Switching Power Supply Fundamentals/The Basic unregulated switching supply

The unregulated switching supply

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The unregulated switching power supply is quite simply a clock turning on and off a switch that is powering a inductor, the output side of the inductor is connected to a capacitor to smooth out the ripple.

part Vdrop Amps Watts of heat
C1(load) 12V max 1.5A ripple
L1 Gowanda 121AT1003V 6.822V 11.5A 60W to -80W
D1 ON MBRS2040lt3 5.178V 11.5A 2.681W
U1 Fairchild FDC610PZ 11.5A 164.4mA 851.2mW
 
simplifyed buck topology switching power supply. Switch rate is set to 10Khz

unregulated output

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Theory of operation

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Rather than constantly adjusting the current flow using a transistor or MOSFET like a audio amplifier a SMPS turns off and on the current flow and avoids any partially on state that a linear supply operates in. By avoiding partially on states the switch dissipates a minimal amount of heat. Inductors resist a change in current flow and when the switch is off the inductor current continues flowing and ramps off slowly the diode completes the circuit during this phase. The inductor smooths the pulses of current, just like the capacitor smooths the pulses of voltage.

   

A SMPS without the inductor. Notice the current flow spikes to 25Amps on the attack edge of the on state.

The problem with no inductors

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The problem as shown in this picture is a total lack of surge current control. Each turn on all the energy to charge the cap happens at once resulting in a surge of 25 amps. No electrolytic capacitor was made/can be made to handle this kind of repetitive surge current the cap will end up blowing its top or overheating. the switching device MOSFET or BJT will need to be 4 times more powerful than if driving the load directly in linear mode, and it to will undergo some massive stress. Finding a decent sized surface mount diode that handles 25 amps of repetitive peek surge current will be next to impossible and the diode will get hot enough to unsolder its self.


Same circuit with inductor

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A SMPS with the inductor. D1 current shows the charging of the inductor D2 current shows the discharge of the inductor. D2 dose not waste power but completes the circuit dumping it in to the cap during the offstate. This by its self adds some hysteresis to this type of circuit because on shutoff it slightly overcharges the cap when the inductor dumps its stored energy.

Why regulate

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With a constant load and a constant or nearly constant supply voltage the output would be fine. But when the input voltage changes or the load changes the output can vary wildly.

A unregulated SMPS with a non constant input voltage.