How Switched Mode Power Supply Works – SMPS – ATX
How Switched Mode Power Supply Works – SMPS – ATX
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They control the output voltage by opening and closing the switching circuit so as to maintain the opening and closing time of this circuit, IE the width of the pulses and their frequencies, to obtain the desired voltage.
There are separate processes for everything to work smoothly.
So let’s see the modular diagram to unravel steps of these processes, so that we can step by step understand.
This is the block in modules divided by steps, to improve our understanding.
So let’s understand these steps:
Step 1 – Transient Filter
It is by this stage that the voltage coming from your network, whether 110 or 220V AC should enter.
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| Transient Filter |
This voltage goes through a basic protection, the fuse, that if some step ahead short, the fuse opens, avoiding to burst everything ahead, and in the same line, we have the NTC (Negative Temperature Coefficient), It’s a surge current limiter, in series with the electric circuit,
In it the value of ohmic resistance decreases as its temperature rises, its initial resistance is approximately 15 Ohms, which we can understand by the Ohms’ law, the advantages one has in using it in series, after the power supply switches it on lowers its resistance to approximately 0.5 Ohms.
EMI filters also exist, these are used to avoid high frequency noise and a huge amount of harmonics generated by the switches that can propagate through the electrical network and cause interference in nearby electronic equipment.
Step 2 – Primary Rectification
Step 3 – Filtration
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| Filtration |
Step 4 – Power Switches
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| Power Switches |
Step 5 – Output Transformer
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| Output Transformer |
The switches work on two different levels, High and Low, when it is HIGH, the voltage goes through it normally, causing a constant voltage level in the input of the coil of the transformer, the action of these transistors, go from HIGH to LOW very quickly.
This will induce the winding to have the necessary voltages according to the winding and frequency placed on these switches.
Step 6 – Fast Rectifier
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| Fast Rectifier |
With the voltage generated by high frequency switches, a diode is needed to meet this demand, so we have the high speed diodes called SCHOTTKY DIODES or fast recovery diodes since ordinary diodes would not be able to work with high frequency voltages .
Step 7 – Output Filters
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| Output Filters |
The inductor – Which has the function of eliminating the high frequency harmonics, so that they do not travel to the equipment that will be fed, for imagine you, if these harmonics pass to a micro-controller for example, could cause undue loads loads and errors of reading in the control processes.
And the Capacitors – They are the ones that filter and stabilize the voltage at the output, avoiding ripples and instabilities at the output.
Step 8 – Driver Transformer
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| Driver Transformer |
Step 9 – PWM control
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| PWM control |
This circuit is connected to the output of the power supply, receives Feedback and directs the voltage information to the IC that controls the oscillator that generates a rectangular signal whose pulse width is controlled and sent to the Transformer Drive that sends these commands to the step of power.
If the power at the output to raise the voltage tends to drop, the circuit activates the instantaneous correction in the pulse width of the switching transistors and the voltage keeps stabilized.
Step 10 – Primary Power Supply VSB
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| Primary Power Supply VSB |
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