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Reverse Polarity Protection for Open-collector Output

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eepty

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I am designing a MCU controlled open-collector digital output (MCU control the base of transistor as a switch, output low). The output is assumed max. 26Vdc, 85mA.



As transistor has max. reverse Vce of about 5V, I would like to add a reverse polarity protection for the output. In the other words, my device has no problem even the user collected the plus and negative wire wrongly.



I have considered some solutions:

1. Simply add a forward bias diode in series with the output. The problem is that it will drop ~0.7V at the output.



2. Add N-channel mosfet at the low side of the output so that the mosfet will switch off when the polarity is reversed. The problem is the Vgs is not large enough to switch the mosfet fully on (When the transistor switch on, the collector will pull to ~0.1V)



3. Add a reverse bias diode parallel to the output. The problem is it will short circuit when the output polarity reversed. The diode will burn eventually.


reverse_polarity1.jpg



Could you suggest other solution?



Thank you.
 

3. Add a reverse bias diode parallel to the output. The problem is it will short circuit when the output polarity reversed. The diode will burn eventually.
Which problem? If you connect positive voltage with no load resistor, the transitor will burn, if you connect voltage > 30V, the TVS diode too.

It's generally assumed that an O.C. output would be only connected to a current limited source, otherwise you'll need extensive protection means. Possible, but beyond the scope of the original question, I think. Circuit 3 can be simplified to a single unipolar TVS diode.
 

1. Simply add a forward bias diode in series with the output. The problem is that it will drop ~0.7V at the output.



Could you suggest other solution?



Thank you.

Can you consider a Schottky diode? An ubiquitous 1N5818 will have a forward drop of 0.33V (worst case, usually lower) at you maximum current
 

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