Power conversion is critical in every embedded system. A poor power design can cause unstable operation, resets, excessive heat, wireless communication problems, sensor noise, reduced efficiency or product failure.
For engineers designing industrial electronics, IoT devices, embedded controllers, sensor systems or mechatronic products, power conversion should be considered early in the design process. A reliable design starts with the real load profile, not only with the nominal voltage and current.
TOP-electronics supports engineers with component selection, technical advice and supply chain support for embedded power designs.
Embedded systems often combine several different loads, such as:
Each part can have different voltage, current, noise, timing and startup requirements. A power supply that works for one part of the system may not be suitable for another.
Power conversion affects:
| Design factor | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Input voltage range | Determines whether the converter can handle all operating conditions |
| Output voltage accuracy | Important for processors, sensors, RF modules and analog circuits |
| Peak current | Prevents resets during startup, transmission or load changes |
| Efficiency | Affects heat generation and battery lifetime |
| Ripple and noise | Can disturb sensors, RF circuits, ADCs and audio electronics |
| Thermal behaviour | Determines whether the converter can operate safely in the enclosure |
| Transient response | Important when loads switch quickly |
| PCB layout | Strongly affects stability, noise and EMC |
| Component availability | Important for production and long-term support |
A common mistake is selecting a DC-DC converter or regulator only by voltage and output current. These values are important, but they do not tell the full story.
Also check:
A converter that looks suitable in the datasheet may fail in the real product if peak loads, heat, layout or input voltage variation are not considered.
Embedded systems rarely draw a constant current. Loads switch on and off, radios transmit in bursts, displays change brightness and processors move between sleep and active modes.
Review the full load profile:
Design for real operating conditions, not only for the average current.
For example, a cellular module may have a low average current but still create short high-current peaks during transmission. If the supply cannot handle those peaks, the system may reset or lose network connection.
Many embedded systems draw more current during startup than during normal operation. This can happen when capacitors charge, displays start, wireless modules register on a network or multiple voltage rails turn on at the same time.
Startup problems can cause:
Check:
Power-up should be tested under minimum input voltage, maximum load and low-temperature conditions.
Power components generate heat. Even efficient converters can become too hot when they operate in a compact enclosure, near other heat sources or at high ambient temperature.
Thermal performance depends on:
Review:
A converter that works on an open development board may overheat inside the final product enclosure.
Switching regulators are layout-sensitive. A poor layout can increase noise, ripple, EMI and instability.
Pay attention to:
The input capacitor should be placed close to the converter. High-current loops should be short. Feedback traces should be kept away from noisy switching nodes.
For switching converters, PCB layout is not just implementation. It is part of the power design.
External components strongly influence converter behaviour. The wrong inductor or capacitor can cause instability, excessive ripple, poor transient response or thermal issues.
Check inductor specifications:
Check capacitor specifications:
Ceramic capacitors can lose significant effective capacitance under DC bias. This should be considered when selecting input and output capacitors.
Many embedded and IoT products spend most of their time in sleep or low-power mode. In these cases, efficiency at maximum load is not enough.
Check:
For battery-powered devices, a regulator with high quiescent current can reduce battery lifetime even if the active-mode efficiency looks good.
Wireless modules can create short but high current peaks during transmission or network registration. This is especially important for cellular, Wi-Fi and other radio modules.
Check:
Poor signal conditions can increase current consumption because the radio may transmit at higher power or retry communication.
Test the power design during real network activity, not only with a static load.
Some circuits are sensitive to ripple, switching noise and ground disturbance.
Examples include:
For these circuits, consider:
A technically correct power rail can still be unsuitable if it is too noisy for the connected circuit.
Grounding affects noise, EMC and measurement stability. Poor ground return paths can create voltage differences between parts of the circuit.
Common problems include:
Review:
The goal is not always to split ground planes, but to control where currents flow.
Power inputs and external interfaces may be exposed to electrical stress. Protection should be included early, especially in industrial or outdoor products.
Consider protection against:
Useful components may include:
Protection requirements depend on the application, power source and installation environment.
Some processors, modules, sensors and displays require voltage rails to start in a specific order. Incorrect sequencing can cause startup failure, excessive current or unpredictable behaviour.
Check:
Power sequencing is especially important in systems with multiple rails, processors, wireless modules, FPGAs, displays or high-performance processors.
Power systems should not only be tested at nominal voltage, room temperature and typical load. Many problems appear only under worst-case conditions.
Test:
Testing in the final enclosure is important because thermal and EMC behaviour can change significantly compared with an open bench setup.
A power design can be technically correct but still create production risk if key components are difficult to source or near end-of-life.
Check:
This is especially important for embedded products with long production lifetimes.
TOP-electronics can help align technical requirements with component availability and supply chain reality.
Avoid these common mistakes:
Before finalising the power design, check:
To help select or review the right power conversion solution, prepare:
This information helps the technical support team recommend a power solution that fits both the electrical design and the production requirements.
Reliable power conversion requires the right converter, external components, PCB layout, thermal design and supply chain planning.
TOP-electronics supports engineers with component selection, technical advice and supply chain support for embedded power designs.
Need help selecting a DC-DC converter, regulator or power management solution? Contact our technical support team.
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