The σ11 Regulated Power Supply

The circuit board

The σ11 circuit board is made of high quality FR-4 glass epoxy, double-layer with plated-through holes as well as silkscreen and solder mask. The copper layers are 2 ounce heavy duty construction for low impedance. There is a ground plane on each side of the board for lowered ground impedance and improved shielding.

The following diagram illustrates some important board dimensions. It can be used as a reference when you work on the chassis enclosure.



Below are photo images of the top and bottom of circuit board. They are not in actual size.

 

The circuit board layout is shown below. The top layer is shown in red, the bottom layer is in blue, areas where there are traces in both the top and bottom layers are in lavender, and the top silkscreen is in light grey.



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Heatsink options

There are three MOSFET heatsinking options, one onboard and two offboard, as shown in the following illustration.

Onboard heatsinks

The default configuration is to use two onboard heatsinks (e.g., Aavid-Thermalloy 529802B00000). If you use a Hammond 1455N series enclosure, then onboard heatsinks must be used.

This is the easiest option and allows the σ11 to supply up to 1A continuously per rail, while allowing higher peak currents. The enclosure housing the σ11 should be well ventilated if the sustained current will be higher than 400mA. If higher sustained output currents are required, then larger, offboard heatsinks should be used.

Offboard-heatsinks - with angle bracket

This option requires an angle bracket to couple the MOSFETs to an offboard heatsink. The bracket should be no thicker than 15/64" (6mm) to assure that there is enough remaining solderable MOSFET pin length on the bottom side of the board. The MOSFETs' pins should be bent 90° back. See the following picture for bending dimensions:



Aluminum angle stock can be found at your local hardware stores, or internet metal shops such as Online Metals who offers custom cutting service.

Offboard-heatsinks - bottom-mount

For this option, the MOSFETs are mounted below the board, and secured to either the case bottom or to a piece of large heatsink. The MOSFET mounting screws can be accessed through the holes on the board, using a miniature screwdriver. You may also enlarge the holes slightly if needed, as long as the ground plane or traces are not breached. The MOSFETs' pins should be bent 90°, and soldered to the board on the top side. The pin bending measurements are the same as in the angle-brackets option, except the pins are to be bent forward instead of backward. This method requires that the board standoffs to be no higher than 5/32" (4mm) in order to have enough remaining solderable MOSFET pin length on the top of the board.

Heatsink sizing considerations

The heatsink should have low enough thermal resistance to support the amount of heat to be dissipated. Bigger and more efficient heatsinks have lower thermal resistance specifications. To determine whether a heatsink is adequate, the power disspation must first be calculated. Use the following formula:

P = (Vin - Vout) * I

Where,
  • P = power dissipation in Watts. This is given off as heat.
  • Vin = pre-regulator voltage (measured across C5) under load
  • Vout = the regulator's output voltage
  • I = sustained output current in Amperes
Since two paralleled MOSFETs serve each rail, each MOSFET will dissipate half the power. However, if the two MOSFETs will be mounted on the same heatsink, then the full power dissipation figure should be used.

Next, we determine if a heatsink (given its thermal resistance rating in °C/W) is sufficient. To do that, we calculate what the MOSFET internal junction temperature would be and check if it would approach the maximum rating of the device with some headroom.

The formula is:

Tj = Ta + (P * (Rjc + Rcs + Rsa))

Where,
  • Tj = junction termperature
  • Ta = ambient temperature
  • P = power to be dissipated
  • Rjc = thermal resistance of junction to device case
  • Rcs = thermal resistance of device case to heatsink
  • Rsa = thermal resistance of heatsink to ambient
For the IRLZ24N MOSFET, Rjc is 3.3°C/W. Ta is the highest ambient termperature you expect the circuit will operate under (note that if the circuit is going to be in an enclosure, then Ta will be higher than room temperature!). P is the power dissipation we calculated. Rcs is the sum of the thermal resistance of any mounting isolation pads, heatsink compound, etc., and you can look that up from their datasheets. And Rsa is the thermal resistance of the heatsink itself.

Calculating for Tj, and comparing it to the MOSFETs' maximum junction temperature of 175°C, you can determine if the heatsink is good enough. Even though these IRF MOSFETs are very rugged, you should avoid letting the MOSFET junction temperature exceed 100°C to prevent reduced device lifespan. Under extreme conditions, forced air cooling (e.g., fan) may become necessary.

Other heatsink notes

  • Heatsinks should always be mounted with the fins oriented vertically for effective convection.
  • TO-220 isolation pads must be used on the MOSFETs for all the offboard configurations.
  • For the offboard heatsink with angle bracket option, heatsink compound should be applied to the mating surface between the bracket and the heatsink to aid heat conduction.


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