The LT8711 [1] is a DC/DC controller that supports synchronous buck, boost, SEPIC and ZETA topologies, or nonsynchronous buck-boost topologies. Analog Devices offers numerous synchronous buck and ...
Which topology do you chose when your specification calls for a non-isolated power supply and the output voltage falls between the minimum and maximum input voltage? Is the tried-and-true flyback used ...
Two critical issues, efficiency and transient response, continue to tag-team the power-electronics arena. CUI takes them on with its patented SEPIC-fed buck (SFB) converter. Two critical issues, ...
These are partly line-bound at the input side and output side of the voltage converter, but partially these are also radiated. Those interferences are mainly caused by the rapid switching edges. They ...
There are multiple solutions in which line current is sinusoidal. In addition, in the recent years, a great number of circuits have been proposed with non-sinusoidal line current. In this paper, a ...
SEPIC (Single Ended Primary Inductance Converter) topology is a good choice for automotive power systems that require an output voltage between the low and high values of the input voltage. SEPIC ...
Zeta, or ‘inverse sepic’, is another one of those dc-dc converters, like Cuk and Sepic, that have a capacitor in series with the power path. Both zeta and Sepic have the same transfer function: ...
CUI has introduced an isolated intermediate bus power converter in a quarter brick package and deliver a power density of 27.2 W/cm3 (445 W/in3) as well as efficiencies in excess of 96%. The module’s ...
PLANO, Texas--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Diodes Incorporated (Diodes) (Nasdaq: DIOD) today launches a boost/single-ended primary inductance converter (SEPIC) controller for various automotive LED applications.
Linear Technology Corporation announces the LT8330, a current mode, 2MHz step-up DC/DC converter with an internal 1A, 60V switch. It operates from an input voltage range of 3V to 40V, making it ...
Several bias voltages are needed for supplying and operating an LCD panel. In most cases, specialised integrated circuits with several charge-pumps are used to generate the different voltages. As the ...
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