millwood said:Rds(on) is the resistance when the device is in saturation.
Rds in a linear region is of no significance (meaning?) because it changes as Id / Vds changes.
walkura said:From what i know Rdson is measured when the mosfet is fully opened .
The only change in resistance you will wittnes is due to the positive temperature coefficient of the mosfet .
(hot mosfets have a slightly higher resistance)
In the *triode* region you can regulate the *resistance* with Vg ,your resistance depends on Vg.
Assuming you can keep the mosfet temperature stable ,then your Rds will be as stable as your gatevoltage .
In the switch state you either have very high resistance(closed) or Rdson like stated in the datasheets when its fully opened .
Do keep in mind to fully open a mosfet a gatevoltage of 10 to 15 volt is needed (logic mos excluded).
(Rdson stated in the datasheet is at 25 degree celcius and is usualy also noted at 75 or 100 degree)
Have a look at page 5 of this datasheet and it should take your doubts away .
http://www.irf.com/technical-info/appnotes/an-957.pdf
It describes how to measure your Rdson and also how they specify it .
http://www.irf.com/technical-info/appnotes/mosfet.pdf
The last datasheet describes in detail what composes your Rdson (and other parameters ).
Usualy most of those factors are of no concern ,but this datasheet does answer all your questions about Rdson and what it consists of.
timof said:When a transistor is opened (high Vgs voltage, high current, low resistance) - it operates in the linear (not saturation) region.
Attached diagram illustrates where the operating points for On state and OFF state are on Ids-Vds plot.
Single-type MOSFET switch
This analog switch uses a four-terminal simple MOSFET of either P or N type. In the case of an N-type switch, the body is connected to the most negative supply (usually GND) and the gate is used as the switch control. Whenever the gate voltage exceeds the source voltage by at least a threshold voltage, the MOSFET conducts. The higher the voltage, the more the MOSFET can conduct. An N-MOS switch passes all voltages less than (Vgate–Vtn). When the switch is conducting, it typically operates in the linear (or Ohmic) mode of operation, since the source and drain voltages will typically be nearly equal.
In the case of a P-MOS, the body is connected to the most positive voltage, and the gate is brought to a lower potential to turn the switch on. The P-MOS switch passes all voltages higher than (Vgate+Vtp). Threshold voltage (Vtp) is typically negative in the case of P-MOS.
A P-MOS switch will have about three times the resistance of an N-MOS device of equal dimensions because electrons have about three times the mobility of holes in silicon.
walkura said:When you use a mosfet as a switch you try to saturate the channel fully .
Using it in the ohmic region only creates unnessecary heat .
I almost never used mosfets in the triode mode .
As gate voltage i tend to use 12 to 15 Volt to be very sure the mosfet is open as far as possible .
(usualy i use non logic level mosfets .)
For switching you want the mosfet to be in a state with as little as possible resistance .
(just to prevent confusion like last night)
At school they said that a transistor or mosfet is called saturated when a further increase of base or gate voltage doesnt result in a further increase of Ic or Id.
In other words its fully opened .
eliben said:However - the question remains: in which region is the MOSFET emloyed as a switch?
Can we agree that this settles the argument? Or is Wikipedia wrong here?
millwood said:this may help a little bit.
when a transistor is just applied a voltage / current to its base, it is cut off: Ic is very little, and Vce stays high. that's the left most region on the Ib / Vbe chart.
as Vbe goes up, Ib goes up and the transistor goes into a linear region (where Ic vs. Ib is more linear).
as Ib continues to go up, beta goes down, Ic stops growing with Ib and the resistor goes into saturation.
and you can find the same regions in Ic vs. Vce chart as well.
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