N-Channel MOSFET pull-down ....

bertus

Joined Apr 5, 2008
22,276
Hello,

The Vgsth in the datasheet gives the voltage where the mosfet just starts to conduct at 250 μA.
For the IRFZ44 this voltage is between 2 and 4 Volts.

IRFZ44_vgsth.png

As @jpanhalt said, you can only determine whether the mosfet is really on with a load.

Bertus
 

ericgibbs

Joined Jan 29, 2010
18,841
Motor supply voltage is from a 12-cell NiMH battery, 14.4V nominal, but a full charge should see 16.8V. Supply current is about 3A at 50% duty cycle.
hi @daba1955
I read your post as showing it was driving the final load, please confirm.?
E
 
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Irving

Joined Jan 30, 2016
3,878
So your rise and fall times tell you it's not being driven hard enough.

Although the MOSFET isn't getting warm you're losing approx 0.4Wh of capacity in the transition.

Your scope is showing a low of -200mV because that's the body diode of the MOSFET catching the back emf of the motor. You need to measure the actual low voltage at the middle of the ON phase to determine on resistance. Also, how did you measure the 3A, with a multimeter? If so the real peak current at 50% duty cycle is 3/.7 = 4.3A.
 

Irving

Joined Jan 30, 2016
3,878
The scope is telling us rise & fall of 2 and 8uS. For that MOSFET the actual rise and fall times with 100ohm gate resistor as per my earlier post should be around 600-700nS. It's not a major problem, but it's not as efficient as it should/could be - the 1k resistor is far too big, even a 270 is overkill. Whether that loss is material is up to the TS, but for battery powered kit we should always endeavour to minimise losses, it's just good engineering practice. Plus I'm offering educational insight based on 50y experience.
 

Thread Starter

daba1955

Joined Apr 27, 2019
188
To evaluate whether it is fully on, you need a load. Without a load, voltage doesn't mean much. With a load, the voltage drop will allow you to calculate RDS(on). Noticed you say supply current. If that is the current through the load you can calculate RDS(on).
The motor was indeed connected, and spinning about 50% speed. The motor drives an offset spinning weight, which is why the current is so high, compared to a motor with no load on it, when the current is less than 250mA. The motor is about the same size and type as used in many hand tools, drills, etc. That was the supply current, yes, but the rest of the circuit current is negligable. I am somewhat surprised at the cleanliness of the waveform. With no mechanical load on the motor it is not so clean.....

2020-08-20_120916.jpg

Yes, it is designed to vibrate, but that's all I can say about the application, as it is a commercial product in development.
 

ericgibbs

Joined Jan 29, 2010
18,841
hi daba,
Do you have the time to re-run a short test, showing the waveform on the MOSFET Drain?
Which point in the circuit do you have the scope ground connected.?
E
 

Thread Starter

daba1955

Joined Apr 27, 2019
188
hi daba,
Did you resolve the difference in the PWM versus measured frequencies?

E
Yes I have. There are different "default" frequencies for pairs of PWM pins. I just read the specs wrongly ....

D3 and D11 : 490.2 Hz
D5 and D6 : 976.56 Hz
D9 and D10 : 490.2 Hz

Since I am using pin D3, 490.2 is correct.
 

Thread Starter

daba1955

Joined Apr 27, 2019
188
hi daba,
Do you have the time to re-run a short test, showing the waveform on the MOSFET Drain?
Which point in the circuit do you have the scope ground connected.?
E
I had the scope ground connected to GND, and the probe on the Motor -ve terminal, therefore directly across Drain to Source.
 

Thread Starter

daba1955

Joined Apr 27, 2019
188
The IRFZ44N is not ideal, but it will work depending on circumstance.

The key parameter is Vgs(th), the threshold voltage. That is spec'd as min 2, max 4v. Vgs(th) is the voltage the gate must see for the MOSFET to just turn on and pass the spec'd current.

View attachment 215128

For that device, its 250uA. However, that's worst case, many devices will be around 2.5 - 3v. Vgs(th) is better thought of as the voltage below which the the device is guaranteed to be OFF.

It you look at the chart 1 below, you can see that Vgs = 4.5v is the lowest voltage at which the manufacturer will guarantee that it is actually ON. But its not a hard edge. It is usably ON at a lower voltage, with limitations...

Chart 2 shows the transfer characteristic in its linear region, as the gate voltage changes. Although the line stops at Vgs = 4.5 because thats the spec, it clearly carries on down to Id = 250uA at 4v or below. So for an Arduino output at 4.2v (guaranteed on 5v and 20mA current source) there's a good chance that the bulk of devices will be ON and capable of sustaining around an amp or more of drain current and although the on-resistance might be 10x its spec'd 17.5mOhm, it will only be dissipating 0.175ohm x 1A x 1A = 0.175W and that's a rise of only 11degC over ambient. So not ideal, but useable. Counter-intuitatively as the die temperature rises the threshold voltage actually drops, making it easier to turn on!
With my 1K series, 10K pull-down, I would have been hitting the gate with 4.5454 V from my arduino 5V output.

With 100R series, and 47K pull-down that will go up to 4.989 V, clearly giving me a better margin, and I'm guessing the gate charge time will be less ....

I'm thinking that to make any sense my measurements would have to be done with a linear static load, rather than the spinning motor. 3A at 16.8V ! Now where did I put those 5.6R 50W resistors .....
 

ericgibbs

Joined Jan 29, 2010
18,841
hi,
A point to consider, your results for a Resistive load versus an Inductive load [motor] may differ.
E

BTW: I would like to see the Resistive load waveforms.
 
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Thread Starter

daba1955

Joined Apr 27, 2019
188
hi,
A point to consider, your results for a Resistive load versus an Inductive load [motor] may differ.
E

BTW: I would like to see the Resistive load waveforms.
Can't oblige, eric, nothing suitable, unless I use a car headlight bulb ?

Someone asked for a re-test, I've run it again, but this time with the scope Y-gain set as high as it will go ....

2020-08-20_131447.jpg
 

ericgibbs

Joined Jan 29, 2010
18,841
hi,
Many thanks for the results.
Did the scope show rise/fall of 1us and 4uS when the full swing is displayed on the scope [ with the motor]

I guess you know that the cold current of a tungsten lamp can be 5 to 10 times higher than it normal running current.
E
 

Thread Starter

daba1955

Joined Apr 27, 2019
188
hi,
Many thanks for the results.
Did the scope show rise/fall of 1us and 4uS when the full swing is displayed on the scope [ with the motor]

I guess you know that the cold current of a tungsten lamp can be 5 to 10 times higher than it normal running current.
E
Rise/Fall was 2uS/8uS with the motor (Post #17).

My sketch starts the motor at a minimum speed I have set, and then I can increase/decrease at will (4-button transmitter). I didn't took the bulb past 50% duty cycle, didn't want it getting too hot, and I didn't notice the supply current, which I read off my bench power supply.

So I did it again : 2.5 A at about 50% duty cycle. Its a 12V 55W bulb.

I let it run for several minutes, the FET got "warm", but not too hot to touch or hold.
 
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