
Select a flyback topology for low-power applications (under 50 W) where simplicity and cost-efficiency matter. The primary switch (MOSFET) should handle at least 1.5× the peak input voltage–opt for a part with a 600 V rating if the bus exceeds 400 V. Secondary regulation requires a fast recovery diode (≤50 ns reverse recovery) rated for 1.3× the output voltage to prevent overshoot during transient loads. Ground the feedback path through a dedicated trace, avoiding shared return lines that introduce noise coupling.
For medium-power stages (50–200 W), a half-bridge resonant stage reduces switching losses by leveraging zero-voltage switching (ZVS). Use a 1:1:1 transformer with split primary windings to balance magnetizing currents; leakage inductance should not exceed 0.5% of the magnetizing inductance to maintain efficiency above 90%. Snubber circuits (RC networks) across the primary switches must target the self-resonant frequency of the transformer–typically 10–50 MHz–to dampen ringing without excessive power dissipation.
Thermal management dictates component placement: position the MOSFET and diode ≥5 mm apart on a 2 oz copper PCB to prevent thermal runaway. For high-voltage isolation (≥1.5 kV), maintain a minimum creepage distance of 8 mm between primary and secondary copper pours. Test the setup with a 1 kΩ load step; output voltage should stabilize within 2 ms with ≤2% overshoot. Failure to meet this benchmark indicates inadequate compensation–adjust the error amplifier’s bandwidth by tuning the feedback capacitor (start with 4.7 nF).
EMI compliance requires a pi-filter on the input: combine a 10 µH choke, 1 µF X-capacitor, and two 220 pF Y-capacitors to ground. Shield the transformer with a copper foil wrap connected to the primary ground; leave a 1-mm gap at the seams to avoid forming a shorted turn. Measure conducted emissions with a line impedance stabilization network (LISN)–target ≤73 dBµV in the 150 kHz–30 MHz range for FCC/CE certification.
Galvanically Separated Power Supply Schematic
Use a flyback topology for low-power applications under 50W to minimize component count while ensuring safe voltage separation. The core components include:
- A high-frequency transformer with a turns ratio matching input-to-output voltage requirements (e.g., 1:2 for 12V to 24V).
- A MOSFET with a voltage rating at least 1.5× the input voltage (e.g., 60V for a 48V source).
- A Schottky diode for rectification, selected for forward voltage drop below 0.5V.
Add a snubber circuit (10Ω resistor + 1nF capacitor in series) across the transformer primary to suppress voltage spikes exceeding 10% of the nominal switching waveform.
Select an optocoupler like PC817 for feedback if output regulation tighter than ±5% is required. Place the feedback resistor divider near the output capacitor to reduce noise-induced errors. For open-loop designs, omit the optocoupler and rely on transformer saturation limits to cap output within ±10%.
Critical Layout Practices
- Route the primary and secondary grounds separately, connecting them only at a single star point near the input filter capacitor.
- Keep the switching node traces as short and wide as possible–target under 20mm length for 200kHz operation.
- Position the gate driver and MOSFET within 1cm to reduce parasitic inductance, which can exceed 10nH/cm in poorly routed designs.
Test the feedback loop stability using a network analyzer. Aim for a phase margin of 45°–60° and gain margin of at least 10dB. If the crossover frequency exceeds 1/10th of the switching frequency, reduce the compensator zero location by increasing the feedback capacitor or adding a pole at 1/2 the crossover frequency.
Implement a current-limiting resistor (e.g., 0.1Ω sense resistor) in series with the MOSFET to protect against output short-circuits. Set the overcurrent threshold to 120% of the maximum load current. For transient response, use a 1μF ceramic capacitor on the output; larger electrolytics risk sluggish recovery during load steps.
Common Pitfalls and Fixes

- Excessive ringing: Increase gate resistance to 10–22Ω or add a ferrite bead in series with the gate.
- Transformer saturation: Use a core with an air gap (e.g., EFD20) and limit peak currents via PWM dead-time adjustment.
- EMI leakage: Add a 10nF Y-rated capacitor between primary and secondary grounds to bypass high-frequency noise.
For input voltages above 60V, replace the flyback diode with a synchronous rectifier (e.g., TPS2113) to reduce losses. Verify thermal performance by ensuring MOSFET temperature rise stays below 40°C at full load–exceeding 60°C risks long-term drift in output voltage. Use a thermal pad or heatsink if the calculated dissipation exceeds 1.5W.
Core Elements of a Galvanically Separated Power Stage
Select a high-frequency transformer with a ferrite core–N87 or 3C90 material–optimized for 100–500 kHz switching. Wind primary and secondary coils with Litz wire (AWG 26–32 strands) to minimize skin effect losses; maintain a minimum 5:1 turns ratio to achieve 85–95% coupling efficiency while ensuring >3 kV isolation between input and output. Use a split bobbin or staggered winding technique to reduce parasitic capacitance below 20 pF, critical for compliance with CISPR 22/EN 55022 EMI standards.
Switching Devices and Control Logic

Deploy synchronous rectifiers (e.g., Trench MOSFETs rated 40–100 V, DS(on)) on the secondary side for sub-2 V outputs; pair with a PWM controller (e.g., LT8316, UCC28700) featuring adaptive dead-time control to prevent shoot-through. For primary-side switching, use 100–150 V GaN FETs (e.g., EPC2053) or SiC MOSFETs (C3M0065090D) to reduce switching losses by 40% compared to silicon–critical for 92%+ efficiency at 200 W+ loads. Ensure gate drivers (e.g., UCC21520) include undervoltage lockout and
Step-by-Step Assembly of a Flyback Power Stage Layout
Select a switching transistor with a breakdown voltage exceeding 1.5× the maximum input voltage. For a 48V input, a 60V MOSFET (e.g., IPD60R180C7) ensures a 20% safety margin. Match the device’s RDS(on) to your output current–under 50mΩ for loads above 3A. Position the MOSFET within 5mm of the transformer’s primary winding to minimize loop inductance; use a kelvin connection for the source terminal to reduce switching losses.
Choose a flyback xfmr core based on inductance factor (AL) and size constraints. For 10W–50W designs, an EFD20 (N87 material) offers a compact footprint with AL = 600nH/turn². Wind the primary coil first, using 1–2 layers of 0.3mm magnet wire, spacing turns evenly to avoid inter-winding capacitance. Calculate turns ratio as N = (Vin × Dmax) / (Vout × (1–Dmax)), where Dmax is the maximum duty cycle (typically 0.4–0.5).
The snubber network must clamp the primary voltage spike to ≤90% of the MOSFET’s VDS rating. Use a fast-recovery diode (e.g., MUR160) in series with a 47Ω resistor and 2.2nF capacitor (X7R dielectric). Mount the snubber from the MOSFET drain to the transformer’s primary return path. Verify clamping effectiveness by probing the drain node with a 100MHz bandwidth scope–ringing frequency should not exceed 30MHz to avoid EMI failures.
| Component | Part Number | Key Spec | Quantity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Switching FET | IPD60R180C7 | 60V, 50mΩ | 1 |
| Flyback Diode | SB560 | 60V, 5A (Schottky) | 1 |
| Snubber Diode | MUR160 | 400V, 1A (Ultra-fast) | 1 |
| Feedback Opto | PC817 | CTR: 80–160% | 1 |
Route the secondary side traces with ≥1oz copper to handle peak currents. Place the output diode (SB560, Schottky type) from the secondary winding, using a via stitch to connect to the output capacitor’s ground plane. Select output caps based on ESR (e.g., 2× 47µF/25V polymer capacitors for 12V output) to reduce ripple below 50mVpp. Implement feedback with a TL431 shunt regulator and PC817 optocoupler, ensuring the CTR (Current Transfer Ratio) exceeds 1:1 to avoid unstable regulation.
Finalize the layout by verifying creepage distances–keep primary and secondary grounds ≥8mm apart (reinforced insulation per IEC 62368). Test the build with a 50% load step while monitoring output regulation (±2% tolerance) and input ripple (in). Use a thermal camera to confirm MOSFET case temperature stays ≤85°C at full load; if exceeding, add a 6.4mm² heatsink or increase copper area on the PCB.
Calculating Transformer Parameters for Optimal Galvanic Separation
Begin with the core cross-sectional area (Ac) using the empirical formula: Ac = 0.2 × √Pout, where Pout is the required output power in watts for the switching stage. For a 60W design, this yields 1.55 cm²–round up to 1.7 cm² to accommodate ETD29 ferrite cores, whose datasheet specifies a minimum 1.8 cm² area. Verify against manufacturer curves to prevent saturation at 100 kHz with a 0.3T flux density.
Calculate primary turns (Np) via Np = (Vin × 108) / (4 × Bmax × f × Ac). Plugging in 12V input, 0.3T flux, 100 kHz, and 1.8 cm² yields 56 turns; use 57 for margin, wound with 0.8mm diameter wire to handle 5A peaks while keeping skin-effect losses below 3% at the switching frequency.
Secondary turns follow Ns = Np × (Vout + Vd) / (Vin × Dmax), where Vd is diode forward drop (0.7V for Schottky) and Dmax the maximum duty cycle (0.45 for 45% margin). A 5V output thus requires 24 turns; wind three strands of 0.5mm wire in parallel for 3A output current, reducing proximity-effect losses by 22% compared to single-strand.
Spacing between windings dictates creepage and clearance–minimum 6mm for reinforced insulation at 600V working voltage. Split primary and secondary onto opposite bobbin cheeks, interleaving a single 0.1mm polyester tape layer to meet EN 60950-1 Class II requirements without increasing core window height. Terminate windings via twisted 22AWG pair leads routed through opposite slots to minimize coupling capacitance to less than 15pF, critical for sub-200ns common-mode noise suppression.
Verify magnetizing inductance Lm via Lm = (Np2 × μe × Ac) / le. Using ETD29’s 3500μ effective permeability and 67mm magnetic path length, Lm should measure 4.2mH; deviations exceeding ±5% indicate air gaps requiring grind-in adjustment during assembly.