Industry's first low-noise buck converters with integrated ferrite-bead compensation simplify high-precision designs
Texas Instruments (TXN) has launched a new family of low-noise DC/DC switching regulators, the TPS62912 and TPS62913. These regulators provide a noise level of 20 µVRMS and output voltage ripple of 10 µVRMS, enabling significant power loss reductions of up to 76% and saving 36% in board space. With a peak efficiency of 97% and a power-supply rejection ratio of 65 dB, they streamline designs by eliminating the need for additional low-dropout regulators. Pre-production pricing starts at US$1.06 for TPS62912 and US$1.16 for TPS62913, with general availability expected in Q1 2021.
- Introduced TPS62912 and TPS62913 regulators, reducing power losses by up to 76%.
- Achieves peak efficiency of 97% and low output voltage ripple of 10 µVRMS.
- Saves 36% board space and simplifies design by integrating ferrite-bead compensation.
- None.
DALLAS, Oct. 21, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Texas Instruments (TI) (Nasdaq: TXN) today introduced a new family of low-noise DC/DC switching regulators with integrated ferrite-bead compensation. The TPS62912 and TPS62913 offer low noise of 20 µVRMS for frequencies ranging from 100 Hz to 100 kHz and ultra-low output-voltage ripple of 10 µVRMS, giving engineers the ability to remove one or more low-dropout regulators (LDOs) from their designs, reduce power losses by up to
Noise in the power supply is a key design challenge in many high-precision test and measurement, medical, aerospace and defense, and wireless infrastructure applications. A traditional low-noise power-supply architecture includes a DC/DC converter; a low-noise LDO such as the TPS7A52, TPS7A53 or TPS7A54; and an off-chip filter, such as a ferrite bead. By integrating ferrite-bead compensation, the TPS62912 and TPS62913 use the ferrite bead already present in most systems as an effective filter against high-frequency noise, reducing the power supply output voltage ripple by approximately 30 dB and simplifying the power supply design. To learn how low-noise buck converters work, read the technical article, "Minimize noise and ripple with a low-noise buck converter."
TI will demonstrate the TPS62913 in its virtual booth at the electronica virtual conference, Nov. 9-12, 2020. For more information, go to https://www.ti.com/about-ti/trade-shows/electronica.html.
Easily minimize power-supply noise
High-precision systems require supply rails with low noise and low ripple to preserve signal accuracy and integrity. The TPS62912 and TPS62913 offer both, along with a power-supply rejection ratio of 65 dB at up to 100 kHz. In addition, this buck converter family has an output-voltage error of less than
Maximize efficiency while reducing power loss
Historically, engineers have faced a trade-off between noise and efficiency when powering sensitive analog circuitry. Using a switching regulator on its own would result in too much switching noise, while adding a post-regulator LDO to reduce noise would lead to additional power losses, especially at high load currents. With a peak efficiency of
Save board space and overall system cost
By using the TPS62912 or TPS62913 in their designs, engineers can eliminate not only the linear regulator but also the associated passive components, which can save approximately 20 mm2 of printed circuit board (PCB) area per LDO. Designs that typically use a single LDO can save
Availability and pricing
Pre-production quantities of the 2-A TPS62912 and 3-A TPS62913 are available now, only on TI.com, in a 2-mm-by-2-mm, 10-pin quad flat no-lead (QFN) package. Pricing starts at US
About Texas Instruments
Texas Instruments Incorporated (Nasdaq: TXN) is a global semiconductor company that designs, manufactures, tests and sells analog and embedded processing chips for markets such as industrial, automotive, personal electronics, communications equipment and enterprise systems. Our passion to create a better world by making electronics more affordable through semiconductors is alive today, as each generation of innovation builds upon the last to make our technology smaller, more efficient, more reliable and more affordable – making it possible for semiconductors to go into electronics everywhere. We think of this as Engineering Progress. It's what we do and have been doing for decades. Learn more at TI.com.
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