π‘οΈ Protection Circuits (Diodes, Fuses, TVS)
Electronics are fragile. A wrong connection, a power surge, or an accidental mistake can destroy a circuit instantly.
Protection circuits are your first line of defense. They stop dangerous conditions before they reach sensitive components.
π‘ Spend βΉ5 on protection to save a βΉ2000 board.
β Why Protection Mattersβ
Without protection, circuits are vulnerable to:
- π Reverse battery connections
- β‘ Voltage spikes (lightning, inductive switching)
- π₯ Overcurrent due to shorts or wiring mistakes
- π§ββοΈ Static electricity (ESD)
- π©οΈ Power surges
Protection components are cheap, passive, and proven.
π Diodes β Reverse Voltage Protectionβ
A diode is a one-way valve for current.
Reverse Polarity Protectionβ
Place a diode in series with the power input.
- Correct polarity β diode conducts β circuit works
- Reverse polarity β diode blocks β circuit is safe
Example:β
Battery connected backward:
π Cost: a few cents
π Protection level: saves the entire circuit
Good designers assume someone will connect the battery wrong.
π₯ Fuses β Overcurrent Protectionβ
A fuse is a sacrificial safety device.
- Normal current β fuse stays intact
- Excess current β fuse melts β circuit opens
Instead of your PCB burning, the fuse dies.
How it Works:β
- Normal: current flows
- Short circuit:
Fuse Rating Ruleβ
Choose a fuse slightly higher than normal current.
Example:
- Normal current =
- Fuse rating =
β Too small β nuisance blowing
β Too large β no protection
β‘ TVS Diodes β Voltage Spike Protectionβ
TVS (Transient Voltage Suppressor) diodes clamp sudden voltage spikes.
What They Do:β
- Normal voltage β OFF
- Spike exceeds rating β ON (very fast)
- Voltage clamped to safe level
Example:β
- Spike from relay coil =
- Circuit max rating =
- TVS clamps spike to β
π’ Much faster than regular diodes
π’ Designed to absorb high surge energy
π Common Protection Combinationsβ
π Power Input Protectionβ
- Fuse β overcurrent protection
- Reverse diode β polarity protection
- TVS diode β surge protection
π Motors & Relay Coilsβ
- Freewheeling (flyback) diode across coil
- Optional TVS diode for severe spikes
When coil turns OFF:
Diode safely dissipates this energy.
π‘ Data & Communication Lines (USB, UART, RS485)β
- TVS diodes on signal lines
- Series resistors for current limiting
π§ββοΈ ESD (Static Discharge) Protectionβ
- TVS diodes on exposed pins
- Series resistors
- Solid ground plane to shunt energy
π§ͺ Real-World Exampleβ
You control a relay using an Arduino.
- Relay coil is inductive
- Switching generates high-voltage spikes
β No diode β Arduino dies
β
Diode across coil β system runs for years
One diode saves an entire microcontroller.
πΆ Why Beginners Must Careβ
Protection is often skipped β until something fails.
Experienced engineers:
- Always add protection
- Assume misuse
- Design for the real world
A circuit that works only on your desk is not a real product.
β Common Mistakesβ
- Forgetting reverse polarity protection
- No diode across relays or motors
- Using underrated fuses
- Ignoring ESD on connectors
- Assuming βit wonβt happenβ
It will happen.
β Basic Protection Checklistβ
β Power input:
- Reverse diode
- Fuse
- Input capacitor
β Inductive loads:
- Flyback diode
β External connectors:
- TVS diodes
- Series resistors
β High-voltage switching:
- Clamp sensitive nodes
π° Cost vs Benefitβ
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Protection parts | βΉ5ββΉ20 |
| Repair & debugging | Hours + frustration |
| Field failure | Reputation damage |
Protection is cheap insurance.
π The Bottom Lineβ
Protection circuits are not optional β they are essential.
- π Diodes stop reverse voltage
- π₯ Fuses stop overcurrent
- β‘ TVS diodes stop voltage spikes
Add protection by default, not as an afterthought.
Your circuits will:
- Last longer
- Survive real-world abuse
- Save time, money, and sanity