2022-08-31 04:57 AM
Solved! Go to Solution.
2022-08-31 06:29 AM
Welcome, @NHiel.1, to the community!
The value is a pulse value, which is also only guaranteed at the said pulse values.
To be more precise, the 600W also only applies for a limited time, namely the 10/1000μs pulse mentioned in the data sheet, where 10µs refers to rise time tr and 1000µs to the pulse duration td. For the 4kW mentioned, this is tr=8μs and td=20µs.
The shorter the pulse, the higher the power the TVS can handle without thermal damage to the chip, as this may only happen with a very low duty cycle.
You will find more details in e.g. AN316.
Does it answer your question?
Regards
/Peter
2022-08-31 06:29 AM
Welcome, @NHiel.1, to the community!
The value is a pulse value, which is also only guaranteed at the said pulse values.
To be more precise, the 600W also only applies for a limited time, namely the 10/1000μs pulse mentioned in the data sheet, where 10µs refers to rise time tr and 1000µs to the pulse duration td. For the 4kW mentioned, this is tr=8μs and td=20µs.
The shorter the pulse, the higher the power the TVS can handle without thermal damage to the chip, as this may only happen with a very low duty cycle.
You will find more details in e.g. AN316.
Does it answer your question?
Regards
/Peter
2022-08-31 11:16 PM
Dear Peter,
many thanks for the explanation. I hadn´t found any explanantion for 10/1000µs or 8/20µs values. With knowing that first value is tr and second is td, the data make sense. And yes, the response answered our question. Many thanks again and best regads
Norbert
2022-08-31 11:17 PM
You're welcome!
If the problem is resolved, please mark this thread as answered by selecting Select as best. This will help other users find that answer faster.
Regards
/Peter