Diode Power Loss Calculator — Conduction Loss, Switching Loss, Junction Temperature | CalcEngines
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Diode Power Loss Calculator

Calculate conduction loss, switching loss, junction temperature, and heatsink requirements for Si, Schottky, SiC, and GaN diodes. Includes rectifier topology comparison and live thermal visualisation.

Diode Power Loss Calculator
Conduction Loss  ·  Switching Loss  ·  Junction Temp  ·  Heatsink  ·  Rectifier  ·  Diode Types
LIVE
Diode Type Preset
Operating Parameters
V
A
A
V
Switching Parameters
kHz
ns
%
°C
Thermal Parameters
°C/W
°C/W
°C/W
Formulas
Conduction Loss
Pcond = Vf × Iavg
Forward voltage drop times average current. Dominant at low switching frequencies.
Switching Loss
Psw = ½ × Vr × Ipk
× trr × fsw
Reverse recovery energy per cycle times switching frequency. Dominant at high f.
Junction Temperature
Tj = Ta + Ptot
× Rth(j-a)
Rth(j-a) = Rth(j-c) + Rth(c-s) + Rth(s-a). Must stay below Tj,max.
Live Diode Schematic & Heat
A K I ?A Vf ?V P = ? Tj = ?
Junction Temperature
25°C50°C75°C100°C125°C150°C175°C
Results
Total Power Loss
Conduction Loss
Switching Loss
Junction Temp Tj
Efficiency
Conduction Loss
Switching Loss
Sw/Cond Ratio
Junction Temp
°C
Rth(j-a) Total
°C/W
Headroom to Tj,max
°C
Thermal Parameters
W
°C
°C/W
°C/W
°C/W
°C
Package Rth(j-c) Presets
PackageRth(j-c) typicalMax current
DO-41 (axial)15–25 °C/W1 A
DO-1510–20 °C/W1.5 A
DO-201AD4–8 °C/W6 A
TO-220 (2-pin)1.5–3 °C/W15 A
TO-2470.5–1.5 °C/W30 A
D2PAK (SMD)1.5–3 °C/W15 A
SOD-323 (SMD)150–300 °C/W0.3 A
Derating rule: Operate at maximum 80% of Tj,max for reliable long-term life. For a 150°C rated device, target Tj ≤ 120°C.
Thermal Resistance Ladder
JUNCTION (Tj) Rth(j-c) 2.5 °C/W CASE (Tc) Rth(c-s) 0.5 °C/W Rth(s-a) 10.0 °C/W AMBIENT (Ta)
Results
Junction Temperature
Case Temp (Tc)
Heatsink Temp (Ts)
Rth(j-a) Total
Headroom
Max Safe Power
W
Required Heatsink
°C/W
Rectifier Parameters
V
A
V
V
Topology Schematic
D1 D2 D3 D4 AC+ AC- +DC GND
Topology Comparison
Results Table
TopologyDiodes conductingTotal Vf dropPower LossEfficiency
Full-Wave Bridge Loss
Total Vf drop
Diode count
4
Bridge efficiency
Annual heat (kWh)
Operating Point for Comparison
A
kHz
V
Side-by-Side Comparison
Diode TypeVf typ.trrPcondPswPtotalRelative Eff.Best for
Power Loss Bars
Technology selection guide: Standard silicon (PN junction) for low-frequency, high-voltage. Schottky for low-voltage high-current. Fast/ultrafast recovery for medium-frequency. SiC for high-voltage high-frequency. GaN for ultra-high-frequency (>1 MHz) with lowest switching losses.
Common Diodes — Electrical Characteristics
Part NumberTypeVf @ IfVRRMIF(av)trrPackage
1N4001Si PN0.93V @ 1A50V1A2 μsDO-41
1N4007Si PN0.93V @ 1A1000V1A2 μsDO-41
1N5408Si PN1.0V @ 3A800V3A3 μsDO-201
1N5819Schottky0.45V @ 1A40V1A<10 nsDO-41
1N5822Schottky0.525V @ 3A40V3A<10 nsDO-201
SS34Schottky0.5V @ 3A40V3A<10 nsSMA
MBRS360Schottky0.5V @ 3A60V3A<10 nsSMB
MBR20100Schottky0.75V @ 20A100V20A<10 nsTO-220
UF4007Ultrafast1.0V @ 1A1000V1A75 nsDO-41
BYW29-200Ultrafast0.95V @ 8A200V8A25 nsTO-220
MUR1560Ultrafast0.87V @ 15A600V15A35 nsTO-220
C3D04060ASiC1.5V @ 4A600V4A<5 nsTO-220
IDH06SG60CSiC1.5V @ 6A600V6A<5 nsTO-220
GS1MSi PN1.0V @ 1A1000V1A150 nsSMA
Diode Technology Characteristics
TechnologyVf rangeVRRM maxtrrLeakageTj,max
Standard Silicon (PN)0.6–1.2VUp to 5kV1–10 μsLow150°C
Fast Recovery (FR)0.8–1.2VUp to 1.2kV50–500 nsLow150°C
Ultrafast Recovery0.8–1.1VUp to 1.2kV15–75 nsMedium150°C
Schottky (Si)0.2–0.5VUp to 200V<10 nsHigh175°C
Silicon Carbide (SiC)1.4–2.0VUp to 1.7kV<5 nsVery Low200°C
GaN (HEMT-based)0.5–1.5VUp to 650V<2 nsVery Low150°C

Understanding Diode Power Loss

Every diode dissipates power when conducting current. This loss has two distinct components: conduction loss and switching loss. Conduction loss (Pcond = Vf × Iavg) occurs continuously whenever the diode is forward biased and is the dominant loss mechanism in low-frequency applications like mains rectifiers. A standard silicon diode with Vf = 0.7V carrying 10A dissipates 7W as heat — a substantial efficiency penalty in high-current systems.

Switching loss (Psw = ½ × Vr × Ipk × trr × fsw) arises from reverse recovery. When a conducting diode is reverse biased, minority carriers stored in the junction must recombine before the diode blocks. During this reverse recovery time (trr), a brief reverse current flows through the diode, dissipating energy proportional to switching frequency. At 100 kHz with a 2 μs recovery time, switching loss can dwarf conduction loss — making diode technology selection critical for switched-mode power supplies.

Technology choice rule: For f < 1 kHz, optimise Vf (choose Schottky). For f = 1–500 kHz, minimise trr (ultrafast or Schottky). For f > 500 kHz and V > 200V, use SiC or GaN.

Junction Temperature and Thermal Management

Diode reliability depends critically on junction temperature. Every 10°C rise in Tj approximately halves the expected device lifetime (Arrhenius degradation model). Junction temperature is calculated through the thermal resistance network: Tj = Ta + Ptotal × Rth(j-a), where Rth(j-a) = Rth(j-c) + Rth(c-s) + Rth(s-a). Each thermal resistance stage adds temperature rise: junction-to-case (from the datasheet), case-to-sink (thermal interface material, typically 0.1–0.5 °C/W with good thermal paste), and sink-to-ambient (the heatsink itself).

Always apply a derating margin: design for Tj ≤ 80% of the datasheet maximum. For a 150°C rated device, target Tj ≤ 120°C. This provides margin for thermal impedance degradation over time, hotspot variation within the die, and ambient temperature excursions.

Rectifier Topology Comparison

The choice of rectifier topology directly affects how many diode voltage drops appear in series with the load. A half-wave rectifier uses one diode (one Vf drop) but only conducts on alternate half-cycles, wasting half the input energy. A full-wave bridge uses four diodes but two conduct simultaneously, producing 2 × Vf drop. A centre-tap full-wave rectifier uses two diodes with one Vf drop but requires a centre-tapped transformer.

For a 12V, 10A application using standard silicon (Vf = 0.7V): the bridge rectifier loses 14W (2 × 0.7 × 10), achieving 89.6% efficiency. Substituting Schottky diodes (Vf = 0.35V) reduces losses to 7W — doubling the useful power and eliminating the need for active cooling.

Practical tip: In synchronous rectifier designs, MOSFETs replace diodes entirely, reducing the effective voltage drop to I × RDS(on) — typically 10–50 mV — and virtually eliminating rectifier losses in high-current DC-DC converters.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between conduction loss and switching loss?
Conduction loss (Vf × Iavg) occurs whenever the diode carries forward current and is independent of frequency. Switching loss (proportional to frequency × trr) occurs only during transitions and increases with switching frequency. At 50Hz mains frequency, switching loss is negligible. At 200kHz in a SMPS, switching loss can be several times larger than conduction loss.
Why does SiC have a higher Vf than Schottky but is still preferred in high-power designs?
SiC diodes have a higher Vf (1.4–2.0V vs 0.3–0.5V for Schottky), which increases conduction loss. However, SiC supports voltages up to 1700V (vs 200V for Schottky), has virtually zero reverse recovery charge at any voltage, operates reliably to 200°C, and has negligible leakage current. In high-voltage high-frequency designs, the switching loss savings from near-zero trr far outweigh the higher Vf penalty.
How do I select a heatsink for a power diode?
Required heatsink Rth(s-a) = (Tj,max × 0.8 − Ta) / Ptotal − Rth(j-c) − Rth(c-s). The Thermal Analysis tab calculates this automatically. For example: Tj,max = 150°C (derated to 120°C), Ta = 40°C, P = 5W, Rth(j-c) = 2°C/W, Rth(c-s) = 0.5°C/W: required heatsink = (120−40)/5 − 2 − 0.5 = 16−2.5 = 13.5°C/W.
Switching loss formula assumes linear current fall during reverse recovery. Actual loss depends on snubber circuits, circuit parasitic inductance, and gate drive characteristics. Always validate thermal calculations with device datasheet SPICE models and measured junction temperature in prototype hardware.
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