I am designing a rail splitter to power a high precision board with low current requirements (10-15 mA). Initially I thought about building an opamp-based rail plitter, but then I realized I needed to clean and pre-filter the DC anyhow and opted for Linear Regulators instead.
The main 12V DC power comes from an AC transformer and I clearly see some AC leaking through with the oscilloscope as well as a bit of ripple left.
Right now my question is not about how to filter the ripple or the AC, but rather in which configuration the LM317/LM337 are more stable for the task in hand.
The LM317 is a positive voltage regulator, Vin=12V, Vadj=1.25V, 12V>Vout>0V. The LM337 is a negative voltage regulator, so Vin=-12V, Vadj=-1.25V, 0V>Vout>-12V
By setting LM317 Vout=6 and LM337 Vout=-6, they are effectively pointing to the same voltage, giving us a regulated midpoint (VGND).
I am aware that the LM3x7 can be either regulated with an external voltage in the Vadj pin (in this case, voltage divider between V+ and GND) or with a resistor pair, the first one creating a loop between Vout and Vadj pins and the second resistor between Vadj and GND.
I have found a couple of places where they used the LM317/LM337 to do exactly this using the voltage dividier/external voltage in the Vadj pin
here and
here but none with the traditional feedback loop of the LM3x7.
I have simulated both circuits with the bare minimum amount of components to make them work (it will be beefed up later with protection mechanisms and noise reduction later), and both seem to behave the same way in simulations.
My question is, which one would be more stable or recommended to continue with the design? Or will both work as intended with similar performance?Thank you in advance!