Home

BuckBoost

Buck-boost refers to a class of DC-DC converter topologies that can regulate an output voltage to be higher or lower than the input. The most common form, the buck-boost converter, is an inverting topology that produces a negative output voltage relative to ground. There are also non-inverting buck-boost variants that provide a positive output without polarity inversion, using different network arrangements such as SEPIC, Cuk, or multi-switch configurations.

Most buck-boost converters share a basic operating principle. A switch, inductor, diode, and capacitor are arranged

Topologies range from a simple single-inductor, single-switch inverting buck-boost to non-inverting variants that use additional switches

Applications include battery-powered devices, automotive systems, solar or wind energy harvesters, and portable power supplies, where

so
that
when
the
switch
is
on,
energy
is
stored
in
the
inductor
from
the
input;
when
the
switch
turns
off,
the
inductor
releases
energy
to
the
output
through
the
diode
or
a
synchronous
switch.
The
output
voltage
is
set
by
the
duty
cycle
of
the
control
signal
and
the
topology,
allowing
the
converter
to
step
the
voltage
up
or
down
as
needed.
or
coupled
inductors.
Non-inverting
buck-boost
implementations,
such
as
SEPIC
or
Cuk-based
designs,
preserve
the
output
polarity
while
still
providing
wide
input-to-output
regulation.
Modern
implementations
often
integrate
control
circuitry
and
protection
features
on
the
same
chip.
input
voltages
can
lie
below
or
above
the
desired
output.
Key
considerations
in
design
are
control
loop
stability,
efficiency,
thermal
management,
EMI,
and
protection
against
short
circuits
or
reverse
polarity.