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Solid State Relais

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Solid State Relais


by Jan Hamer

Solid State Relays are available almost everywhere these days, however they remain very expensive.
Therefore, your efforts to build one yourself pays off. Especially since it only needs a handful components
and the circuitry is simple and straightforward.

A Solid State Relay is actually not a relay at all. There is no 'relay' present, just the electronics which
does the switching. It works the same way as a relay; you can use a low voltage to switch a higher
voltage or better. This 'relay' is positioned in between one of the 115/220V AC wires although it is
common practice to leave the neutral wire the way it is and switch the phase or hot wire. See diagram
for 'LOAD'.
As long as thereis no dc voltage present (left side of circuit diagram), the phototransistor within the
TIL111 blocks and so no current is present. To make sure of that the base of the TIL111 is fed to the
emitter (e) via an 1M resistor. This method prevents the base of transistor BC547B going low and thus
remains biased 'on'. The collector is thus also low, and consequently the gate (g) of the TIC106M
thyristor, which remains in the 'off' state. Through the 4-diode bridge rectifier circuit there is no
current, except for the miniscule basis and collector current of the BC547B which is not enough over
the 330 ohm resistor to switch on the TIC226M Triac. The current through the 'Load' is thus very very
small.
With a certain input voltage, say 5 volt, the diode inside the TIL111 lights up and activates the
phototransistor. The voltage drop over the 1Meg ohm resistor in series with the 22K resistor increases
to a certain set point that it will block the BC547B transistor. The collector current at that moment will
follow that of the AC voltage to a certain value which will activate the Thyristor. This creates a
sufficient large voltage drop over the 330 ohm resistor to switch the Triac 'on'. The voltage over the
Triac at that moment is only a couple volts so that the practically the whole 115/220 AC voltage is over

28/01/2016 12:37

Solid State Relais

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http://www.sentex.ca/~mec1995/circ/solidstate.html

the 'Load'.
The Triac is protected via the 100nF capacitor and the 47 ohm resistor, the 100nF capacitor over the
330 ohm resistor is to prevent unwanted biasing of the Triac created by small spikes. To create the
posibility to switch this circuit with different voltages, a FET BF256A has been added. This FET acts
like a current-source by means of connecting the source (s) with the gate (g). What this means is that
this FET determines the current through the TIL111, no matter what voltage is put on the input (within
certain tolerances ofcourse). The diode 1N4148 is to protect the circuit in case of polarity reversal.
(Tony: The TIL111 is a so called 'optoisolator' with an NPN output and can be replaced with a NTE3042)
A good point of a circuit like this is the seperation of the DC and AC voltages, so this circuit could be
used in a variety of applications, up to approximately 1.5 KiloWatt, if you mount the Triac on a large
cooling-rib.
The 'M' indicator noted on the Triac means it is a 600volt type, a 'D' stands for 400volt. So make sure
you go for the M type.
(Tony: The NTE replacements for this circuit are 600volt types which is more than sufficient for our
110/115VAC.) Also, if you decide to make a pcb for this circuit, to create sufficient space between the
AC lines and don't make these AC tracks too narrow.
Published & Translated from Dutch into English with permission of Jan Hamer, The Netherlands.
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Page Copyright 2002 - Tony van Roon

28/01/2016 12:37

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