Key Takeaways
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What Are LDOs and Buck Converters, and How Do They Work?
An LDO (low-dropout regulator) uses a series PMOS pass transistor to maintain output regulation by dissipating Pdiss = (Vin − Vout) × Iout as heat. A buck converter uses a duty-cycle-controlled MOSFET switch and inductor to transfer energy in discrete packets, achieving 85–95% efficiency independent of voltage ratio.
Internal Operation
In an LDO, a pass transistor and resistor-divider feedback maintain Vout by continuously dissipating the voltage difference. In a buck converter, alternating high-side and low-side MOSFETs at fSW = 100 kHz–5 MHz charge and discharge an inductor, with output capacitors filtering residual ripple. Efficiency losses split between switching losses (∝ fSW × Qg) and conduction losses (RDS(on) × Iout²).
Why Engineers Use Both
Most power architectures combine both topologies: a buck converter for bulk step-down and an LDO for post-regulation of noise-sensitive rails. Neither topology is universally superior — the decision depends on each rail’s specific operating conditions.
What Are the Key Features and Performance Differences?
| Feature | Description | Engineering Benefit |
| Efficiency | LDO: Vout/Vin; Buck: 85–95% regardless of ratio | Buck mandatory when Vin/Vout > 2:1 and Iout > 200 mA |
| Output Noise | LDO: 3–30 µV RMS; Buck: 1–50 mV pk-pk at fSW | LDO required for RF, PLL, and precision ADC rails |
| Transient Response | LDO: sub-µs; Buck: 10–50 µs limited by LC filter | LDOs recover faster from load steps on FPGA core rails |
| BOM Count | LDO: IC + 1–2 caps; Buck: IC + L + Cin + Cout + optional snubber | LDOs reduce cost and board area in low-current applications |
| Thermal Dissipation | LDO Pdiss = (Vin − Vout) × Iout; Buck losses spread across FETs and L | LDOs need heatsinking above ~500 mA at >1 V dropout |
Deep Dive: The Dropout Efficiency Penalty
LDO efficiency equals Vout / Vin. At 5 V input, 3.3 V output, 500 mA: Pdiss = (5 − 3.3) × 0.5 = 0.85 W, yielding 66% efficiency versus 90% for a buck converter dissipating only 0.18 W. The thermal penalty compounds rapidly with dropout and current — making the 2:1 voltage ratio the practical efficiency crossover point.
What Are the Technical Specifications to Evaluate?
| Parameter | LDO (Typical) | Buck Converter (Typical) | Unit | Compliance |
| Input Voltage | 1.5 V – 60 V | 2.5 V – 100 V | V | AEC-Q100, IEC 60068-2 |
| Output Voltage | 0.8 V – 50 V | 0.6 V – 60 V | V | JEDEC JESD22 |
| Dropout Voltage | 30 mV – 1.5 V at rated Iout | N/A | mV | JEDEC JESD51 |
| Quiescent Current | 1 µA – 5 mA | 10 µA – 3 mA (PFM) | µA | IEC 60068-1 |
| Output Current | 50 mA – 3 A | 0.5 A – 20 A | A | AEC-Q100, JEDEC |
| Switching Frequency | N/A | 100 kHz – 5 MHz | kHz | CISPR 25, CISPR 32 |
| Thermal Resistance RθJA | 40–200 °C/W | 30–150 °C/W | °C/W | JEDEC JESD51, AEC-Q100 |
How Do These Specifications Affect Real-World Performance?
- Dropout and headroom: An LDO with 300 mV dropout requires Vin to stay at least 300 mV above Vout. In single-cell Li-ion designs where Vin sags near end-of-life, select LDOs with dropout below 200 mV to maintain regulation throughout the discharge curve.
- Iq in sleep mode: In IoT devices spending 99% of time in sleep, an LDO Iq of 2 µA is negligible. A buck PFM Iq of 50 µA can reduce battery life by 20–40%. Consequently, Iq is frequently the deciding specification in duty-cycled portable designs.
- Switching frequency and EMI: For CISPR 25 Class 5 automotive compliance, spread-spectrum modulation reduces buck converter peak emissions by 10–15 dB. Verify this feature is available on the selected device before committing to a part.
What Are the Package and Configuration Options?
Package Types
- LDO (SOT-23-5, SOT-223, DPAK, QFN): SOT-23-5 handles up to 300 mA. SOT-223 and DPAK with exposed pads suit 500 mA–1.5 A rails needing PCB thermal spreading. QFN provides the lowest RθJA for LDOs above 1 A.
- Buck (QFN, SOIC-8, WLCSP): Integrated QFN-16 or SOIC-8 buck ICs cover 0.5 A–5 A. WLCSP suits smartphone PMICs. Above 5 A, discrete controller ICs with external DPAK MOSFETs provide better thermal management.
- Through-hole TO-220: Common in industrial supplies where 1 A–3 A loads and large dropout require direct heatsink mounting.
Control Modes and Variants
- Fixed vs. adjustable output: Fixed-output LDOs eliminate external resistors. Adjustable LDOs set Vout via a resistor divider — preferred in multi-rail designs.
- PWM vs. PFM buck converters: Fixed PWM simplifies EMI filter design but is inefficient at light loads. Auto-mode PFM maintains high efficiency at µA loads — though variable-frequency noise complicates CISPR compliance.
- LDO PSRR grade: Standard LDOs achieve 40–60 dB PSRR at 1 kHz, falling to 10–20 dB at 1 MHz. High-PSRR LDOs (70–80 dB at 1 MHz) are required for RF front-end and PLL supply rails.
How Are LDOs and Buck Converters Used in Real-World Applications?
- Smartphone PMIC: A multi-phase buck steps the 4.2 V battery to 1.0–1.8 V processor core rails at 3–6 A; an LDO post-regulates the RF transceiver supply to below 15 µV RMS, preventing phase noise degradation.
- Automotive Infotainment ECU: An AEC-Q100 buck converts 12 V to 5 V at 2 A with spread-spectrum for CISPR 25 Class 5 compliance; a downstream LDO delivers a clean 3.3 V audio codec supply free of switching ripple.
- IoT Sensor Node: A PFM buck handles active-mode conversion at 50 mA; a 1.5 µA Iq LDO takes over during sleep to maintain RTC and SRAM, extending battery life from weeks to months.
- Industrial PLC Analogue Input Module: A buck generates 5 V from a 24 V bus at 92% efficiency; an LDO post-regulates 3.3 V for a 24-bit ADC at 10 µV RMS — below the ADC LSB noise floor.
- 5G Small Cell Radio Unit: A synchronous buck steps 48 V to 5 V; a high-PSRR LDO (75 dB at 1 MHz) generates the 2.85 V RF PA bias supply, preventing switching harmonics from degrading ACLR.
- Medical Wearable Monitor: A 2 µA Iq LDO maintains 1.8 V on the biopotential AFE at 10 µA system current, keeping switching noise away from a 10 mV ECG signal where SNR is below 40 dB.
Find Your LDO or Buck Converter on LCSC
LCSC stocks LDO and buck converter ICs from Texas Instruments, Diodes Inc., Torex, Monolithic Power Systems, Silergy, 3PEAK, Aerosemi, and HGSEMI. Both AEC-Q100 automotive-grade and commercial-grade parts are available.
Key LDO Sourcing Filters
- Input/output voltage range, dropout voltage, and Iq
- Output noise (µV RMS), PSRR at 1 MHz, and package type
- AEC-Q100 automotive grade filter
Key Buck Converter Sourcing Filters
- Input voltage range, maximum Iout, and switching frequency
- Spread-spectrum support, PWM/PFM mode, integrated vs. external FETs
- RDS(on) and AEC-Q100 grade filter
How Do LDO Regulators and Buck Converters Compare?
| Attribute | LDO Regulator | Buck Converter | Design Implication |
| Efficiency | Vout/Vin (poor at high ratio) | 85–95% typical | Buck mandatory when ratio > 2:1 and Iout > 200 mA |
| Output Noise | 3–30 µV RMS | 1–50 mV pk-pk at fSW | LDO required for RF, PLL, precision ADC rails |
| BOM Complexity | IC + 1–2 capacitors | IC + L + Cin + Cout + bootstrap | LDO preferred for simple low-current rails |
| EMI Generation | None (linear) | Moderate–high at switching node | Buck needs careful layout; spread-spectrum reduces peaks |
| Thermal Load | High at large (Vin−Vout)×Iout | Low; spread across FETs and inductor | LDO may need heatsink above 500 mA at >1 V dropout |
Quick Selection Guide
- Vin/Vout > 2:1 and Iout > 200 mA? → Buck converter
- Output noise below 50 µV RMS? → LDO (or LDO post-regulating a buck rail)
- BOM under 3 passive components? → LDO
- Continuous Iout above 1 A? → Buck converter
- Sleep-mode current below 10 µA? → Ultra-low Iq LDO
- CISPR 25 / CISPR 32 compliance needed? → Buck with spread-spectrum; LDO for sensitive downstream rails
- Automotive powertrain or ADAS rail? → AEC-Q100 buck + LDO post-regulation
- Vin and Vout within 0.5 V? → LDO with <200 mV dropout; buck is unstable near 100% duty cycle
Conclusion: Choosing the Right Power Regulation Topology
The core trade-off is efficiency versus noise and simplicity. When Vin/Vout exceeds 2:1 or Iout exceeds 500 mA, the thermal and battery-life penalties of an LDO make the buck converter the correct choice. When output noise must stay below 50 µV RMS or BOM must be minimal, the LDO is correct. In most systems the optimal solution combines both — buck for primary step-down, LDO for final post-regulation of sensitive rails. Practical rule: if LDO dissipation exceeds 500 mW, switch to a buck converter.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Can I use an LDO to post-regulate a buck converter output?
Yes — this is a standard architecture. The buck handles bulk conversion and the LDO filters noise. With only 300 mV dropout the efficiency loss is minimal, while output noise drops from millivolt ripple to single-digit µV RMS.
Q: How do I calculate LDO junction temperature to prevent thermal shutdown?
Tj = Ta + (Pdiss × RθJA), where Pdiss = (Vin − Vout) × Iout. For a SOT-223 LDO (RθJA = 60 °C/W) at 500 mA, 1.7 V dropout, 70 °C ambient: Tj = 121 °C — within the 125 °C limit but with no margin. Use a DPAK package or PCB copper pours to reduce RθJA.
Q: What output capacitor does an LDO require for stability?
PMOS LDOs typically require 1–10 µF ceramic (X5R or X7R) with ESR below 100 mΩ. NPN-based LDOs may need 50–500 mΩ minimum ESR — add a 100 mΩ series resistor to satisfy this requirement. Always verify the datasheet ESR vs. capacitance stability plot.
Q: How should I lay out a buck converter PCB to minimise EMI?
Three rules: minimise switching-node copper area; place 100 nF + 10 µF decoupling directly at the IC power pins with a direct ground return; route the feedback trace on the quiet ground side. These practices reduce radiated emissions by 10–20 dBµV/m.
Q: When should I choose a synchronous versus non-synchronous buck converter?
Synchronous converters improve efficiency by 3–8 percentage points at full load by replacing the freewheeling diode with a low-side MOSFET — mandatory above 1 A. Non-synchronous converters suit designs below 500 mA where simplicity and lower gate-charge losses are prioritised.