SLLSFO2B December 2022 – March 2024 THVD2410V , THVD2412V , THVD2450V , THVD2452V
PRODUCTION DATA
The bus pins of the THVD24xxV transceivers include on-chip ESD protection against ±16-kV HBM and ±15-kV IEC 61000-4-2 contact discharge for half-duplex devices ±8-kV for full-duplex devices. The International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) ESD test is far more severe than the HBM ESD test. The 50% higher charge capacitance, C(S), and 78% lower discharge resistance, R(D), of the IEC model produce significantly higher discharge currents than the HBM model. As stated in the IEC 61000-4-2 standard, contact discharge is the preferred transient protection test method.
The on-chip implementation of IEC ESD protection significantly increases the robustness of equipment. Common discharge events occur because of human contact with connectors and cables. Designers may choose to implement protection against longer duration transients, typically referred to as surge transients.
EFTs are generally caused by relay-contact bounce or the interruption of inductive loads. Surge transients often result from lightning strikes (direct strike or an indirect strike which induce voltages and currents), or the switching of power systems, including load changes and short circuit switching. These transients are often encountered in industrial environments, such as factory automation and power-grid systems.
Figure 8-5 compares the pulse-power of the EFT and surge transients with the power caused by an IEC ESD transient. The left side of the diagram shows the relative pulse-power for a 0.5-kV surge transient and 4-kV EFT transient, both of which exceeds the 10-kV ESD transient visible in the lower-left corner. 500-V surge transients are representative of events that may occur in factory environments in industrial and process automation.
The right side of the diagram shows the pulse power of a 6-kV surge transient, relative to the same 0.5-kV surge transient. 6-kV surge transients are may occur in power generation and power-grid systems.
For surge transients, high-energy content is characterized by long pulse duration and slow decaying pulse power. The electrical energy of a transient that is dumped into the internal protection cells of a transceiver is converted into thermal energy, which heats and destroys the protection cells, thus destroying the transceiver. Figure 8-6 shows the large differences in transient energies for single ESD, EFT, surge transients, and an EFT pulse train that is commonly applied during compliance testing.