4.3.1 Target Regulator
The target voltage regulator is a MIC5353 variable output LDO. The on-board debugger can adjust the voltage output supplied to the board target section by manipulating the MIC5353’s feedback voltage. The hardware implementation is limited to an approximate voltage range from 1.7V to 5.1V. Additional output voltage limits are configured in the debugger firmware to ensure that the output voltage never exceeds the hardware limits of the PIC18F16Q40 microcontroller. The voltage limits configured in the on-board debugger on PIC18F16Q40 Curiosity Nano are 1.8–5.5V.
The MIC5353 supports a maximum current load of 500 mA. It is an LDO regulator in a small package, placed on a small printed circuit board (PCB), and the thermal shutdown condition can be reached at lower loads than 500 mA. The maximum current load depends on the input voltage, the selected output voltage, and the ambient temperature. The figure below shows the safe operating area for the regulator, with an input voltage of 5.1V and an ambient temperature of 23°C.
The voltage output of the target regulator is continuously monitored (measured) by the on-board debugger. If it is more than 100 mV over/under the set device voltage, an error condition will be flagged, and the target voltage regulator will be turned off. This will detect and handle any short-circuit conditions. It will also detect and handle if an external voltage, which causes VCC_TARGET to move outside of the voltage setting monitoring window of ±100 mV, is suddenly applied to the VTG pin, without setting the VOFF pin low.