SSZTC21 october   2015

 

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    2.     Additional Resources

David Strasser

Tom Brady just threw his 400th touchdown pass in 13 NFL seasons. Similarly, I just completed my 400th Power over Ethernet (PoE) power supply reference design, the first of which I designed 13 years ago.

Okay, the two records are not exactly comparable, but it is a major milestone for a power supply designer nonetheless. It is amazing all of the applications customers can imagine:  IP phones, security cameras, wireless access points, home automation, point-of-sale terminals - the list goes on.

The original IEEE802.3af specification limited sourced power to 15W. This was sufficient for a while, but customers demanded more power, so the 802.3at specification increased the sourced power to 30W. There are also customers who go the other way and want less power and minimum size. Some customers want isolation, some don’t. Cost is important to some, while efficiency is important to others.  You can begin to see why I have done so many PoE power supply designs!  A few of my most recent designs include:

If one of these designs isn’t what you need, you can find any PoE TI design optimized for cost, size or performance.  My colleagues developed a widget to make it easy to search for the most popular and useful designs in the TI Designs reference design library by inputting common PoE criteria such as class, converter topology, output voltage, output current and isolation requirements. You can narrow down or broaden your search by including or omitting certain criteria. The results of your search will yield a list of reference designs geared toward your power requirements and links to the product pages of each reference design. The product pages contain all of the technical information you need for your design, such as schematics; BOMs; Gerber files; and a test report that showcases the performance of the design, like efficiency and transient response. This will reduce your design cycle and get you to market faster.

For some time now, I have provided non-standard designs that exceed the 30W sourced power limit. The IEEE802.3bt standard will be released soon and will provide standard power levels up to 90W sourced. Texas Instruments has been on the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers committee developing this new standard (as well as the previous .af and .at standards), so we will be ready with new products and reference designs that comply with the standard when released.

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