Hey guys,
The issue of the USB +5V having a low tolerance (5% according to wikipedia) strikes me as a problem that many people will end up having to deal with when they try to use USB to directly power an analogy project. I thought it would be cool if we could go over some of the options to solve it and find out what people thinks works best.
My current situation:
Up until now the only time I ever used the +5V straight from a USB cable was to power some digital chips that didn't really care how clean the rail was.
I have a new board I want to run off USB power but it has an analog chip that internally uses 1/2 the 5V supply as a reference for the analog output. The low regulation tolerance of the USB 5V is going to cause lots of problems in this case since I'll never know where the output midpoint will be. I know in this case there are ways to shift the analog output based on the actual 5V voltage, but having a properly conditioned 5V to start with is probably a better solution.
There appear to be a couple popular options for getting a solid 5V from the unpredictable USB power rail.
1) Use a boost converter to bump the USB 5V up to something around 6.5V that an LDO can handle and then use another regulator to drop that back to a solid 5V.
2) Use a dedicated USB power conditioning chip like the linked semtech
3)
Something completely different.
There are obviously trade offs with each solution like cost, parts count, board space required, and source current levels. What you end up using will vary depending on your project requirements, but having a lot of possible options in one place on this thread will make it easier to evaluate what's out there.
Who has some experience with this issue? What solution have you used and what would you recommend?
Here are a some interesting app notes for solutions I found after a quick search. I haven't used any of these so I can't say how well they work.
http://www.intersil.com/content/dam/Intersil/documents/an13/an1317.pdfhttp://www.semtech.com/images/datasheet/an-pm-1007-5v-to-5v_ag.pdf