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5 Buck Regulators with Low Iq: UPDATED

Aug. 27, 2019
Low quiescent current, also called supply current, might be an important spec for your power-supply design.

Quiescent current is the current that a chip needs to operate even if it’s not delivering power. It’s the bare minimum supply current the chip will use. For buck-regulator chips, improved processes have reduced quiescent currents over the years. The tighter process controls of modern chip manufacturing also mean that the range of Iq from chip to chip will vary less than in the old days.

Iq is why any buck-regulator chip will have worsening efficiency as your circuitry requires less power. Since the Iq is the constant “floor” of power needed to run the chip, it will be a smaller percentage of efficiency loss when the chip is delivering full power than when the chip is just idling, and your circuits that it’s powering are taking their minimum power.

Here are five buck-regulator chips with low quiescent current. Note that a buck-regulator chip is generally thought of as having the power switching transistors inside the part itself. A buck regulator controller uses external power transistors to do the high-current switching. We will look at those in another article.

UPDATE: Since going to press, we found an even lower Iq part from Texas Instruments: The recently announced TPS62840, covered last month by Electronic Design, has an Iq of 60 nA.

1. The ADP5300 from Analog Devices has 350-nA supply current, with a  2.15- to 6-V input and 500-mA output.

2. The BD70522GUL from Rohm has 180-nA supply current, with a 2.5- to 5.5-V input and 500-mA output.

3. The MAX16956 from Maxim Integrated has 1.1-µA supply current with a 3.5- to 36-V input and 300-mA output.

4. The TPS62800 from Texas Instruments has 2.3-µA supply current with a 1.8- to 5.5-V input and 1-A output.

5. The MP28300 from MPS has a 500-nA supply current with a 2- to 5.5-V input and 300-mA output.

If you need an efficient switching buck regulator with low supply current, be sure to check out these parts for your next design project.

This is a new format for us and we’d love to get your feedback. If you would be willing to discuss this article with an editor, please email [email protected].

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