To spell that a bit more: how suitable is a USB Power Delivery (PD) adapter supporting the Programmable Power Supply (PPS) part of the USB PD 3 spec as a general purpose power supply?
There is at least one interesting and widely available example at a reasonable price: the Samsung EP-TA845 which is a 45 Watt wall wort with a single USB-C connector and is priced around $CAD51 currently. There are relatively cheap programmable "sinks" like these:
https://www.tindie.com/products/pier42/usb-c-pd-sink/ https://www.tindie.com/products/clarahobbs/pd-buddy-sink/ that can be coupled (via an E-marked USB-C male to male cable) to make a bare-bones general purpose power supply.
The "source" (power provider) capabilities of the EP-TA845 are:
1: fixed PDO; vol:5000mV, current:3000mA
2: fixed PDO; vol:9000mV, current:3000mA
3: fixed PDO; vol:15000mV, current:3000mA
4: fixed PDO; vol:20000mV, current:2250mA
5: augmented PDO; vol:3300mV ~ 11000mV, current:5000mA, pow_lim=1
6: augmented PDO; vol:3300mV ~ 16000mV, current:3000mA, pow_lim=1
7: augmented PDO; vol:3300mV ~ 21000mV, current:2250mA, pow_lim=1
The interesting ones are the last three, also known as APDOs [PDO is "Power Delivery Object"]. So that implies (with some software help) it can supply 3.3 to 9 volts @ 5 Amps when the power limiting cuts in stopping at 11 volts @ 45/11 Amps. Then from >11 Volts to 15 Volts at 3 Amps. You should see the pattern by now; topping off at 21 Volts and a bit less than 2.25 Amps.
Where I would appreciate the insight of the forum members is to ask how reasonable or onerous are the USB PD 3 spec's requirement on a power sink? I am assuming that the "sink" will be used as a general purpose power supply? To help in that regard I have taken screen shots of 3 pages from the spec that itemize those requirements. If the names of the items aren't clear enough, the full spec can be freely obtained from usb.org with the pages leading up to 317 of interest in this case.
That spec seems to dodge a few issues, for example ripple. It has a figure that shows that ripple may be larger than one LSB (by which I think they mean +- 20 mV). However it doesn't seem quantify that ripple (for example a maximum Vrms) like most power supplies. It is obviously a SMPS, an "isolated quasi-resonant flyback" topology if USB PD designs from chip manufacturers are a guide.
With PPS the sink can select voltages with 20 mV precision and current with 50 mA precision. To send more than 3 Amps down a USB-C cable it must be "E-marked" (i.e. one or both of the plug connectors contains a chip) and its chip states the maximum current it can handle. Also USB-C has two rails: Vbus the one you know and love from USB-2; and a new one: Vconn that is optionally sent along either CC1 or CC2 to power the E-marked chip and possibly a retimer if it is an "active" cable. As Intel are finding out with PCIe4, when you try and send 10 Gbps and faster through a low quality cable, don't expect it to get more than 6 to 12 inch before it disappears into thermal noise, the solution is retimers. And in USB-C to send 20 Gbps down one full duplex digital pair (a USB-C connector has two such pairs) as required by USB4/TB3 then either very short cables or retimers are necessary. But the doesn't impact USB PD, arguably the only saving grace of USB :-)
Doug Gilbert