TIDUA05B June 2015 – March 2025
A 5.25-V supply for the encoder has been selected in order to meet a typical 5-V (±5%) encoder supply specification and have a 0.25-V additional margin to compensate for voltage drop across longer cables used to connect the encoder.
The LDO that provides the 5.25 V to the encoder has to provide also an enable pin. In this way, it is possible to power-cycle the turn-off or power-cycle the encoder supply from a host processor, if desired to for example turn-off the voltage at the encoder connector in case no encoder is connected.
The LDOs do not need specific description, except for the allowed range of output cap/ESR for stability purpose; while the main design involves the SMPS, as this affects all the main performances (noise, EMI, efficiency, cost, and board space).
The TPS79901 has been designed to provide a little higher voltage than the nominal 5 V (5.25 V), using part of the greater accuracy of the LDO to reduce the thermal stress on it. In brief 5.25 V ±2% is within the allowed supply range of the encoder (5 V ±5%). In this way, the power it has to dissipate is

With a 5-V encoder voltage, the maximum power dissipation would increase to 250 mW.
Indeed with a Rthja ≈ 180°C/W it means that the TPS79901 junction temperature will increase less than 34°C versus ambient temperature when working at maximum load current of 250 mA. For example at 85°C ambient, the junction will be 120°C.
The output voltage of the TPS79901 LDO is set with 1% feedback resistors R11 and R13 according to according to the Equation 13, where 1.193 V is the nominal value of the TPS79901 reference voltage:

Figure 4-11 Schematic of 5.25-V LDO for Encoder SupplyA jumper selects between the 5.25-V LDO output and an optional external supply, if desired. The signal PWR_EN is default pull-up, but can be asserted to low from a host microcontroller to disable or power-cycle the encoder supply voltage (see Section 4.3).