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Enhance Triac Reliability Through Thermal Design

Sep 1, 2006 12:00 PM
By Nick Ham, Principal Applications Engineer, Bipolar Product Line, NXP Semiconductors, Hazel Grove,


Appliance applications illustrate how to perform the necessary thermal calculations using datasheet information supplied by the semiconductor vendor.

Click here for the enhanced PDF version of this article including diagrams and/or equations.


Triacs are used to control ac mains loads in home appliances, and commercial and industrial equipment. In the majority of applications, the triac will dissipate sufficient power to make thermal considerations necessary. The size of heatsinks must be calculated, and the maximum junction temperature must be predicted. These thermal design procedures must be followed to ensure long-term reliability of the application.

The thermal design requires several stages of calculation involving power, thermal resistance and temperature rise, as illustrated by several triac (and one silicon-controlled rectifier; SCR) application examples. These include a vacuum cleaner, refrigerator compressor, washing machine and power tool designs.

Calculating Triac Power

Triac power dissipation is influenced by the load current. Full sine-wave current (full-wave conduction) is assumed, as it presents the worst-case condition of maximum triac power dissipation. It also makes for the easiest calculations.

P = VO × ITRIACAVG + RS × ITRIACRMS2 (Eq. 1)

where P is the triac power (W), VO is the triac knee voltage (V), ITRIACAVG is the average load current (A), RS is the triac slope resistance (Ω) and ITRIACRMS is the root-mean-square (RMS) load current (A).

VO and RS are given in the NXP Semiconductors datasheets on the ITRIAC / VTRIAC curve. If the values are not available, they can be obtained from the ITRIAC / VTRIAC curve as described under the heading “Calculating VO and RS.” ITRIACAVG is calculated from the application's RMS load current using Eq. 2. (This assumes full-wave conduction and sinusoidal load current, which will give worst-case power dissipation.) The value for ITRIACRMS is measured in the application.

If half-wave conduction is necessary, as shown in Fig. 1 for a SCR, here's how to calculate ITRIACRMS and ITRIACAVG:


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