The circuit in Figure 1 converts a regula
ted 5V input to an isolated 5V output with 1A current-output capability. IC1, a push-pull transformer
driver, powe
rs a pair of cross-coupled power
MOSFETs in a flip-flop-like configura
TIon. In turn, the MOSFETs toggle the primary winding of a forward transformer. The transformer's secondary output, after recTIficaTIon and filtering, provides the isolated 5V supply. Because the output voltage is unregulated, its voltage tolerance depends on the input-voltage range and the range of lo
ad current. With Schottky recTIfiers, such as the MBRS130 for D1 and D2, the circuit delivers 5V ±10% at 700 to 1000mA from a 5V ±5% input with 80% efficiency (Figure 2). Using ultrafast-recovery silicon rectifiers, such as the MURS120, the circuit delivers 5V ±10% at 200 to 500 mA from a 5V ±5% input, with 77% efficiency. (DI #2502)
Figure 1. A simple circuit produces a 5V, 1A isolated output from a 5V regulated input.
Figure 2. The efficiency of the circuit in Figure 1 depends directly on the forward drops of the output rectifiers.
Reprinted from EDN Magazine March 30, 2000
Copyright Cahners Business Information 2000
A Division of Reed Elsevier Inc.
评论列表(0条)