DocumentCode
3554191
Title
Metal-oxide devices for rapid high current switching
Author
Gaule, Gerhart ; LaPlante, Paul ; Levy, Stephen ; Schneider, Sol
Author_Institution
U.S. Army Electronics Technology & Devices Laboratory, Fort Monmouth, New Jersey
Volume
22
fYear
1976
fDate
1976
Firstpage
279
Lastpage
282
Abstract
Prototypes of Metal-Oxide Threshold Switches (MOTS) have been built using bulk switching effects in chips of transition metal oxides, in most cases niobium-"dioxide", NbO2 (x≈2). A 3 mm diameter disc of niobium oxide can pass 100A, millisecond pulses without damage for hundreds of pulses. Chips mounted in microwave diode packages have capacitances of only a few pF, and leakage resistances ranging from the kiloohm to the megohm range in the "off" state. The "on" state occurs within 500 ps after the threshold voltage has been approached, and within a few (≈2) ns, the voltage across the device begins to drop to a "holding" voltage on the order of 20V. Threshold voltages can be varied during manufacture from 60V to the kV range for prototype MOTS. Due to their speed and low capacitance in the "off" state, MOTS devices are well suited as high current transient protectors in RF lines. Another application being studied with present prototype is the "sharpening" of pulses with undesirably long rise times for use in lasers and radars.
Keywords
Capacitance; Diodes; Manufacturing; Microwave devices; Niobium compounds; Packaging; Protection; Prototypes; Switches; Threshold voltage;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Electron Devices Meeting, 1976 International
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IEDM.1976.189038
Filename
1478750
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