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Unread 19-03-2011, 17:34
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J.Warsoff J.Warsoff is offline
BECAUSE SCIENCE
AKA: Jared Warsoff
FRC #1676 (The Pascack PI-oneers)
Team Role: Alumni
 
Join Date: Jan 2010
Rookie Year: 2009
Location: New Jersey, currently Connecticut
Posts: 245
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Re: pic: Well there's your problem...

Quote:
Originally Posted by Mike Betts View Post
Jared,

Actually, what you see could very well be the result of the failure and not the root cause...

When a power semiconductor fails, it almost always causes a resultant short circuit. This has to do with the inner structure of the device. The actual cause of the failure could be a voltage spike, over-current, loss of cooling (over-temperature), et cetera.

As an example: An over-current condition can be the result of a logic failure upstream of the device causing a "shoot-through" condition (the upper and lower halves of a power pole turn on simultaneously shorting the 12V to ground). This logic failure could be caused by a piece of aluminum dust shorting out two pins on an IC chip elsewhere on the board.

So when you see power devices failed like this, think of it as an indicator that something else failed...

Of course, the failure could indicate a manufacturing defect or a design deficiency as well...

I hope this makes things a little more cloudy for you... Welcome my world...

Regards,

Mike
That helps clear things up a little Mike. Thanks

One of the mentors on my team was the one teaching me about how jags worked, and I came up with the possibility of maybe the gate, source, or drain inside the MOSFETs coming out of alignment, which would mess up the circuit and cause an overheat.

And I am still looking at the jags and trying to figure out any other failures that caused it. Either way, my team will be sticking with the tan jags, since we've never had problems with those.
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