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4hv.org :: Forums :: General Science and Electronics
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sos diode

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cedric
Tue Dec 14 2010, 11:52AM Print
cedric Registered Member #2941 Joined: Fri Jun 25 2010, 08:08AM
Location:
Posts: 143
does any body have a clue where I can find them ?
also ,are they produce commercially or only by small company and university for there own need?
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Sulaiman
Tue Dec 14 2010, 01:37PM
Sulaiman Registered Member #162 Joined: Mon Feb 13 2006, 10:25AM
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 3140
What's a sos diode?

Is it like a pin diode?
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Ash Small
Tue Dec 14 2010, 01:50PM
Ash Small Registered Member #3414 Joined: Sun Nov 14 2010, 05:05PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4245
Google returns 'Solid State Opening Switch Diode'.

EDIT: OR 'Silicon Opening Switch Diode'

OR 'Silicon On Saphire Diode'
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cedric
Tue Dec 14 2010, 01:58PM
cedric Registered Member #2941 Joined: Fri Jun 25 2010, 08:08AM
Location:
Posts: 143
sos diode stand for semiconductor opening switch ,it's some sort of high voltage version of the srd (step recoveries diode),they are use in nanosecond and picoseconds pulse generator,unfortunately except few company like fid technology,who use them in there generator they are not wide spread.my work is related to nanosecond pulse discharge so I want to build a generator for recherches purposes...
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Steve Conner
Tue Dec 14 2010, 01:58PM
Steve Conner Registered Member #30 Joined: Fri Feb 03 2006, 10:52AM
Location: Glasgow, Scotland
Posts: 6706
It's a high voltage step-recovery diode used for pulse compression.

The Russians make them, or you can connect a load of old, slow diodes in series, shove way too much current through them, and hope for the best.
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cedric
Tue Dec 14 2010, 02:02PM
cedric Registered Member #2941 Joined: Fri Jun 25 2010, 08:08AM
Location:
Posts: 143
Steve McConner wrote ...

It's a high voltage step-recovery diode used for pulse compression.

The Russians make them, or you can connect a load of old, slow diodes in series, shove way too much current through them, and hope for the best.


believe me I have been thinking about it but hum.. I want to stay professional smile
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Ash Small
Tue Dec 14 2010, 02:04PM
Ash Small Registered Member #3414 Joined: Sun Nov 14 2010, 05:05PM
Location: UK
Posts: 4245
I found this:

Robert L. Druce, Hugh C. Kirbie, and Mark A. Newton
Light-Weight DC to Very High Voltage DC Converter
U.S. Patent 5,774,348
June 30, 1998
A dc-dc converter capable of generating output of 100 kilovolts without a transformer composed of a silicon-opening-switch (SOS) diode connected to allow a charging current from a capacitor to flow into an inductor. When a specified amount of charge has flowed through the SOS diode, it opens up abruptly, and the consequential collapsing field of the inductor causes a voltage and current reversal that is steered into a load capacitor by an output diode. A switch across the series combination of the capacitor, inductor, and SOS diode closes to periodically reset the SOS diode by inducing a forward-biased current.


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cedric
Tue Dec 14 2010, 02:13PM
cedric Registered Member #2941 Joined: Fri Jun 25 2010, 08:08AM
Location:
Posts: 143
yep ,a lot of recherches are made in using them in generator ,they are fancy and efficient.

Link2

Link2

Link2

those three link to pdf on the subject and there is dozen more,
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cedric
Tue Dec 14 2010, 02:22PM
cedric Registered Member #2941 Joined: Fri Jun 25 2010, 08:08AM
Location:
Posts: 143
Ash Small wrote ...

Google returns 'Solid State Opening Switch Diode'.

EDIT: OR 'Silicon Opening Switch Diode'

OR 'Silicon On Saphire Diode'

I think that silicon on safir is different technology mainly for transistor...
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Pinky's Brain
Tue Dec 14 2010, 08:35PM
Pinky's Brain Registered Member #2901 Joined: Thu Jun 03 2010, 01:25PM
Location:
Posts: 837
Oops, nevermind ... thought SOS == DSRD, but they are two different things.

It seems to me that patents have killed the commercial applications of the SOS diodes for the moment ... just not interesting to spend the money developing them commercially until the patents expire.

The Russians developed them ... the Americans have patents on all the patently obvious applications.

From "All-solid-state repetitive semiconductor opening switch-based short pulse generator" :
wrote ...
The SOS is the key component of pulsed power generator based on SOS. Two pieces of parallel SOS-180–4 are used as the final pulse compression unit in SPG100. The SOS-180–4 is manufactured at Institute of Electrophysics in Russian Ekaterinburg,
So you could contact them, unlikely to be cheap though.
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