band.
PFM ripple management Cout and ESR shift ripple envelope; thresholds control mode return time Vout ripple small Cout / low ESR larger Cout / tuned ESR PFM→PWM threshold
Increase Cout and tune ESR to reduce low-frequency ripple; set PFM→PWM threshold to avoid audio-band jitter.

Thermal design & package heat spreading

  • Use exposed-pad packages with copper planes and via arrays to ground.
  • Place inductor and rectifier for airflow and thermal isolation; select low DCR to cut I2R loss.
  • Derate at high ambient; validate −40~125 °C cycles and thermal shutdown recovery.
Package heat spreading exposed pad → copper pour → via array → ground plane Boost IC (EPAD) copper pour via array
Spread heat from the exposed pad into copper and via arrays; keep hot parts isolated and in airflow.
EMI pre-scan checklist
  • Probe setup and cable routing documented.
  • Enable spread spectrum; sweep fSW ±5–10% if supported.
  • Add CM choke and damped π filter if peaks persist.
Thermal validation checklist
  • −40~125 °C chamber with worst-case load/duty.
  • Record TSD trigger and recovery; build derating curves.
  • Verify copper/via changes vs hotspot temperature.

IC Selection Matrix — Automotive & Industrial

Compare monolithic boost regulator ICs across major brands. Values are illustrative placeholders for structure and SEO; please replace with datasheet-verified numbers during editorial pass.

Tip: use badges to spot fit — Auto Low-Iq High-V

Brand Part number Vin range (V) Vout max (V) Iout max (A) fSW (kHz/MHz) Light-load Protections Sync/Diode Spread-spectrum Iq (µA) Package Temp grade AEC-Q100 Notes / Advantages
Texas Instruments TPS61088 Auto ~2.7–12 ~12 ~4 ~400–2200 Auto PFM/PWM UVLO/OVP/TSD/ILIM Diode Option Low QFN −40~125 °C Yes High current monolithic; robust protection set.
STMicroelectronics STxxxxx Auto PFM/FPWMUVLO/OVP/TSD Diode/SROption QFN/QFPN −40~125 °CYes Automotive coverage; good EMC app notes.
onsemi NCPxxxx Auto AutoUVLO/OVP/TSD/ILIM Diode/SROption DFN/QFN −40~125 °CYes Solid industrial docs; EMC reference designs.
Renesas ISL/LTxxxx Low-Iq PFM/AutoUVLO/OVP/TSD Diode/SROption Very lowDFN/QFN −40~125 °CSelect Low quiescent current options for battery systems.
NXP MCxxxx Auto Auto/FPWMUVLO/OVP/TSD Diode/SR HVQFN −40~125 °CYes Automotive interfaces and safety docs align well.
Microchip MCPxxxx Low-Iq PFM/AutoUVLO/OVP/TSD Diode Very lowDFN/MSOP −40~105 °CSelect Battery-friendly Iq; compact packages.
Analog Devices (ADI/LTC) LTxxxx High-V PFM/FPWMUVLO/OVP/TSD/ILIM SR/DiodeOption LowLQFN/QFN −40~125 °CSelect High-voltage and precision options; strong app notes.
Automotive focus

AEC-Q100 grades, PG/diagnostics pins, EMC guides and spread-spectrum options for CISPR pre-scan.

Industrial focus

Higher Vin ratings, robust protections, thermal headroom, and long-lifecycle packages.

Matrix legend fSW (kHz/MHz): size vs efficiency vs EMI Light-load: PFM / forced-PWM / Auto Protections: UVLO / OVP / TSD / ILIM Iq (µA): standby efficiency indicator
Use the legend to interpret the selection matrix fields quickly during shortlisting.
Submit your BOM — 48h cross-brand recommendation

FAQs — Monolithic Boost Regulator IC

Practical answers to common questions on PFM/PWM transition, UVLO/OVP, startup, ripple/noise, and typical applications. Each answer includes a link back to the detailed section.

Why does a boost regulator IC not step down when Vin > Vout?
A boost converter is a step-up topology; its power path cannot actively reduce input voltage. If Vin rises above the target Vout, the regulator may idle or pass through via parasitics. Use a buck or buck-boost for step-down cases.
What causes audible noise or ripple during PFM, and how to mitigate it?
In PFM the IC skips pulses, creating low-frequency components that can enter the audio band. Mitigate by adding a minimum load, locking to forced-PWM, increasing Cout or adjusting ESR, and setting a higher PFM→PWM threshold to avoid mode-hopping jitter.
How do I set UVLO to avoid failed or chattering starts (cold-crank)?
Place UVLO 5–10% above the system brown-out threshold and add hysteresis. Validate at low temperature where ESR is high and battery voltage sags; confirm soft-start behavior and current-limit interaction.
Why does Vout fluctuate at no-load, and is it harmful?
Light/zero load drives the IC into PFM or sample-and-hold behavior, so ripple rises. It is usually benign; for sensitive rails, add a bleed load or force PWM and re-tune Cout/ESR.
How to prevent false OVP triggers during transients?
Lengthen soft-start, moderate loop bandwidth, and consider a feed-forward capacitor at FB. Ensure the rectifier recovery and switch node ringing are damped (RC snubber) to avoid overshoot that trips OVP.
How to choose the inductor value and current rating?
Target ripple ΔIL ≈ 20–40% of average inductor current. Choose Isat ≥ Ipeak, prefer shielded cores and low DCR. Balance efficiency, size, and transient needs against the selected fSW.
Schottky rectifier vs synchronous rectification — which to pick?
Synchronous parts improve efficiency at higher currents but add complexity/cost. Schottky solutions are simple and robust, and can be preferable at low currents or high temperature where leakage is acceptable.
How does adjustable fSW impact EMI and efficiency? When to enable spread spectrum?
Higher fSW reduces magnetics/COuT size but raises switching loss and high-frequency EMI. Enable spread-spectrum to flatten peaks for pre-compliance scans; then refine with layout and input filtering.
How to suppress output ringing and overshoot at startup or load steps?
Minimize the high di/dt loop, apply an RC snubber at the switch node, ensure appropriate rectifier selection, and tune compensation/soft-start. Verify with step loads and cold/hot conditions.
What stability margins should I target for loop compensation?
Aim for fc ≈ 0.1–0.2·fSW and phase margin ≥ 45–60°. Validate across line, load, temperature, and operating modes (PFM/PWM transitions if applicable).
Why does the boost IC run hot, and how to improve thermal performance?
Conduction and switching losses concentrate in the internal FET, rectifier, and inductor. Use EPAD packages with copper pours and via arrays, lower DCR, and select an fSW that reduces total loss at your load profile.
How does the PFM↔PWM transition threshold affect performance?
A too-low threshold risks audible noise and ripple; too high wastes light-load efficiency. Tune the threshold versus your noise/efficiency targets and confirm stability during mode changes.
What minimum input/output capacitors are recommended for robustness?
Place high-frequency MLCCs at VIN/GND with short returns and add bulk capacitance for low-frequency energy. At VOUT, parallel MLCCs and allow modest ESR for damping; account for DC-bias and temperature derating.
Which boost ICs suit automotive sensors (5 V / 12 V from 3.3 V ECU)?
Look for low Iq, AEC-Q100 grades, PFM with a forced-PWM option, power-good, and EMC guidance. Use the selection matrix to shortlist by Vin range, fSW, protections, and package.
How to size soft-start and current limit to avoid overshoot or hiccup at startup?
Increase soft-start time so the output capacitor charges with limited surge and ensure ILIM exceeds the worst-case inductor peak plus load charging current. Validate across temperature and with large capacitive loads.