December 23, 2016

TI Power Supply Design Seminar 2016

This year TI power supply design seminar (formerly Unitrode) includes the following topics:

  • Design of a high-frequency series capacitor buck converter- presented 2-channel buck in which one channel has a series capacitor;
  • Flyback transformer design considerations for efficiency and EMI- a new funny way of constructing flyback transformer that supposedly minimizes energy losses due to proximity effect and leakage inductance;
  • Switch-mode power converter compensation- a step-by-step process that engineers can follow to compensate a power converter;
  • Bidirectional DC/DC converter topology comparison and design- automotive 48-V/12-V bidirectional converter;
  • SiC and GaN applied to high-frequency power- examines wide bandgap (WBG) silicon (SiC) and gallium nitride (GaN) power devices;
  • Under the hood of a noninverting buck-boost converter- various non-inverting topologies;
  • Design review of a 2-kW parallelable power-supply module- CCM PFC front end followed by current mode-controlled isolated DC/DC resonant ZVT phase-shifted full-bridge converter with synchronous rectification.
This year for the first time TI did not publish a complete seminar book like they used to do before, but provided only short slides. The texts of the presentations is not on their website yet- usually they do if after they finish the entire seminar series. Some of the the past seminar topics you can find here.

September 5, 2016

How to Insert Chapter-Based Right-Aligned Equation Numbers In MS Word 2010

     If you write an article for a journal, a diploma project or a dissertation you may wonder how to insert automatically updated right-aligned equation numbers based on chapters. In other words, for example, math equations in chapter 1 should be referenced to as (1.1), (1.2), etc., and these captions should be on the right edge of a page. Microsoft geniuses somehow used not to think about a built-in method of numbering equations until Office 2016. Having searched the web, I found a cool table-based method provided by Dr.Franklin in this video. However, this video described only a basic numbering, which does not say how to include the chapter number. I’ll show you below how to easily expand this method into a chapter-based numbering.

Most steps are just per the video. First insert table with one raw and 2 columns, and adjust the width of the right column like this:


If you want formulas to be exactly centered on the page, you can optionally insert 3rd column on the left  with the same width as the right column. Type parenthesis in the right column and click inside them. Then click Insert--->Quick Parts --->Field. Scroll down to StyleRef.  You will get a menu like you see below.



Check 'Insert paragraph number' in the Field options, and under Style name select the section which you want to be the base of the numbering. If, for example, your chapters are based on Heading 1, select it in Style name. When you hit OK, it will print the number of the current "Heading 1" chapter. Then type period (dot) and click again Insert--->Quick Parts --->Field. This time scroll down to Seq (which is sequence field). Add a name to this sequence, for example Seq eq.




When you hit OK it will print the number 1. In our example, if you do it in the Chapter 1, the result in right column will look like (1.1). Every time you repeat this procedure the numbers will automatically update sequentially. Optionally, you can click in the main column and then click Insert--->Equation. This will place an equation placeholder there. Finally, select the entire table and get rid of borders.

To simplify the process so that you won’t have to repeat it manually every time you insert a math formula,  you can save all this as an auto text. Select entire table and click Quick Parts--->Auto text--->Save  the selection in auto text gallery. When you will need to place the next formula, you will just go Quick Parts--->Auto text and select your saved auto text. This method will likely work in Word 2013 as well, although I did not try it.

By the way, Equation Editor is an optional component of MS Word. You need to select it when you first install Word.