Voltage Spike (Surge)

You might also like

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 1

The switching on and switching off spikes are two different things.

When a motor is switched on its coils have a very low inductance, so they act
as very low value resistors. This means that you get a surge of current when a
motor is first switched on. This can cause a voltage spike on the supply as the
supply tries to cope with the high current being drawn. The surge in current
can also inductively couple onto parallel wires or PCB tracks, causing voltage
spikes on them.

Switch-off spikes are different. You know how capacitance is the tendency of a
component to store electric charge? Well, you can think of inductance as the
tendency of a component to maintain an electric current.

Suppose you have an inductor with one end connected to ground and the
other connected to a power supply which is putting 1A through it. What
happens when you cut off the supply is that the inductor still "wants" to have
1A running through it. The voltage at the top end of the inductor will go
negative as it tries to draw current out of whatever it is connected to. For a
perfect inductor with its terminals open-circuit, the voltage it will generate is
theoretically infinite. In practice of course inductors are never perfect, but you
can still get many thousands of volts out of an inductor just by putting a current
through it then shutting off the current.

The spikes of current an inductor can create can easily destroy


semiconductors. That's why, when you see an inductive load like a relay coil,
there is nearly always a diode wired in reverse polarity across it. The diode
acts as a path for the current when the load is switched off, thus preventing
the voltage spike.

You might also like