---- Wiadomość Oryginalna ----
Od: Darryl Gibson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Do: gEDA user mailing list <geda-user@moria.seul.org>
Data: 19 listopada 2006 18:22
Temat: Re: gEDA-user: LED in reverse

> Karel Kulhavy wrote:
> 
> > 
> > How is it possible that the LED withstands 20mA in forward and is destroyed 
> > by
> > 0.5mA in reverse? If it has say 1.5V forward and 5V reverse then the amount 
> > of
> > energy dissipated is greater in the forward case.
> 
When diode is reverse biased it may be locally overheated since the breakdown 
may occur only at small amount of the junction surface. This may destroy the 
diode, especially if it is high efficiency heterojunction/multilayer type. Very 
old diodes should be more resistant, but they are not designed to replace zener 
diodes.

I remember old red LED glowing on breakdown at about 15V. It was some 25 years 
ago and the diode was old, low efficiency type (~1mcd at 10mA).

Some time ago i read the warning for RF transistors that reverse biasing into  
breakdown of the E-B junction may significantly increase noise figure.

Wojciech Kazubski


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