PMIC - Hot Swap Controllers

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
TPS2331IPW

TPS2331IPW

Texas Instruments

TPS2331 3-13V SINGLE HOT-SWAP IC

1396

TPS2456RHHT

TPS2456RHHT

Texas Instruments

TPS2456 DUAL 12V PROTECTION AND

8741

TPS2491DGS

TPS2491DGS

Texas Instruments

IC HOT SWAP CTRLR GP 10VSSOP

883

TPS259802ONRGER

TPS259802ONRGER

Texas Instruments

2.7-V TO 24-V, 8-A, 3-M SMART EF

2958

TPS24772RGET

TPS24772RGET

Texas Instruments

IC HOT SWAP CTRLR GP 24VQFN

34

TPS25910RSAR

TPS25910RSAR

Texas Instruments

IC HOT SWAP CTRLR GP 16QFN

8468

TPS2343DDP

TPS2343DDP

Texas Instruments

POWER SUPPLY CIRCUIT, ADJ

29504

TPS24742RGET

TPS24742RGET

Texas Instruments

IC HOT SWAP CTRLR GP 24VQFN

404

HPC3130APBM

HPC3130APBM

Texas Instruments

PCI BUS CONTROLLER, CMOS

3033

TPS2393APWR

TPS2393APWR

Texas Instruments

IC HOT SWAP CTRLR -48V 14TSSOP

0

TPS2341PHP

TPS2341PHP

Texas Instruments

POWER SUPPLY CIRCUIT, FIXED

765

TPS24750RUVT

TPS24750RUVT

Texas Instruments

IC HOT SWAP CTRLR GP 36VQFN

392

UCC2917D

UCC2917D

Texas Instruments

POWER SUPPLY SUPPORT CIRCUIT

3875

TPS2310IPWG4

TPS2310IPWG4

Texas Instruments

IC HOT SWAP CTRLR GP 20TSSOP

0

UCC2921DG4

UCC2921DG4

Texas Instruments

UCC2921 LATCHABLE NEGATIVE FLOAT

65

TPS23521PWR

TPS23521PWR

Texas Instruments

IC HOT SWAP CTRLR -48V 16TSSOP

0

UCC2919PW

UCC2919PW

Texas Instruments

POWER SUPPLY SUPPORT CIRCUIT

65970

UCC2912N

UCC2912N

Texas Instruments

POWER SUPPLY SUPPORT CIRCUIT

6475

UC2914DWTR

UC2914DWTR

Texas Instruments

UC2914 5-35V SINGLE, HOT-SWAP IC

4000

TPS2330IPWRG4

TPS2330IPWRG4

Texas Instruments

IC HOT SWAP CTRLR GP 14TSSOP

0

PMIC - Hot Swap Controllers

1. Overview

Hot Swap Controllers are specialized Power Management ICs (PMICs) designed to manage the safe insertion and removal of circuit boards or modules in powered systems. They prevent electrical hazards, inrush currents, and data corruption during live plug/unplug operations. These controllers are critical in high-availability systems such as servers, data centers, and telecommunications infrastructure, enabling maintenance without system downtime.

2. Main Types and Functional Classification

Type Functional Features Application Examples
Basic Hot Swap Controllers Overcurrent/voltage protection, manual reset Entry-level servers, industrial racks
Advanced Protection Controllers Digital fault logging, adjustable current limits Telecom switches, storage arrays
Digital Hot Swap Controllers I2C/PMBus interface, real-time monitoring Cloud data centers, AI accelerators

3. Structure and Components

Typical hot swap controllers are housed in QFN, TSSOP, or BGA packages. Key components include:

  • High-side MOSFET driver for load switching
  • Current-sense amplifiers for load monitoring
  • Digital logic for fault detection and timing control
  • Thermal shutdown circuitry
  • Communication interfaces (e.g., SMBus)

4. Key Technical Specifications

Parameter Typical Range Importance
Operating Voltage 3V - 80V Determines system compatibility
Current Limit Accuracy 5% - 10% Protects against overloads
Fault Response Time 100ns - 10 s Minimizes damage during faults
Quiescent Current 10 A - 1mA Impacts power efficiency

5. Application Areas

Main industries and devices:

  • Telecommunications: 5G base stations, optical transceivers
  • Data Centers: Blade servers, RAID storage systems
  • Industrial: PLC modules, automated test equipment
  • Consumer: High-end gaming laptops, workstations
Case Study: In a cloud server, TI's TPS2491 enables hot swapping of power supplies while maintaining 12V rail stability.

6. Leading Manufacturers and Products

Manufacturer Representative Product Key Features
Texas Instruments TPS2491 12V operation, 10A current limit
STMicroelectronics L6992S Embedded MOSFET driver, 45V rating
Infineon IRS2894 High-side control, 100V tolerance

7. Selection Guidelines

Key considerations:

  1. Match voltage/current ratings with system requirements
  2. Evaluate protection features (OCP, OVP, UVLO)
  3. Package size vs. thermal management needs
  4. Digital interface compatibility (if monitoring required)
  5. Cost vs. reliability trade-offs for specific applications

8. Industry Trends

Future directions:

  • Integration with digital power management ecosystems
  • Adoption of GaN/SiC transistors for higher efficiency
  • AI-driven predictive fault detection
  • Miniaturization for dense PCB layouts
  • Standardization of hot-swap protocols across industries

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