Hi,
My Power Supply weekend preaching and all my opinion
I think this topic is important, that's why I put time into it to explain a few things.
1
The power-on behavior of a LAB Power Supply is just one of the important features.
2
A second is the overload behavior when the current exceeds the set value.
3
Then we also have the behavior of the power supply when the output is shorted.
I have done quite a few measurements on LAB Power Supply's and that was often shocked by the very high peak currents.
Of course this is not just because of the capacitor across the output terminals, besides this short peak current you also have the peak current due to the often much too slow regulating current loop.
4
And then again how well does the U-loop react when the current reaches its normal value again.
5
Some problems can be solved by what I indicated earlier by using a current source that always draws some current from the power section.
Yes, that takes some energy, but you get a much better U and I loop from it, the power section then always remains well in its operating range.
6
It is unfortunate that a number of manufacturers are moving more and more to software-controlled U and I loops.
This usually does not improve the quality and especially not if the U and I loop is realy done by a ADC and the processor itself.
No hair on my head thinks about such a modern LAB Power Supply here on my workbench.
My experience with modern measuring equipment and software bugs is not really positive....
7
Many people who start with electronics often make a bench power supply, often because they think it is easy, many simple schemas are available through search engines.
9
I am too old to have done that via search engines, with me they were magazines of course. :-)
Many power transistors I have blown and so I learned that a linear power supply is anything but simple.
Almost no construction project mentions the phase margin for the U and I loop.
Nowadays this is a lot better, but especially for the SMPS types and their configuration.
9
On many forums when one is asked for help to decide regarding power supplies, often the first reaction of forum members is that an SMPS type should be used and this is Wrong, Wrong, Wrong!
That usually indicates that the ones proposing that have little measured equipment with SMPS power supplies.
For those who are going to build something themselves with SMPS, they are then stuck with a very big EMC/common mode problem.
Then when I counter, the comments often come that in my scope, phone are also SMPS power Supplies and that is correct.
These are often very well designed and tested for EMC and I don't see the average homebuilder replicating this....
10
But the manufacturers of all kinds of equipment can also do something about EMC interference and common mode problems.
I have several function generators here that inject EMC into my D.U.T. with their SMPS Power Supply.
For this I bought a Scoop/Function generator model from OWON that runs on battery.
And gone are my commonmode problems with certain measurements.
More and more I have to turn off equipment on my main workbench to do measurements at low levels.
I now have a second workbench with less equipment and where almost everything is off (real power switch), so no equipment with Standby Power Supply's etc.
And then consider how I think about a Power Supply that has a switching pre-regulation and then a linear post-regulation.
Then you're still stuck with the commonmode injection of the switching part, yea... but not on my measuring bench...
This is a personal opinion.
11
Above all, don't get me wrong, I am very happy with the SMPS technique but it is certainly not the holy grail.
That technique also has major negative characteristics.
What you are going to apply must be looked at holistically in my opinion.
What is needed, what is stable, how much power loss may occur, what are the error situations that may occur and how much EMC is permissible and of course the cost.
12
There is no “One Size Fits All” LAB Power Supply.
But for an electronic lab, you do expect it to be “clean” with both a fast U and a fast I loop and otherwise no on or off abberations of the Power switch and or the enable key.
13
The last one!
A LAB power Supply must be kind to itself and to the D.U.T that is connected to, this is perhaps the most important premise...
Kind regards,
Bram