It is likely this won't affect many, but we have good evidence of
counterfeit high voltage transistors from some suppliers. The types so
far affected are BU505 and MJE8502, these are 1500V VCES and 700V
VCEO. We noted failures in our products and traced to a very low VCEO
which I checked with a current limited voltage source. We found ST
brand BU505's failing at slightly more than 500V VCEO and the same for
Onsemi branded MJE8502. I etched a couple of BU505's with nitric acid
to remove all metal. One was a good tested one and one the other a
failed one. There was a completely different die size between the two.
The good one had a 3.3mm die and the bad one a 1.8mm die. The good one
had the markings etched and the bad one had markings printed. These
devices are often used for switchmode supplies and horizontal drive in
CRT's, where circuit designs may not ever allow the base to be open
circuit, ie driven from a low impedance source, so I guess that many
users many not see the failures.
I presented the data to St Microelectronics and they confirmed the
likelihood of counterfeit devices. Now we will have to do incoming
VCEO checks of all batches until the situation improves. We try to get
these normally from mainstream suppliers, but sometimes supply
problems prevent this. Looks like we will have to get smarter with
purchasing though. This is the first time I have personally come
across this in 20+ years of engineering.
counterfeit high voltage transistors from some suppliers. The types so
far affected are BU505 and MJE8502, these are 1500V VCES and 700V
VCEO. We noted failures in our products and traced to a very low VCEO
which I checked with a current limited voltage source. We found ST
brand BU505's failing at slightly more than 500V VCEO and the same for
Onsemi branded MJE8502. I etched a couple of BU505's with nitric acid
to remove all metal. One was a good tested one and one the other a
failed one. There was a completely different die size between the two.
The good one had a 3.3mm die and the bad one a 1.8mm die. The good one
had the markings etched and the bad one had markings printed. These
devices are often used for switchmode supplies and horizontal drive in
CRT's, where circuit designs may not ever allow the base to be open
circuit, ie driven from a low impedance source, so I guess that many
users many not see the failures.
I presented the data to St Microelectronics and they confirmed the
likelihood of counterfeit devices. Now we will have to do incoming
VCEO checks of all batches until the situation improves. We try to get
these normally from mainstream suppliers, but sometimes supply
problems prevent this. Looks like we will have to get smarter with
purchasing though. This is the first time I have personally come
across this in 20+ years of engineering.