Been looking into ss rectifiers, and found the following topology in master blencowe's book
But I'm wondering why doesn't (or does?) the current flow as shown in the poorly drawn schematic attached?
Wisdom will be well appreciated

Moderators: pompeiisneaks, Colossal

It would certainly need a significant transient to couple through the power transformer, and perhaps be time-aligned with worst-case voltage waveform position, and then for one diode to enter avalanche conditions such that its avalanche induced increase in current also flows through the other diode whilst it's transitioning states but perhaps has a lower voltage across it (but still has voltage headroom to stay below avalanche conditions). Not sure if I've seen that mechanism exposed in a detailed way.R.G. wrote: ↑Wed Oct 15, 2025 10:39 pm if the diodes in series don't have matching turn-off times, the faster of the two turns off before the other one does and is left holding off all the reverse voltage until its series buddy diode turns off too. So the faster turn-off diode can fail in reverse breakdown over time from the transients.
The need for snubbing comes from the semiconductor physics of ordinary rectifiers. Rectifiers have to have large-area junctions for the currents, and largish depth depletion regions to hold off high voltages. That volume gets filled with charge carriers when the rectifier is conducting, and has to all be drained out before the newly-empty depletion region/junction will support reverse voltage. When the depletion region empties, the junction will abruptly stop conducting. Abruptly, much like slamming a door. It's a fast, HARD turn-off. UF type diodes ar both fast (don't have the same got-to-empty-it-all effect) and soft (slowly recovers voltage-supporting ability, not all at once) so they don't make the brick-wall turn offs that couple out as sub-microsecond transients. They don't excite ringing and RF nearly as much because the slammed-door doesn't happen.martin manning wrote: ↑Wed Oct 15, 2025 11:33 pm My understanding from something i read a while ago is that UF-type diodes do not need snubber caps, but I'm not sure if the voltage balancing effect would still be desirable.
Yes, it does take a chain of events. I wasn't thinking of a power line transient coming through the transformer so much as the slam-and-ring of one of the diodes in the rectifiers slamming off and letting the wire inductances ring. As much as anything else, I was mentally exploring what could happen with the rectifiers themselves causing transients. That's automatically aligned with the worst-case voltage position, or nearly so since the diodes all act right at the peaks of the waveforms.trobbins wrote: ↑Thu Oct 16, 2025 5:37 am It would certainly need a significant transient to couple through the power transformer, and perhaps be time-aligned with worst-case voltage waveform position, and then for one diode to enter avalanche conditions such that its avalanche induced increase in current also flows through the other diode whilst it's transitioning states but perhaps has a lower voltage across it (but still has voltage headroom to stay below avalanche conditions). Not sure if I've seen that mechanism exposed in a detailed way.