Equalising HEXFETs

When experimenting with audio output  stages featuring multiple HEXFETs it quickly  becomes apparent that the total power is  not divided equally among the individual transistors.

The reason for this lies in the wide part-to-part variations in gate-source voltage, which  in the case of the IRFP240 (or IRFP9240) can  be from 2 V to 4 V. Source resistors in the  region of 0.22 Ω as commonly seen in amplifier circuits (see example circuit extract) help  to counteract this, but usually not to a sufficient extent.

Equalising HEXFETs Circuit

One possible solution to this problem is to ‘select’ the transistors used so that their gate-source voltages match as closely as possible.  For building prototypes or very short production runs this is feasible, but requires additional manual effort in testing the components, and, of course, more transistors mus be ordered than will finally be used.

The circuit idea shown here allows differences  in gate-source voltage between pairs of transistors to be compensated for by the addition of trimmer potentiometers: the idea has been tested in simulation using Simetrix. The  second circuit extract shows the required  changes.

Author : Alfred Rosenkränzer - Copyright : Elektor

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