Linear Technology LT4363 Datasheet page 14

High voltage surge stopper with current limit
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LT4363
applicaTions inForMaTion
(SOA), an intrinsic property of the MOSFET. SOA quanti-
fies the time required at any given condition of V
I
to raise the junction temperature of the MOSFET to its
D
rated maximum. MOSFET SOA is expressed in units of
watt-squared-seconds (P
stant for intervals of less than 100ms for any given device
type, and rises to infinity under DC operating conditions.
Destruction mechanisms other than bulk die temperature
distort the lines of an accurately drawn SOA graph so that
2
P
t is not the same for all combinations of I
2
In particular P
t tends to degrade as V
maximum rating, rendering some devices useless for
absorbing energy above a certain voltage.
When a fast input voltage step occurs, the current through
the pass transistor to supply the load and charge up the out-
put capacitor can be high enough to trigger an overcurrent
event. The gate pulls low to 1V above the OUT pin, turning
off the MOSFET momentarily. The internal charge pump
will then start to pull the GATE pin high and turn on the
MOSFET to support the load current and charge up the
OUT pin. The fault timer may not start yet because the
current level is below the overcurrent limit threshold and
the output voltage has not reached the servo voltage. This
extra stress needs to be included in calculating the overall
stress level of the MOSFET.
Calculating Transient Stress
To select a MOSFET suitable for any given application, the
SOA stress must be calculated for each input transient
which shall not interrupt operation. It is then a simple matter
to choose a device which has adequate SOA to survive the
maximum calculated stress. P
waveform is calculated as follows (Figure 4):
V
PK
V
REG
V
IN
t
r
Figure 4. Safe Operating Area Required to Survive Prototypical
Transient Waveform
14
DS
2
t). This figure is essentially con-
and V
D
approaches the
DS
2
t for a prototypical transient
τ
For more information
Let
and
a = V
– V
REG
IN
b = V
– V
PK
IN
(V
= Nominal Input Voltage)
IN
Then
2
2
P
t = I
LOAD
.
)
(
3
1
b – a
DS
t
r
3
b
Typically V
≈ V
REG
1
(
2
2
P
t =
I
LOAD
2
For the transient conditions of V
V
= 16V, t
= 10µs and τ = 1ms, and a load current
REG
r
2
of 3A, P
t is 18.4W
a DPAK package. The P
is evaluated by integrating the square of MOSFET power
over time. LTSpice can be used to simulate timer behavior
for more complex transients and cases where overvoltage
and overcurrent faults coexist.
Calculating Short-Circuit Stress
SOA stress must also be calculated for short-circuit condi-
tions. Short-circuit P
2
P
t = ∆V
DS
Where ∆V
is the voltage across the MOSFET, and ∆V
DS
is the SNS pin threshold, and t
interval.
For V
= 15V, ∆V
IN
R
= 12mΩ and C
SNS
than the transient SOA calculated in the previous example.
Nevertheless, to account for circuit tolerances this figure
should be doubled to 12.6W
4363 F04
www.linear.com/LT4363
1
b
2
2
2
τ 2a
+
ln
+3a
+b
- 4ab
2
a
and τ » t
simplifying the above to
IN
r
)
2
2
τ
V
– V
[W
s]
PK
REG
= 80V, V
PK
2
s – easily handled by a MOSFET in
2
t of other transient waveshapes
2
t is given by:
2
∆V
2
SNS
• t
[W
s]
TMR
R
SNS
is the overcurrent timer
TMR
= 13V (V
= 2V), ∆V
DS
OUT
2
= 100nF , P
t is 6.3W
TMR
2
s.
= 12V,
IN
SNS
= 50mV,
SNS
2
s – less
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