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I am building a wind powered water heater. The system has a wind turbine that turns a brushless DC motor as a generator. The 3 phase output from the BLDC is rectified and passed to a heater load. A MSOFET is used to control the current and so the generator torque. Eventually I want to be able to modulate the current to control the speed of the rotor to get optimum tip speed ratio. I need advice on how to add flyback protection to this type of circuit.

The basic circuit is shown below. If the power supply was a simple voltage source I would place a diode between the drain and point "A" on the circuit to protect the FET from voltage spikes due to the inductive energy in the load. However in this case there is significant inductance in the left hand side of the circuit and adding a flyback diode for the load does not protect the FET from the energy stored in the generator coils. If I connect the diode to point "B" instead of "A" then the FET is ineffective, current always flows. Connecting the diode to anywhere inside the rectifier or generator is not possible and nonsensical anyway. What is the proper way to add flyback protection to this circuit?

enter image description here

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  • \$\begingroup\$ There are MOSFETs that will drive this load, you need to look at the UIS (avalanche) rating. \$\endgroup\$
    – Gil
    Commented Aug 7, 2021 at 1:55
  • \$\begingroup\$ @Gil I was planning to use a MOSFET so I knew that there are suitable MOSFETs out there. Can you explain what you mean regarding the UIS rating? \$\endgroup\$
    – Hubert B
    Commented Aug 7, 2021 at 9:15
  • \$\begingroup\$ It might help if you could add some more info to your diagram showing where everything is located and how long the wiring runs are between components. I am not clear on why your heater load will be particularly inductive (unless it is due to a long wiring run), and I would think you would want a very large filter capacitor near your rectifier and probably another slightly smaller one from A to B. The flyback placement seems fine. \$\endgroup\$
    – user57037
    Commented Aug 7, 2021 at 17:35
  • \$\begingroup\$ Instead of MPPTracking electronically, you can go "wind energy" → mechanical → hydrodynamic → thermal without detour to electric. The power increases with the cube of air speed on both sides. Or cut the electric route extremely short rotating a magnet an immersed conducting cylinder, but I guess that's just quadratic in speed. \$\endgroup\$
    – greybeard
    Commented Jan 2, 2023 at 7:38

2 Answers 2

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UIS = Unclamped Inductive Spike, some now call it Unclamped Inductive Switching, same thing. This is the transient when power to an inductor is switched off. The inductor reverses polarity the voltage will rise until the energy contained in the inductor is dissipated. An example of that test circuit is shown below. You will find a similar schematic on the MOSFET data sheet with the pertinent details they tested to. We started testing for this in the early 80's for the automotive market. I believe Siliconix was the first to add this to there data sheets. What we saw was UIS devices are basically unlimited in avalanche current until the junction temperature exceeds the intrinsic temperature of approximately 420 degrees C, process dependent, or the bond wires fry. During breakdown we were seeing the device behaving like it was 2X RDSon. Note: secondary breakdown then occurs independent of the parasitic BJT.

enter image description here

From: Ti Understanding MOSFET data sheets, Part 1 - UIS/avalanche ratings. "The unclamped inductive switching (UIS) rating has proven to be a useful parameter since becoming prevalent in MOSFET data sheets in the mid-1980s. While repetitive avalanching of the FET is not recommended in actual applications, engineers have learned to use this metric to avoid designing-in weaker devices that might cause issues. Devices with particularly weak UIS capability or heavy degradation over temperature (>30 percent from 25°C to 125°C) should raise a red flag, as these devices will be more susceptible to failing. Designers should also be weary of manufacturers playing games with the ratings to exaggerate their FET’s avalanche capability. Not all devices with the same label will support the same amount of UIS, check the data sheet to be sure. Also note during UIS it is heating the junction, to much and it fails.

UIS testing is conducted with a test circuit like the one seen in Figure 1. A supply voltage is applied across the FET while it is turned off and the device is checked for leakage. As the FET is turned on, the inductor current steadily increases. When the desired current is achieved, the FET is switched off and the Ldi/dt voltage across the FET swings above the MOSFET’s breakdown, activating its intrinsic parasitic-bipolar transistor and effectively avalanching the FET. This test is repeated, ramping up the current incrementally, until destruction of the device occurs as evidenced by a failing of the preliminary leakage test."

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What is the proper way to add flyback protection to this circuit?

In the same position as you depicted it. Use a fast witching diode, like Schottky if the switching frequency is high.

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