Littelfuse Selecting An Appropriate Esd Device Application Note
Littelfuse Selecting An Appropriate Esd Device Application Note
Application Note:
Background
To IC
Figure 3
VCC
ESD
Entry
ESD
Entry
To IC
Electrical Characteristics
The majority of TVS/Zener ESD devices (Figure 2) are
specified with four main characteristics: ESD Level,
Reverse Standoff Voltage/Leakage, Capacitance, and
Breakdown Voltage. (There is a fifth characteristic that
is not as prevalent, which well discuss later.)
The ESD level only tells the designer what level of ESD
the device itself can withstand before damage occurs.
It gives no guarantee that the IC being protected will
survive the same level of ESD given on the devices
datasheet. Additionally, the breakdown voltage is
usually between 6V-8V at 1mA or 10mA. This only gives
the designer a data point to ensure the ESD device
remains inactive during normal circuit operation. It gives
no indication about the shunt resistance or clamping
voltage he/she can expect under an ESD strike. The
other two characteristics relate to the devices
parasitics and again offer no insight about the ESD
devices performance during an ESD transient.
Similarly, the rail clamp or diode array structure in Figure
3 is usually specified with the same four characteristics:
ESD Level, Reverse Standoff Voltage/Leakage,
Capacitance, and Breakdown Voltage. The breakdown
voltage of the internal TVS diode is usually given (i.e. 67V) but there is no mention how the steering diodes
plus TVS will behave or clamp during an ESD pulse.
In summary, the electrical characteristics mentioned
above provide characterization data on the ESD
protector only, and give the designer no information
about the effectiveness of the ESD device under stress.
We will revisit the electrical characteristics later but for
now let us examine some of the common plots/graphs
found in ESD device datasheets.
Characteristic Plots
A board designer can find many waveforms in an ESD
device datasheet. The following list only names a few
of the more common plots:
1
VLP = LP
di
dt
Figure 6
Dynamic Resistance
As mentioned earlier, the ultimate goal of a protection
device is to provide the lowest resistance shunt path to
GND under an ESD event. Ideally, all current would be
steered into the ESD device so that the protected IC
would not have to dissipate any of the energy input into
the circuit. Figure 5 depicts the ESD protection device
as a variable resistor which will be high impedance (low
leakage) during normal circuit operation and low
impedance during any EOS (Electrical Over Stress) or
ESD event.
Figure 5
To IC
ESD Entry
ESD Device
R DYNAMIC =
10.6V 9.5V
= 1.1
2 A 1A
Important Considerations
It is usually common practice to think of an ESD pulse in
terms of a current pulse. As can be seen in Figure 7, a
simplified model of an ESD generator, the voltage on
the capacitor (i.e. 8kV) is discharged through a 330
resistor into an ESD protection device. The ESD device
is typically <10 so the output of the ESD generator
more closely resembles a current pulse as opposed to a
voltage spike.
Conclusions
This paper has given an overview of a couple of ESD
topologies and explained the difficulties a designer may
face in choosing the correct ESD component for his/her
application. Time and again limiting criteria such a
parasitic capacitance, standoff voltage, ESD withstand,
etc. are not enough to sort through and vet all the
possible choices for a suitable protection device.
Figure 7
Citations/References:
1)
Table 1
IEC
Level
Voltage
(kV)
1
2
3
4
2
4
6
8
Peak
Current
10% (A)
7.5
15
22.5
30
Current
@ 30ns
(A)
4
8
12
16
Current
@ 60ns
(A)
2
4
6
8
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