Electronic – MOSFET Driver Failure

drivermosfet

I'm having trouble with TC4421A MOSFET drivers in a new PWM DC Heater design blowing. The 12V power supply used during testing is capable of 25A. While doing my initial testing, I started off with higher value load resistors with a 5 kHz PWM duty cycle of 25%. I successfully tested the design at up to 4A. That's when the TC4421A driver failed and literally caught fire. The MOSFET was not damaged. The PWM is generated by a PIC with a Vdd of 5V. My test setup had approx 2 feet of wire connecting the dc supply. Not the most ideal setup, but I didn't expect the driver to fail. The P-Chan MOSFET is rated at 80A and the driver is rated at 9A peak. Also, the 100 ohm gate resistor was not damaged nor was the PIC. I'm hesitating with any further testing until I at least make some attempt to keep the driver from blowing up. My ultimate goal is to be able to deliver up to 100W into a resistive load by varying the PWM duty cycle.

Thanks in advance for any advice.

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Best Answer

Quite possibly it's the two feet of wire that is forming an inductor of somewhere between 100nH and a couple of uH depending how your wire is laid across the bench.

With a pulse of 4A and 1uH the stored energy is 8 uJ and if this was dumped into the 4.7 uF capacitor when the load was turned off, the terminal voltage would rise a couple of volts BUT if the capacitor were an electrolytic with maybe an ESR of one ohm you could be starting to see voltages on the line to the chip that destroy it. The TC4421 has 20V as its maximum supply voltage.

Try twisting the power wires together and maybe also try increasing the capacitance.

Looking at your circuit, you have a 2 ohm load so the peak currents would be 6A and this of course means more voltage on the 4u7 capacitor so that would be more like a 3V glitch on the supply taking it to 15 volts. It's getting close! Each time the voltage gets bigger the current taken by the load gets bigger and maybe there is some point when this spirals out of control?


EDIT

My first test was with a short across the 100 ohm gate resistor with the though that the relatively high gate capacitance might keep the driver from switching the MOSFET fast enough. That test ended up blowing both the MOSFET and the driver.

The MOSFET in your schematic is rated at 16V gate-source voltage max: -

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With the ringing and glitching as I've explained above, this is the likely failure mechanism for the MOSFET - puncturing the gate through to the source will be also pretty fatal for the driver too.