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Single-Inductor Buck-Boost (SEPIC/Zeta)

Single-Inductor Buck-Boost (SEPIC/Zeta) — Intro

Single-inductor SEPIC/Zeta is a non-inverting buck-boost architecture that uses a single magnetic core (coupled inductor, typically 1:1 with k ≈ 0.95–0.99) plus a series coupling capacitor (Cc). It naturally supports CV/CC, enables gentle start-up current limiting, and can be made pre-bias friendly across wide VIN. Tradeoffs include a right-half-plane zero (RHPZ) that constrains bandwidth, strict Cc RMS/ESR sizing, and damping for leakage inductance.

Definition

“Single-inductor” here means a single magnetic component with two windings on one core (a coupled inductor). Together with a series coupling capacitor Cc, it forms a non-inverting buck-boost converter: SEPIC or Zeta. Both deliver a positive output from a positive input while stepping voltage up or down.

  • SEPIC/Zeta share similar power stages; they differ in the energy transfer path and ripple distribution.
  • Using one magnetic core reduces volume and loop area; Cc sets RMS stress and start-up surge.
  • Well-suited to CV/CC loads (LEDs, auxiliary rails, sensor/measurement fronts) with soft-start limiting.
  • Limits: RHPZ caps control bandwidth; verify Cc RMS/ESR; damp Llk with RC/RCD.
VIN VOUT
Cover — Single-inductor SEPIC/Zeta use cases with CV/CC and soft-start limiting

Next we compare SEPIC vs Zeta power paths, ripple placement, and high-dv/dt hot loops to guide compensation, layout, and validation.

Principle — Conversion, Ripple, and Limits

In continuous conduction and ideal form, the single-inductor SEPIC/Zeta buck-boost follows a boost-like conversion law while its control bandwidth is constrained by a right-half-plane zero (RHPZ). Coupling alters ripple sharing across windings, and the series coupling capacitor Cc must keep low impedance at fSW to avoid excess ripple and start-up surge.

Conversion Ratio (CCM, Ideal)

For SEPIC/Zeta in CCM and ideal components: VOUT/VIN ≈ D/(1−D). Near D≈0.5 the input RMS current rises and stresses increase; at high D, efficiency and transient behavior degrade, so margining is required in practical designs.

Inductor Ripple & Coupling Effects

Ripple current per winding follows ΔIL ≈ (VL/L)·(D·Ts). With a coupled inductor, winding ripples are correlated (set by coupling factor k and dot orientation), which redistributes copper/core loss and thermal hotspots. The effective inductance Leq depends on k and the energy path in SEPIC vs Zeta.

RHPZ & ESR Zero

The buck-boost-like right-half-plane zero limits voltage-loop bandwidth: fRHPZ ≈ RLOAD(1−D)² / (2π·Leq). Output capacitor ESR introduces a zero: fZESR ≈ 1/(2π·COUT·ESR). The coupling capacitor impedance must be small around the switching frequency: |XCc| ≈ 1/(2π f Cc) « channel impedance.

Dual-Loop Control for CV/CC

A current inner loop (peak or valley with proper slope compensation) plus a voltage outer loop (Type-II commonly, Type-III for higher BW within RHPZ limits) implements CV/CC. ILIM and SS (soft-start capacitor or digital ramp) coordinate gentle start-up and pre-bias behavior.

Bode sketch — RHPZ (red), ESR zero (dashed), and a safe bandwidth window (blue highlight).

These principles set the guardrails for component selection and compensation. Next we turn them into copy-able design rules.

Design Rules — Copy-able Process

Use this step-by-step flow to size the coupled inductor, coupling/output capacitors, rectification, limits, and compensation while respecting RHPZ, EMI, and thermal targets.

1) Define VIN/VOUT & Margins

Set min/nom/max VIN, target VOUT, load range. Reserve 10–20% efficiency/thermal margin and include cold/hot corners.

2) Coupled Inductor
  • ΔIL ≈ 20–40% · IL,avg; choose k≥0.95, often 1:1.
  • Isat ≥ IPK with temp derating; shielded core preferred.
  • Compute copper/core loss vs fSW, material (ferrite/iron powder), Bmax.
3) Coupling Capacitor Cc
  • Check RMS current (often a sizable fraction of switch/input current).
  • |XCc(fSW)| must be small; verify ESR and bias/temperature drift.
  • Prefer film + MLCC in parallel; X7R arrays to overcome DC bias loss.
4) Output Capacitors

Split ripple target into charge and ESR parts. Add small series-R for damping/ESR-zero shaping when needed.

5) Rectification
  • Diode: rate Iavg, Irms, VF, reverse recovery.
  • Synchronous FET: dead-time, reverse conduction, gate damping, driver slew trade-offs.
6) Current Limit & Soft-Start

Choose peak vs valley limit (mode-boundary behavior near D≈0.5). Set SS cap/digital ramp and ILIM threshold; ensure pre-bias safe start without reverse discharge.

7) Compensation
  • Rule: BW ≤ fRHPZ/5–10.
  • Voltage loop Type-II (typical) or Type-III (higher BW cases within limits).
  • Slope compensation for peak mode; avoid jitter at mode boundary in valley mode.
8) EMI & Measurement
  • Minimize hot-loop area; input π / dual-T filters; RC/snubber for leakage spikes.
  • Spread-spectrum: beware probe ground-lead artifacts and analyzer RBW misreads.
9) Thermal

Compute RθJA for FET/diode/inductor. Use copper spreading and via arrays; validate with steady-state hot-spot maps (≥10-min soak).

VIN/VOUT & Margins Coupled Inductor Coupling Cap Cc Output Caps Rectification (Diode / Sync) Current Limit & Soft-Start Compensation BW ≤ fRHPZ/5–10 EMI & Measurement Thermal & Final Checks
One-page design flow — named cards for each step: VIN/VOUT & Margins, Coupled Inductor, Coupling Cap Cc, Output Caps, Rectification, Current Limit & Soft-Start, Compensation, EMI & Measurement, Thermal.
Quick Rules
  • ΔIL = 20–40% · IL,avg
  • |XCc(fSW)| « channel impedance
  • BW ≤ fRHPZ/5–10
Don’t Forget
  • Pre-bias safe soft-start
  • Snubbers for leakage spikes
  • Via arrays for hot devices

With these rules in place, proceed to Layout & EMI and Validation to lock stability and compliance.

Layout & EMI — Hot Loops and No-Shake Rules

To keep a single-inductor SEPIC/Zeta stable and quiet, minimize hot-loop area, route proper return paths, and place the coupling capacitor Cc next to the switching nodes. Use Kelvin sensing for current sense, partition PGND/AGND, and add damping (RC/RCD and gate resistors) to tame leakage-induced ringing.

① Switch FET Loop
  • Shortest path from VIN decoupling to FET to ground return.
  • Keep high-dv/dt node compact; avoid crossing ground splits.
  • Place snubber near FET; short, wide traces.
② Rectifier Loop
  • Diode/SR FET close to inductor and output caps.
  • Return straight to output ground, not via signal ground.
  • Gate damping (SR) to prevent reverse conduction chatter.
③ Input Bypass Loop
  • Bulk + high-freq MLCC right at VIN/FET pins.
  • Dual-path: HF to power ground, bulk to quiet ground star.
  • Use via arrays to anchor to ground plane.
④ Cc Energy Loop
  • Cc adjacent to the two coupled-inductor nodes.
  • Symmetric entry/exit and mirrored return to reduce parasitics.
  • Film + MLCC in parallel; shortest loop area wins.

Dots & Winding Orientation

Match dot polarity to the controller’s reference. A reversed dot pair shifts ripple sharing and can inject unexpected common-mode noise. Verify after assembly with a quick scope check across windings at light load.

  • Do: keep winding start/finish consistent with schematic dots.
  • Don’t: route the dot node across plane splits.

Kelvin Sense & Grounding

Kelvin route the sense resistor; isolate AGND from power currents and join at a single star near the IC AGND pin.

  • Do: dedicated sense pair to Rsense pads.
  • Don’t: tie AGND into switch loop returns.

Damping & Gate Control

Place RC/RCD snubbers at the culprit node (FET or rectifier). Set gate resistors to balance loss vs ringing and meet EMI margins; validate dead-time for synchronous rectification.

Layer Stack & Return Paths

Top: power routing; inner: continuous ground plane; bottom: signals. Avoid signal lines crossing plane gaps; guide return directly under the forward path to cancel fields.

Hot loops and placement — switch (red), rectifier (green), input bypass (amber), and coupling-cap energy loop (blue). Cc sits between the coupled inductor nodes.
Do
  • Place Cc tight to the switching nodes.
  • Keep continuous ground plane under power routes.
  • Kelvin sense Rsense; single AGND-PGND star point.
Don’t
  • Cross plane splits with fast nodes.
  • Loop snubbers through long vias.
  • Share AGND with power returns.

With loop areas minimized and grounds disciplined, you can confidently validate start-up, mode boundaries, loop gain, EMI, and thermal behavior.

Validation — Scripted Tests & Reusable Logs

Validate across start-up conditions, VIN/VOUT crossings, loop gain, EMI, and thermal steady state. Pay special attention near D≈0.5 (VIN ≈ VOUT), where mode boundaries and current-limit transitions are most sensitive.

Start-Up Suite

  • Cold/hot start; pre-bias present; sweep soft-start slope vs inrush and output dip.
  • Record: rise time, Vdip, input current peak, switch-node spikes, PG/EN timing.
  • Confirm ILIM behavior (fold-back vs clamp) does not latch or chatter.

Across VIN & Mode Boundary

  • Sweep VIN through VIN ≈ VOUT (around D≈0.5); watch for subharmonics and peak↔valley limit handover.
  • Apply load steps (25%↔75%), linear sweeps of VIN/IOUT; log overshoot/undershoot and settling.

Loop Gain — CV & CC

  • Target BW ≤ fRHPZ/5–10; phase margin 45–60° with load/temperature corners.
  • Injection point at the error amp or current sense; keep injected amplitude small to avoid nonlinearity.
  • With spread-spectrum, average/qp detectors may read differently—note analyzer RBW/VBW.

EMI — Conducted & Radiated

  • Conducted (LISN, 150 kHz–30 MHz) and radiated (1 m/3 m). Keep probe ground leads short to avoid false peaks.
  • Correlate bench scans to chamber results; verify snubber and filter damping remain stable across VIN.

Thermal Imaging

  • Full-load soak ≥10 min; capture max device temps and ΔT to ambient.
  • Compare to RθJA estimates and loss models; check for via starvation under hot parts.
Validation Matrix — Conditions vs Measurements
Condition Key Measurements Pass Criteria Notes
Cold start, min VIN, max load Inrush peak, Vout dip, PG timing, Vsw spike No latch; dip < spec; spike < abs max SS ramp tuned; ILIM verified
VIN sweep through VIN≈VOUT Subharmonics, limit mode handover No oscillation; seamless handover Observe near D≈0.5
Load step 25%↔75% Overshoot/undershoot, settling time BW target met; PM within spec Loop injection correlates
Conducted EMI (LISN) QP/Avg limits vs mask Below limit with margin Filter damping stable
Thermal soak ≥10 min @ full load Max device temp, ΔT, IR map Tj < rating; hotspots acceptable Via arrays present under hot parts

Thresholds Sheet

Limits and protection thresholds
Parameter Target Measured
ILIM
UVLO/OVP
SS slope

Inrush/Sag Sheet

Start-up and disturbance metrics
Test Peak/Dip Settling
Cold start
VIN dip
Load step

Loop Parameters Sheet

Poles/zeros, BW and margins
Item Value Notes
fRHPZBW ≤ fRHPZ/5–10
ESR zero
PM / GMPM ≥ 45–60°

ICs & Selection Matrix — Single-Inductor SEPIC/Zeta

Real, SEPIC-capable parts only. “Controller” rows drive external MOSFETs; output current is set by the power stage. Values are typical summaries for quick screening—verify against the datasheets for final sizing.

Fields: Brand, Type, PN, VIN, IOUT, fSW, Sync, Gate Driver, SS/ILIM, Spread-Spectrum, LED/General, AEC-Q100, Notes
Brand Type PN VIN Range IOUT (max) fSW Sync Gate Driver SS / ILIM Spread-Spectrum LED / General AEC-Q100 Notes
TI Controller LM3478 2.97–40 V Ext MOSFET 100 kHz–1 MHz (adj.) Optional (external SR) Low-side driver Soft-start, cycle-by-cycle No (sync pin only) General / LED LM3478Q-Q1 available Boost/SEPIC/flyback capable; current-mode.
TI Controller TPS40210 / TPS40211 4.5–52 V Ext MOSFET Adj. (typ. 200–600 kHz) Optional (external SR) Low-side driver Programmable SS, cycle-by-cycle No General / LED Q-1 options Boost/SEPIC/flyback; 0.7 V / 0.26 V ref (40210/40211).
ST Controller HVLED001A Offline; 85–305 Vac (HPF) Up to ~150 W systems QR / variable No (diode) Integrated Peak current mode; programmable No LED No (std. industrial) Flyback / buck-boost PFC; SEPIC also supported.
NXP Integrated SBC FS27 (with SEPIC front-end) Automotive 12/24 V systems Front-end supply (configurable) Internal controller No (SEPIC controller) Integrated Programmable limits General (SBC power) Yes; ASIL-capable SBC includes SEPIC controller for 24 V withstand.
Renesas LED Controller ISL1904 Offline (PFC LED) By power stage CrCM control No Integrated Primary-side regulation; OCP LED No Supports boost, Ćuk, SEPIC, buck-boost topologies.
onsemi LED Driver NCP3066 / NCV3066 Up to 40 V LED CC; by sense & MOSFET ~150 kHz (adj.) No (diode) Integrated switch / driver Current-regulated LED CC No LED NCV grade available Buck/boost/SEPIC LED driver controller.
Microchip Controller MCP1631HV +5.5–16 V (HV) Ext MOSFET High-speed PWM (ext. clock) Optional (external SR) External MOSFET driver Peak current-mode; programmable No LED / General Automotive-friendly variants Frequently used for SEPIC LED/charger designs.
Melexis LED Driver MLX10803 Automotive supply (wide) By power stage Controller-set No Integrated Programmable LED current LED Automotive oriented General-purpose high-power LED driver; SEPIC usable.

Tip: shortlist by VIN domain first (low-voltage DC vs. offline mains), then decide “controller vs integrated”, and finally check SS/ILIM and RHPZ-limited bandwidth targets.

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FAQs — Single-Inductor SEPIC/Zeta

Practical answers for sizing the coupling capacitor, handling RHPZ limits, soft-start, mode boundaries around D≈0.5, EMI and measurement hygiene. Each entry includes a takeaway threshold or formula to copy into your design notes.

How do I size the coupling capacitor to avoid overheating yet limit inrush?

Make |XCc(fSW)| = 1/(2πfSWCc) much lower than the series path impedance while checking the RMS current from worst-case duty and ripple. Use multiple X7R MLCCs in parallel with a small film cap to tame ESR shift. Verify temperature rise at max VIN and load; add soft-start pre-charge if needed.

Peak-current limit vs valley-current limit near D≈0.5 — which is safer?

At the mode boundary (VIN≈VOUT), peak limiting resists subharmonics but aggravates overshoot; valley limiting gives smoother recovery yet risks chatter with shallow slope compensation. Rule of thumb: ensure effective slope ≥ 0.5× inductor down-slope and confirm no period-doubling in a VIN sweep through D≈0.5.

How can I tune dead-time without increasing diode conduction loss?

Start with short dead-time, add gate damping to control dv/dt, then extend only until cross-conduction vanishes on scope. Check body-diode current plateau; target <50–100 ns for mid-power designs. Validate over temperature and at highest VIN—dead-time usually grows with slower gates and snubber loading.

How do I support pre-bias start-up without reverse discharge?

Keep the synchronous rectifier disabled until VOUT ramp exceeds pre-bias; use diode rectification or SR with strong reverse blanking. Coordinate SS, ILIM, and PG so the current loop limits first. Confirm no negative current through the inductor during soft-start by probing VSW and inductor current.

Why does input RMS current spike around certain duty cycles?

SEPIC/boost move higher energy through the input at intermediate duty, raising RMS stress. For ideal CCM, VOUT/VIN≈D/(1−D); near D≈0.5 the product of inductor ripple and average current often peaks. Choose bulk electrolytics with ripple margin and test at VIN that makes VOUT≈VIN.

Does spread-spectrum break loop measurements or compensation?

It does not change small-signal poles/zeros but smears the injected tone. For Bode work, disable spread-spectrum or measure in average/peak-hold with adequate RBW/VBW. Keep compensation values fixed; only re-validate margins. Re-enable dithering for EMI after confirming bandwidth and phase margin.

How do I choose magnetic core material for wide-VIN SEPIC/Zeta?

Use ferrite for high fSW and low core loss; use iron-powder where ripple is large and saturation headroom matters. Shielded parts cut EMI. Size for ΔIL=20–40%·IL,avg, verify Isat at hot corner, and check copper/core loss at min and max VIN.

How should I chain PG with a downstream LDO/VRM?

Gate the next rail with SEPIC/Zeta PG plus a short delay (1–5 ms) to avoid double correction during ramp-up. Keep return grounds separate and meet the VRM’s UVLO/soft-start requirements. If the downstream regulator sinks current, ensure your pre-bias policy prevents reverse discharge.

Soft-start slope vs inrush: what relationship matters most?

Make the SS ramp such that the inner current loop is always in control. Empirically, set SS time ≥ 5–10× output LC time-constant and confirm input inrush does not exceed bulk capacitor ripple rating. For large Cc, consider pre-charge or a current clamp during the first milliseconds.

What RC filter can I place on the current-sense signal without destabilizing?

Keep the filter pole above one-tenth of fSW and below the switching noise corner. Typical: fp ≈ 0.1–0.2·fSW with a small zero at the slope-comp point if needed. Verify the injected-signal phase in the Bode plot does not erode phase margin <45°.

When should I switch to a 2-switch inverting converter for a −V rail?

Prefer 2-switch inverting when negative output current is high, isolation of return currents is critical, or SEPIC/Zeta efficiency falls from diode loss and RHPZ-limited bandwidth. It offers cleaner return paths and easier compensation at high gains, at the expense of extra FET and driver complexity.

USB-PD: how do I keep regulation during PDO transitions?

Reduce bandwidth near the transition and cap slew on the commanded setpoint. Coordinate EN/SS with PD events so the current loop remains dominant. Validate worst cases: stepping VIN upward across D≈0.5 and large load changes; ensure no overshoot violates the sink’s OVP window.

Crank and falling-VIN ride-through: any duty limits or protections?

Set a maximum duty clamp to keep the switch within SOA and maintain margin from RHPZ. Add UVLO with hysteresis and current limit fold-back during deep dips. Test cold-crank profiles and log recovery time; avoid prolonged operation where D→1 and the loop loses control authority.

How low should I cap bandwidth under the RHPZ constraint?

Use BW ≤ fRHPZ/5–10. This gives space for load variation and ESR-zero placement. For LED CC, pick the lower side of that range to reduce flicker from line ripple; for tightly regulated rails, approach the upper side after confirming ≥60° phase margin across temperature.

Synchronous rectification vs Schottky — where is the crossover?

SR wins when I·VF loss dominates and thermal headroom is tight. Use a Schottky below a few hundred milliamps or when pre-bias start-up simplicity matters. Account for dead-time, reverse conduction, and gate losses; confirm EMI does not worsen from faster edges with SR.

Need a verified SEPIC/Zeta short-list?

Send your VIN range, VOUT, IOUT and constraints. We’ll return a cross-brand matrix, first-pass risks, and compensation targets—ready to validate within 48 hours.

Submit your BOM (48h) Ask for cross-brand alternates
  • Coverage: low-voltage DC and offline front-ends, LED and general CV/CC rails.
  • Deliverables: selection matrix, design limits (RHPZ-aware), and validation checklist.
  • Your inputs: VIN(min/nom/max), VOUT, IOUT, startup constraints, size/thermal limits.