ElecDesigner
Member level 5
Maybe In overthinking this but here goes.
If I have a transistor that is operating for very short pulses and is not saturated, the instantaneous power is quite large (as the Vce is large).
Say I have a small signal rated for 60V, 1A but the power dissipation spec is something like 200mW (continuous).
In the absence of SOA curves (small signal transistor datasheets down provide anything like that), what approach do we take.....
Is there a point where the pulse width is so small that power dissipation doesn't come into it?
Basically I have the scenario where the dissipation is about 0.5W for a few 100 us every 100ms and am struggling to believe i need a transistor rated for 0.5W dissipation.
If I have a transistor that is operating for very short pulses and is not saturated, the instantaneous power is quite large (as the Vce is large).
Say I have a small signal rated for 60V, 1A but the power dissipation spec is something like 200mW (continuous).
In the absence of SOA curves (small signal transistor datasheets down provide anything like that), what approach do we take.....
Is there a point where the pulse width is so small that power dissipation doesn't come into it?
Basically I have the scenario where the dissipation is about 0.5W for a few 100 us every 100ms and am struggling to believe i need a transistor rated for 0.5W dissipation.