Analog Devices introduces ADI Power Studio for power management

Analog Devices introduces ADI Power Studio for power management

Analog Devices launches enhanced power management design tools. ADI Power Studio introduces two new web-based tools, Planner and Designer, to streamline power system design. These tools simplify the process from concept to evaluation, enabling engineers to achieve efficient and confident designs, thereby reducing development cycles and accelerating market readiness.


Analog Devices has announced the launch of ADI Power Studio, a comprehensive suite of products aimed at advancing power management design and optimisation. This family of tools includes the newly introduced web-based ADI Power Studio Planner and ADI Power Studio Designer, both offering a modernised user experience. These tools, alongside the existing portfolio, including LTspice, SIMPLIS, and others, aim to simplify the entire power system design process, empowering engineers to design with accuracy and efficiency.

The demand for increased power density in today’s electronic systems presents significant challenges, often leading to bottlenecks during architecture decisions and component selection. ADI Power Studio addresses these issues by providing a unified, intuitive workflow that enables engineering teams to simulate real-world performance accurately and automate key outputs such as bill of materials and report generation. This integration facilitates shorter development cycles and reduces rework, allowing engineers to bring power-dense systems to market more swiftly.

“ADI Power Studio is more than a set of tools — it’s a design ecosystem,” said Robert Reay, Vice President and Fellow, Power Products, ADI. “By integrating new system-level and IC-level design capabilities into a single product family, we’re enabling engineers to streamline power management design and optimisation so they have the potential to get solutions to their customers faster.”

The ADI Power Studio Planner provides an interactive view of system architecture for system-level power tree planning, enabling engineers to model power distribution and analyse system efficiency. Meanwhile, the ADI Power Studio Designer offers IC-level power supply design capabilities, delivering optimised component recommendations and performance estimates. Both tools are designed to guide engineers through simulation, configuration, and evaluation processes, supporting both LTspice and SIMPLIS schematics.

ADI remains committed to its existing suite of desktop and web-based power management tools, ensuring customer continuity. The introduction of Power Studio Planner and Designer marks the first phase of ADI’s vision for a fully connected power design workflow, with further updates and product announcements anticipated in the coming months.

For further information on ADI Power Studio, visit www.analog.com.


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