multi-sourcing standards for pol and ibc digital power supplies
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Confidential | ©2015 AMP |
MULTI-SOURCING STANDARDS FOR POL AND IBC DIGITAL POWER SUPPLIES
Mark AdamsAMP Group Spokesperson and Senior Vice President, CUI Inc
APEC 2015
©2015 AMP |
WHAT ARE STANDARDS?
Developed based on guiding principles of openness, balance, consensus, and due process.
Established in order to meet technical, safety, regulatory, societal and market needs.
Catalysts for technological innovation and global market competition.
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©2015 AMP |
TODAY’S CHALLENGE
Significant advancement in semiconductor technology and performance metrics have had a tremendous impact on the board level power infrastructure.
The need to have products that are innovative enough to address these metrics while still allowing support of a supply assurance program. In order to achieve this, the power supply is quickly adding a digital dimension to the equation.
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©2015 AMP |
WHAT’S HAPPENING IN MOBILE NETWORKS AND DATA CENTERS?
Data center IP traffic up from2.5 Zettabytes p.a. in 2012 to7.7 Zettabytes p.a. in 2017*
Mobile network traffic will grow 10X from 2013 to 2019, reaching 19 Exabytes per month*
Demand for processing power rising, driving continued semiconductor innovation
Power-per-board up from 300 W in the 1980s to 3 kW by the end of 2015, 5 kW by 2020
*Ericsson Mobility Report
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TECHNOLOGIES ARE PROLIFERATINGOUTSIDE TELECOMMUNICATIONS AND SERVER MARKETS
Greater complexity and management of multi-rail semiconductors, FPGAs, processors, DSPs, etc, - products that are used throughout all market segments, including medical, industrial, consumer, and test & measurement.
Geometry advancement in semiconductors has created a requirement of tighter tolerances and flexible architecture to support dynamic core voltage adjustments.
Increased density of boards in technology products continue to increase, yet board space to implement this incremental growth continues to shrink, requiring greater function and density consolidation.
“The market for digital power solutions is already well-established in the server and telecommunication markets,” said Jonathon Eykyn, power supply and storage component analyst for IHS. “However, IHS is now starting to see growing adoption across a much broader range of products and applications, which is driving rapid growth.”
*Ericsson Mobility Report
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POWERING TOMORROW’S SYSTEMS THE CHALLENGES
How to drive up efficiency, reduce emissions and cut costs
How to monitor and control increasingly complex systems
How to create secure component supply chains for mission critical applications
POL current requirements – already at100 A and may rise to over 400 A in data centers and IP networks
Digital power is particularly effective for improvingefficiency under low-load conditions
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TYPICAL DISTRIBUTED DIGITAL POWERARCHITECTURE WITH INTERMEDIATE BUS
Typical digital features that boost system performance and efficiency:
Adaptive voltage scaling
Automatic compensation
System level monitoring and control
AC-DCfront end
power supply
POLDC-DC
Converters(Non-isolated)
DC-DCConverter(Isolated)
POLDC-DC
Converters(Non-isolated)
POLDC-DC
Converters(Non-isolated)
48V DC 12V DCAC
SYSTEM BOARD
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Source Ericsson (EGG October 2014)
©2015 AMP |
POWER SUPPLIER DRIVERS
The drive to perfect power—always
Integrator of technologies, how do they differentiate?
When to lead? When to align?
The industry has changed now that digital is quickly growing—and continues to move faster than it has in the past
Customers still want it all
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WHY ARE STANDARDS NEEDED FOR POWER?
Supply chain security
Provides customers with options
Avoid “reinventing the wheel” for each new product
Accelerate innovation
Accelerate efficiency improvements
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©2015 AMP |
COMMUNICATION STANDARD
Established standards already exist
SMBus
The physical connection. A long standing protocol used by most organizations already on their board designs.
PMBus
An open power-management protocolwith fully defined commands.
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©2015 AMP |
STANDARDS IMPACT
NEXT GENSUPPLYDESIGN
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DESIGN WHAT DOES IT DO FOR YOU?
The requirement of intelligent or digital power supplies are quickly proliferating throughout the electronics segment, it is no longer just a datacom/telecom sector requirement.
Digital power supplies are inherently more complicated, this is a burden on suppliers and customers.
Standards supporting members provide a variety of products that cover a wide range of densities, footprints, and features in order to allow the design engineer the best options to meet their requirements.
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SUPPLY WHAT ARE THE LIMITATIONS
Supply assurance programs are a requirement by many customers and the advent of digital power complicates this requirement.
Many considerations need to be taken into account because mechanical specifications alone will not allow for a digitally controlled power supply to be multi-sourced by another vendor.
Each group defines compatibility differently.
All standards groups have a minimum number of suppliers that need to provide a product prior to promoting it as an approved product.
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©2015 AMP |
STANDARDS MUST BE PROACTIVE
Standards groups must be proactive intheir engagements and have a visionary roadmap.
The industry cannot move faster than the standard groups or other groups will step in to fill the gap left.
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POLA
Founded 2003
Initiated by TI, Astec (Emerson) and Artesyn
4 total members
Agreed interoperability standards
Analog centric
CHALLENGESanalog only, inactive for new development, point of load only
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DOSA
Founded 2004
Initiated by SynQor and Lineage Power (formerly Tyco Electronics Power Systems)
15 members strong
Supports both POL and IBC
Three companies must support in order to be a “DOSA” product
Defacto analog ‘brick’ packaging standard
Analog and digital definitions for mechanical footprint
CHALLENGESlimited collaboration, mechanical only standard, limited pin-out options
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©2015 AMP |
AMP GROUP
Founded 2014
Initiated by CUI Inc, Ericsson Power Modules, and Murata
3 total members
2 member must support in order to be an “AMP Group” product
Full system
Full digital system structure
– Mechanical
– Features
– Software/configuration
CHALLENGESnew collaboration, driving more than mechanical, infrastructure to support initiative
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©2015 AMP |
CONCLUSION
Standards are essential to the continued growth of future technologies
One standard/consortium does not fit all
Interoperability between standards will be limited due to the nature of proprietary digital development
Standards must continue to adapt and develop faster than the adoption
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Confidential | ©2015 AMP |
THANK YOUwww.ampgroup.com
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