I know that it's normally a bad idea to power semiconductors with the same power line that you use to drive inductive loads because of the noise that those loads put on the power line, so I decided to separate the power domains for my project into 2. I'm using a 5V power rail for all things semiconductor (microcontrollers, sensors, leds and the like), and a 12V power rail for all things inductive (motors, steppers, servos)
This has to be battery powered, so I'm planning on using 4 18650 cells, and use 2 buck converters to create both power rails
My main question is, how good are buck converters on insulating the power lines from noise?, i.e., if I have stepper motors producing noise in the 12V rail, will that noise cross the 12V buck converter into the power line coming from the battery?, and if it does, will it cross the 5V buck converter into the 5V power rail? My other option is to put another set of 2 18650 batteries to power the 5V buck converter, but I'd prefer to not do that if at all possible
Open to other power designs as well
Both buck converters have to be reasonably beefy, as I need around 5A per rail (batteries should be ok with providing that amount of current)
Thanks
Joso