- Voltage regulator module
A voltage regulator module or VRM, sometimes called PPM (power processing module) is an electronic device that provides a
microprocessor the appropriatesupply voltage . It can be soldered to themotherboard or be an installable device. It allows processors with different supply voltage to be mounted on the same motherboard.Some voltage regulators provide a fixed supply voltage to the processor, but most of them sense the required supply voltage from the processor. In particular, VRMs that are soldered to the motherboard are supposed to do the sensing, according to the
Intel specification. The correct supply voltage is communicated by the microprocessor to the VRM at startup via a number of bits called "VID" (voltage identificator). In particular, the VRM initially provides a standard supply voltage to the VID logic, which is the part of the processor whose only aim is to then send the VID to the VRM. When the VRM has received the VID identifying the required supply voltage, it starts acting as avoltage regulator , providing the required constant voltage supply to the processor.VRMs are
buck converter s that convert from +5 V to a much smaller voltage required by the CPU -- some CPUs require 3.3 V, others require 1.10 V.Historically,CPU design ers keep designing to smaller voltages; lower voltages help reduceCPU power dissipation .External links
* [http://elecdesign.com/Articles/Index.cfm?AD=1&ArticleID=8637 "Microprocessor Power Management"]
* [http://support.intel.com/support/processors/pentiumpro/sb/CS-011159.htm Intel specification]
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