
- Stock: In Stock
- Model: A0371.AMS1117ADJ
AMS1117 Adjustable Voltage Regulator IC
The AMS1117 Adjustable Voltage Regulator is a reliable, low-dropout (LDO) linear regulator designed to provide a stable, adjustable output voltage for a wide range of electronics components and modules. Ideal for both Arduino and Raspberry Pi projects, as well as professional designs, it ensures clean power rails for microcontrollers, sensors, and mixed-signal circuits.
⚙️ Key Features
- Adjustable output voltage: Precisely set the output to your target voltage using an external resistor divider.
- Low dropout voltage (LDO): Efficient operation even when VIN is close to VOUT, reducing wasted power.
- High accuracy: Stable regulation for dependable performance in digital and analog applications.
- Thermal overload protection: Automatically limits operation under excessive temperature to protect the device.
- Short-circuit current limiting: Safeguards the regulator and load from fault conditions.
📐 Technical Specifications
- Output Voltage: Adjustable (set via external resistors; typical reference ≈ 1.25 V)
- Dropout Voltage: Low (typ. around 1.1 V at high load; ensure sufficient headroom)
- Accuracy: High (tight reference and regulation for steady output)
- Protection: Integrated thermal overload and short-circuit limiting
- Output Current: Up to approximately 1 A (thermal and dropout dependent)
- Recommended capacitors: Input ≥ 10 µF and output ≥ 10 µF placed close to the pins (low-ESR types recommended)
- Typical package: SOT-223/DPAK style (varies by supplier)
- Pinout (SOT-223): 1 = ADJ/GND, 2 = VOUT, 3 = VIN; tab/heatsink is tied to VOUT
Note: Exact electrical limits and tolerances can vary by manufacturer. Always consult the specific AMS1117-ADJ datasheet for your device.
🧮 Setting the Output Voltage
The adjustable version uses two resistors: R1 from VOUT to ADJ, and R2 from ADJ to GND. The output is approximately:
VOUT ≈ 1.25 V × (1 + R1/R2) + IADJ × R1 (IADJ is small and often neglected for practical designs)
- Common starting point: R2 ≈ 240 Ω, then choose R1 to achieve your target voltage.
- Place the divider close to the IC and route grounds carefully for best regulation.
🔌 Application Examples
- Power supply design: Create stable rails for Arduino shields, Raspberry Pi peripherals, and microcontroller boards.
- Post-regulation: Clean up noisy supplies for analog circuits, ADC/DAC, and RF modules.
- Logic level rails: Step 5 V down to 3.3 V for sensors and wireless modules (e.g., ESP8266/ESP32), observing dropout and thermal limits.
- Local regulation: Point-of-load regulation for distributed systems and electronics components on mixed-signal PCBs.
- Energy management: Efficient linear regulation where simplicity and low noise are preferred over switching solutions.
🛠️ Design Notes & Best Practices
- Headroom: Ensure VIN ≥ VOUT + dropout (allow ~1.2–1.3 V margin at higher currents).
- Thermal management: Power dissipation P = (VIN − VOUT) × IOUT. Use copper pour on the tab (VOUT) for heatsinking.
- Stability: Use recommended input/output capacitors close to the pins; keep traces short to minimize impedance.
- Protection: Built-in thermal shutdown and short-circuit limiting enhance robustness under fault conditions.
🤝 Ideal For Makers and Engineers
Whether you are prototyping on a breadboard with Arduino, integrating peripherals with Raspberry Pi, or designing production hardware, the AMS1117-ADJ offers a dependable, low-noise power solution for your electronics modules and microcontroller-based systems.