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Difference Between Linear Power Supply and Switched Mode Power Supply

Linear Power Supply vs Switched Mode Power Supply

When it comes to electrical and electronic circuits, it is important to have a power supply as it delivers the right amount of voltage and current to make the circuit run without exceeding the correct limits and burning or blowing it up. In this regard, there are two very common types of power supply, the linear and the switched mode. The main difference between the two is the way they operate. Linear power supplies provide a constant voltage at all times while the power provided by a switched mode power supply constantly varies. A switching power supply operates by constantly switching the source on and off; the rate of which is dictated by the needed voltage at the output.

A linear power supply is often used because of its simplicity. Linear regulators exist in packaged ICs that only need a rectified voltage source to operate. In comparison, a switched mode power supply is very complex and requires a handful of ICs as well as inductors.

The main advantage of a switched mode power supply over a linear power supply is efficiency. A linear power supply operates pretty much like a voltage divider that constantly changes resistance to regulate the output voltage. The current that goes into it is the same as the current that goes out of it and the difference between the input and output is wasted. A switched mode power supply doesn’t have much when it comes to resistive elements and the electricity is mainly stored in capacitors. The voltage of a switched mode power supply constantly oscillates at a very minute amount and the circuitry uses this oscillation to gauge when to connect and disconnect from the source.

The main disadvantage of a switched mode power supply compared to a linear power supply is noise. The voltage oscillations and the constant connecting and disconnecting from the source create too much electrical noise that can interfere with other nearby electronics. To combat this noise, adequate shielding is often needed. Linear power supplies also create some amount of noise but nowhere near as much as that produced by switched mode power supplies.

Summary:

1.A linear power supply supplies constant voltage while a switched power supply doesn’t
2.A linear power supply is much simpler than a switched mode power supply
3.A switched mode power supply is more power efficient than a linear power supply
4.A switched mode power supply is more likely to create interference than a linear power supply

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4 Comments

  1. thanks for text.

  2. Good post! Thank you for it! Finally, it became understandable the difference to me! I want to ask you about Dell power supplies? Have you ever used it? My friend suggests me this variant http://hardware.be/power-supply/dell/l321x-psu.html but it is very expensive and I am not sure that this one supply worth it! What can you say about it? I will be very greatful if you tell me any advise in choosing good hardware! Thank you!

  3. One of the major benefits of switch mode power supplies is their small size when compared to a linear supply. Modern computers etc would be considerably larger and heavier if they were powered by linear supplies

  4. I need brief information about this the concept is not truly cleared in this post

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