Snubber Circuits
Snubber Circuits
Snubber Circuits
B. Diode Snubbers
C. Turn-off Snubbers
D. Overvoltage Snubbers
E. Turn-on Snubbers
F. Thyristor Snubbers
William P. Robbins
Professor
Dept. of Electrical Engineering
University of Minnesota
200 Union St. SE.
Minneapolis, MN 555455
Copyright 1997
Snubbers - 1
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Function of Snubber Circuits
di
• Limiting the rate-of-rise ( ) of currents through the
dt
semiconductor device at device turn-on
dv
• Limiting the rate-of-rise ( ) of voltages across the
dt
semiconductor device at device turn-off
Snubbers - 2
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Types of Snubber Circuits
dv
• Limit during device turn-off
dt
di
• Limit during device turn-on
dt
Snubbers - 3
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Need for Diode Snubber Circuit
+ Lσ • L σ = stray inductance
Rs
Io
• S w closes at t = 0
V D Cs
d f
• R s - Cs = snubber circuit
- Sw
di V
Df d
=
d t Lσ
Io
i (t) t
Df
I rr
v (t) t
Df V
d
d i Lσ • Diode voltage
Lσ
d t without snubber
di Lσ
• Diode breakdown if V d + Lσ > BVBD
dt
Snubbers - 4
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Equivalent Circuits for Diode Snubber
Lσ
+ Rs
V Diode cathode
d
snap-off anode Cs
-
Lσ
• Rs = 0
+
+ •v = -v
Cs Df
V v Cs
d Cs
-
-
d2vCs vCs Vd
• Governing equation - + =
dt 2 LσCs L σCs
Snubbers - 5
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Performance of Capacitive Snubber
Cbase
• vCs (t) = Vd - V d cos(ωot) + Vd sin(ωot)
Cs
I r r 2
1
• ωo = ; C base = Lσ
LσCs V
d
Cbase
• Vcs,max = Vd 1 + 1 +
Cs
V 3
Cs,max
Vd
2
0
0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2
C base
Cs
Snubbers - 6
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Effect of Adding Snubber Resistance
Lσ
+ -
Rs
V v (t)
d Df
Cs
- +
d2vDf dvDf
• Governing equation LσCs + Rs Cs + vDf = -Vd
dt 2 dt
• Boundary conditions
dvDf (0+) I rr R s Vd I r r Rs2
vDf (0+) = - I r r R s and =- - +
dt Cs Lσ Lσ
Cbase
vDf (t) = - Vd - V d e- αt sin(ωa t - φ − ξ)
Cs
α2 1 Rs
ωa = ωo 1 - ; ωo = ; α=
ωo2 LσCs 2Lσ
Rb α α Vd Lσ
tan(φ) = - - ; tan(ξ) = ; R base = , C base =
ωa Lσ ωa ωa I rr (Vd/ I r r )2
Snubbers - 7
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Performance of R-C Snubber
Vmax
• =1+ 1 + C N- 1 - R N exp(-αt m)
Vd
Cs Rs
• CN = and RN =
Cbase R base
Ls I r r 2 Vd
• Cbase = and R base =
Vd2 I rr
R s,opt
C s = C base = 1.3
R
base
2
V max
V
d
Rs I rr
Vd
0
0 1 R s 2
R base
Snubbers - 8
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Diode Snubber Design Nomogram
Wtot
2
3 L s I r r /2
WR
2
L s I r r /2
2
0
0 V max
for R = R
0 Vd s s,opt
0
00
00
0 00
0 00 0
00 0 0 0 0 00
1 R s,op
R base
0
0 1 2 3
C s / Cbase
Snubbers - 9
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Need for Snubbers with Controlled Switches
L1 • L1 , L 2 , L 3 = stray inductances
L2
Io
V • L = L + L + L
d 1 2 3
i
sw +
S vsw
L3 w
-
di
L
dt
i
sw
L di
Io dt V Io
d
vsw
to t t t t5 t
3 4 6
1
idealized
i
sw switching
t t5 loci
6 • Overvoltage at
turn-off turn-off due to
to
stray inductance
t1
• Overcurrent at
turn-on
turn-on due to diode
reverse recovery
t
4 t3 vsw
Vd
Snubbers - 10
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Turn-on Snubber for Controlled Switches
• Circuit configuration
Turn-off
D snubber
i f Io
+ DF
V
d Ds
S Rs
w i
- Cs
Cs
• Assumptions
Io 1. No stray inductance.
Df
2. i s w (t) = Io(1 - t/t f i )
V
d 3. i s w (t) uneffected by
Io - i
sw snubber circuit.
i sw
Cs
Snubbers - 11
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Turn-off Snubber Operation
I ot I ot 2
• i Cs (t) = and v Cs (t) =
tf i 2Cs t f i
I ot f i
• For Cs = Cs1 , v Cs = Vd at t = tf i yielding C s1 =
2Vd
i i i
sw sw sw
Io
i i i
Df Df Df
t fi t t fi
fi
i
Cs
V
d
v
Cs
Snubbers - 12
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Benefits of Snubber Resistance at Sw Turn-on
• Turn-on with R s = 0
t rr discharge
• Energy stored on Cs
of C s
dissipated in S w .
vsw
• Extra energy
V Io dissipation in S w
d
because of lengthened
i sw t ri t voltage fall time.
2
0 t ri + t rr
v
sw
• Turn-on with R s > 0 t rr
• Energy stored on Cs i I
D rr
dissipated in R s f
rather than in S w . Vd
Io
i sw Rs
• Voltage fall time kept
quite short. I rr
Snubbers - 13
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Effect of Snubber Capacitance
• Switching trajectory
i sw
Io
Cs = Cs1
Cs > Cs1
V vsw
d
• Energy dissipation
1
WR = dissipation in
total Wbase
W /
resistor
0.8
WT = dissipation in
switch S w
0.6
W / Wbase I ot f i
R Cs1 =
0.4
2Vd
WT / W base
0.2 Wtotal = WR + WT
Snubbers - 14
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Turn-off Snubber Design Procedure
• Selection of Cs
• Minimize WR + WT
• Selection of R s
Vd
• Limit icap(0+) = < Ir r
Rs
Snubbers - 15
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Overvoltage Snubber for Controlled Switches
Lσ
+
D Io R
f ov
Vd
Sw Dov
- C ov
kV
d di LσIo
i • kV d = Lσ = Lσ
s dt tf i
w
Io V kV dt f i
d
• Lσ =
Io
v
s
w
o t
fi
Snubbers - 16
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Operation of Overvoltage Snubber
Cov ( ∆V sw,max )2 Lσ ( I o )2
v =
s 2 2
w π Lσ C ov
0
4
.
Snubbers - 17
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Overvoltage Snubber Design
Ls I o 2
• Cov =
(∆v sw,max )2
kV d t fi
• Using Ls = in equation for Cov yields
Io
kV d t fi I o 2 100k t f i I o
• Cov = =
I o (0.1Vd )2 V d2
t fi I o
• Cov = 200 Cs1 where Cs1 = which is used
2Vd
in turn-off snubber
t off
• R ov ≈
2.3 C ov
Snubbers - 18
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Turn-on Snubber Circuit
• Circuit topology
+ +
D I D
f o f R
Ls
Ls I
o
Snubber
D
circuit Ls
R V
V Ls Ls d
d D
D f
Ls
Sw
- Sw -
di s w
• Circuit reduces V s w as switch S w turns on. Voltage drop Ls
dt
provides the voltage reduction.
i sw
Io
With Without
snubber snubber
di sw
Ls
dt
v
sw
V
d
Snubbers - 19
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Turn-on Snubber Operating Waveforms
v I rr
s di s w
w • controlled by
dt
switch S w and
drive circuit.
V
d Io
Ls I o
• ∆vs w =
tr i
i
s
tr i trr
w
v I rr
s di s w
reduced
w • limited by circuit
dt
Vd Io
V to <
d Ls tr i
Io
Vdt r i
i • Ls1 =
s Io
w
Ls Io
t ≈ > tr i + t r r
on
V
d
di s w
• I r r reduced when Ls > Ls1 because I r r proportional to
dt
Snubbers - 20
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Turn-on Snubber Recovery at Switch Turn-off
+
D Io • Assume switch current fall time
f
t ri = 0.
- Sw
Io R
I o R Ls exp(-R Ls t/Ls ) Ls
• Switch waveforms
is
at turn-off with
w V turn-on snubber in
Io d circuit.
vs
t rv
w
Snubbers - 21
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Turn-on Snubber Design Trade-offs
• Selection of inductor L s
• Ws w = WB (1 + I r r / I o)2 [1 - Ls /L s1 ]
• Ls > Ls1 Ws w = 0
• WR = WB Ls / L s1
• Selection of resistor R Ls
Snubbers - 22
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Thyristor Snubber Circuit
1 3 5
- van + L
A
- v bn + L
B i
d
- v cn + L
Cs
4 6 2
Rs
• van (t) = Vs sin(ωt), v bn(t) = Vs sin(ωt - 120°), vcn (t) = Vs sin(ωt - 240°)
• Phase-to-neutral waveforms
v
v bn
an
v LL= v v v t
bn an = ba 1
3
• Maximum rms line-to-line voltage V LL = V
2 s
Snubbers - 23
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Equivalent Circuit for SCR Snubber Calculations
i
L
2 L P
+ T after
1 Cs
recovery
V ( t )
bc 1 i
T3 (on) T1 Rs
-
A
• Assumptions
Vs 2VLL VLL
• Line impedance = = =
2I a1 6I a1 3I a1
where I a1 = rms value of fundamental component of the
line current.
VLL
• ωLσ = 0.05
3I a1
Snubbers - 24
W.P. Robbins © 1997
Component Values for Thyristor Snubber
• Use same design as for diode snubber but adapt the formulas to the
thyristor circuit notation
I r r 2
• Snubber capacitor C s = Cbase = Lσ
V
d
di Lσ
• From snubber equivalent circuit 2 L σ = 2 VLL
dt
di Lσ 2VLL 2VLL
• I rr = tr r = tr r = t rr = 25 ωI a1t r r
dt 2Lσ 0.05 V LL
2
3 I a1ω
• Vd = 2 VLL
Vd
• Snubber resistance R s = 1.3 Rbase = 1.3
I rr
2VLL 0.07 V LL
• R s = 1.3 =
25ωI a1t r r ωI a1t r r
LσI r r 2 Cs Vd2
• WR = + = 18 ω I a1 VLL(tr r )2
2 2
Snubbers - 25
W.P. Robbins © 1997