Buck-Boost Converters Shrink Solution Size Up To 25%

Oct. 3, 2019
Buck-Boost Converters Shrink Solution Size Up To 25%

Texas Instruments rolled out its latest line of buck-boost converters that deliver up to 2.5 A and enable up to 25% smaller power supply solutions in industrial and consumer Internet of Things devices. The chips are designed to consume standby current in the range of 11- to 15-µA, boosting the battery life of gadgets ranging from portable point-of-sale devices to wireless headphones.

The chips—the TPS63802, TPS63805, TPS63806 and TPS63810—can be used in solutions ranging from 19.5 mm2 to 25 mm2. The parts themselves are trapped inside compact packages and can be surrounded by smaller passive components. The parts can alternate between buck, buck-boost or boost modes and can handle wide 1.3-V to 5.5-V input voltage  and 1.8-V to 5.2-V output voltage ranges, Texas Instruments said. 

The TPS63802 and TPS63805 are 2-A buck-boost converters for industrial Internet of Things devices with limited battery life, ranging from sensors slapped on factory floors to smart meters plugged into buildings, which tend to operate for short amounts of time—for instance, to send data from the factory floor to the cloud. The TPS63806 and TPS63810 are 2.5-A components to be used in smartphones or wireless headphones.

Texas Instruments, the world's largest player in analog semiconductors, back in July introduced the TPS62840, a buck converter capable of operating on 60 nA of standby current. The company claims current draw is 33% lower than the part's closest competition. By wasting less standby current, the product can cut the system's battery count by 50%, which means its customers to employ smaller batteries, Texas Instruments said.

The TPS63805, TPS63806 and TPS63810 are slipped inside 1.4-mm-by-2.3-mm packages and cost $0.98, $1.05 and $1.09 each in 1,000-unit quantities, respectively. The TPS63802, which is shipping inside a 2-mm-by-3-mm QFN package, is priced at 98 cents per chip in 1,000-unit orders. The TPS63802 and TPS63810 are in currently in pre-production, while the TPS63805 and TPS63806 have started shipping to customers.

Sponsored Recommendations

Near- and Far-Field Measurements

April 16, 2024
In this comprehensive application note, we delve into the methods of measuring the transmission (or reception) pattern, a key determinant of antenna gain, using a vector network...

DigiKey Factory Tomorrow Season 3: Sustainable Manufacturing

April 16, 2024
Industry 4.0 is helping manufacturers develop and integrate technologies such as AI, edge computing and connectivity for the factories of tomorrow. Learn more at DigiKey today...

Connectivity – The Backbone of Sustainable Automation

April 16, 2024
Advanced interfaces for signals, data, and electrical power are essential. They help save resources and costs when networking production equipment.

Empowered by Cutting-Edge Automation Technology: The Sustainable Journey

April 16, 2024
Advanced automation is key to efficient production and is a powerful tool for optimizing infrastructure and processes in terms of sustainability.

Comments

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of Electronic Design, create an account today!