I remember doing one of those Internet courses on switching mode power supply design. One slide had types of components and succinct summary of efficiency:
True, strictly speaking I should've written "laws of thermodynamics"... What I really meant was: there is no magic way of transforming higher to lower voltages at current xy without having to deal with the heat generated by the "conversion"...
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I remember doing one of those Internet courses on switching mode power supply design. One slide had types of components and succinct summary of efficiency:
Resistor ✘ power loss
Capacitor ✔ but cannot lower voltage
Inductor ✔ definitely
Active component, e.g. transistor ✔ definitely
I see that course https://www.coursera.org/specializations/power-electronics is still being offered.
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Yes, that's why I ordered a test-board for a DC/DC circuit I want to try: https://hackaday.io/project/164742-universal-lipoli-ion-uvlo-undervoltage-lockout/log/165041-06-new-dcdc-buck-design
Those aren't too efficient in the lower current region, though. Some behaviors need to do be tested under live conditions :)
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BTW strictly speaking Ohm's law isn't about conservation of energy. It just connects voltage, current and resistance.
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True, strictly speaking I should've written "laws of thermodynamics"... What I really meant was: there is no magic way of transforming higher to lower voltages at current xy without having to deal with the heat generated by the "conversion"...
Are you sure? yes | no