Peer-to-peer, engineer-to-engineer questions and answers from the EDABoard.com engineering community around power electronics. Click the “Read more” link and follow the entire conversation and maybe add your two cents by logging in to EDAboard.com XFMR winding optimization for DC resistance – I am asking about the design of the windings of a high-frequency transformer. The point […]
Featured
Wireless charging in vehicles — making the cables disappear
By Laird Technologies, Inc. According to a Mobility Report from Ericsson, there will be 6.1 billion smartphone users by 2020, or about 75% of the world’s population at that time. Today, it is estimated that there are 2.6 billion smartphone subscriptions globally. As a result, the mobile communications industry is moving faster than ever to […]
A magnetic diode? Yes, there is such a thing
A diode that conducts and blocks electrical current magnetically, rather than through an interface between two semiconductors, has been developed at the University of Missouri. The development comes from a group of physicists led by Deepak K. Singh, associate professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Missouri. The diode is comprised of a […]
Wireless charging, Part 2: Implementation
Part 1 of this FAQ looked at the overall context of wireless charging of personal devices. This part looks in more detail at the approaches to wireless charging and the implementation specifics. Q: What approaches are available for wireless charging? A: There are three basic topologies: single-coil inductive, multi-coil inductive, and resonant. Q: What are […]
Wireless charging, Part 1: Context
Wireless charging of devices is a hot and growing area. This FAQ explores the rationale and options for implementing this form of energy transfer, storage, and charging. Q: What is wireless charging? A: It consists of two functions which are closely linked. The first is the transmission of electricals power wirelessly from a transmitting source […]
Wireless charging: Will the exception soon become the rule?
by Aishwarya Vijay, Grand View Research, Inc. If you count the number of power cords you come across each day, right from your coffeemaker in the morning to plugging in your smartphone at the end of the day, the number could well be in the double digits. What would it be like to live a […]
All the better to hear you — Professional headsets to be outfitted with hi-fi audio SoC
Audio equipment supplier Jabra will be using Dialog Semiconductor plc DA14495 hi-fi audio SoCs to power its new range of professional wireless headsets. Jabra Engage headsets were designed to solve the challenge of maintaining audio quality within increasingly popular open office environments. When many wireless headsets are used in close proximity, such as in an […]
Power Electronics Top Talks in April on EDABoard.com forums
Peer-to-peer, engineer-to-engineer questions and answers from the EDABoard.com engineering community around power electronics. Click the “Read more” link and follow the entire conversation and maybe add your two cents by logging in to EDAboard.com Designing 600 watts synchronous buck – I want to design the synchronous buck with LTC3858-1 with the below specifications Vin=13 volts to […]
Parasitic capacitance, inductance, and displacement current
When two electrical conductors are physically close, carry a charge, and there’s a voltage potential between them, they create a virtual capacitor between them, even if the conductors are insulated. The virtual capacitor between them is known as parasitic or stray capacitance. This can happen anywhere but is most troublesome between traces on printed circuit […]
Load lines, Part 2: The DC load line and AC operation
In Part 1 of this FAQ, we looked at the basic DC load line for a simple, basic common-emitter transistor configuration. Part 2 looks at how this graph is used to maintain the linear AC performance of the amplifier configuration. Note that the term “quiescent mode” or “quiescent state” is also used with ICs and […]