SCR Principles And Circuits

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Basic operation and practical application circuits for SCRs.

An SCR (Silicon Controlled Rectifier) is a controllable medium- to high-power self-latching solid-state DC power switch. This article explains its basic operation and shows some practical ways of using it.

SCR basics

An SCR is a four-layer PNPN silicon semiconductor device. It has three external terminals (anode, gate, and cathode) and uses the alternative symbols of Figure 1(a) and has the transistor equivalent circuit of Figure 1(b)Figure 2 shows the basic way of using the SCR as a DC switch, with the anode positive relative to the cathode, and the SCR controlled via its gate. The basic characteristics of the SCR can be understood with the aid of these diagrams, as follows:

  1. When power is first applied to the SCR by closing S1 in Figure 2, the SCR is 'blocked' and acts (between anode and cathode) like an open switch. This action is implied by Figure 1(b), i.e., Q2's base current is derived from Q1 collector, and Q1's base current is derived from either Q2 collector or the gate terminal; in the latter case, no base current is available, so both transistors are cut off, and only a small leakage current flows from anode to cathode.
  2. The SCR can be turned on and made to act like a forward-biased silicon rectifier by briefly applying gate current to it via S2; the SCR quickly (in a few microseconds) self-latches into the on state under this condition, and stays on even when the gate drive is removed. This action is implied by Figure 1(b); the initial gate current turns Q1 on, and Q1's collector current turns Q2 on, and Q2's collector current then holds Q1 on even when the gate drive is removed: a 'saturation' potential of 1V or so is generated between the anode and cathode under the on condition.
  3. Only a brief pulse of gate current is needed to drive the SCR on. Once the SCR has self-latched, it can only be turned off again by briefly reducing its anode current below a certain 'minimum holding current' value (typically, a few milliamps); in AC applications, turn-off occurs automatically at the zero-crossing point in each half-cycle.
  4. Considerable current gain is available between the gate and anode of the SCR, and low values of gate current (typically a few mA or less) can control high values of anode current (up to tens of amps). Most SCRs have anode ratings of hundreds of volts. The SCR gate characteristics are similar to those of a transistor base-emitter junction (see Figure 1(b)).
  5. Internal capacitance (a few pF) exists between the SCR's anode and gate, and a sharply rising voltage appearing on the anode can cause enough signal breakthrough to the gate to trigger the SCR on. This 'rate effect' turn-on can be caused by supply-line transients, etc. Rate-effect problems can be overcome by wiring a C-R smoothing network between the anode and cathode, to limit the rate of rise to a safe value.122
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