AC-DC|Basic
What is Switching System?
2015.09.03
Points of this article
・While being more complex than the transformer system, the switching system has become the main stream technology in recent years.
・The design can be made simple through the use of a control IC.
Figure 5 shows an AC-DC conversion system using switching elements.
Whereas in the transformer system, first the 100VAC is transformed to a smaller AC voltage by a power transformer for the rectification. In the switching system, first the 100VAC is directly rectified using a diode bridge. Consequently, the diode bridge should meet the high voltage requirement. The 100VAC, at a peak value, measures about 140V.
In the next step, a capacitor is used to smooth the rectified high voltage, and in this case also, a high-voltage capacitor is required.
In succession, the high DC voltage is chopped through the on/off of the switching elements, and the energy is transmitted to the secondary side through a high-frequency transformer. This operation uses the on/off frequency, that is, the switching frequency, which is considerably higher than the input AC frequency of 50/60Hz, measuring tens of kHz. The result is a conversion to the square wave illustrated in Figure 5.

Figure 5. AC-DC conversion based on a switching system
The chopped high-frequency AC voltage is rectified with a rectifying diode provided on the secondary side, smoothed out by a capacitor, and converted to a predetermined DC output voltage. In the figure, rectified waves of the high-frequency AC are omitted. It is the same as half-wave rectification using a single diode, please refer to Figure 2 in the previous section. In addition, the conversion to a desired DC voltage requires the switching-element control circuit shown in Figure 5. (This circuit configuration is an example of a flyback system?more on it later.)
The method in which the high DC voltage is chopped and converted to AC and then reconverted back to a low DC voltage by rectifying and smoothing is the same as the regular switching DC-DC conversion. When viewed in detail, the switching DC-DC conversion process involves a DC/AC conversion and then an AC-DC conversion. Incidentally, the linear system DC-DC conversion using a 3-terminal regulator simply converts DC to DC.
Principles of switching DC-DC conversion after rectifying and smoothing
The principles underlying the conversion of AC to DC through rectification are as explained above. We now briefly describe the principles of the subsequent operation: the DC-DC conversion based on a switching system.

Figure 6. Principles of switching system-based DC-DC conversion taking PWM as an example
Figure 6 illustrates the principles of voltage stepping down using a pulse-width modulation (PWM) system, which is a representative control method. PWM is a control method that controls the on/off time ratio, which is the duty cycle, by keeping the cycle (frequency) constant, and it is used in a variety of applications. PWM converts DC voltage to a required duty-cycle AC by switching, and returns it to DC by rectifying it to produce a desired DC voltage. For example, PWM converts 100VDC by switching to 25% ON of the cycle and the remainder to OFF, resulting in a 25:75 AC. The AC is then rectified and smoothed out, that is, averaged, and converted to DC. The result is 25VDC, or equivalent to 25%. In actuality, DC-DC conversion is power conversion and the conversion efficiency must be taken into account. Thus the result may not be the type of exact equation shown in the figure, nevertheless the conversion is performed based on the principles just described. In addition, as the load current increase, the voltage declines, and the control circuit performs feedback control in order to restore the voltage to a set level by increasing the pulse width. As a consequence, the pulse width does not necessarily remain fixed.
In a nut shell, the AC-DC conversion involves rectifying and smoothing out the input AC voltage as is to convert it into DC and re-converting the DC into high-frequency AC, and rectifying and smoothing it to convert to a desired DC voltage. Compared with the transformer system described above, the switching system performs AC-DC conversion twice, which seems complicated. Because this system, which is complicated to be sure, provides significant advantages, recently there have been growing numbers of AC-DC converters employing the switching system. We will discuss the advantages of the switching system later.
Components used in a switching system and implementation examples
The photograph in Figure 7 illustrates the components necessary for a switching system-based AC-DC conversion, as well as a circuit implementation example. In basic configuration, the system is the same as the one shown in Figure 5. As such, the circuit controls regulation by providing feedback of the output voltage to a PWM control circuit.


Figure 7. Components of a PWM switching system-based AC-DC converter and an implementation example
While the components are similar to those of the transformer system described previously, in this converter the diode bridges, the primary-side electrolyte capacitor, and the switching elements (transistors) all should meet high voltage-tolerant specification.
Because the transformer must operate at high frequencies in a range of tens of kHz, it is referred to as a high-frequency transformer or a switching transformer. The core for a switching transformer is generally made of ferrite.
For switching elements, basically transistors are used, which are dubbed power transistors, switching transistors, and the like. The high-power MOSFET for a switching power supply has gained wider circulation. A switching transistor is selected to match the required output power. In situations where the output power is not very high, a control IC containing the switching transistor may be used to reduce the number of components required.
The control circuit that regulates the output voltage can be configured by using transistors, operational amplifiers, and other types of discrete devices. In many applications, AC-DC conversion ICs have gained in popularity because of their ability to provide accurate regulation control and a number of protection functions. Especially for on-board AC-DC power supply designs, designing the system with an AC-DC converter IC playing a central role may be a realistic approach. Incidentally, the control IC for the circuit is mounted around the lower center on the back of the board, in a small package called SOP8 providing multiple protection functions in addition to the control function.
【Download Documents】 Basics of AC-DC Converter and Design Procedures
A hand book for beginners to AC-DC converter design, covering the basics of AC-DC conversion and various conversion methods, as well as the procedures and issues involved in designing an AC-DC converter.
AC-DC
Basic
- AC-DC Basics
- DC-DC Conversion (Regulated) System after Smoothing
- Design Procedure for AC-DC Conversion Circuits (Overview)
- Issues and considerations in AC-DC Conversion Circuit Design
- Summary
- Extra Plus Basic Knowledge
Design
-
Overview of Design Method of PWM AC-DC Flyback Converters
- Isolated Flyback Converter Basics: Flyback Converter Operation and Snubber
- Isolated Flyback Converter Basics: What are Discontinuous Mode and Continuous Mode?
- Want are Isolated Flyhback Convertors?
- Design Procedure
- Isolated Flyback Converter Basics: What is Switching AC-DC Conversion?
- Determining Power Supply Specifications
- Designing Isolated Flyback Converter Circuits
- Isolated Flyback Converter Basics: What are Characteristics of Flyback Converter?
- Designing Isolated Flyback Converter Circuits: Transformer Design (Calculating numerical values)
- Choosing an IC for Design
- Designing Isolated Flyback Converter Circuits: Transformer Design (Structural Design) – 1
- Designing Isolated Flyback Converter Circuits: Transformer Design (Structural Design) – 2
- Designing Isolated Flyback Converter Circuits: Selecting Critical Components ? MOSFET related – 1
- Designing Isolated Flyback Converter Circuits: Selecting Critical Components ? MOSFET related – 2
- Designing Isolated Flyback Converter Circuits: Selecting Critical Components ? CIN and Snubber
- Designing Isolated Flyback Converter Circuits: Selecting Critical Components ? Output Rectifier and Cout
- Designing Isolated Flyback Converter Circuits: Selecting Critical Components ? VCC of IC
- Designing Isolated Flyback Converter Circuits: Selecting Critical Components – IC Settings Etc.
- Designing Isolated Flyback Converter Circuits: Addressing EMI and Output Noise
- Example Board Layout
- Summary
-
Overview of Design Examples of AC-DC Non-isolated Buck Converters
- What are Buck Converters? – Basic Operation and Discontinuous Mode vs. Continuous Mode
- Selection of Power Supply ICs and Design Examples
- Selecting Critical Components: Input Capacitor C1 and VCC Capacitor C2
- Selecting Critical Components: Inductor L1
- Selecting Critical Components: Current Sense Resistor R1
- Selecting Critical Components: Output Capacitor C5
- Selecting Critical Components: Output Rectifying Diode D4
- EMI Countermeasures
- Board Layout and Summary
-
Introduction
- Design Procedure
- IC Used in Design
- Power Supply Specifications and Replacement Circuit
- Synchronous Rectifying Circuit Section: Selection of Synchronous Rectifying MOSFET
- Synchronous Rectification Circuit Section: Power Supply IC Selection
- Troubleshooting ①: Case When Secondary-Side MOSFET Suddenly Turns OFF
- Synchronous Rectification Circuit Section: Selection of Peripheral Circuit Components-C1, R3 at MAX_TON Pin, and VCC Pin
- Troubleshooting ②: Case When Secondary-Side MOSFET Turns On Due to Resonance Under Light Loading
- Troubleshooting ③: Case When, Due to Surge, VDS2 Rises to Above Secondary-Side MOSFET VDS Voltage
- Comparison of Efficiency of Diode Rectification and Synchronous Rectification
- Points to Note Relating to PCB Layout
- Summary
- Synchronous Rectification Circuit Section: Selection of Peripheral Circuit Components-D1, R1, R2 at DRAIN Pin
- Shunt Regulator Circuit Section: Selection of Peripheral Circuit Components
-
Introduction
- Power Supply ICs Used in Design: Optimized for SiC MOSFETs
- Design Example Circuit
- Transformer T1 Design – 1
- Transformer T1 Design – 2
- Selecting Critical Components: MOSFET Q1
- Selecting Critical Components: Input Capacitor and Balancing Resistor
- Selecting Critical Components: Switch Setting Resistors for Overload Protection Points
- Selecting Critical Components: VCC-Related Components of Power Supply ICs
- Selecting Critical Components: Components Related to Power Supply IC BO (Brownout) Pins
- Selecting Critical Components: Components Related to Snubber Circuits
- Selecting Critical Components: MOSFET Gate Drive Adjustment Circuit
- Selecting Critical Components: Output Rectifying Diode
- Selecting Critical Components: Output Capacitors, Output Setting and Control Components
- Selecting Critical Components: Current Sense Resistors and Components Related to Detection Pins
- Selecting Critical Components: Components for Dealing with EMI and Output Noise
- PCB Layout Example
- Example Circuit and Component List
- Evaluation Results: Efficiency and Switching Waveform
- Summary
Evaluation
-
What are Isolated Flyback Converters Performance Evaluation and Checkpoints?
- Overview and important features of a power supply IC used in example performance evaluation
- Design goals and circuits in performance evaluation
- Performance evaluation using an evaluation board: Measurement method and results
- Critical checkpoint: Output transient response and rising output voltage waveform
- Critical checkpoint: Measuring temperature and loss
- Critical checkpoint: Aluminum electrolytic capacitors
- Summary
- Critical checkpoint: Transformer saturation
- Critical checkpoint: MOSFET VDS and IDS, and rated voltage of output rectifier diode
- Critical checkpoint: Vcc voltage
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