Hello all,
in a design I have a 12V input, which I needed to drop down to 5V and 3,3V. So I choose the NCV1117 and cascaded the 5V regulator and the 3,3V regulator to distribute the heat a bit on the PCB(5V reg in a 3DPAK, 3,3V in SOT-223). Input and output had 100nF + 10µF MLCC. Testing this setup showed a really bad performance, I could hear the 12V SMPS ringing, probing the voltage rails showed really bad spikes and oscillation.
This is of course partly due to a design fault of me, reading the datasheet there is a table linking output capacitance and ESR and some recomendations. So I added 2 22µF tantal capacitors on the output of both 1117 and this helped a bit, but there were still pretty bad spikes in the voltage.
So in a last attempt I connected the 3,3V reg directly to the 12V rail and this removed a lot of the noise significantly.
To be sure I don't have some issues with the dropout voltage, I checked the datasheet from OnSemi and the maximum dropout voltage is 1.2V, so this is within margins.
The 3,3V drives a LCD display, so a digital load.
My question: Is there a known problem of cascading linear regulators(of same type) in connection with non analog loads? My inital guess would be that the cascading would result in a lower noise, but apperently the cascaded control loops counteracted each other somehow.