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purpose of gate diode

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circuitmangler

Computer
Joined
Jul 5, 2003
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A control circuit I've got has the control (pin 3) of a 555
controlling an NPN transistor which itself controls a IRF710
MOSFET. In series with the MOSFET's gate is a James Bond
diode (last three digits "007" - can't make out the prefix).
The circuit appears to be intended for an inductive
load as there is a freewheeling diode in place across the
load terminals.

Question: is the diode there to limit transient gate
current from getting back to the transistor? Horowitz and Hill recommends using a resistor in series with the gate for this purpose. Does the use of a diode suggest anything about the kinds of inductive loads (current, power, switching
speeds) this circuit was designed for? Or, is using this
diode always preferable to using a resistor?

thanks...

 
Pin 3 is the output pin 5 is the control.
The diode is probably a 1N4007.
Diodes are sometimes used to effect the on/off time of the FET, in this case maybe the duty cycle.
Resistors on gates can be there for protection or to alter switching transition times.
 
Thanks for the info. Could you point me to a resource
which describes how a diode is used in this way?

Thanks,

circuitmangler
 
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