The way I learned it at school that makes 55/70 = 0.785 (78.5%). Not very good for a switched mode converter.One more thing.input was 70 watts and output was 55 watts. whats the efficiency of converter?
Can you give more details on the inductor/core you are using?
30 Khz is a low switching speed, by modern standards. The efficiency should be higher.
How are you driving the Mosfet? Proper gate drive improves efficiency tremendously.
Better still, can you provide Drain-voltage waveforms? One showing a single full cycle. Set the ground exactly at a line grid, and adjust the vertical sensitivity to employ as much of the display's vertical resolution as possible.
Then a pair more, with a timebase 10X faster, showing the leading and trailing edges respectively.
The efficiency problem with 20 amps at only 12v will be mostly conduction losses.
The diode is going to lose half a volt or so no matter what,
That is about four percent gone right there.
As total loss is only about ten percent, maybe two percent in the mosfet and four percent in the choke ?
Now suppose we double up on mosfets,conduction losses there might reduce from one percent to half a percent. Hardly worth the trouble.
Suppose we fitted a monster inductor with double the wire cross section.
Losses drop from four percent to two percent. Again hardly worth the trouble.
Its a lot easier to get from 85% to 90% than to go from 90% to 95%.
The point of diminishing returns comes up pretty fast.
Note that the low side switch can only be used as long as the input and load common don't need to tied together.
Re; the second photo, your bench lab.
Congratulations on a busy work bench.
I'm serious, I'm not being sarcastic! A cluttered and messy bench lab means that the individual is really working hard. My personal heroes in that respect are two of the greatest analog gurus: Bob Pease and Jim Williams.
I particularly like the charred tip of the red alligator clip. It means that you have had "low-impedance-incident". If you have also burned yourself with the soldering iron, you can be considered a real electronics pro.
Any ideas from u or other members to improve the circuit?
Here is some visualization of expected peak currents during start up based on your component values.
There is also the idea of interleaving two or more buck converters. It reduces stress on all components. Current is drawn from your supply as a reduced continual waveform, rather than large Ampere bursts. As it stands you'll have 24A or more going through your inductor. Therefore its saturation spec must be greater than 24A. If this is difficult to achieve then you may want to consider interleaving two or more, each carrying waveforms in the area of 12A.
Also have you confirmed your buck converter can have input 16V and output 14V, at 20A?
what u suggest for interleaving.lets say i m using 2 converters of 12 amps in parallel driven by same pwm source.will they operate at same time or in phase shift mode.
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