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Diode Bias Calculator

Analyze forward and reverse bias conditions. Calculate diode current, power dissipation, and understand the I-V characteristics of different diode types.

Calculate Diode Bias

Applied voltage to the circuit
Voltage drop across diode when conducting
Current limiting resistor in ohms

Forward Bias

Diode is conducting current

Current (If)
19.5 mA
Resistor Voltage
4.3 V
Power (Resistor)
84 mW
Power (Diode)
14 mW

📈 Diode I-V Characteristic Curve

The current-voltage (I-V) characteristic curve shows how diode current varies with applied voltage. This is fundamental to understanding diode behavior.

If vs Vf Characteristic Curves

V I -1V 0.3V 0.7V Reverse Bias Forward Bias
Silicon (0.7V)
Germanium (0.3V)
Schottky (0.2V)

Understanding the Curve

  • Forward Bias Region: When V > Vf (threshold), current increases exponentially. The diode conducts.
  • Reverse Bias Region: When V < 0, only tiny leakage current flows (microamps or less).
  • Knee Voltage (Vf): The threshold voltage where conduction begins - varies by diode type.
  • Breakdown Region: At very high reverse voltages, the diode breaks down (not shown, typically -50V to -1000V).

⚡ Diode Types Comparison

Different diode materials have distinct characteristics that make them suitable for specific applications.

Property Silicon (Si) Germanium (Ge) Schottky
Forward Voltage (Vf) 0.6 - 0.7 V 0.2 - 0.3 V 0.15 - 0.45 V
Reverse Leakage Very Low (nA) Higher (µA) Moderate (µA)
Max Temperature ~200°C ~85°C ~125°C
Switching Speed Moderate Slow Very Fast
Best For General purpose, rectification Low voltage drops, legacy circuits High-speed switching, low loss
Common Part Numbers 1N4148, 1N4001-1N4007 1N34A, OA90 1N5817-1N5819, BAT54

When to Use Each Type

  • Silicon Diodes: Best for most applications - power supplies, protection circuits, general rectification. The 1N4007 is a workhorse for AC rectification.
  • Germanium Diodes: Useful when you need low voltage drop and can tolerate higher leakage. Common in vintage radio detector circuits.
  • Schottky Diodes: Ideal for high-frequency switching power supplies, reverse polarity protection, and applications where minimal power loss is critical.

🔄 Forward vs Reverse Bias Explained

Forward Bias Condition

A diode is forward biased when the positive terminal of the voltage source connects to the anode (P-side) and negative to the cathode (N-side).

  • Current flows from anode to cathode
  • Voltage drop across diode ≈ Vf (threshold voltage)
  • Current is limited by the series resistor: I = (Vin - Vf) / R
  • Diode acts like a closed switch with a small voltage drop

Reverse Bias Condition

A diode is reverse biased when the positive terminal connects to the cathode and negative to the anode.

  • Virtually no current flows (only tiny leakage current)
  • Diode acts like an open switch
  • Used for protection, voltage blocking, and signal isolation
  • If reverse voltage exceeds breakdown voltage, the diode can be damaged

The Bias Formula

If = (Vin - Vf) / R
Forward current = (Input voltage - Forward voltage) / Resistance

🔗 Related Rectifier Calculators

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