Electronic – Powering transformers using a switching transistor circuit on DC instead of AC

transformertransistors

I've been doing some reading about transformers and have gathered that they are only able to increase or decrease voltage when using AC. I was wondering whether a switching transistor circuit (the circuit that turns on and off really fast), would be enough to induce another voltage in the second coil of the transformer. I've heard that it's the switching property of AC that actually moves the electrons around. Will this constantly switching DC work?

Best Answer

Yes. In fact most MODERN power supplies use that principle. That is called "Switch-Mode Power Supply" (SMPS). It is almost required by law in new electronic equipment (including phone chargers, etc.) for efficiency greatly exceeding the old-style big "heavy-iron" transformers that ran at electric mains frequencies (50Hz and 60Hz). SMPS typically operate at 10s or 100s of KHz and use a much smaller ferrite transformer for equivalent power as the old-school "heavy iron".