LTspice supports the Chan core since long ago. Unfortunately, it doesn't support direct coupling with other than linear inductances (i.e. the default inductance). However, as you found out in your searches, there are ways to circumvent this. If it were me, I'd use this link for my needs, but there are other links, as well (and also some examples in the default installation of LTspice).
A few remarks: there is no "specialized" symbol denoted L
, that is the general SPICE notation for inductance, ever since 40+ years ago. The parameters are specialized, and this can be checked in the LTspice manual. Even if it is pretty spartan, I highly recommend reading it, at least once, it may save you tons of searches on the net. Also, in the LTspice Yahoo Groups archive and message list there should be more than enough examples to get you started, if the LTwiki link doesn't do it for you.
This is a simpler version to that from the LTwiki, it only accounts for primary/secondary resistances:
Note that I used G
sources for their superior convergence over E
sources. If you need more than two windings, extending this should be fairly easy, as the Chan core is only used as a "prototype", with one turn; the sources take care of the windings (and anything else that may be added).
The example on the LTwiki, though, should be pretty self-explanatory, I'm afraid that, if you are looking for a simple, "place L
, add coupling" sort of transformer, there is no such thing and you're likely be asking for external libraries which will, most probably, have the same arrangement under the hood.
Best Answer
From experimenting, setting a value here adds "Ipk=value" to the inductor's card in the netlist. However nothing in the help files documents any meaning for this parameter.
According to this brief thread on the LTSpice mailing list, the peak current parameter does not affect the simulation and is only provided as a reference for the user.