
Switching frequency is one of the most important design variables in power electronics.
The chosen switching frequency affects:
- Inductor size
- Transformer size
- Core losses
- Copper losses
- Ripple current
- Thermal performance
- Efficiency
- EMI
Understanding these tradeoffs allows engineers to optimize magnetic components for size, performance, efficiency, and manufacturability.
What Is Switching Frequency?
Switching frequency is the rate at which a power converter turns its switching devices on and off.
It is typically measured in:
- kHz
- MHz
Modern converters commonly operate between:
- 20 kHz
- 2 MHz
depending on the application.
Why Frequency Matters
Magnetic components store and transfer energy.
The amount of energy transferred during each switching cycle depends on switching frequency.
As frequency increases:
- More energy transfer cycles occur each second.
- Smaller magnetic components can often be used.
- Ripple current generally decreases.
This is one reason modern converters continue moving toward higher frequencies.
Higher Frequency Means Smaller Magnetics
One of the biggest advantages of increasing switching frequency is reducing magnetic size.
For inductors:
Higher frequency generally allows:
- Fewer turns
- Smaller cores
- Lower inductance values
- Reduced volume
This enables more compact power supplies.
For portable electronics and high-density power systems, this is often a major advantage.
Ripple Current and Frequency
Switching frequency strongly influences ripple current.
For many converter topologies:
\Delta I \propto \frac{1}{f}
Where:
- ฮI = Ripple current
- f = Switching frequency
Increasing switching frequency typically reduces ripple current.
๐ Related Guide: Ripple Current Explained
Core Losses Increase with Frequency
Higher frequency is not always better.
As switching frequency increases:
- Hysteresis losses increase
- Eddy current losses increase
- Core temperature rises
At sufficiently high frequencies, core losses can become the dominant source of heating.
๐ Related Guide: How to Reduce Inductor Losses
Copper Losses and Frequency
Higher frequency also increases AC winding losses.
Two major mechanisms are:
Skin Effect
Current crowds toward the outer surface of conductors.
Proximity Effect
Nearby magnetic fields distort current distribution.
Both effects increase effective winding resistance and reduce efficiency.
Core Material Selection
Frequency strongly influences material choice.
๐ Related Guide: How to Choose the Right Core Material
Typical examples:
| Frequency Range | Preferred Material |
|---|---|
| Below 50 kHz | Powdered Iron |
| 50 kHz – 1 MHz | Ferrite |
| Above 1 MHz | Nanocrystalline / Advanced Materials |
Choosing the wrong material can dramatically increase losses.
Saturation Considerations
Switching frequency also affects saturation behavior.
Lower frequencies often require:
- Larger inductance values
- More turns
- Higher stored energy
This can increase saturation risk.
๐ Related Guide: Understanding Magnetic Saturation
Temperature Rise
Frequency affects thermal performance through:
- Core losses
- Copper losses
- AC resistance effects
As frequency rises:
- Component temperatures often increase
- Cooling requirements may increase
๐ Related Guide: Inductor Temperature Rise Explained
EMI Considerations
Higher frequencies often create:
- Increased radiated emissions
- Increased conducted emissions
- More difficult PCB layout challenges
Proper shielding, filtering, and layout become increasingly important.
Cost Tradeoffs
Higher frequency designs may reduce magnetic size but can increase:
- Controller cost
- Switching device cost
- EMI mitigation cost
- Development complexity
The optimal frequency is often a balance between size and efficiency.
Practical Design Guidelines
Engineers typically increase switching frequency when they need:
- Smaller magnetics
- Reduced ripple current
- Higher power density
Engineers may reduce switching frequency when they need:
- Maximum efficiency
- Lower temperatures
- Reduced EMI
- Simpler magnetic design
The best frequency depends on the application.
Automated Frequency Optimization
Modern magnetic design software can automatically evaluate:
- Core losses
- Ripple current
- Saturation margin
- Thermal performance
- Efficiency
across multiple switching frequencies.
This allows engineers to identify the optimal operating point more quickly.
Conclusion
Switching frequency affects nearly every aspect of magnetic design.
Higher frequencies allow:
- Smaller components
- Lower ripple current
- Higher power density
But they also increase:
- Core losses
- AC winding losses
- EMI challenges
Successful magnetic design requires balancing these competing factors to achieve the best overall system performance.
Need Help Optimizing Magnetic Designs?
The SolidMagnetics automated design platform helps engineers optimize:
- Core selection
- Switching frequency tradeoffs
- Ripple current
- Saturation margin
- Thermal performance
- Manufacturability
while automatically generating CAD models, engineering drawings, and production-ready outputs.
Ready to Generate Your Custom Magnetic Design?
Upload your electrical requirements and receive:
- 3D CAD model
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