LinkSwitch®-XT Design Meets the Needs of
Efficiency-Conscious Producers of LCD Monitors, LCD-TVs, Appliances, and
External Adapters
Power Integrations (Nasdaq:POWI),
the leader in high-voltage integrated circuits for energy-efficient
power conversion, today released a new Design Engineering Report (DER-227)
which details the design of a 3-watt power supply circuit that consumes
just 10 mW during no-load operation. This minuscule power consumption
within the power supply leaves much more power available for use by
electronic systems designed to comply with the standby power limits
mandated by regulations such as the European Union’s Ecodesign
Directive for Energy-Using Products (EuP).
The EuP standard will limit standby power consumption to 500 mW, and
many eco-minded manufacturers of consumer products and appliances are
choosing even lower standby power budgets of 100 mW, 50 mW, or even 30
mW. A standby power supply that consumes only 10 mW at zero load allows
a greater margin for other leaky circuit components, such as input
filters, capacitors, and bias components, while still providing the
power required to support valuable system standby activities. These
include functions such as powering circuits to monitor an infrared
remote control in consumer entertainment equipment, as well as hardware
to sense a key-press to activate appliances or send automated wake-up
signals such as those provided to an LCD monitor by a PC.
The power circuit described in DER-227
is based on Power Integrations’ LNK363DN, a member of the LinkSwitch-XT
offline switcher IC family in an SO-8 package. This 3-watt,
single-output, isolated power supply operates from a universal 85 to 265
VAC input, delivering 5 V at up to 0.6 A. It meets EN55022B/CISPR22B
limits without the need for a Y capacitor, and meets the efficiency
requirements of the European EuP Ecodesign Directive and ENERGY
STAR EPS v 2.0.
Comments Andrew Smith, product marketing manager at Power Integrations:
“Consumers are increasingly interested in green products. In response,
equipment manufacturers are developing products that use energy more
efficiently and the market is moving rapidly towards exceptionally low
power use, particularly in standby mode.