vthielen
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I need to (try-to) design electronics for 30-years lifespan continuous operation.
I had some trouble with zeners that failed in a couple of years time, even though they where only used at about 30% of specified power ratings at room temperature.
Does anybody else have similar experiance?
Might this have been down to a bad batch?
Does it help to chose a zener of higher power specification, or does this make it worse (larger surface so bigger chance of defects)?
The practical problem is that I need a low-power (50mW) 12V supply (for MCU) in a 220VAC appliance. I have 2 options:
1) using a commercial switching power PCB module supply like SPAC265FC
2) using a capacitor to get a small current from the 220VAC, and run that through a zener.
which would be the most reliable option?
I had some trouble with zeners that failed in a couple of years time, even though they where only used at about 30% of specified power ratings at room temperature.
Does anybody else have similar experiance?
Might this have been down to a bad batch?
Does it help to chose a zener of higher power specification, or does this make it worse (larger surface so bigger chance of defects)?
The practical problem is that I need a low-power (50mW) 12V supply (for MCU) in a 220VAC appliance. I have 2 options:
1) using a commercial switching power PCB module supply like SPAC265FC
2) using a capacitor to get a small current from the 220VAC, and run that through a zener.
which would be the most reliable option?