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  ? semiconductor components industries, llc, 2004 june, 2004 ? rev. 3 1 publication order number: MTP75N06HD/d MTP75N06HD preferred device power mosfet 75 a, 60 v, n?channel, to?220 this power mosfet is designed to withstand high energy in the avalanche and commutation modes. the energy efficient design also offers a drain?to?source diode with a fast recovery time. designed for low?voltage, high?speed switching applications in power supplies, converters and pwm motor controls, and inductive loads. the avalanche energy capability is specified to eliminate the guesswork in designs where inductive loads are switched, and to offer additional safety margin against unexpected voltage transients. ? diode is characterized for use in bridge circuits ? i dss and v ds(on) specified at elevated temperature ? avalanche energy specified maximum ratings (t c = 25 c unless otherwise noted) rating symbol value unit drain?source voltage v dss 60 vdc drain?gate voltage (r gs = 1.0 m  ) v dgr 60 vdc gate?source voltage ? continuous gate?source voltage ? single pulse v gs 20 30 vdc vpk drain current ? continuous drain current ? continuous @ 100 c drain current ? single pulse (t p 10  s) i d i d i dm 75 50 225 adc apk total power dissipation derate above 25 c p d 150 1.0 w w/ c operating and storage temperature range t j , t stg ?55 to 175 c single pulse drain?to?source avalanche energy ? starting t j = 25 c (v dd = 25 vdc, v gs = 10 vdc, i l = 75 apk, l = 0.177 mh, r g = 25  ) e as 500 mj thermal resistance ? junction?to?case ? junction?to?ambient r  jc r  ja 1.0 62.5 c/w maximum lead temperature for soldering purposes, 1/8 from case for 10 seconds t l 260 c maximum ratings are those values beyond which device damage can occur. maximum ratings applied to the device are individual stress limit values (not normal operating conditions) and are not valid simultaneously. if these limits are exceeded, device functional operation is not implied, damage may occur and reliability may be affected. 75 amperes 60 volts r ds(on) = 10 m  preferred devices are recommended choices for future use and best overall value. device package shipping ordering information MTP75N06HD to?220ab 50 units/rail to?220ab case 221a style 5 1 2 3 4 n?channel d s g marking diagram & pin assignment m75n06hd = device code ll = location code y = year ww = work week m75n06hd llyww 1 gate 3 source 4 drain 2 drain http://onsemi.com
MTP75N06HD http://onsemi.com 2 electrical characteristics (t j = 25 c unless otherwise noted) characteristic symbol min typ max unit off characteristics drain?source breakdown voltage (c pk 2.0) (note 3) (v gs = 0 vdc, i d = 250  adc) temperature coefficient (positive) v (br)dss 60 ? 68 60.4 ? ? vdc mv/ c zero gate voltage drain current (v ds = 60 vdc, v gs = 0 vdc) (v ds = 60 vdc, v gs = 0 vdc, t j = 125 c) i dss ? ? ? ? 10 100  adc gate?body leakage current (v gs = 20 vdc, v ds = 0 v) i gss ? 5.0 100 nadc on characteristics (note 1) gate threshold voltage (c pk 5.0) (note 3) (v ds = v gs , i d = 250  adc) temperature coefficient (negative) v gs(th) 2.0 ? 3.0 8.38 4.0 ? vdc mv/ c static drain?source on?resistance (c pk 2.0) (note 3) (v gs = 10 vdc, i d = 37.5 adc) r ds(on) ? 8.3 10 m  drain?source on?voltage (v gs = 10 vdc) (i d = 75 adc) (i d = 37.5 adc, t j = 125 c) v ds(on) ? ? 0.7 0.53 0.9 0.8 vdc forward transconductance (v ds = 15 vdc, i d = 37.5 adc) g fs 15 32 ? mhos dynamic characteristics input capacitance (v 25 vdc v 0 vdc c iss ? 2800 3920 pf output capacitance (v ds = 25 vdc, v gs = 0 vdc, f = 1.0 mhz ) c oss ? 928 1300 reverse transfer capacitance f = 1 . 0 mhz) c rss ? 180 252 switching characteristics (note 2) turn?on delay time t d(on) ? 18 26 ns rise time (v ds = 30 vdc, i d = 75 adc, v gs =10vdc t r ? 218 306 turn?off delay time v gs = 10 vdc, r g = 9.1  ) t d(off) ? 67 94 fall time r g = 9 . 1  ) t f ? 125 175 gate charge q t ? 71 100 nc (v ds = 48 vdc, i d = 75 adc, q 1 ? 16.3 ? (v ds 48 vdc , i d 75 adc , v gs = 10 vdc) q 2 ? 31 ? q 3 ? 29.4 ? source?drain diode characteristics forward on?voltage (i s = 75 adc, v gs = 0 vdc) (i s = 75 adc, v gs = 0 vdc, t j = 125 c) v sd ? ? 0.97 0.88 1.1 ? vdc reverse recovery time t rr ? 56 ? ns (i s = 75 adc, v gs = 0 vdc, t a ? 44 ? (i s 75 adc , v gs 0 vdc , di s /dt = 100 a/  s) t b ? 12 ? reverse recovery stored charge q rr ? 0.103 ?  c internal package inductance internal drain inductance (measured from contact screw on tab to center of die) (measured from the drain lead 0.25 from package to center of die) l d ? 3.5 ? nh internal source inductance (measured from the source lead 0.25 from package to source bond pad) l s ? 7.5 ? nh 1. pulse test: pulse width 300  s, duty cycle 2%. 2. switching characteristics are independent of operating junction temperature. 3. reflects typical values. c pk = max limit ? typ 3 x sigma
MTP75N06HD http://onsemi.com 3 typical electrical characteristics r ds(on) , drain-to-source resistance (ohms) r ds(on) , drain-to-source resistance (normalized) r ds(on) , drain-to-source resistance (ohms) i dss , leakage (na) v ds , drain-to-source voltage (volts) t j , junction temperature ( c) i d , drain current (amps) i d , drain current (amps) v ds , drain-to-source voltage (volts) v gs , gate-to-source voltage (volts) i d , drain current (amps) i d , drain current (amps) 0 0.5 1 figure 1. on?region characteristics figure 2. transfer characteristics 0 50 150 figure 3. on?resistance versus drain current and temperature figure 4. on?resistance versus drain current and gate voltage 1 1000 figure 5. on?resistance variation with temperature figure 6. drain?to?source leakage current versus voltage v ds 10 v t j = -55 c 25 c -50 -25 0 25 50 75 100 125 150 0 10 20 60 40 v gs = 0 v t j = 125 c t j = 25 c v gs = 10 v i d = 37.5 a 100 30 9 v t j = 25 c 100 c 25 75 15 v 150 0 2 1.5 100 c 0.016 0.012 0.009 0.007 0.006 1.9 1.6 1.3 1 0.7 25 47 368 125 100 75 50 25 v gs = 10 v 8 v 7 v 6 v 5 v 150 0 125 100 75 50 25 0.014 0.012 0.010 0.008 0.006 0.004 100 125 t j = 25 c v gs = 10 v t j = 100 c 25 c -55 c v gs = 10 v 0.010 0.008 0 50 150 25 75 100 125 10 50 25 c 0.011
MTP75N06HD http://onsemi.com 4 power mosfet switching switching behavior is most easily modeled and predicted by recognizing that the power mosfet is charge controlled. the lengths of various switching intervals (  t) are determined by how fast the fet input capacitance can be charged by current from the generator. the published capacitance data is difficult to use for calculating rise and fall because drain?gate capacitance varies greatly with applied voltage. accordingly, gate charge data is used. in most cases, a satisfactory estimate of average input current (i g(av) ) can be made from a rudimentary analysis of the drive circuit so that t = q/i g(av) during the rise and fall time interval when switching a resistive load, v gs remains virtually constant at a level known as the plateau voltage, v sgp . therefore, rise and fall times may be approximated by the following: t r = q 2 x r g /(v gg ? v gsp ) t f = q 2 x r g /v gsp where v gg = the gate drive voltage, which varies from zero to v gg r g = the gate drive resistance and q 2 and v gsp are read from the gate charge curve. during the turn?on and turn?off delay times, gate current is not constant. the simplest calculation uses appropriate values from the capacitance curves in a standard equation for voltage change in an rc network. the equations are: t d(on) = r g c iss in [v gg /(v gg ? v gsp )] t d(off) = r g c iss in (v gg /v gsp ) the capacitance (c iss ) is read from the capacitance curve at a voltage corresponding to the off?state condition when calculating t d(on) and is read at a voltage corresponding to the on?state when calculating t d(off) . at high switching speeds, parasitic circuit elements complicate the analysis. the inductance of the mosfet source lead, inside the package and in the circuit wiring which is common to both the drain and gate current paths, produces a voltage at the source which reduces the gate drive current. the voltage is determined by ldi/dt, but since di/dt is a function of drain current, the mathematical solution is complex. the mosfet output capacitance also complicates the mathematics. and finally, mosfets have finite internal gate resistance which effectively adds to the resistance of the driving source, but the internal resistance is difficult to measure and, consequently, is not specified. the resistive switching time variation versus gate resistance (figure 9) shows how typical switching performance is affected by the parasitic circuit elements. if the parasitics were not present, the slope of the curves would maintain a value of unity regardless of the switching speed. the circuit used to obtain the data is constructed to minimize common inductance in the drain and gate circuit loops and is believed readily achievable with board mounted components. most power electronic loads are inductive; the data in the figure is taken with a resistive load, which approximates an optimally snubbed inductive load. power mosfets may be safely operated into an inductive load; however, snubbing reduces switching losses. gate-to-source or drain-to-source voltage (volts) c, capacitance (pf) figure 7. capacitance variation 10 0 10 15 20 25 v gs v ds 55 v ds = 0 v c iss c rss v gs = 0 v t j = 25 c c iss c oss c rss 7000 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 0
MTP75N06HD http://onsemi.com 5 q t , total gate charge (nc) r g , gate resistance (ohms) t, time (ns) v ds , drain-to-source voltage (volts) v gs , gate-to-source voltage (volts) figure 8. gate?to?source and drain?to?source voltage versus total charge 1 10 100 10 100 1000 v ds = 30 v i d = 75 a v gs = 10 v t j = 25 c t r t f t d(on) t d(off) figure 9. resistive switching time variation versus gate resistance 01030506080 20 40 10 6 2 0 8 4 12 60 50 40 30 10 20 0 qt q2 v gs i d = 75 a t j = 25 c v ds q3 q1 70 drain?to?source diode characteristics the switching characteristics of a mosfet body diode are very important in systems using it as a freewheeling or commutating diode. of particular interest are the reverse recovery characteristics which play a major role in determining switching losses, radiated noise, emi and rfi. system switching losses are largely due to the nature of the body diode itself. the body diode is a minority carrier device, therefore it has a finite reverse recovery time, t rr , due to the storage of minority carrier charge, q rr , as shown in the typical reverse recovery wave form of figure 12. it is this stored charge that, when cleared from the diode, passes through a potential and defines an energy loss. obviously, repeatedly forcing the diode through reverse recovery further increases switching losses. therefore, one would like a diode with short t rr and low q rr specifications to minimize these losses. the abruptness of diode reverse recovery effects the amount of radiated noise, voltage spikes, and current ringing. the mechanisms at work are finite irremovable circuit parasitic inductances and capacitances acted upon by high di/dts. the diode's negative di/dt during t a is directly controlled by the device clearing the stored charge. however, the positive di/dt during t b is an uncontrollable diode characteristic and is usually the culprit that induces current ringing. therefore, when comparing diodes, the ratio of t b /t a serves as a good indicator of recovery abruptness and thus gives a comparative estimate of probable noise generated. a ratio of 1 is considered ideal and values less than 0.5 are considered snappy. compared to on semiconductor standard cell density low voltage mosfets, high cell density mosfet diodes are faster (shorter t rr ), have less stored charge and a softer reverse recovery characteristic. the softness advantage of the high cell density diode means they can be forced through reverse recovery at a higher di/dt than a standard cell mosfet diode without increasing the current ringing or the noise generated. in addition, power dissipation incurred from switching the diode will be less due to the shorter recovery time and lower switching losses. i s , source current (amps) v sd , source-to-drain voltage (volts) figure 10. diode forward voltage versus current 0 50 75 25 0.5 0.58 0.66 0.74 0.82 0.98 v gs = 0 v t j = 25 c 0.9
MTP75N06HD http://onsemi.com 6 i s , source current t, time figure 11. reverse recovery time (t rr ) di/dt = 300 a/  s standard cell density high cell density t b t rr t a t rr safe operating area the forward biased safe operating area curves define the maximum simultaneous drain?to?source voltage and drain current that a transistor can handle safely when it is forward biased. curves are based upon maximum peak junction temperature and a case temperature (t c ) of 25 c. peak repetitive pulsed power limits are determined by using the thermal response data in conjunction with the procedures discussed in an569, atransient thermal resistance ? general data and its use.o switching between the off?state and the on?state may traverse any load line provided neither rated peak current (i dm ) nor rated voltage (v dss ) is exceeded, and that the transition time (t r , t f ) does not exceed 10  s. in addition the total power averaged over a complete switching cycle must not exceed (t j(max) ? t c )/(r  jc ). a power mosfet designated e?fet can be safely used in switching circuits with unclamped inductive loads. for reliable operation, the stored energy from circuit inductance dissipated in the transistor while in avalanche must be less than the rated limit and must be adjusted for operating conditions differing from those specified. although industry practice is to rate in terms of energy, avalanche energy capability is not a constant. the energy rating decreases non?linearly with an increase of peak current in avalanche and peak junction temperature. although many e?fets can withstand the stress of drain?to?source avalanche at currents up to rated pulsed current (i dm ), the energy rating is specified at rated continuous current (i d ), in accordance with industry custom. the energy rating must be derated for temperature as shown in the accompanying graph (figure 13). maximum energy at currents below rated continuous i d can safely be assumed to equal the values indicated. v ds , drain-to-source voltage (volts) t j , starting junction temperature ( c) e as , single pulse drain-to-source avalanche energy (mj) i d , drain current (amps) figure 12. maximum rated forward biased safe operating area 25 150 50 100 125 75 0 375 250 125 500 figure 13. maximum avalanche energy versus starting junction temperature 0.1 1.0 10 100 1 10 100 1000 dc r ds(on) limit thermal limit package limit v gs = 20 v single pulse t c = 25 c i d = 75 a 100  s 1 ms 10 ms 10  s
MTP75N06HD http://onsemi.com 7 typical electrical characteristics r(t), effective transient thermal resistance (normalized) t, time (s) figure 14. thermal response 0.1 1.0 0.01 0.1 0.2 0.02 d = 0.5 0.05 0.01 single pulse r  jc (t) = r(t) r  jc d curves apply for power pulse train shown read time at t 1 t j(pk) - t c = p (pk) r  jc (t) p (pk) t 1 t 2 duty cycle, d = t 1 /t 2 figure 15. diode reverse recovery waveform di/dt t rr t a t p i s 0.25 i s time i s t b 1.0e-05 1.0e-04 1.0e-03 1.0e-02 1.0e-01 1.0e+00 1.0e+01
MTP75N06HD http://onsemi.com 8 package dimensions to?220 three?lead to?220ab case 221a?09 issue aa style 5: pin 1. gate 2. drain 3. source 4. drain notes: 1. dimensioning and tolerancing per ansi y14.5m, 1982. 2. controlling dimension: inch. 3. dimension z defines a zone where all body and lead irregularities are allowed. dim min max min max millimeters inches a 0.570 0.620 14.48 15.75 b 0.380 0.405 9.66 10.28 c 0.160 0.190 4.07 4.82 d 0.025 0.035 0.64 0.88 f 0.142 0.147 3.61 3.73 g 0.095 0.105 2.42 2.66 h 0.110 0.155 2.80 3.93 j 0.018 0.025 0.46 0.64 k 0.500 0.562 12.70 14.27 l 0.045 0.060 1.15 1.52 n 0.190 0.210 4.83 5.33 q 0.100 0.120 2.54 3.04 r 0.080 0.110 2.04 2.79 s 0.045 0.055 1.15 1.39 t 0.235 0.255 5.97 6.47 u 0.000 0.050 0.00 1.27 v 0.045 --- 1.15 --- z --- 0.080 --- 2.04 b q h z l v g n a k f 123 4 d seating plane ?t? c s t u r j on semiconductor and are registered trademarks of semiconductor components industries, llc (scillc). scillc reserves the right to mak e changes without further notice to any products herein. scillc makes no warranty, representation or guarantee regarding the suitability of its products for an y particular purpose, nor does scillc assume any liability arising out of the application or use of any product or circuit, and specifically disclaims any and all liability, including wi thout limitation special, consequential or incidental damages. atypicalo parameters which may be provided in scillc data sheets and/or specifications can and do vary in different application s and actual performance may vary over time. all operating parameters, including atypicalso must be validated for each customer application by customer's technical experts. scillc does not convey any license under its patent rights nor the rights of others. scillc products are not designed, intended, or authorized for use as components in systems intended for surgical implant into the body, or other applications intended to support or sustain life, or for any other application in which the failure of the scillc product could create a sit uation where personal injury or death may occur. should buyer purchase or use scillc products for any such unintended or unauthorized application, buyer shall indemnify and hold scillc and its officers, employees, subsidiaries, af filiates, and distributors harmless against all claims, costs, damages, and expenses, and reasonable attorney fees arising out of, direct ly or indirectly, any claim of personal injury or death associated with such unintended or unauthorized use, even if such claim alleges that scillc was negligent regarding the design or manufacture of the part. scillc is an equal opportunity/affirmative action employer. this literature is subject to all applicable copyright laws and is not for resale in any manner. publication ordering information n. american technical support : 800?282?9855 toll free usa/canada japan : on semiconductor, japan customer focus center 2?9?1 kamimeguro, meguro?ku, tokyo, japan 153?0051 phone : 81?3?5773?3850 MTP75N06HD/d literature fulfillment : literature distribution center for on semiconductor p.o. box 61312, phoenix, arizona 85082?1312 usa phone : 480?829?7710 or 800?344?3860 toll free usa/canada fax : 480?829?7709 or 800?344?3867 toll free usa/canada email : orderlit@onsemi.com on semiconductor website : http://onsemi.com order literature : http://www.onsemi.com/litorder for additional information, please contact your local sales representative.


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