Voltage Regulator Module (VRM) 10.2L Design Guidelines

Voltage Regulator Module (VRM) Design Guidelines 7
1 Applications
1.1 Introduction and Terminology
This document defines DC-to-DC converters to meet the power requirements of computer systems
using 64-bit Intel
®
Xeon™ processor MP with up to 8MB L3 cache and 64-bit Intel
®
Xeon™
processor MP with 1MB L2 cache processor. Requirements will vary according to the needs of
different computer systems and processors that a specific voltage regulator is expected to support.
The intent of this document is to define electrical, thermal and mechanical specifications for
VRM 10.2L.
VRM The voltage regulator module (VRM) designation in this document refers to a voltage
regulator that is plugged into a baseboard, where the baseboard is designed to support more than
one processor. VRM output requirements in this document are intended to match the needs of a set
of microprocessors.
‘1’ – In this document refers to a high voltage level (V
OH
and V
IH
).
‘0’ – In this document refers to a low voltage level (V
OL
and V
IL
)
‘#’ – Symbol after a signal name in this document refers to an active low signal, indicating that a
signal is in the asserted state when driven to a low level.
The specifications in the processors datasheet always take precedence over the data provided in
this document.
VRM 10.2L incorporates functional changes from prior EVRD and VRM guidelines:
Continuous load core current (Icc
TDC
) (thermal design current) of 105 A (Section 2.1).
A maximum core current (Icc
MAX
) of 120 A.
Maximum current slew rate of 930 A/µs.
Mechanical compliance to the VRM 10.2 design guideline.
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