Inductor Energy Storage Calculator
Find the energy stored in an inductor or the peak current needed to reach a target energy storage level. Essential for SMPS, filter, and power electronics design.
🔌 What is Inductor Energy Storage?
Inductor energy storage is the energy held in the magnetic field of an inductor when current flows through it. The relationship is E = 0.5 times L times I squared, where E is stored energy in joules, L is inductance in henries, and I is the current in amperes. Because energy scales with the square of current, doubling the current quadruples the stored energy, making peak current the dominant factor in inductor and core selection.
Understanding inductor energy storage is critical in three main areas of electronics design. First, in switch-mode power supplies (SMPS) such as buck, boost, and flyback converters, the inductor is the primary energy-storage element. Each switching cycle, the transistor charges the inductor to a peak current and the energy is then transferred to the output. Second, in filter inductors for AC power lines and motor drives, the stored energy determines how much current ripple the inductor will smooth. Third, in pulsed power systems and wireless charging transmitters, the inductor is deliberately charged to a precise energy level and then discharged into a load at a controlled rate.
A common misconception is that a larger inductance always stores more energy. In practice, many SMPS designs use smaller inductance at higher switching frequency, which actually reduces stored energy per cycle while maintaining the same output power. The designer optimises inductance to balance core size, switching losses, and output ripple simultaneously.
The peak flux linkage output (L times I, in webers) is equally important for core selection. Ferrite cores used in switching power supplies saturate at 300 to 400 mT; exceeding this causes the inductance to collapse suddenly, leading to uncontrolled current rise and potential transistor failure. This calculator shows flux linkage alongside stored energy so both design constraints can be checked in one step.