T
Thomas Anderson
Hi!
I want to charge a capacitor to 300 V from something like 5-15 V.
Because I can't find 400 V MOSFETs for 10-50 mA which would have a
suitably small gate charge I tought a BJT would be the solution for
simple and fast turn off:
MPSA44
NPN Transistor
400V
300 mA
http://www.datasheetcatalog.com/datasheets_pdf/M/P/S/A/MPSA44.shtml
The specs talk about frequencies up to 20 MHz (VCE=10V).
Philips even says 100 MHz:
fT transition frequency
(IC = 10 mA; VCE = 10 V; f = 100 MHz)
20 MHz (max)
Since there is a turn on and a turn off in one period the turn off
time should be something like 1/40e6 = 25 ns or less since there may
be some duty cycle between switches. Well, things may be different
at VCE=300V and Motorola only mentions 10 MHz.
And now I am confused by the turn on/off timing diagrams in the
Motorola specs (page 4) (VCC=150V; IC/IB=10 (saturated?)):
There is ts (storage? time = BE junction discharge time?) and tf
(fall time = IC fall time?) given for IC = 1-50 mA. Do I have to add
these times? Why is the turn off time higher for smaller IC? Ohh, is
it because turn off is when IC drops below some % of initial IC and
not below some fixed value? So when I have IC = 30 mA, is my turn
off time then 3.3 us (ts) + 0.5 us (tf) = 3800 ns? That's a lot more
than 25 ns.
I wanted to use a 1 mH inductor which would loose 10 mA in 33 ns
when charging a cap at 300V:
I=U*t/L
t=I*L/U
t = 30 mA * 1 mH / 300 V = 100 ns
So I need a bigger inductor anyways (also because I have a 75 ns
diode), but if this transistor really has 3800 ns turn off time I
need a different approach. Any recommendations for a transistor? I'd
prefer the inductor current to remain below 50 mA.
Thanks!
-=-
This message was sent via two or more anonymous remailing services.
I want to charge a capacitor to 300 V from something like 5-15 V.
Because I can't find 400 V MOSFETs for 10-50 mA which would have a
suitably small gate charge I tought a BJT would be the solution for
simple and fast turn off:
MPSA44
NPN Transistor
400V
300 mA
http://www.datasheetcatalog.com/datasheets_pdf/M/P/S/A/MPSA44.shtml
The specs talk about frequencies up to 20 MHz (VCE=10V).
Philips even says 100 MHz:
fT transition frequency
(IC = 10 mA; VCE = 10 V; f = 100 MHz)
20 MHz (max)
Since there is a turn on and a turn off in one period the turn off
time should be something like 1/40e6 = 25 ns or less since there may
be some duty cycle between switches. Well, things may be different
at VCE=300V and Motorola only mentions 10 MHz.
And now I am confused by the turn on/off timing diagrams in the
Motorola specs (page 4) (VCC=150V; IC/IB=10 (saturated?)):
There is ts (storage? time = BE junction discharge time?) and tf
(fall time = IC fall time?) given for IC = 1-50 mA. Do I have to add
these times? Why is the turn off time higher for smaller IC? Ohh, is
it because turn off is when IC drops below some % of initial IC and
not below some fixed value? So when I have IC = 30 mA, is my turn
off time then 3.3 us (ts) + 0.5 us (tf) = 3800 ns? That's a lot more
than 25 ns.
I wanted to use a 1 mH inductor which would loose 10 mA in 33 ns
when charging a cap at 300V:
I=U*t/L
t=I*L/U
t = 30 mA * 1 mH / 300 V = 100 ns
So I need a bigger inductor anyways (also because I have a 75 ns
diode), but if this transistor really has 3800 ns turn off time I
need a different approach. Any recommendations for a transistor? I'd
prefer the inductor current to remain below 50 mA.
Thanks!
-=-
This message was sent via two or more anonymous remailing services.