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Unit-V : Rectifiers and Power supplies

Switched-mode power supply A switched-mode power supply (switching-mode power supply, SMPS, or simply switcher) is an electronic power supply that incorporates a switching regulator in order to be highly efficient in the conversion of electrical power. Like other types of power supplies, an SMPS transfers power from a source like the electrical power grid to a load (e.g., a personal computer) while converting voltage and current characteristics. An SMPS is usually employed to efficiently provide a regulated output voltage, typically at a level different from the input voltage. Unlike a linear power supply, the pass transistor of a switching mode supply switches very quickly (typically between 50 kHz and 1 MHz) between full-on and full-off states, which minimizes wasted energy. Voltage regulation is provided by varying the ratio of on to off time. In contrast, a linear power supply must dissipate the excess voltage to regulate the output. This higher efficiency is the chief advantage of a switched-mode power supply. Switching regulators are used as replacements for the linear regulators when higher efficiency, smaller size or lighter weight are required. They are, however, more complicated, their switching currents can cause electrical noise problems if not carefully suppressed, and simple designs may have a poor power factor. A linear regulator provides the desired output voltage by dissipating excess power in ohmic losses (e.g., in a resistor or in the collectoremitter region of a pass transistor in its active mode). A linear regulator regulates either output voltage or current by dissipating the excess electric power in the form of heat, and hence its maximum power efficiency is voltage-out/voltage-in since the volt difference is wasted. In contrast, a switched-mode power supply regulates either output voltage or current by switching ideal storage elements, like inductors and capacitors, into and out of different electrical configurations. Ideal switching elements (e.g., transistors operated outside of their active mode) have no resistance when "closed" and carry no current when "open", and so the converters can theoretically operate with 100% efficiency (i.e., all input power is delivered to the load; no power is wasted as dissipated heat).

Basic schematic of a boost converter For example, if a DC source, an inductor, a switch, and the corresponding electrical ground are placed in series and the switch is driven by a square wave, the peak-to-peak voltage of the waveform measured across the switch can exceed the input voltage from the DC source. This is because the inductor responds to changes in current by inducing its own voltage to counter the change in current, and this voltage adds to the source voltage while the switch is open. If a diodeand-capacitor combination is placed in parallel to the switch, the peak voltage can be stored in the capacitor, and the capacitor can be used as a DC source with an output voltage greater than the DC voltage driving the circuit. This boost converter acts like a step-up transformer for DC signals. A buckboost converter works in a similar manner, but yields an output voltage which is

opposite in polarity to the input voltage. Other buck circuits exist to boost the average output current with a reduction of voltage. In an SMPS, the output current flow depends on the input power signal, the storage elements and circuit topologies used, and also on the pattern used (e.g., pulse-width modulation with an adjustable duty cycle) to drive the switching elements. Typically, the spectral density of these switching waveforms has energy concentrated at relatively high frequencies. As such, switching transients, like ripple, introduced onto the output waveforms can be filtered with small LC filters. Advantages and disadvantages The main advantage of this method is greater efficiency because the switching transistor dissipates little power when it is outside of its active region (i.e., when the transistor acts like a switch and either has a negligible voltage drop across it or a negligible current through it). Other advantages include smaller size and lighter weight (from the elimination of low frequency transformers which have a high weight) and lower heat generation due to higher efficiency. Disadvantages include greater complexity, the generation of high-amplitude, high-frequency energy that the low-pass filter must block to avoid electromagnetic interference (EMI), and a ripple voltage at the switching frequency and the harmonic frequencies thereof. Very low cost SMPSs may couple electrical switching noise back onto the mains power line, causing interference with A/V equipment connected to the same phase. Non-power-factorcorrected SMPSs also cause harmonic distortion. SMPS and linear power supply comparison There are two main types of regulated power supplies available: SMPS and linear. The following table compares linear regulated and unregulated AC-to-DC supplies with switching regulators in general: Comparison of a linear power supply and a switched-mode power supply Linear power supply Switching power supply Notes Heatsinks for high power A transformer's power linear regulators add size Smaller transformer (if used; handling capacity of given and weight. else inductor) due to higher size and weight increases Transformers, if used, are operating frequency with frequency provided Size and large due to low operating (typically 50 kHz 1 MHz). that hysteresis losses can be weight frequency (mains power Size and weight of adequate kept down. Therefore, frequency is at 50 or RF shielding may be higher operating frequency 60 Hz); otherwise can be significant. means either higher capacity compact due to low or smaller transformer. component count. With transformer used, any voltages available; if Any voltages available, A SMPS can usually cope transformerless, not limited only by transistor Output with wider variation of input exceeding input. If breakdown voltages in many voltage before the output voltage unregulated, voltage circuits. Voltage varies little changes. varies significantly with with load. load.

Switching losses in the transistors (especially in the short part of each cycle when the device is partially on), on-resistance of the If regulated: efficiency switching transistors, largely depends on Output is regulated using equivalent series resistance voltage difference duty cycle control; the in the inductor and between input and output; transistors are switched fully capacitors, and core losses output voltage is on or fully off, so very little in the inductor, and rectifier Efficiency, regulated by dissipating resistive losses between voltage drop contribute to a heat, and excess power as heat input and the load. The only typical efficiency of 60 power resulting in a typical heat generated is in the non- 70%. However, by dissipation efficiency of 3040% If ideal aspects of the optimizing SMPS design unregulated, transformer components and quiescent (such as choosing the iron and copper losses current in the control optimal switching may be the only circuitry. frequency, avoiding significant sources of saturation of inductors, and inefficiency. active rectification), the amount of power loss and heat can be minimized; a good design can have an efficiency of 95%. Complexity Unregulated may be Consists of a controller IC, In switched-mode mains simply a diode and one or several power (AC-to-DC) supplies, capacitor; regulated has a transistors and diodes as well multiple voltages can be voltage-regulating circuit as a power transformer, generated by one and a noise-filtering inductors, and filter transformer core, but that capacitor; usually a capacitors. Some design can introduce design/use simpler circuit (and complexities present complications: for example simpler feedback loop (reducing noise/interference; it may place *minimum* stability criteria) than extra limitations on output current restrictions switched-mode circuits. maximum ratings of on one output. For this transistors at high switching SMPSs have to use duty speeds) not found in linear cycle control. One of the regulator circuits. outputs has to be chosen to feed the voltage regulation feedback loop (Usually 3.3 V or 5 V loads are more fussy about their supply voltages than the 12 V loads, so this drives the decision as to which feeds the feedback loop. The other outputs usually track the regulated one pretty well). Both need a careful selection of their transformers. Due to the high operating frequencies

in SMPSs, the stray inductance and capacitance of the printed circuit board traces become important. Mild high-frequency interference may be generated by AC rectifier Long wires between the EMI/RFI produced due to diodes under heavy components may reduce the the current being switched current loading, while high frequency filter Radio on and off sharply. most other supply types efficiency provided by the frequency Therefore, EMI filters and produce no highcapacitors at the inlet and interference RF shielding are needed to frequency interference. outlet. Stable switching reduce the disruptive Some mains hum frequency may be interference. induction into unshielded important. cables, problematical for low-signal audio. Unregulated PSUs may This can be suppressed with have a little AC ripple capacitors and other superimposed upon the filtering circuitry in the DC component at twice Noisier due to the switching output stage. With a Electronic mains frequency (100 frequency of the SMPS. An switched mode PSU the noise at the 120 Hz). Can cause unfiltered output may cause switching frequency can be output audible mains hum in glitches in digital circuits or chosen to keep the noise out terminals audio equipment or noise in audio circuits. of the circuits working brightness ripples or frequency band (e.g., for banded distortions in audio systems above the analog security cameras. range of human hearing) Very low cost SMPS may couple electrical switching noise back onto the mains This can be prevented if a Electronic Causes harmonic power line, causing (properly earthed) EMI/RFI noise at the distortion to the input AC, interference with A/V filter is connected between input but relatively little or no equipment connected to the the input terminals and the terminals high frequency noise. same phase. Non power- bridge rectifier. factor-corrected SMPSs also cause harmonic distortion. Usually inaudible to most The operating frequency of humans, unless they have a an unloaded SMPS is Faint, usually inaudible fan or are sometimes in the audible mains hum, usually due to unloaded/malfunctioning, or Acoustic human range, and may vibration of windings in use a switching frequency noise sound subjectively quite the transformer and/or within the audio range, or loud for people who have magnetostriction. the laminations of the coil hyperacusis in the relevant vibrate at a subharmonic of frequency range. the operating frequency. Power factor Low for a regulated Ranging from very low to Active/passive power factor supply because current is medium since a simple correction in the SMPS can drawn from the mains at SMPS without PFC draws offset this problem and are the peaks of the voltage current spikes at the peaks of even required by some sinusoid, unless a choke- the AC sinusoid. electric regulation

Inrush current

Risk electric shock

authorities, particularly in Europe. The internal resistance of low-power transformers in linear power input or resistor-input supplies usually limits the circuit follows the peak current each cycle and rectifier (now rare). thus gives a better power factor than many switchedmode power supplies that directly rectify the mains with little series resistance. Empty filter capacitors initially draw large amounts of current as they charge up, with larger capacitors drawing larger amounts of Large current when peak current. Being many mains-powered linear times above the normal Extremely large peak "inpower supply equipment operating current, this rush" surge current limited is switched on until greatly stresses components only by the impedance of the magnetic flux of subject to the surge, input supply and any series transformer stabilises and complicates fuse selection resistance to the filter capacitors charge to avoid nuisance blowing capacitors. completely, unless a and may cause problems slow-start circuit is used. with equipment employing overcurrent protection such as uninterruptible power supplies. Mitigated by use of a suitable soft-start circuit or series resistor. of Supplies with Common rail of equipment Due to regulations transformers allow (including casing) is concerning EMI/RFI metalwork to be energised to half mains radiation, many SMPS grounded, safely. voltage, but at high contain EMI/RFI filtering at Dangerous if impedance, unless the input stage before the primary/secondary equipment is bridge rectifier consisting of insulation breaks down, earthed/grounded or doesn't capacitors and inductors. unlikely with reasonable contain EMI/RFI filtering at Two capacitors are design. Transformerless the input terminals. connected in series with the mains-operated supply Live and Neutral rails with dangerous. In both linear the Earth connection in and SM the mains, and between the two capacitors. possibly the output This forms a capacitive voltages, are hazardous divider that energises the and must be well-isolated. common rail at half mains voltage. Its high impedance current source can provide a tingling or a 'bite' to the operator or can be exploited to light an Earth Fault LED.

However, this current may cause nuisance tripping on the most sensitive residualcurrent devices. Can fail so as to make output voltage very high. Stress on capacitors may cause them The floating voltage is to explode. Can in some caused by capacitors cases destroy input stages in bridging the primary and amplifiers if floating voltage secondary sides of the Very low, unless a short exceeds transistor base- power supply. A connection occurs between the Risk of emitter breakdown voltage, to an earthed equipment will primary and secondary equipment causing the transistor's gain cause a momentary (and windings or the regulator damage to drop and noise levels to potentially destructive) fails by shorting increase. Mitigated by good spike in current at the internally. failsafe design. Failure of a connector as the voltage at component in the SMPS the secondary side of the itself can cause further capacitor equalises to earth damage to other PSU potential. components; can be difficult to troubleshoot. Theory of Operation

Block diagram of a mains operated ACDC SMPS with output voltage regulation Input rectifier stage

AC, half-wave and full-wave rectified signals. If the SMPS has an AC input, then the first stage is to convert the input to DC. This is called rectification. The rectifier circuit can be configured as a voltage doubler by the addition of a

switch operated either manually or automatically. This is a feature of larger supplies to permit operation from nominally 120 V or 240 V supplies. The rectifier produces an unregulated DC voltage which is then sent to a large filter capacitor. The current drawn from the mains supply by this rectifier circuit occurs in short pulses around the AC voltage peaks. These pulses have significant high frequency energy which reduces the power factor. Special control techniques can be employed by the following SMPS to force the average input current to follow the sinusoidal shape of the AC input voltage thus the designer should try correcting the power factor. An SMPS with a DC input does not require this stage. An SMPS designed for AC input can often be run from a DC supply (for 230 V AC this would be 330 V DC), as the DC passes through the rectifier stage unchanged. It's however advisable to consult the manual before trying this, though most supplies are quite capable of such operation even though nothing is mentioned in the documentation. However, this type of use may be harmful to the rectifier stage as it will only use half of diodes in the rectifier for the full load. This may result in overheating of these components, and cause them to fail prematurely. If an input range switch is used, the rectifier stage is usually configured to operate as a voltage doubler when operating on the low voltage (~120 V AC) range and as a straight rectifier when operating on the high voltage (~240 V AC) range. If an input range switch is not used, then a fullwave rectifier is usually used and the downstream inverter stage is simply designed to be flexible enough to accept the wide range of DC voltages that will be produced by the rectifier stage. In higher-power SMPSs, some form of automatic range switching may be used. Inverter stage The inverter stage converts DC, whether directly from the input or from the rectifier stage described above, to AC by running it through a power oscillator, whose output transformer is very small with few windings at a frequency of tens or hundreds of kilohertz (kHz). The frequency is usually chosen to be above 20 kHz, to make it inaudible to humans. The output voltage is optically coupled to the input and thus very tightly controlled. The switching is implemented as a multistage (to achieve high gain) MOSFET amplifier. MOSFETs are a type of transistor with a low on-resistance and a high current-handling capacity. Voltage converter and output rectifier If the output is required to be isolated from the input, as is usually the case in mains power supplies, the inverted AC is used to drive the primary winding of a high-frequency transformer. This converts the voltage up or down to the required output level on its secondary winding. The output transformer in the block diagram serves this purpose. If a DC output is required, the AC output from the transformer is rectified. For output voltages above ten volts or so, ordinary silicon diodes are commonly used. For lower voltages, Schottky diodes are commonly used as the rectifier elements; they have the advantages of faster recovery times than silicon diodes (allowing low-loss operation at higher frequencies) and a lower voltage drop when conducting. For even lower output voltages, MOSFETs may be used as synchronous rectifiers; compared to Schottky diodes, these have even lower conducting state voltage drops. The rectified output is then smoothed by a filter consisting of inductors and capacitors. For higher switching frequencies, components with lower capacitance and inductance are needed.

Simpler, non-isolated power supplies contain an inductor instead of a transformer. This type includes boost converters, buck converters, and the buck-boost converters. These belong to the simplest class of single input, single output converters which use one inductor and one active switch. The buck converter reduces the input voltage in direct proportion to the ratio of conductive time to the total switching period, called the duty cycle. For example an ideal buck converter with a 10 V input operating at a 50% duty cycle will produce an average output voltage of 5 V. A feedback control loop is employed to regulate the output voltage by varying the duty cycle to compensate for variations in input voltage. The output voltage of a boost converter is always greater than the input voltage and the buck-boost output voltage is inverted but can be greater than, equal to, or less than the magnitude of its input voltage. There are many variations and extensions to this class of converters but these three form the basis of almost all isolated and non-isolated DC to DC converters. By adding a second inductor the Cuk and SEPIC converters can be implemented, or, by adding additional active switches, various bridge converters can be realised. Other types of SMPSs use a capacitor-diode voltage multiplier instead of inductors and transformers. These are mostly used for generating high voltages at low currents. The low voltage variant is called charge pump. Regulation A feedback circuit monitors the output voltage and compares it with a reference voltage, which shown in the block diagram serves this purpose. Depending on design/safety requirements, the controller may contain an isolation mechanism (such as opto-couplers) to isolate it from the DC output. Switching supplies in computers, TVs and VCRs have these opto-couplers to tightly control the output voltage. Open-loop regulators do not have a feedback circuit. Instead, they rely on feeding a constant voltage to the input of the transformer or inductor, and assume that the output will be correct. Regulated designs compensate for the impedance of the transformer or coil. Monopolar designs also compensate for the magnetic hysteresis of the core. The feedback circuit needs power to run before it can generate power, so an additional non-switching power-supply for stand-by is added. Transformer design SMPS transformers run at high frequency. Most of the cost savings (and space savings) in offline power supplies come from the fact that a high frequency transformer is much smaller than the 50/60 Hz transformers formerly used. There are additional design tradeoffs. The higher the switching frequency, the lower the amount of energy that needs to be stored intermediately during the time of a single switching cycle. Because this energy is stored in form of magnetic energy in the transformer core material (like ferrite, less of such material is needed. However, higher frequency also means more energy lost during transitions of the switching semiconductor. Furthermore, much more attention to the physical layout of the circuit board is required, and the amount of electromagnetic interference will be more pronounced. Core losses increase at higher frequencies. Cores use ferrite material which has a low loss at the high frequencies and high flux densities used. The laminated iron cores of power-frequency transformers would be unacceptably lossy at switching frequencies of a few kilohertz.

Rectifier
A rectifier is an electrical device that converts alternating current (AC), which periodically reverses direction, to direct current (DC) which flows in only one direction. The process is known as rectification. Physically, rectifiers take a number of forms, including vacuum tube diodes, mercury arc valves, solid state diodes, silicon-controlled rectifiers and other silicon-based semiconductor switches. Historically, even synchronous electromechanical switches and motors have been used. Early radio receivers, called crystal radios, used a "cat's whisker" of fine wire pressing on a crystal of galena (lead sulfide) to serve as a point-contact rectifier or "crystal detector". Rectifiers have many uses, but are often found serving as components of DC power supplies and high-voltage direct current power transmission systems. Rectification may serve in roles other than to generate direct current for use as a source of power. As noted, detectors of radio signals serve as rectifiers. In gas heating systems flame rectification is used to detect presence of flame. The simple process of rectification produces a type of DC characterized by pulsating voltages and currents (although still unidirectional). Depending upon the type of end-use, this type of DC current may then be further modified into the type of relatively constant voltage DC characteristically produced by such sources as batteries and solar cells. A device which performs the opposite function (converting DC to AC) is known as an inverter. Rectifier devices Before the development of silicon semiconductor rectifiers, vacuum tube diodes and copper(I) oxide or selenium rectifier stacks were used. High power rectifiers, such as are used in highvoltage direct current power transmission, now uniformly employ silicon semiconductor devices of various types. These are thyristors or other controlled switching solid-state switches which effectively function as diodes to pass current in only one direction. Half-wave rectification In half wave rectification, either the positive or negative half of the AC wave is passed, while the other half is blocked. Because only one half of the input waveform reaches the output, it is very inefficient if used for power transfer. Half-wave rectification can be achieved with a single diode in a one-phase supply, or with three diodes in a three-phase supply.

The output DC voltage of a half wave rectifier can be calculated with the following two ideal equations.

Full-wave rectification A full-wave rectifier converts the whole of the input waveform to one of constant polarity (positive or negative) at its output. Full-wave rectification converts both polarities of the input waveform to DC (direct current), and is more efficient. However, in a circuit with a non-center tapped transformer, four diodes are required instead of the one needed for half-wave rectification. Four diodes arranged this way are called a diode bridge or bridge rectifier.

Graetz bridge rectifier: a full-wave rectifier using 4 diodes. For single-phase AC, if the transformer is center-tapped, then two diodes back-to-back (i.e. anodes-to-anode or cathode-to-cathode) can form a full-wave rectifier. Twice as many windings are required on the transformer secondary to obtain the same output voltage compared to the bridge rectifier above.

Full-wave rectifier using a center-tap transformer and 2 diodes.

Full-wave rectifier, with vacuum tube having two anodes. A very common vacuum tube rectifier configuration contained one cathode and twin anodes inside a single envelope; in this way, the two diodes required only one vacuum tube. The 5U4 and 5Y3 were popular examples of this configuration.

A three-phase bridge rectifier.

3-phase AC input, half & full wave rectified DC output waveforms

For three-phase AC, six diodes are used. Typically there are three pairs of diodes, each pair, though, is not the same kind of double diode that would be used for a full wave single-phase rectifier. Instead the pairs are in series (anode to cathode). Typically, commercially available double diodes have four terminals so the user can configure them as single-phase split supply use, for half a bridge, or for three-phase use. Disassembled
automobile alternator, showing the six diodes that comprise a full-wave three-phase bridge rectifier. Most devices that generate alternating current (such devices are called alternators) generate threephase AC. For example, an automobile alternator has six diodes inside it to function as a fullwave rectifier for battery charging applications. The average and root-mean-square output voltages of an ideal single phase full wave rectifier can be calculated as:

Where: Vdc, Vav - the average or DC output voltage, Vp - the peak value of half wave, Vrms - the root-mean-square value of output voltage. = ~ 3.14159 Peak loss An aspect of most rectification is a loss from the peak input voltage to the peak output voltage, caused by the built-in voltage drop across the diodes (around 0.7 V for ordinary silicon p-njunction diodes and 0.3 V for Schottky diodes). Half-wave rectification and full-wave rectification using two separate secondaries will have a peak voltage loss of one diode drop. Bridge rectification will have a loss of two diode drops. This may represent significant power loss in very low voltage supplies. In addition, the diodes will not conduct below this voltage, so the circuit is only passing current through for a portion of each half-cycle, causing short segments of zero voltage to appear between each "hump". Rectifier output smoothing While half-wave and full-wave rectification suffice to deliver a form of DC output, neither produces constant-voltage DC. In order to produce steady DC from a rectified AC supply, a smoothing circuit or filter is required. In its simplest form this can be just a reservoir capacitor or smoothing capacitor, placed at the DC output of the rectifier. There will still remain an amount of AC ripple voltage where the voltage is not completely smoothed.

RC-Filter Rectifier: This circuit was designed and simulated using Multisim 8 software. Sizing of the capacitor represents a tradeoff. For a given load, a larger capacitor will reduce ripple but will cost more and will create higher peak currents in the transformer secondary and in the supply feeding it. In extreme cases where many rectifiers are loaded onto a power distribution circuit, it may prove difficult for the power distribution authority to maintain a correctly shaped sinusoidal voltage curve. For a given tolerable ripple the required capacitor size is proportional to the load current and inversely proportional to the supply frequency and the number of output peaks of the rectifier per input cycle. The load current and the supply frequency are generally outside the control of the designer of the rectifier system but the number of peaks per input cycle can be affected by the choice of rectifier design.

A half-wave rectifier will only give one peak per cycle and for this and other reasons is only used in very small power supplies. A full wave rectifier achieves two peaks per cycle and this is the best that can be done with single-phase input. For three-phase inputs a three-phase bridge will give six peaks per cycle and even higher numbers of peaks can be achieved by using transformer networks placed before the rectifier to convert to a higher phase order. To further reduce this ripple, a capacitor-input filter can be used. This complements the reservoir capacitor with a choke (inductor) and a second filter capacitor, so that a steadier DC output can be obtained across the terminals of the filter capacitor. The choke presents a high impedance to the ripple current. A more usual alternative to a filter, and essential if the DC load is very demanding of a smooth supply voltage, is to follow the reservoir capacitor with a voltage regulator. The reservoir capacitor needs to be large enough to prevent the troughs of the ripple getting below the voltage the DC is being regulated to. The regulator serves both to remove the last of the ripple and to deal with variations in supply and load characteristics. It would be possible to use a smaller reservoir capacitor (these can be large on high-current power supplies) and then apply some filtering as well as the regulator, but this is not a common strategy. The extreme of this approach is to dispense with the reservoir capacitor altogether and put the rectified waveform straight into a choke-input filter. The advantage of this circuit is that the current waveform is smoother and consequently the rectifier no longer has to deal with the current as a large current pulse, but instead the current delivery is spread over the entire cycle. The downside is that the voltage output is much lower approximately the average of an AC half-cycle rather than the peak. Voltage-doubling rectifiers The simple half wave rectifier can be built in two versions with the diode pointing in opposite directions, one version connects the negative terminal of the output direct to the AC supply and the other connects the positive terminal of the output direct to the AC supply. By combining both of these with separate output smoothing it is possible to get an output voltage of nearly double the peak AC input voltage. This also provides a tap in the middle, which allows use of such a circuit as a split rail supply. A variant of this is to use two capacitors in series for the output smoothing on a bridge rectifier then place a switch between the midpoint of those capacitors and one of the AC input terminals. With the switch open this circuit will act like a normal bridge rectifier: with it closed it will act like a voltage doubling rectifier. In other words this makes it easy to derive a voltage of roughly 320V (+/- around 15%) DC from any mains supply in the world, this can then be fed into a relatively simple switched mode power supply.

Cockcroft Walton Voltage multiplier Cascaded stages of diodes and capacitors can be added to make a voltage multiplier (Cockcroft Walton circuit). These circuits can provide a potential several times that of the peak value of the

input AC, although limited in current output and regulation. Voltage multipliers are used to provide the high voltage for a CRT in a television receiver, or for powering high-voltage tubes such as image intensifiers or photo multipliers.

Voltage regulator
A voltage regulator is an electrical regulator designed to automatically maintain a constant voltage level. A voltage regulator may be a simple "feed-forward" design or may include negative feedback control loops. It may use an electromechanical mechanism, or electronic components. Depending on the design, it may be used to regulate one or more AC or DC voltages. Electronic voltage regulators are found in devices such as computer power supplies where they stabilize the DC voltages used by the processor and other elements. In automobile alternators and central power station generator plants, voltage regulators control the output of the plant. In an electric power distribution system, voltage regulators may be installed at a substation or along distribution lines so that all customers receive steady voltage independent of how much power is drawn from the line. Electronic voltage regulators A simple voltage regulator can be made from a resistor in series with a diode (or series of diodes). Due to the logarithmic shape of diode V-I curves, the voltage across the diode changes only slightly due to changes in current drawn. When precise voltage control is not important, this design may work fine. Feedback voltage regulators operate by comparing the actual output voltage to some fixed reference voltage. Any difference is amplified and used to control the regulation element in such a way as to reduce the voltage error. This forms a negative feedback control loop; increasing the open-loop gain tends to increase regulation accuracy but reduce stability (avoidance of oscillation, or ringing during step changes). There will also be a trade-off between stability and the speed of the response to changes. If the output voltage is too low (perhaps due to input voltage reducing or load current increasing), the regulation element is commanded, up to a point, to produce a higher output voltageby dropping less of the input voltage (for linear series regulators and buck switching regulators), or to draw input current for longer periods (boost-type switching regulators); if the output voltage is too high, the regulation element will normally be commanded to produce a lower voltage. However, many regulators have over-current protection, so that they will entirely stop sourcing current (or limit the current in some way) if the output current is too high, and some regulators may also shut down if the input voltage is outside a given range. Active regulators Active regulators employ at least one active (amplifying) component such as a transistor or operational amplifier. Shunt regulators are often (but not always) passive and simple, but always inefficient because they (essentially) dump the excess current not needed by the load. When more power must be supplied, more sophisticated circuits are used. In general, these active regulators can be divided into several classes: Linear series regulators Switching regulators SCR regulators

Linear regulators Linear regulators are based on devices that operate in their linear region (in contrast, a switching regulator is based on a device forced to act as an on/off switch). In the past, one or more vacuum tubes were commonly used as the variable resistance. Modern designs use one or more transistors instead, perhaps within an Integrated Circuit. Linear designs have the advantage of very "clean" output with little noise introduced into their DC output, but are most often much less efficient and unable to step-up or invert the input voltage like switched supplies. All linear regulators require a higher input than the output. If the input voltage approaches the desired output voltage, the regulator will "drop out". The input to output voltage differential at which this occurs is known as the regulator's drop-out voltage. Entire linear regulators are available as integrated circuits. These chips come in either fixed or adjustable voltage types. Switching regulators Switching regulators rapidly switch a series device on and off. The duty cycle of the switch sets how much charge is transferred to the load. This is controlled by a similar feedback mechanism as in a linear regulator. Because the series element is either fully conducting, or switched off, it dissipates almost no power; this is what gives the switching design its efficiency. Switching regulators are also able to generate output voltages which are higher than the input, or of opposite polarity something not possible with a linear design. Like linear regulators, nearly-complete switching regulators are also available as integrated circuits. Unlike linear regulators, these usually require one external component: an inductor that acts as the energy storage element. (Large-valued inductors tend to be physically large relative to almost all other kinds of componentry, so they are rarely fabricated within integrated circuits and IC regulators with some exceptions) Comparing linear vs. switching regulators The two types of regulators have their different advantages: Linear regulators are best when low output noise (and low RFI radiated noise) is required Linear regulators are best when a fast response to input and output disturbances is required. At low levels of power, linear regulators are cheaper and occupy less printed circuit board space. Switching regulators are best when power efficiency is critical (such as in portable computers), except linear regulators are more efficient in a small number of cases (such as a 5V microprocessor often in "sleep" mode fed from a 6V battery, if the complexity of the switching circuit and the junction capacitance charging current means a high quiescent current in the switching regulator). Switching regulators are required when the only power supply is a DC voltage, and a higher output voltage is required. At high levels of power (above a few watts), switching regulators are cheaper (for example, the cost of removing heat generated is less). SCR regulators

Regulators powered from AC power circuits can use silicon controlled rectifiers (SCRs) as the series device. Whenever the output voltage is below the desired value, the SCR is triggered, allowing electricity to flow into the load until the AC mains voltage passes through zero (ending the half cycle). SCR regulators have the advantages of being both very efficient and very simple, but because they can not terminate an on-going half cycle of conduction, they are not capable of very accurate voltage regulation in response to rapidly-changing loads. An alternative is the SCR shunt regulator which uses the regulator output as a trigger, both series and shunt designs are noisy, but powerful, as the device has a low on resistance. Combination (hybrid) regulators Many power supplies use more than one regulating method in series. For example, the output from a switching regulator can be further regulated by a linear regulator. The switching regulator accepts a wide range of input voltages and efficiently generates a (somewhat noisy) voltage slightly above the ultimately desired output. That is followed by a linear regulator that generates exactly the desired voltage and eliminates nearly all the noise generated by the switching regulator. Other designs may use an SCR regulator as the "pre-regulator", followed by another type of regulator. An efficient way of creating a variable-voltage, accurate output power supply is to combine a multi-tapped transformer with an adjustable linear post-regulator. Zener diode regulators Zener diodes are widely used as voltage references and as shunt regulators to regulate the voltage across small circuits. When connected in parallel with a variable voltage source so that it is reverse biased, a Zener diode conducts when the voltage reaches the diode's reverse breakdown voltage. From that point on, the relatively low impedance of the diode keeps the voltage across the diode at that value.

In this circuit, a typical voltage reference or regulator, an input voltage, U IN, is regulated down to a stable output voltage UOUT. The intrinsic voltage drop of diode D is stable over a wide current range and holds UOUT relatively constant even though the input voltage may fluctuate over a fairly wide range. Because of the low impedance of the diode when operated like this, Resistor R is used to limit current through the circuit. In the case of this simple reference, the current flowing in the diode is determined using Ohms law and the known voltage drop across the resistor R. IDiode = (UIN - UOUT) / R The value of R must satisfy two conditions: 1) R must be small enough that the current through D keeps D in reverse breakdown. The value of this current is given in the data sheet for D. For example, the common BZX79C5V6 device, a 5.6 V 0.5 W Zener diode, has a recommended reverse current of 5

mA. If insufficient current exists through D, then U OUT will be unregulated, and less than the nominal breakdown voltage (this differs to voltage regulator tubes where the output voltage will be higher than nominal and could rise as high as U IN). When calculating R, allowance must be made for any current through the external load, not shown in this diagram, connected across UOUT. 2) R must be large enough that the current through D does not destroy the device. If the current through D is ID, its breakdown voltage VB and its maximum power dissipation PMAX, then IDVB < PMAX. A load may be placed across the diode in this reference circuit, and as long as the zener stays in reverse breakdown, the diode will provide a stable voltage source to the load. Shunt regulators are simple, but the requirements that the ballast resistor be small enough to avoid excessive voltage drop during worst-case operation (low input voltage concurrent with high load current) tends to leave a lot of current flowing in the diode much of the time, making for a fairly wasteful regulator with high quiescent power dissipation, only suitable for smaller loads. Zener diodes in this configuration are often used as stable references for more advanced voltage regulator circuits. These devices are also encountered, typically in series with a base-emitter junction, in transistor stages where selective choice of a device centered around the avalanche/Zener point can be used to introduce compensating temperature co-efficient balancing of the transistor PN junction. An example of this kind of use would be a DC error amplifier used in a regulated power supply circuit feedback loop system.

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