A
power supply unit (sometimes abbreviated
power supply or
PSU) is a device that supplies electrical power to a device or group of devices. The term is most commonly applied to units that are
integrated with the devices they supply, such as
computers and household electronics, and never to devices supplying, conditioning or otherwise supporting an
electric utility grid. (For large-scale power supplies, see
electricity generation.)
A
power supply (or in some cases just a transformer) that is built into the top of a
plug is known as a
wall wart,
power brick, or just
power adapter.
The range of different types of power supply is very broad, since widely differing design criteria affect each application.
As well as the usual requirements of cost, reliability, weight and size, constraints that commonly affect power supplies are the amount of power they can supply, how long they can supply it for without needing some kind of refueling or recharging, how stable their output voltage or
current is under varying load conditions, and whether they provide continuous power or pulses.
Common power supply technologies include:
More specialised power supplies might be based upon:
Many people say that the term "power supply" should be reserved for those devices that convert some other form of energy into electricity (such as solar power and fuel cells and generators). A more accurate term for devices that convert one form of electric power into another form of electric power (such as transformers and linear regulators) is power converter.
See also
Category:Power supplies
he:ספק כוח
es:Fuentes de alimentación