Electronic – Why are constant current drivers 10% less efficient than constant voltage drivers

ledled-driverpower

I want to drive a CREE XP-G3 LED with 2.73V, 350mA. My power supply is a car battery (10.5-14.5V).

I went to the Texas Instruments website and inputted the above specs into their WEBENCH designer, once for a constant voltage supply and once for a constant current supply. The constant current regulators topped out at 83% efficiency but the constant voltage ones reached 89%+ I looked on Digi-key for non-TI parts and it was a similar story for my specs.

Is there a fundamental architecture difference between constant-current and constant voltage regulators? They both look like their feedback input is just a voltage.

If all my Cree XP-G3 LEDs are the same, can I just use a constant voltage supply tuned to 2.73V?

Constant voltage:
Constant voltage

Constant current:
Constant current

Best Answer

You lose a little efficiency due to the difference between Vin and Vout.

String 3 LEDs in series. You can adjust your current down to the same power level or use lower power LEDs.

You did not set up Workbench correctly.

  • Click the Efficiency ">>" twice to get it to max efficiency.
  • Recalculate
  • Select All Part Types

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