Originally posted by xee2
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discharge current associated with the Gate Capacitance.
To turn the MosFet "ON" the Gate Capacitance must be
charged to a voltage higher than its Threshold rating and
to turn it "Fully ON" will generally need to be charged to
10 Volts. There are exceptions in that some are "L"
or Logic devices which will turn nearly fully on with 5 Volts
of Gate charge.
To turn the MosFet "OFF" the Gate Capacitance must be
discharged to 0 Volts.
Internal to the MosFet is a protective diode between the
Gate and Source leads to prevent the Gate Voltage from
going too high (about 18~20 Volts) or from reversing polarity.
It is very difficult to drive a MosFet with any appreciable
series resistance in the Gate connection which would
excessively prolong the Gate Capacitance charge/discharge
time constant. A Gate resistance of about 50 Ohms is often
used at high frequencies to limit Gate current magnitude and
to dissipate power that would otherwise have to be dissipated
within the Gate Driver chip.
For best performance a MosFet should be transformer driven,
with adequate protection against polarity reversal, or driven
by a Gate Driver Chip. It is also possible to use discrete
transistors configured as a Totem-Pole for the needed
Pull-up and Pull-down of the Gate input.
Once you learn the "tricks" of getting the MosFet to
respond to its input signal you'll be able to make it do
everything that you want.
The higher the Drain Current rating of the MosFet the
higher the Gate Capacitance. High Gate Capacitance
demands more charge/discharge current to turn the
MosFet ON and OFF.
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