PFC Boost Inductor Design Example (2 kW)

Power Factor Correction (PFC) stages are commonly used in industrial power supplies, EV chargers, telecom equipment, and high-power AC-DC converters.

One of the most critical components in a boost PFC stage is the boost inductor.

In this example, we will walk through the design process for a 2 kW continuous-conduction-mode (CCM) PFC inductor.

The objective is to demonstrate the engineering process used to select and optimize a practical magnetic design.

High-power boost inductor used in a 2kW power factor correction circuit converting AC input into a regulated 400VDC bus.
PFC boost inductors store energy and shape input current to improve power factor in high-power AC-DC converters.

Design Requirements

Input Voltage:

90–265 VAC

Output Voltage:

400 VDC

Output Power:

2000 W

Switching Frequency:

100 kHz

Target Efficiency:

95%+

Maximum Temperature Rise:

40°C


Quick Design Estimate

Before performing detailed calculations, engineers often estimate candidate magnetic designs.

Inductor Quick Feasibility Checker

Use this quick estimator to check peak current, stored energy, and preliminary design difficulty.

Peak Current: A

Ripple Current: A p-p

Stored Energy: mJ

Preliminary Difficulty:

Likely Core Direction:

This is a quick educational estimate only. Final design requires core geometry, gap, winding, loss, fill factor, and thermal checks.

Need a manufacturable design package?

Run the full SolidMagnetics designer to generate optimized candidates, CAD files, BOM data, and design deliverables.

Start Design Analysis

Step 1: Determine Output Current

Output current:

2000 W ÷ 400 V

= 5 A

This establishes the minimum output current requirement.


Step 2: Determine Input Current

At low-line operation:

90 VAC

Input current becomes substantially higher.

This operating condition usually drives the magnetic design.


Step 3: Select Ripple Current Target

A common design goal is:

20%–40% ripple current

For this example:

30% ripple current

is selected.


Calculate Ripple Current

Buck Converter Ripple Current Calculator

Estimate duty cycle, inductor ripple current, and peak current for a buck converter.

Duty Cycle: %

Ripple Current: A p-p

Ripple Percentage: %

Peak Current: A

Need a full CAD-ready inductor design?

Start Design Analysis

Ripple current influences:

  • Core size
  • Copper losses
  • Temperature rise
  • Saturation margin

Step 4: Determine Required Inductance

The boost inductor must maintain continuous conduction while limiting ripple current.

Key design considerations include:

  • Worst-case line voltage
  • Switching frequency
  • Maximum current
  • Efficiency targets

Inductance is typically optimized iteratively rather than chosen from a single equation.


Step 5: Evaluate Energy Storage

PFC inductors store significant magnetic energy.

Engineers must verify:

  • Core size
  • Energy capability
  • Saturation margin

👉 Related Guide: How to Calculate Inductor Energy Storage


Step 6: Select Core Material

Common choices include:

  • Ferrite
  • Powdered Iron
  • Nanocrystalline

For high-power PFC designs:

Ferrite is frequently preferred because of:

  • Low losses
  • High-frequency performance
  • Wide availability

👉 Related Guide: How to Choose the Right Core Material


Step 7: Check Saturation Margin

PFC inductors often operate near their design limits.

Saturation analysis is critical.

👉 Related Guide: Understanding Magnetic Saturation

Verify Saturation Margin

Inductor Saturation Risk Checker

Estimate flux density from inductance, peak current, turns, and effective core area.

Estimated Flux Density: T

Risk Level:

Approximation: B ≈ L × Ipk / (N × Ae). Final design should use actual core data, gap, material Bsat, and temperature limits.

Need a full saturation and gap-checked design?

Start Design Analysis

Adequate margin must be maintained at low line and maximum load conditions.


Step 8: Select Conductor Size

Large currents require careful conductor selection.

Possible options include:

  • Single large conductor
  • Parallel conductors
  • Litz wire
  • Copper foil

Evaluate Wire Options

Wire Current Density Calculator

Estimate required copper area and approximate AWG size from RMS current and target current density.

Total Copper Area Required: mm²

Area Per Conductor: mm²

Approximate Suggested AWG:

This is a first-pass estimate. Real winding design also requires insulation diameter, window fill, AC loss, bend radius, and thermal checks.

Want optimized winding and CAD output?

Start Design Analysis

Wire selection directly influences:

  • DCR
  • Copper losses
  • Thermal performance

Step 9: Estimate Losses

Losses come from:

  • Copper losses
  • Core losses
  • AC winding losses

Reducing losses improves:

  • Efficiency
  • Reliability
  • Thermal performance

Estimate Magnetic Losses

Inductor Loss Estimator

Estimate copper loss, core loss, and total loss for a preliminary inductor design.

Copper Loss: W

Core Loss: W

Total Loss: W

Thermal Concern:

Need a thermal-checked design package?

Start Design Analysis

Step 10: Thermal Evaluation

Thermal design verifies:

  • Maximum winding temperature
  • Core temperature
  • Long-term reliability

👉 Related Guide: How to Reduce Inductor Temperature Rise

The target is:

Less than 40°C temperature rise

under worst-case conditions.


Practical Optimization Process

A real engineering workflow typically evaluates:

  • Multiple core families
  • Multiple gap sizes
  • Multiple wire configurations
  • Thermal performance
  • Cost

before selecting a final design.


Conclusion

PFC boost inductors represent one of the most important magnetic components used in modern power electronics.

A successful design balances:

  • Efficiency
  • Saturation margin
  • Temperature rise
  • Manufacturability
  • Cost

while meeting stringent performance requirements.


Need Help Designing PFC Magnetics?

The SolidMagnetics platform helps engineers optimize:

  • Core selection
  • Air gap sizing
  • Saturation margin
  • Thermal performance
  • Manufacturability

while automatically generating CAD models, engineering drawings, BOMs, and production-ready outputs.

Ready to Generate Your Custom Magnetic Design?

Upload your electrical requirements and receive:

  • 3D CAD model
  • Manufacturing drawings
  • BOM
  • Build-ready geometry
Start Design Analysis
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