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UC3852DTR - Texas Instruments-TPS2010DRG4 Power Switches Power Switch Hi Side 1-OUT 0A 140mOhm 8-Pin SOIC T/R

UC3852DTR

LTB
Texas Instruments

POWER FACTOR CORRECTION PREREGULATOR 1MA 200KHZ 8-PIN SOIC T/R

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UC3852DTR - Texas Instruments-TPS2010DRG4 Power Switches Power Switch Hi Side 1-OUT 0A 140mOhm 8-Pin SOIC T/R

UC3852DTR

LTB
Texas Instruments

POWER FACTOR CORRECTION PREREGULATOR 1MA 200KHZ 8-PIN SOIC T/R

Technical Specifications

Parameters and characteristics for this part

SpecificationUC3852DTR
Current - Startup400 µA
Frequency - Switching200 kHz
ModeContinuous Conduction (CCM)
Mounting TypeSurface Mount
Operating Temperature [Max]70 °C
Operating Temperature [Min]0 °C
Package / Case8-SOIC
Package / Case [x]0.154 in
Package / Case [y]3.9 mm
Supplier Device Package8-SOIC
Voltage - Supply [Max]30 VDC
Voltage - Supply [Min]14.5 V

Pricing

Prices provided here are for design reference only. For realtime values and availability, please visit the distributors directly

DistributorPackageQuantity$
DigikeyTape & Reel (TR) 2500$ 2.78
Texas InstrumentsLARGE T&R 1$ 3.96
100$ 3.23
250$ 2.54
1000$ 2.15

Description

General part information

UC3852 Series

The UC1852 provides a low-cost solution to active power-factor correction (PFC) for systems that would otherwise draw high peak current pulses from AC power lines. This circuit implements zero-current switched boost conversion, producing sinusoidal input currents with a minimum of external components, while keeping peak current substantially below that of fully-discontinuous converters.

The UC1852 provides controlled switch on-time to regulate the output bulk DC voltage, an off-time defined by the boost inductor, and a zero-current sensing circuit to reactivate the switch cycle. Even though switching frequency varies with both load and instantaneous line voltage, it can be maintained within a reasonable range to minimize noise generation.

While allowing higher peak switch currents than continuous PFCs such as the UC1854, this device offers less external circuitry and smaller inductors, yet better performance and easier line-noise filtering than discontinuous current PFCs with no sacrifice in complexity or cost. The ability to obtain a power factor in excess of 0.99 makes the UC1852 an optimum choice for low-cost applications in the 50 to 500 watt power range. Protection features of these devices include under-voltage lockout, output clamping, peak-current limiting, and maximum-frequency clamping.