>I am planning to build a high voltage power supply for a tube project, and
>I need to create a reference voltage as high as possible
>to compare with an output of ~ 400V.  Zener diodes only seem to go up to
>around 40V, and I was wondering whether it was possible to reverse bias an
>ordinary diode with a breakdown voltage in the vicinity of 400V to create
>a reference voltage.  If I run a (small) constant current backwards
>through the diode (probably in the order of micro amps), will this produce
>a consistent output, and will the diode be able to withstand this
>treatment for long?


It will probably work, but I doubt that the stability of the voltage will
be good enough.  If you need real stability in a power supply I would
suggest a solid state reference diode that is something like 7 V.  This
would be compared to the divided-down output voltage.  The 7 V reference
diodes are very stable with temperature.  This, and a set of stable and
accurate divider resistors, will get you a better overall supply.  the
other thing you can do is bypass the upper divider resistor with a small
capacitor.  This effectively provides a much higher feedback gain for
ac, cutting the ripple down significantly.

-- phil


Date: 17 Sep 1998 04:02:19 GMT

Original Subject: Re: Diode back conduction


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