A DC-DC converter should be selected based on input range, output voltage, load current, efficiency, thermal behaviour, ripple, transient response and PCB layout requirements.
The right converter is not simply the one with the correct voltage and current rating. In embedded systems, the converter must support the real load profile, fit the thermal limits of the enclosure and provide stable power under all operating conditions.
TOP-electronics supports engineers with DC-DC converter selection, power component advice and supply chain support for embedded applications.
| Design factor | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Input voltage range | Determines whether the converter can handle the full supply range |
| Output voltage | Must match the processor, sensor, module or subsystem requirement |
| Continuous current | Defines the normal operating load |
| Peak current | Prevents voltage drops during startup or load transients |
| Efficiency | Affects heat generation and battery lifetime |
| Quiescent current | Important for low-power and battery-operated devices |
| Ripple and noise | Can disturb sensors, RF circuits, ADCs and audio electronics |
| Thermal behaviour | Determines whether the converter can operate safely in the final enclosure |
| PCB layout | Strongly affects stability, EMI and converter performance |
| Lifecycle and availability | Important for long-term embedded products |
Before choosing a DC-DC converter, evaluate:
A converter that works in a typical condition may still fail during startup, peak load, low input voltage or high ambient temperature.
Start with the full input voltage range, not only the nominal input voltage.
Check:
For battery-powered systems, the input voltage changes over the discharge curve. For industrial systems, the supply may include dips, spikes or wider tolerances.
The converter must operate reliably across the full expected range.
Next, define the required output voltage and current.
Check:
Do not select a converter only by average current. Embedded systems often have short peak loads that are much higher than the normal operating current.
Select the topology based on the relationship between input and output voltage.
Use a buck converter when the input voltage is always higher than the required output voltage.
Examples:
Use a boost converter when the input voltage is lower than the required output voltage.
Examples:
Use a buck-boost converter when the input voltage can be above or below the required output voltage.
Examples:
Battery-powered systems often need buck-boost conversion when the battery voltage drops below the required output voltage during discharge.
Efficiency is not constant. It changes with input voltage, output voltage and load current.
Check efficiency at:
For battery-powered devices, light-load efficiency and quiescent current can be more important than maximum-load efficiency.
For compact industrial devices, efficiency affects thermal behaviour. A less efficient converter generates more heat and may require a larger package, more copper area or additional thermal measures.
Low-power embedded systems often spend most of their time in sleep mode. In these applications, quiescent current can strongly affect battery lifetime.
Check:
A converter with good full-load efficiency may still be unsuitable for a battery-powered product if the quiescent current is too high.
DC-DC converters generate switching noise. This can affect sensitive circuits if not handled correctly.
Noise-sensitive circuits include:
Check:
In some designs, a DC-DC converter is followed by a low-noise LDO for sensitive rails. This can improve noise performance while keeping efficiency acceptable.
Embedded systems often contain loads that switch quickly between sleep, active and peak current modes.
Examples:
The converter must respond without excessive voltage drop or overshoot.
Check:
Poor transient response can cause resets, unstable communication or measurement errors.
The inductor is one of the most important external components in a switching converter design.
Check:
The inductor saturation current must be high enough for peak operating conditions. If the inductor saturates, converter performance can degrade and component stress can increase.
Lower DCR can improve efficiency, but may require a larger component.
Input and output capacitors affect ripple, stability, transient response and lifetime.
Check:
Ceramic capacitors can lose effective capacitance under DC bias. This means the real capacitance in the circuit may be lower than the nominal value.
For industrial products, also check temperature range and long-term reliability.
Thermal performance must be checked in the final product conditions, not only on a development board.
Check converter performance at:
Review:
Thermal derating can reduce usable output current. A converter rated for a certain current may not deliver that current continuously in a compact enclosure.
PCB layout has a major impact on DC-DC converter performance.
Pay attention to:
Keep noisy switching nodes away from feedback traces, analog circuits, RF sections and sensor inputs.
A good schematic can still perform poorly if the layout is not correct.
Protection features help improve product reliability.
Useful features include:
The required protection depends on the power source, load type and operating environment.
Industrial and outdoor applications may also need input protection, surge protection or reverse polarity protection outside the converter itself.
Startup behaviour can be critical in systems with multiple voltage rails.
Check:
Some processors, modules, displays and memory devices require specific power sequencing. Incorrect sequencing can cause startup failure or unpredictable behaviour.
The smallest package is not always the best choice. Very small converters can be harder to cool, route and assemble.
Check:
For compact embedded products, total solution size is often more important than IC package size alone.
A technically suitable converter must also be suitable for production.
Check:
This is especially important for industrial, medical, professional audio and embedded products with long production lifetimes.
Avoid these common mistakes:
Before selecting a DC-DC converter, define:
To help select the right DC-DC converter, prepare:
This information helps the technical support team recommend a converter and supporting components that fit both the electrical design and production requirements.
The right DC-DC converter depends on input voltage, load profile, topology, efficiency, thermal design, noise requirements, PCB layout and component availability.
TOP-electronics supports engineers with DC-DC converter selection, power component advice and supply chain support for embedded systems.
Need support selecting a DC-DC converter for your embedded design? Contact our technical support team.
Back