Analysis
Multichannel power-supply managers integrate thermal-management and “black box” fault-logging capabilities
Maxim introduces the MAX34440/MAX34441 PMBus-compliant system-management controller ICs incorporating the industry’s most comprehensive fault-logging and thermal-management capabilities for enterprise equipment. The MAX34440 provides six channels of power-supply management with sequencing, voltage monitoring, closed-loop margining, and support for current monitoring. The MAX34441 combines five power-supply management channels with one channel of the most sophisticated closed-loop fan control available. These devices ensure predictable power-supply operation, improve system performance, and extend energy efficiency in complex systems such as network switches and routers, base stations, and servers, as well as high-reliability industrial and medical equipment.
The Both devices support the capture of up to 15 failure logs in nonvolatile (NV) flash memory on user-defined fault events. Fault events can be triggered by any logical combination of over-/undervoltage, overcurrent, overtemperature, or sequencing errors. Each failure log captures 800ms worth of system history in NV flash memory, including voltage, current, and temperature history. This extensive failure-logging capability allows the MAX34440/MAX34441 to operate like an airplane flight data recorder, or “black box,” enabling rapid root cause determination and system performance improvements.
In addition to its five power-supply management channels, the MAX34441 incorporates a fan control channel. This allows the system fan to be operated at the minimum possible speed, thereby minimizing power and acoustic noise while maximizing reliability through reduced fan wear and dust accumulation. Complementing this fan control channel, the MAX34441’s fault management capability includes the ability to trigger a fault on a low fan speed condition and log fan speed history when any type of fault occurs.
The MAX34440/MAX34441 incorporate a PMBus-compliant, industry-standard command interface (SMBus/I2C) to allow interoperability and software design reuse. The devices implement PMBus-standard commands for sequencing, monitoring, margining, and fault-management functions, which are used across many compliant devices from multiple suppliers.