Hi,
We want to do phase cutting to control water heater power from the AC mains input.
The mains switching devices will be thyristors. It must be thyristors because if there is a short
then the thyristor can break the short circuit current. A FET (back to back FETs as its AC) cannot do this without blowing up.
Even an IGBT would struggle.
Also, just switching a FET off when its in a mains circuit, and is carrying 40A, is very dodgy...the turn-off
loss's (overlap of voltage and current), will likely blow the FET to bits.
Therefore, we must do a Thyristor circuit, but will short out the thyristor with a FET once it starts conducting. (To reduce the conduction loss)
We will keep gate current flowing into the thyristor, so that when the FET turns OFF, the thyristor will immediately conduct
the current...then the thyristor can do the turn off "Properly".
Do you think this i a good idea?
(Its like a synchronous thyristor drive)