Electronic – Very small 12V DC power supply

power supply

As a second part of my bad question about voltage converters .

Well, I was asking about a regulator to get me from 220V AC/DC, into 12V DC .
A regulator can't do that , but today I got the Apple charger for the iPhone , that takes my 220v into a 5v , and its very small.

I think if you take out the plastic you get a tiny transformer.

Is this a switching power supply ?

So , my question now is, what kind of transformer Apple uses in its iPhone chargers, is it some kind of regulator, or just a small transformer with coils ?

My needs are very small voltage conversion, from 220V AC (or DC with diodes), into about 12V-24V DC, with a very small current consumption (MCU), that is in one small enclosure box, and relatively cheap.

I was looking for it everywhere, but couldn't find such a small box to do that.

(By small I mean to be on a board, not more than 2-3 cm)

Best Answer

A full iPhone charger teardown is given by Ken Shirriff. Making something that small that is efficient (doesnt produce much heat) while also meeting the EMC and safety constraints is a very difficult task, and is only cheap because of the extremely high volumes that companies like Apple can produce.

Apart from the size of the major components such as transformer and transistors, one of the factors that stops these chargers getting much smaller is the mandatory spacings for safety agency approval. Pads/pins/tracks with high voltages between them have to comply with creepage and clearance distances so that they don't electrocute the users.

Since your priority is for a small size PSU, you have to compromise on the cost. The absolute cheapest power supply may not be the smallest, and as Ken shows, may compromise safety or performance. The Apple design seems to cost about 5 USD for the parts, which is cheap for such a high quality design. Their selling price, as with much consumer electronics, may not directly reflect the cost of the parts.