This circuit is derived from an application note of LM2575, It is a
Power Switching Regulator from
National Semiconductor . The details are here
LM2575
An application note by
On
Semiconductor shows how this chip can be used to
generate Negative Voltage Power Supplies from Positive Voltages.
LM2575-D.pdf.
A Power Transistor which is having a drop of 4 Volts across it and passing
3 amps thru it, may dissipate around 12 Watts of Heat, This is the problem in Series Regulators. While a Saturated
Transistor or Mosfet with 1 Volts across and 3 Amps Thru will be just 3 Watts. But then a fully
on transistor or mosfet cannot be controlled or regulated, for that we turn
it ON and OFF very fast so that the right amount of current or voltage is
delivered. The way this is done is PWM - Pulse Width Modulation. In this
the mosfet or transistor is switched ON-OFF at say 100 kHz, but the ON duration
is varied to control the output. The longer the duration of ON time more
energy or punch is transferred. Switching losses will be present depending
on how fast the rise and fall times of the pulses are.
The Pulsed AC or Chopped DC can be
smoothed to the Average with Inductors and Capacitors. The reactive pulses of
the Inductor has to be absorbed by a Schottky Rectifier 1N5817 -- 20V-1A fast
switching diode with low switching losses.
Tuesday, May 03, 2005
5V -1A Power Supply using LM2575
Posted by delabs at 6:36 AM
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