What it is showing is just a transistor acting as a switch which is quite in order but not what a conventional SSR does.
Brian.
The 4N35 optocoupler has the base pin available, maybe it's to bias it or something.
The schematics you post seem to be missing half the device or aren't really "relay" devices, surely - no isolation between control signal and output/switch.
Renesas may have a little info about SSRs, or companies that make them on their websites, Crydom is one.
Your question doesn't relate to SSRs specifically, but to transistors used as switches in general.
I have on one project used the base connection of a 6N139 opto-coupler in a feedback network to hold it in 'half conducting' state so it could carry a linear signal for audio isolation but that is a different issue to the one you identified.
The article you found on the net is quite explanatory and covers most points but bear in mind it refers to opto-isolators rather than SSRs. A relay is an on or off device, it only has two output states whereas an isolator can be linear in operation.
Interesting! In this project, you are achieving linearity by firstly putting the output transistor in certain bias point via tying the base to a "positive voltage" and secondly, by further increasing the linearity through a feedback mechanism, right?
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