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Flyback Diode - Wikipedia

A flyback diode is used to eliminate high voltage spikes that occur when current through an inductor is suddenly reduced. It works by providing a path for the energy stored in the inductor's magnetic field to flow through the diode until dissipated. Without a flyback diode, the sudden reduction in current can cause arcing across open switch contacts or transistor junctions. The summary explains the purpose and working principle of a flyback diode concisely in 3 sentences.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
127 views3 pages

Flyback Diode - Wikipedia

A flyback diode is used to eliminate high voltage spikes that occur when current through an inductor is suddenly reduced. It works by providing a path for the energy stored in the inductor's magnetic field to flow through the diode until dissipated. Without a flyback diode, the sudden reduction in current can cause arcing across open switch contacts or transistor junctions. The summary explains the purpose and working principle of a flyback diode concisely in 3 sentences.

Uploaded by

Matias Ramos
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Flyback diode - Wikipedia [Link]

org/wiki/Flyback_diode

Flyback diode
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A yback diode (sometimes called a snubber diode, commutating diode, freewheeling diode, suppressor diode, suppression diode, clamp diode, or catch diode [1]) is a diode used to eliminate
yback, which is the sudden voltage spike seen across an inductive load when its supply current is suddenly reduced or interrupted.

Contents
1 Working principle
2 Design
3 Induction at the opening of a contact
3.1 Derivation A simple circuit with an inductance and a
4 Applications yback diode
5 See also
6 References
7 Further reading
8 External links

Working principle
In its most simplied form with a voltage source connected to an inductor with a switch, we have 2 states available. In the rst steady-state, the switch has been
closed for a long time such that the inductor has become fully energized and is behaving as though it were a short (Figure 1). Current is owing "down" from the
positive terminal of the voltage source to its negative terminal, through the inductor. When the switch is opened (Figure 2), the inductor will attempt to resist the
sudden drop of current (dI/dt is large therefore V is large) by using its stored magnetic eld energy to create its own voltage. An extremely large negative potential
is created where there once was positive potential, and a positive potential is created where there was once negative potential. The switch, however, remains at the
voltage of the power supply, but it is still in contact with the inductor pulling down a negative voltage. Since no connection is physically made to allow current to
continue to ow (due to the switch being open), the large potential dierence can cause electrons to "arc" across the air-gap of the open switch (or junction of a
transistor). This is undesirable for the reasons mentioned above and must be prevented.

A yback diode solves this starvation-arc problem by allowing the inductor to draw current from itself (thus, "yback") in a continuous loop until the energy is
dissipated through losses in the wire, the diode and the resistor (Figure 3). When the switch is closed the diode is reverse-biased against the power supply and
doesn't exist in the circuit for practical purposes. However, when the switch is opened, the diode becomes forward-biased relative to the inductor (instead of the
power supply as before), allowing it to conduct current in a circular loop from the positive potential at the bottom of the inductor to the negative potential at the top
(assuming the power supply was supplying positive voltage at the top of the inductor prior to the switch being opened). The voltage across the inductor will merely
be a function of the forward voltage drop of the yback diode. Total time for dissipation can vary, but it will usually last for a few milliseconds.

These images show the voltage spike and its elimination through the use of a yback diode (1N4007). The inductor in this case is a
solenoid connected to a 24V DC power supply. Each waveform was taken using a digital oscilloscope set to trigger when the voltage across the inductor dipped below zero. In
Figure 1 the voltage as measured across the switch bounces/spikes to around -300 V. In Figure 2, a yback diode was added in antiparallel with the solenoid. Instead of spiking
to -300 V, the yback diode only allows approximately -1.4 V of potential to be built up (-1.4 V is a combination of the forward bias of the 1N4007 diode (1.1 V) and the foot of
wiring separating the diode and the solenoid). The waveform in Figure 2 is much less bouncy than the waveform in Figure 1. In both cases, the total time for the solenoid to
discharge is a few milliseconds.

Design
Figure 1, Voltage spike occurs In an ideal yback diode selection, one would seek a diode which has very large peak forward current capacity (to handle voltage transients without burning out the diode), low
when current through a Figure 2, Voltage spike is
forward voltage drop, and a reverse breakdown voltage suited to the inductor's power supply. Depending on the application and equipment involved, some voltage surges can be
solenoid is suddenly stopped suppressed with a yback
upwards of 10 times the voltage of the power source, so it is critical not to underestimate the energy contained within an energized inductor.
diode.
When used with a DC coil relay, a yback diode can cause delayed drop-out of the contacts when power is removed, due to the continued circulation of current in the relay coil
and diode. When rapid opening of the contacts is important, a low-value resistor can be placed in series with the diode to help dissipate the coil energy faster, at the expense of higher voltage at the switch.

Schottky diodes are preferred in yback diode applications for switching power converters, because they have the lowest forward drop (~0.2 V rather than >0.7 V for low currents) and are able to quickly respond to reverse bias (when the
inductor is being re-energized). They therefore dissipate less energy while transferring energy from the inductor to a capacitor.

When the yback diode is used to simply dissipate the inductive energy, as with a solenoid or motor, cheap 1N540x and 1N400x general-purpose diodes are used instead.

Induction at the opening of a contact


According to Lenz's law, if the current through an inductance changes, this inductance induces a voltage so the current will go on owing as long as there is energy in the magnetic eld. If the current can only ow through the air, the

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Flyback diode - Wikipedia [Link]

voltage is therefore so high that the air conducts. That is why in mechanically-switched circuits, the near-instantaneous dissipation which occurs without a yback diode is often observed as an arc across the opening mechanical contacts.
Energy is dissipated in this arc primarily as intense heat which causes undesirable premature erosion of the contacts. Another way to dissipate energy is through electromagnetic radiation.

Similarly, for non-mechanical solid state switching (i.e., a transistor), large voltage drops across an unactivated solid state switch can destroy the component in question (either instantaneously or through accelerated wear and tear).

Some energy is also lost from the system as a whole and from the arc as a broad spectrum of electromagnetic radiation, in the form of radio waves and light. These radio waves can cause undesirable clicks and pops on nearby radio
receivers.

To minimise the antenna-like radiation of this electromagnetic energy from wires connected to the inductor, the yback diode should be connected as physically close to the inductor as practicable. This approach also minimises those parts
of the circuit that are subject to an unwanted high-voltage a good engineering practice.

Derivation

The voltage at an inductor is, by the law of electromagnetic induction and the denition of inductance:

If there is no yback diode but only something with a great resistance (such as the air between two metal contacts), say, R2, we will approximate it as:

If we open the switch and ignore VCC and R1, we get:

or

which is a dierential equation with the solution:

We observe that the current will decrease faster if the resistance is high, such as with air.

Now if we open the switch with the diode in place, we only need to consider L1, R1 and D1. For I > 0, we can assume:

so:

which is:

whose solution is:

We can calculate the time it needs to switch o by determining for which t it is I(t) = 0.

Applications

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Flyback diode - Wikipedia [Link]

Flyback diodes are commonly used when inductive loads are switched o by semiconductor devices: in relay drivers, H-bridge motor drivers, and so on. A switched-mode power supply also exploits this eect, but the energy is not
dissipated to heat and instead used to pump a packet of additional charge into a capacitor, in order to supply power to a load.

See also
1N400x general-purpose diodes
1N4148 signal diode
1N58xx Schottky diodes
Lenz's law

References
1. [Link] ([Link] use of "catch" diode

Further reading
Ott, Henry (1988). Noise Reduction Techniques in Electronic Systems (2nd ed.). Wiley. ISBN 978-0471850687.

External links
Relay Technical Notes ([Link] - American Zettler
Relay Application Notes ([Link] - TE Connectivity
Relay RC Circuit ([Link] - Evox Rifa
Application Circuits of Miniature Signal Relays ([Link] - NEC/Tokin
Diode Turn-on/o Time and Relay Snubbing ([Link] - Clifton Laboratories
"diode for relay coil spikes and motor shuto spikes?" ([Link] - [Link]

Retrieved from "[Link]

This page was last edited on 14 June 2017, at 04:20.


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