92% efficiency is that real world or datasheet best case?
92% is pretty typical for the mid-point of operation of a switcher, but remember they typically roll off on efficiency as you approach maximum load; 92% sounds more like a mid-loading best case efficiency point.
But if you assume 92% efficiency you need to get rid of 5W in your switcher (not impossible, but challenging) plus 1W per port. Your aluminium widget will dissipate 9W so it will run quite hot. This heat will decrease efficiency further (ON-resistance of MOSFET increases with temperature) so make sure to do a full load burn-in test on the final product.
Great point! I hope we won't have to use a thermal gap pad material to conduct heat to the aluminum billet but we have that as a fallback if needed.
The switchers we are using approach max efficiency as load increases (losses are primarily switching), also it's a multiphase so the switching/rdson losses are distributed across 4 switches (synchronous dual phase buck), and copper losses are distributed across 2 inductors.
92% was a mid to high load back of napkin calculation based on the other switchers we've done for customers. It IS going to get a bit warm so we'll see how it ends up!
The datasheet doesn't actually quote efficiencies. We've got some work to do on tradeoff between component sizes, switching frequency and end efficiency. As you know there are a lot of competing variables in a switcher design.
You are right, a full burn in test on several prototypes running at a 50C ambient is mandatory to prove out a high quality robust design. No cutting corners if you don't want to have failures. I'm no genius and often miss things on the first prototypes.
Thanks for the suggestions, we don't want to miss anything that we don't have to.