Power Electronics: THYRISTOR Protection
Power Electronics: THYRISTOR Protection
THYRISTOR Protection
Thyristor protection circuits
• Reliable operation of a thyristor demands that its specified ratings
are not exceeded.
• In practice, a thyristor may be subjected to overvoltages or
overcurrents. During SCR turn-on, di/dt may be prohibitively
large.
• There may be false triggering of SCR by high value of dv/dt.
• A spurious signal across gate-cathode terminals may lead to
unwanted turn-on.
• A thyristor must be protected against all such abnormal
conditions for satisfactory and reliable operation of SCR circuit
and the equipment.
• SCRs are very delicate devices, their protection against abnormal
operating conditions is, therefore, essential.
• The object of this section is to discuss various techniques adopted
for the protection of SCRs.
– di/dt protection.
– dv/dtprotection.
di/dt protection
• When a thyristor is forward biased and is turned on by a gate pulse,
conduction of anode current begins in the immediate neighbourhood of
the gate-cathode junction.
• Let the capacitance of this junction be Cj. For any capacitor, i = C dv/dt.
• In case it is assumed that entire forward voltage va appears across
reverse biased junction J2 then charging current across the junction is
given by
– i = dQ/dt =d(Cj Va )/dt
– i=Cj (d Va /dt) + Va(d Cj /dt)
– i = Cj dva /dt
• This charging or displacement current across junction J2 is collector
currents of Q2 and Q1 Currents IC2, IC1 will induce emitter current in
Q2, Q1.
dv/dt protection
• In case rate of rise of anode voltage is large, the emitter currents will be
large and as a result, α1+ α2 will approach unity leading to eventual
switching action of the thyristor.
• If the rate of rise of forward voltage dVa/dt is high, the charging current i
will be more. This charging current plays the role of gate current and
turns on the SCR even when gate signal is zero.
– Stress reduction: to shape the device switching waveform such that the
voltage and current associated with the device are not high simultaneously.
Designing the snubber circuit
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