Design Example: 400VDC to 24VDC Flyback Transformer Design

Flyback converters are among the most widely used isolated power supply topologies in industrial and consumer electronics.

This example demonstrates the engineering process involved in designing a flyback transformer for a 400VDC to 24VDC power supply.

The goal is to illustrate the design workflow rather than produce a final production-ready magnetic component.

Flyback transformer used in a 400VDC to 24VDC isolated power supply showing ferrite core, air gap, and winding structure.
Example flyback transformer design for a 400VDC to 24VDC isolated power supply operating at 120W.

Design Requirements

Input Voltage:

400VDC

Output Voltage:

24VDC

Output Power:

120W

Switching Frequency:

100 kHz

Isolation:

1500 VAC

Maximum Temperature Rise:

40°C


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.

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Step 1: Determine Output Current

Output current:

120W ÷ 24V

= 5A

This establishes the secondary current requirement.


Step 2: Estimate Turns Ratio

A preliminary turns ratio is selected to achieve:

  • Acceptable duty cycle
  • Reasonable winding count
  • Adequate efficiency

👉 Related Guide: Transformer Turns Ratio Explained


Step 3: Select Core Family

Potential core families include:

  • ETD34
  • ETD39
  • PQ35
  • EE35

The final choice depends on:

  • Power level
  • Thermal requirements
  • Available winding area

Step 4: Determine Energy Storage

Unlike conventional transformers, flyback transformers store energy.

Stored energy must support the required output power without saturation.

👉 Related Guide: How to Calculate Inductor Energy Storage


Step 5: Air Gap Design

The air gap determines:

  • Energy storage capability
  • Saturation margin
  • Magnetizing inductance

Proper air gap design is critical.

👉 Related Guide: Air Gap Design in Power Inductors


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.

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Step 6: Saturation Analysis

Peak flux density must remain below the material saturation limit.

👉 Related Guide: Understanding Magnetic Saturation

Adequate design margin is required under worst-case operating conditions.


Step 7: Winding Design

The winding arrangement affects:

  • Leakage inductance
  • Copper losses
  • EMI
  • Manufacturability

👉 Related Guide: Transformer Leakage Inductance Explained


Step 8: Thermal Evaluation

Losses originate from:

  • Copper losses
  • Core losses
  • Leakage energy

👉 Related Guide: Inductor Temperature Rise Explained

The design target is less than 40°C temperature rise.


Practical Design Optimization

Engineers typically evaluate multiple combinations of:

  • Core size
  • Air gap
  • Wire size
  • Turns ratio
  • Winding structure

before selecting a final design.


Conclusion

Flyback transformer design requires balancing:

  • Isolation
  • Energy storage
  • Saturation margin
  • Thermal performance
  • Manufacturability

By evaluating these factors together, engineers can create efficient and reliable isolated power supplies.


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