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Old 14th December 2005, 12:03 PM   (permalink)
Default Protection diode

Is a 30BF20 a good diode to protect my project against reverse polarity?

(automotive project) 12-24v 2.5a max

Thx

Steve
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Old 14th December 2005, 12:28 PM   (permalink)
Default Re: Protection diode

Quote:
Originally Posted by Scarr
Is a 30BF20 a good diode to protect my project against reverse polarity?

(automotive project) 12-24v 2.5a max

Thx

Steve
as per the datasheet it can be used , be sure to use a heatsink
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Old 14th December 2005, 02:56 PM   (permalink)
Default Dam!!!

Why does there always have to be a "but"

I assume the heatsink is there for when it's connected the correct way around and current is flowing through it? if it is I think I can get away without one as normally it's only 500ma bursting to 2.5A for a few hundred ms, also it is connected to a large ground plane that will help things.

Thx
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Old 14th December 2005, 04:27 PM   (permalink)
Default Re: Dam!!!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Scarr
Why does there always have to be a "but"

I assume the heatsink is there for when it's connected the correct way around and current is flowing through it? if it is I think I can get away without one as normally it's only 500ma bursting to 2.5A for a few hundred ms, also it is connected to a large ground plane that will help things.

Thx
You can deduce all you need from the datasheet. If you assumed 2.5A worst case (I know this is more than you expect), Fig.3 says the fwd voltage is about 0.9V. Assume 1.0V. This is a dissipation of 2.5W. The mechanical Specifications table says max. thermal resistance is 15 deg/W with modest (8mm^2) pad size. This means the temperature rise should not exceed (2.5W*15deg/W) 37.5 degrees C. The maximum junction temperature is 150 C. Therefore, you can very conservatively tolerate an ambient temperature of about 110 C, which is above the boiling point of water.
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Old 15th December 2005, 04:15 AM   (permalink)
Default

If you're just trying to protect the device against being hooked up backwards, just use a reverse biased diode across the power and fuse the input (which you should do anyways). Then the diode does nothing in normal use but will short out the power source and blow the fuse if hooked up wrong.

What are you trying to do??
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Old 16th December 2005, 01:14 AM   (permalink)
Default

And the reverse-biased rectifier across the fused line is the only way to do it without incurring voltage drops with the exception of more exotic crowbar circuits or circuits using MOSFETs in-line with the supply.

The series diode should be a Schottky type if you want a simple circuit that minimizes voltage drop.

If you can stand all sorts of voltage drop, put a bridge rectifier in series with the supply and ground leads and you can connect the power up either way and the device will work fine with only two diode drops in series. Again, Schottkys will help minimize that.

Dean
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Dean Huster, Electronics Curmudgeon
Contributing Editor emeritus, "Q & A", of the former "Poptronics" magazine (formerly "Popular Electronics" and "Electronics Now" magazines).

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