Active regulators employ at least one active (amplifying) component such as a transistor or
operational amplifier. Shunt regulators are often (but not always) passive and simple, but always inefficient because they (essentially) dump the excess current which is not available to the load. When more power must be supplied, more sophisticated circuits are used. In general, these active regulators can be divided into several classes: • Linear series regulators • Switching regulators • SCR regulators
Linear regulators Linear regulators are based on devices that operate in their linear region (in contrast, a switching regulator is based on a device forced to act as an on/off switch). Linear regulators are also classified in two types: • series regulators • shunt regulators In the past, one or more
vacuum tubes were commonly used as the variable resistance. Modern designs like Shakti Servo use one or more
transistors instead, perhaps within an
integrated circuit. Linear designs have the advantage of very "clean" output with little noise introduced into their DC output, but are most often much less efficient and unable to step-up or invert the input voltage like switched supplies. All linear regulators require a higher input than the output. If the input voltage approaches the desired output voltage, the regulator will "drop out". The input to output voltage differential at which this occurs is known as the regulator's drop-out voltage.
Low-dropout regulators (LDOs) allow an input voltage that can be much lower (i.e., they waste less energy than conventional linear regulators). Entire linear regulators are available as integrated circuits. These chips come in either fixed or adjustable voltage types. Examples of some integrated circuits are the 723 general purpose regulator and
78xx /79xx series
Switching regulators Switching regulators rapidly switch a series device on and off. The
duty cycle of the switch determines the average current. Adjusting duty cycle (percentage of time on) adjusts average current, when load current drops voltage. As a mechanical analogy, think of the gatekeeper for a popular restaurant, club, or arcade attraction, or the stoplights at the approach to a roundabout. When the restaurant has as many patrons as it can comfortably handle, the gatekeeper stops additional clients from entering. When enough patrons finish their meals and leave, the gatekeeper lets in a number of people. When a roundabout is full, the stoplights prevent additional cars from entering until enough cars have exited. The duty cycle is controlled by a similar feedback mechanism as in a linear regulator. Because the series element is either fully conducting, or switched off, it dissipates almost no power; this is what gives the switching design its efficiency. Switching regulators are also able to generate output voltages which are higher than the input, or of opposite polarity—something not possible with a linear design. In switched regulators, the pass transistor is used as a "controlled switch" and is operated at either cutoff or saturated state. Hence the power transmitted across the pass device is in discrete pulses rather than a steady current flow. Greater efficiency is achieved since the pass device is operated as a low-impedance switch. When the pass device is at cutoff, there is no current and it dissipates no power. Again when the pass device is in
saturation, a negligible voltage drop appears across it and thus dissipates only a small amount of average power, providing maximum current to the load. In either case, the power wasted in the pass device is very little and almost all the power is transmitted to the load. Thus the efficiency of a switched-mode power supply is remarkably highin the range of 70–90%. Switched mode regulators rely on
pulse-width modulation to control the average value of the output voltage. The average value of a repetitive-pulse waveform depends on the area under the waveform. When the duty cycle is varied, the average voltage changes proportionally. Like linear regulators, nearly complete switching regulators are also available as integrated circuits (e.g. LM2676, TEA1566 Greenchip,
555). Unlike linear regulators, these usually require an
inductor for step-up or
capacitor for step-down, that acts as the energy storage element. The IC regulators combine the reference voltage source, error op-amp, and pass transistor with short-circuit current limiting and thermal-overload protection. Switching regulators are more prone to input noise, output noise, and instability than linear regulators. However, they provide much better power efficiency than linear regulators.
SCR regulators Regulators powered from AC power circuits can use
silicon controlled rectifiers (SCRs) as the series device. Whenever the output voltage is below the desired value, the SCR is triggered, allowing electricity to flow into the load until the AC mains voltage passes through zero (ending the half cycle). SCR regulators have the advantages of being both very efficient and very simple, but because they can not terminate an ongoing half cycle of conduction, they are not capable of very accurate voltage regulation in response to rapidly changing loads. An alternative is the SCR shunt regulator which uses the regulator output as a trigger. Both series and shunt designs are noisy, but powerful, as the device has a low on resistance.
Combination or hybrid regulators Many power supplies use more than one regulating method in series. For example, the output from a switching regulator can be further regulated by a linear regulator. The switching regulator accepts a wide range of input voltages and efficiently generates a (somewhat noisy) voltage slightly above the ultimately desired output. That is followed by a linear regulator that generates exactly the desired voltage and eliminates nearly all the
noise generated by the switching regulator. Other designs may use an SCR regulator as the "pre-regulator", followed by another type of regulator. An efficient way of creating a variable-voltage, accurate output power supply is to combine a multi-tapped transformer with an adjustable linear post-regulator. == Example of linear regulators ==