Jung Super regulator at 3.3 volts?

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Hey guys, I was wondering if its possible to make the Jung super regulator work at 3.3 volts. I have been talking with someone about it who said he tried and was unable to make it load stable. He thought the problem might have been that he was using 12 volts, and thought it needed a minimum of 15 volts to work right. I didn't think that was so and was wondering if any of you might know why it didn't work, and what I might need to do in order to make it work, or if its even possible. If you haven't guessed, this is to power a DAC. Any help you can offer will be greatly appreciated.
 
pjpoes said:
Hey guys, I was wondering if its possible to make the Jung super regulator work at 3.3 volts.


mr.duck said:
I don't think it will work because the LM329 voltage reference is 6.9v

Guys:
Have a try by replacing the LM329 by TL431, TL431 is a high precision voltage reference. It can also trim to the desired voltage as U want.


SUGGUSTION IS FOR YOUR REFERENCE, MAY CAUSE THE DESIGN BETTER OR WORSE :whazzat:
 
With the part I added to the Jung/Didden design in the schematic below, the super regulator just might work at 3.3V. Sorry Jan and Walt for butchering up your brainchild!😉

Regards,
Milan
 

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Christer said:


Perhaps this paper with a 5 V version is the one? Although he doesn't seem to say anything about other output voltages, he says the op amp works well down to 2.7 V.
http://waltjung.org/PDFs/Low_Noise_Power_for_Analog_Circuits.pdf


It should work if you would increase R3 to, lessee, I guess R3 = [2.5/(3.3-2.5)]*1k. And decrease R6 to keep the same bias current into the reference.

Jan Didden
 
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