SNVAA87 august 2023 LMR38020
The Fly-Buck™ is also known as the isolated buck converter, where the isolated output is generated by adding a coupled winding to the filter inductor of a buck converter. The circuit on the secondary side looks similar to a Flyback, but the primary side is a synchronous buck converter. This makes Fly-Buck™ naturally primary side regulation, and achieve isolated output regulation effortlessly via winding coupling. Comparing with the conventional PSR Flyback, Fly-Buck™ has the following key advantages and detailed differences comparison between Fly-Buck™ and Flyback are listed in Table 3-1.
Specifications | Fly-Buck | Flyback |
---|---|---|
Input | The minimum input voltage has to be larger than the primary output voltage, while the secondary output voltage can be higher or lower than input voltage (isolated buck topology). | The minimum input voltage can be smaller or larger than the output voltage (isolated buck-boost topology). |
Output | Primary side output is a
non-isolated output and can be only positive. Secondary side output is isolated, and can be positive or negative. |
Primary side output is
an non-isolated output for controller powering and also sensing in
PSR. Secondary side dual outputs are isolated, and can be positive or negative. |
Switch Stress | MOSFETs are rated at Vinmax. | Need consider flyback voltage on the primary low-side MOSFET, rated at Vinmax + (Vout / N) (where N = Ns / Np), which means higher switch stress. |
Transformer | 3-winding transformer, smaller, lower leakage. | 4-winding transformer, bigger, larger leakage. |
Size | Smaller design size, smaller transformer size (typically). | Larger design size, larger transformer size (typically). |
Cost | Fewer components count, lower cost. | More components count, higher cost. |
Performance | Good regulation
achievable, +/-5% on both primary and secondary outputs. Relatively better power transfer efficiency. |
PSR has poorer cross
regulation performance. High output accuracy can be achieved if
using SSR with optocoupler, but large deviation under light load
condition. Less efficient as only utilizing off-time transferring power. |
About the input specification of Fly-Buck™, it needs to be kept in mind that the minimum input voltage has to be higher than the targeted primary output voltage. Very often this results in a high duty cycle when the input voltage is low. That needs attention because high duty cycle results in very high peak current during power transferring to the secondary side.
For example, in micro inverter application, the output voltage of the PV panels (as input voltage of the auxiliary power) could be very low in dawn and dusk as the sun light is dim, or at some time the PV panels are under heavy shade. So, it needs more considerations on the switch MOSFET selection.