ST1S10PHR Buck Converter Not Regulating (Output 0.79V)
- April 23, 2026
- 2 replies
- 92 views
Dear ST Technical Support Team,
I am currently using the ST1S10PHR buck converter in my custom PCB design to convert 12V input to 5V output.
However, the regulator is not switching to the expected 5V output. The measured output voltage remains around 0.79V.
Below are the measured and design details:
Input Voltage: 12V
VIN_SW and VIN_A pins: Confirmed 12V present
EN (INH) pin: 12V present (device enabled)
Expected Output Voltage: 5V
Measured Output Voltage: ~0.79V
Feedback Resistors: R1 = 11kΩ, R2 = 2kΩ
Inductor: 3.3µH
Switching frequency: Internal 900kHz (SYNC connected directly to GND with short trace)
GND and EPAD connected to ground plane
One concern in my PCB layout is that the SW pin to inductor trace length is approximately 47mm. Although the inductor is placed near the IC, the copper routing from SW to the inductor became long due to layout constraints.
The board powers up correctly, and all input pins measure properly, but the output remains close to the feedback reference voltage (~0.8V) and does not regulate to 5V.
Could the long SW trace be the reason for improper switching or instability?
Is there any recommended workaround without redesigning the PCB (for example: the output inductor values changing, adding an RC snubber network at SW, increasing input/output capacitors, layout modification using jumper wire, or other corrective suggestions)?
Additionally, would increasing the inductor value (for example from 3.3µH to a higher value) help improve stability in this situation, or is the issue primarily layout-related?
I can share the schematic and PCB layout files for your review if required.
Kindly advise on possible causes and recommended corrective actions.
Thank you for your support.
Best regards,
MOHAMMED NAVAS
InThings Technology
navas@inthings.tech
