I have been in two separate design reviews where the SEPIC topology was rejected for an isolated < 40W application. These meetings were at 2 different companies and with different principal engineers that both stated that the SEPIC design did not meet the isolation requirement.
In the end the size constraints, mainly height, pushed one of the designs away from a flyback, and the principal engineer okayed the design so long as a common mode choke was added to the output of the SEPIC in question.
Most of the Textbookstextbooks and Articlesarticles that I have read categorize the SEPIC as an isolated topology, thus adding to my confusion.
What I do know:
- "You won’t find a complete analysis of the the Sepic converter anywhere in printed literature literature. What you will find are application notes notes with comments like, “the Sepic is is not well-understood.” Despite the lack of of documentation for the converter, engineers continue continue to use it when applicable" Analyzing the Sepic Converter-BASSO
- All of the reference designs on the TI website list the Capacitorcapacitor isolated topologies as Nonnon-Isolatedisolated!. (PMP10070,PMP30373,PMP30373,)
- Energy/Isolationisolation is handled by different means with a capacitor vs transformer. (High level only though, i.e. charge/discharge vs magnetic field transfer.)
My Questionsquestions are as follows:
- Is a SEPIC,CUK, or ZETA converter truly an Isolated Converterisolated converter?
- How isdoes capacitive isolation compare to transformer isolation?
- How could the Common Mode Chokecommon mode choke alleviate any isolation concerns?
Thank you all in advance!