TVS - Thyristors

Image Part Number Description / PDF Quantity Rfq
A1220UA4LRP

A1220UA4LRP

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 100V/180V 150A 6SMD GW

0

P0602ACMCL

P0602ACMCL

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 25V/50V 400A TO220-3

0

P0300EBMCL

P0300EBMCL

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 25V 250A TO226-2

0

P0640Q22CLRP

P0640Q22CLRP

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 58V 400A 2TDFN

0

P2103UALTP

P2103UALTP

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 170V 150A 6SMD GW

0

P2602SBLRP

P2602SBLRP

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 220V 250A DO214AA

0

P0080EALRP1

P0080EALRP1

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 6V 150A TO226-2

0

P2604UCLRP

P2604UCLRP

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 220V/440V 400A 6SMD GW

0

P2100SCLRP

P2100SCLRP

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 180V 400A DO214AA

0

P1800EBL

P1800EBL

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 170V 250A TO226-2

0

P0720ECLRP1

P0720ECLRP1

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 65V 400A TO226-2

0

P0300Q12BLRP

P0300Q12BLRP

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 25V 250A 2TDFN

0

P4202AALRP

P4202AALRP

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 190V/380V 150A TO220-3

0

P1300EAL

P1300EAL

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 120V 150A TO226-2

0

P1553UALTP

P1553UALTP

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 130V 150A 6SMD GW

0

P2000SCLRP

P2000SCLRP

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 180V 400A DO214AA

0

P0644UALRP

P0644UALRP

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 58V/116V 150A 6SMD GW

0

P2706UBLTP

P2706UBLTP

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 230V 250A 6SMD GW

0

P2600EBLAP

P2600EBLAP

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 220V 250A TO226-2

0

P1100EBLRP2

P1100EBLRP2

Wickmann / Littelfuse

THYRISTOR 90V 250A TO226-2

0

TVS - Thyristors

1. Overview

Transient Voltage Suppression (TVS) diodes and Thyristors are critical components in circuit protection systems. TVS diodes are semiconductor devices designed to protect sensitive electronics from voltage spikes caused by electrostatic discharge (ESD), inductive load switching, or lightning strikes. Thyristors, a family of semiconductor devices including Silicon-Controlled Rectifiers (SCRs) and Triacs, are used for high-power switching and overvoltage protection. Both technologies are essential in modern electronics, ensuring reliability in applications ranging from consumer devices to industrial machinery.

2. Main Types and Functional Classification

TypeFunctional FeaturesApplication Examples
Unidirectional TVSProtects against single-polarity transientsPower supplies, DC circuits
Bidirectional TVSClamps positive/negative transients simultaneouslyAC lines, communication interfaces
Silicon-Controlled Rectifier (SCR)Latching behavior for overvoltage crowbar protectionPower converters, motor drives
TriacAC current control and bidirectional switchingLighting control, HVAC systems

3. Structure and Composition

TVS diodes typically use a heavily doped PN junction structure with a large cross-sectional area to absorb transient energy. They are encapsulated in plastic packages (e.g., DO-214) with two terminals. Thyristors feature a four-layer PNPN structure with three terminals (anode, cathode, gate). Advanced models incorporate passivation layers and metal-over-glass packaging for thermal stability. Both devices use semiconductor materials like silicon, with doping profiles optimized for specific breakdown voltages.

4. Key Technical Specifications

ParameterDescriptionImportance
Breakdown Voltage (Vbr)Minimum voltage causing conductionMatches protection level to circuit requirements
Clamping Voltage (Vc)Voltage across device during conductionDetermines stress on protected components
Response TimeTime to transition from off to on stateCritical for protecting against fast transients
Surge Current Rating (Ipp)Maximum allowable transient currentEnsures survival under worst-case scenarios
Holding Current (Ih)Thyristor-specific: Maintains conduction stateAffects reset behavior in crowbar circuits

5. Application Fields

Key industries include:

  • Telecommunications: Ethernet transceivers, fiber optic modules
  • Industrial Automation: PLCs, motor drives
  • Consumer Electronics: Smartphones, power adapters
  • Automotive: CAN bus protection, alternator circuits
  • Renewable Energy: Solar inverters, wind turbine controllers

6. Leading Manufacturers and Products

ManufacturerRepresentative ProductsKey Features
LittelfuseSM8S Series TVS8kV ESD protection, low leakage current
STMicroelectronicsSTRIP Series ThyristorsIntegrated protection for AC loads
VishayTPSMB Series Bidirectional TVSAEC-Q101 qualified for automotive use
ON SemiconductorNUD3160 SCRIntegrated gate drive for crowbar circuits

7. Selection Guidelines

Key considerations:

  1. Match breakdown voltage to system operating voltage (typically 10-15% higher)
  2. Ensure clamping voltage is below the maximum rating of protected ICs
  3. Select surge current capacity based on expected fault conditions
  4. For thyristors: Evaluate holding current vs. load characteristics
  5. Consider packaging (SMD vs. through-hole) for PCB integration

Example: For a 12V automotive circuit, a bidirectional TVS with 18V breakdown voltage and 40A surge rating would protect against load dump transients while surviving ISO 7637 test pulses.

8. Industry Trends

Emerging trends include:

  • Integration of TVS and EMI filtering in single packages
  • Wide bandgap materials (SiC/GaN) enabling higher temperature operation
  • Smart thyristors with integrated diagnostics for predictive maintenance
  • Miniaturization driven by 5G infrastructure and IoT device demands
  • Rail-to-rail protection architectures in high-speed data lines
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