Datasheet4U Logo Datasheet4U.com

P1012AP13 - Self-Supplied Monolithic Switcher

Download the P1012AP13 datasheet PDF. This datasheet also covers the P1013AP13 variant, as both devices belong to the same self-supplied monolithic switcher family and are provided as variant models within a single manufacturer datasheet.

Description

Pin No.

Pin No.

ally 10 mF.

VCC participates to the frequency jittering.

Features

  • Built.
  • in 700 V MOSFET with Typical RDSon of 11 W and 22 W.
  • Large Creepage Distance Between High.
  • Voltage Pins.
  • Current.
  • Mode Fixed Frequency Operation: 65 kHz.
  • 100 kHz.
  • 130 kHz.
  • Skip.
  • Cycle Operation at Low Peak Currents Only: No Acoustic Noise!.
  • Dynamic Self.
  • Supply, No Need for an Auxiliary Winding.
  • Internal 1.0 ms Soft.
  • Start.
  • Latched Overvoltage Protection with Auxilia.

📥 Download Datasheet

Note: The manufacturer provides a single datasheet file (P1013AP13-ONSemiconductor.pdf) that lists specifications for multiple related part numbers.

Datasheet Details

Part number P1012AP13
Manufacturer onsemi
File Size 483.17 KB
Description Self-Supplied Monolithic Switcher
Datasheet download datasheet P1012AP13 Datasheet

Full PDF Text Transcription (Reference)

The following content is an automatically extracted verbatim text from the original manufacturer datasheet and is provided for reference purposes only.

View original datasheet text
NCP1010, NCP1011, NCP1012, NCP1013, NCP1014 Self-Supplied Monolithic Switcher for Low StandbyPower Offline SMPS The NCP101X series integrates a fixed−frequency current−mode controller and a 700 V MOSFET. Housed in a PDIP−7 or SOT−223 package, the NCP101X offers everything needed to build a rugged and low−cost power supply, including soft−start, frequency jittering, short−circuit protection, skip−cycle, a maximum peak current setpoint and a Dynamic Self−Supply (no need for an auxiliary winding). Unlike other monolithic solutions, the NCP101X is quiet by nature: during nominal load operation, the part switches at one of the available frequencies (65 − 100 − 130 kHz). When the current setpoint falls below a given value, e.g.
Published: |