Choosing Wire Gauge for Power Inductors

Selecting the proper wire gauge is one of the most important decisions in power inductor design. Wire size directly affects:

  • current handling
  • copper loss
  • DCR
  • thermal performance
  • efficiency
  • winding fill factor
  • manufacturability

Choosing the wrong wire gauge can lead to excessive heating, poor efficiency, difficult winding assembly, or even complete design failure.

This guide explains the major engineering considerations involved in selecting wire size for practical power inductors.


Why Wire Gauge Matters

The winding wire carries the inductor current and generates the magnetic field responsible for energy storage.

As current flows through the wire, resistive losses produce heat according to:

P=I2RP = I^2RP=I2R

Where:

  • P = copper power loss
  • I = RMS current
  • R = winding resistance

Reducing wire resistance lowers:

  • heating
  • voltage drop
  • efficiency losses

However, larger wire also consumes more winding space and may increase manufacturing complexity.


Understanding RMS Current

Inductor wire sizing is based primarily on RMS current, not average current alone.

Ripple current contributes to RMS heating and significantly affects thermal performance.

👉 Related Guide: Ripple Current Explained

Higher ripple current increases:

  • copper losses
  • skin effect
  • proximity losses
  • winding temperatures

This is why accurate ripple current estimation is critical during magnetic design.


American Wire Gauge (AWG)

Wire size is commonly specified using:

American Wire Gauge (AWG)

Smaller AWG numbers indicate larger wire diameters.

Examples:

AWGApprox Diameter
24 AWG0.51 mm
20 AWG0.81 mm
18 AWG1.02 mm
16 AWG1.29 mm

Larger wire:

  • reduces resistance
  • lowers heating
  • improves efficiency

But also:

  • increases winding area
  • reduces turns capacity
  • may complicate assembly

Balancing DCR and Fill Factor

One of the primary engineering tradeoffs in magnetic design is balancing:

  • low DCR
  • acceptable fill factor

DCR (DC Resistance) affects efficiency and heating.

Fill factor describes how much of the winding window is occupied by copper.

Excessive fill factor can:

  • make winding difficult
  • increase manufacturing cost
  • reduce insulation spacing
  • create assembly issues

Most practical inductor designs target fill factors significantly below theoretical maximum values to improve manufacturability.


Single Strand vs Parallel Strands

High-current inductors often use:

  • multiple parallel wires
  • litz wire
  • foil windings

instead of a single large conductor.

Parallel strands help:

  • reduce AC losses
  • improve flexibility
  • simplify winding
  • reduce skin effect losses

Example:

3x AWG20

means three parallel 20 AWG wires.


Skin Effect at High Frequency

At higher switching frequencies, current tends to flow near the outer surface of the conductor.

This phenomenon is called:

skin effect

Skin effect increases effective AC resistance and can significantly raise losses.

Skin depth decreases as frequency increases.

Higher-frequency designs often require:

  • smaller parallel strands
  • litz wire
  • foil conductors

to minimize AC losses.


Proximity Effect

Proximity effect occurs when magnetic fields from nearby conductors force current into non-uniform regions of the wire.

This can further increase AC resistance beyond simple skin effect calculations.

Poor winding layout may dramatically increase:

  • copper losses
  • temperature rise
  • efficiency reduction

Proper conductor arrangement becomes increasingly important at high frequencies and high current densities.


Thermal Considerations

Wire gauge strongly affects thermal performance.

Larger wire:

  • lowers resistance
  • reduces heating
  • improves efficiency

However:

  • winding density increases
  • airflow may decrease
  • assembly becomes more difficult

Thermal design always involves balancing:

  • current density
  • physical size
  • efficiency
  • manufacturability

Mechanical Manufacturability

Very large wire sizes may become difficult to:

  • bend
  • route
  • terminate
  • solder
  • fit into the bobbin window

Manufacturability is a major practical consideration often overlooked in theoretical magnetic calculations.

Successful designs balance:

  • electrical performance
  • thermal behavior
  • assembly practicality

The Relationship Between Wire Size and Core Size

As wire size increases:

  • winding volume increases
  • window area requirements increase
  • core size may need to increase

This directly affects:

  • cost
  • size
  • weight
  • power density

Optimizing the complete magnetic structure requires balancing all of these constraints simultaneously.


Automated Wire Optimization

Modern magnetic design software can automatically optimize:

  • wire gauge
  • strand count
  • fill factor
  • DCR
  • thermal performance
  • manufacturability

Automated optimization significantly reduces engineering time while improving consistency and design quality.


Conclusion

Choosing wire gauge for power inductors involves balancing:

  • RMS current
  • ripple current
  • DCR
  • thermal limits
  • AC losses
  • fill factor
  • manufacturability

Successful magnetic designs optimize all of these factors simultaneously rather than focusing on any single parameter alone.

As switching frequencies and power densities continue increasing, proper conductor selection becomes increasingly important for achieving efficient and manufacturable magnetic designs.

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