Title :
Two novel soft-switched, high frequency, high-efficiency, non-isolated Voltage Regulators-the phase-shift buck converter and the matrix-transformer phase-buck converter
Author :
Wei, Jia ; Lee, Fred C.
Author_Institution :
Center for Power Electron. Syst., Virginia Polytech. Inst. & State Univ., Blacksburg, VA, USA
fDate :
3/1/2005 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Microprocessors in today´s computers continue to get faster and more powerful. From the Intel 80×86 series to today´s Pentium IV, CPUs have greatly improved the performance. Accordingly, their power consumption has increased dramatically , . To reduce the power loss, an evolution began when the high-performance Pentium processor was driven by a nonstandard, less-than-5-V power supply, instead of drawing its power from the 5-V plane on the system board. In order to provide the power as quickly as possible, the voltage regulator (VR), a dedicated dc-dc converter, is placed in close proximity to power the processor. In the beginning, VRs drew power from the 5-V output of the silver box. As the power delivered through the VR increased so dramatically, it became no longer efficient to use the 5-V bus. Then for desktop and workstation applications, the VR input voltage moved to the 12-V output of the silver box. This trend began when Pentium II processors emerged. Today´s Pentium IV processors use 12-V-input VRs.
Keywords :
DC-DC power convertors; computer power supplies; matrix convertors; microprocessor chips; power transformers; switching convertors; voltage regulators; 12 V; 5 V; dc-dc converter; matrix-transformer phase-buck converter; microprocessor; phase-shift buck converter; voltage regulator; Buck converters; Energy consumption; Frequency conversion; Matrix converters; Microprocessors; Power supplies; Regulators; Silver; Virtual reality; Voltage; Microprocessors; voltage regulator (VR);
Journal_Title :
Power Electronics, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TPEL.2004.843014