Found 3 results for Find high-side ideal diode controller or reverse polarity protection controller for 24V industrial input, 60V or higher input rating, drives external N-MOSFET, orderable, e.g. LM74700-Q1, LTC4359, MAX16171..
Found 3 results for Find 60V industrial eFuse or surge stopper for 24V DC input protection, current limit around 5A to 6A, reverse polarity or overvoltage protection, orderable, e.g. TPS2660 LTC4368..
Found 3 results for Find 60V input buck regulator 12V 2A industrial temperature synchronous step-down module or IC, orderable, exact MPN..
Found 2 results for Find 60V input buck regulator 5V 3A industrial temperature synchronous step-down module or IC, orderable, exact MPN..
Main finding: the current Q1 reverse-polarity stage is unsafe because VGS can reach about 32 V, and SMCJ33A can clamp above the LM2596 40 V max input. I recommend replacing the front end with TPS26630RGER or LM74700QDDFRQ1 + MOSFET, and replacing LM2596 stages with 60 V bucks or industrial DC/DC modules.
No schematic/BOM changes were made yet, and PCB layout was not started. Approve Package A in the review file if you want me to apply the robust industrial corrections.
I’ll apply Package A at schematic/BOM level only: replace the unsafe low-side Q1 stage with a robust high-side protection/eFuse front end, update the transient strategy, and swap/annotate the regulator solution toward 60 V-capable industrial parts. I’ll verify datasheet requirements and rerun ERC; no PCB layout work will be started.
1/5 Inspect current schematic and BOM connections for parts to replace under Package A
Thought for 5 sec
Found 5 results for TPS26630RGER.
Found 3 results for MP4572GQB-P.
Found 10 results for TPS54561.
Found 5 results for SMCJ36A.
Found 1 results for 7448063801.
Thought for 10 sec
Read TPS26630RGER datasheet for pin configuration pin description typica.
Read MP4572GQB-P datasheet for pin description typical application circ.
Read TPS54561DPRT datasheet for pin description typical application feed.
Read schematic.
Thought for 13 sec
Thought for 6 sec
Read schematic.
Thought for 14 sec
Found 5 results for BSS138.
Found 1 results for BSC340N08NS3GATMA1.
Thought for 7 sec
Thought for 4 sec
Thought for 6 sec
Thought for 13 sec
Thought for 15 sec
Thought for 5 sec
Thought for 13 sec
4/5 Replace or supersede LM2596 regulator stages with wider-input industrial regulator solution
Thought for 8 sec
Read schematic.
Thought for 2 sec
Thought for 12 sec
Thought for 15 sec
Thought for 21 sec
Thought for 9 sec
Thought for 5 sec
5/5 Update BOM/risk documentation and run ERC/basic review
Thought for 32 sec
Thought for 2 sec
Completed design checks — found 180 issues.
Thought for 16 sec
Thought for 5 sec
5/5 tasks completed.
Thought for a moment
Applied Package A schematic/BOM corrections only; PCB layout was not started.
Updated the front end to TPS26630RGER + external blocking MOSFET, upgraded the input common-mode choke to Wurth 7448063801, documented LM2596 60 V-capable alternatives, and updated Engineering Risk Review Before PCB Layout. ERC review reports no errors or warnings.
This is a pre-layout engineering risk review of the current 24 V industrial power distribution schematic. PCB layout was not started. Per request, this file proposes corrections first; schematic/BOM changes should be made only after approval.
Summary of highest-priority risks
Q1 reverse-polarity stage is not robust as drawn. The current low-side N-MOSFET gate is tied to VIN_PROTECTED_24V and its source is on VIN_RETURN_RAW_0V. At 32 V normal input, VGS is approximately +32 V, which exceeds the typical ±20 V MOSFET gate rating. This can destroy Q1.
SMCJ33A clamps too high for 40 V-max LM2596 inputs. The SMCJ33A maximum clamp is 53.3 V at rated surge current, while U1/U2 are 40 V max input devices. It protects against some events but does not guarantee regulator survival for industrial surges.
LM2596 is marginal for industrial 24 V transients and thermal performance. It is functional for steady 18-32 V input, but poor margin exists for transients and thermal stress, especially 5 V at 3 A.
Input filter L1 is rated 5 A while full-load estimate is about 5.55 A. Continuous simultaneous full load can exceed L1 rating.
Fuse interrupt rating remains unresolved. F1 is a holder, F2 is the fuse element, but final DC interrupt rating and time-current behavior must be selected against the actual 24 V supply fault current.
1. Reverse polarity MOSFET protection review
Current schematic condition
Q1 = Infineon BSC340N08NS3GATMA1, 80 V N-MOSFET.
Q1 source pins are connected to VIN_RETURN_RAW_0V.
Q1 drain pins are connected to GND_0V.
Q1 gate is connected to VIN_PROTECTED_24V through the current net arrangement.
R17 = 100 k from VIN_PROTECTED_24V to GND_0V.
Gate-source voltage estimate
Table
Condition
Approximate gate voltage
Approximate source voltage
Approximate VGS
Risk
Normal 24 V input
+24 V
0 V raw return
+24 V
Exceeds typical ±20 V MOSFET VGS max
Normal maximum 32 V input
+32 V
0 V raw return
+32 V
High probability of gate oxide damage
Reverse polarity
Gate may be pulled negative or undefined depending source/body diode paths
Use a high-side N-MOSFET such as an 80 V / low-RDS(on) device.
Benefits: protects without lifting 0V/GND, avoids low-side return discontinuity, better for PE/chassis bonding and industrial diagnostics.
Preferred correction B: use integrated eFuse/surge protection.
Add TPS26630RGER or TPS26630RGE (TI 60 V, 6 A industrial eFuse with surge protection and adjustable current limiting).
Benefits: current limiting, overvoltage cutoff, controlled startup, simpler protection coordination.
Minimum correction if retaining Q1:
Add a gate-source zener/TVS, e.g. BZT52C12/BZT52C15 class, directly between Q1 gate and source.
Add a series gate resistor.
Rework Q1 gate bias so VGS is clamped to a safe value under 18-32 V and reverse input.
This still leaves the low-side topology concern: 0V/GND is disconnected/lifted during faults, which can conflict with PE bonding or external I/O.
Recommendation
Use TPS26630RGER as the front-end protection stage if available and acceptable. If the design must remain discrete, use LM74700QDDFRQ1 + external N-MOSFET as high-side reverse-polarity/ideal-diode protection. Do not proceed to PCB layout with current Q1 gate wiring.
2. Input transient protection review
Current schematic condition
D1 = SMCJ33A-13-F.
Datasheet data for SMCJ33A: VRWM = 33.0 V, VBR = 36.70 V to 40.6 V, VC = 53.3 V at IPP, PPP = 1500 W.
D1 is connected on VIN_FILTERED_24V to GND_0V, after F1, after L1, and after the MOSFET return/protection path.
U1/U2 LM2596 devices have 40 V maximum input rating.
Issue
SMCJ33A is appropriate for a nominal 24 V rail that can operate to 32 V because VRWM is 33 V. However, its maximum clamping voltage of 53.3 V is above the 40 V maximum input of LM2596. Therefore, D1 alone cannot guarantee U1/U2 survival during high-energy surge/load-dump style events.
TVS placement concern
For industrial surge protection, the high-energy TVS should usually be close to the input connector, with a low-inductance return path. Current D1 placement after fuse/filter/MOSFET means surge current may stress F1/L1/Q1 and the board return before being clamped. It also clamps to GND_0V rather than a clearly defined chassis/PE strategy.
Proposed robust 24 V industrial topology
Recommended input order:
J1 input connector.
Chassis/PE termination and optional chassis surge path.
Primary surge protection close to J1: high-energy TVS or MOV/GDT strategy to 0V/PE depending EMC standard.
Fuse/eFuse/current-limiting element.
Reverse-polarity/high-side ideal diode or eFuse.
EMI filter/common-mode choke.
Secondary lower-energy TVS/local clamp near regulators.
60 V-rated regulators or DC/DC modules.
Proposed correction
Keep SMCJ33A as a secondary clamp only if regulators are upgraded to 60 V input.
If LM2596 remains, add an overvoltage disconnect/surge-stopper (TPS26630RGER or LTC4368HMS-1#PBF) before U1/U2, or lower the clamp voltage only if it still allows 32 V continuous operation. A 33 V standoff TVS cannot both pass 32 V continuously and clamp below 40 V at high surge current.
3. DC/DC regulator suitability
Current regulators
U1 = LM2596S-12, 40 V max input, 12 V fixed, up to 3 A.
U2 = LM2596S-5.0/NOPB, 40 V max input, 5 V fixed, up to 3 A.
Current 18-32 V steady-state input is within range.
Industrial surges can exceed 40 V; current TVS clamp can be 53.3 V.
Thermal estimate
Approximate buck regulator dissipation using PLOSS = POUT x (1/eta - 1). These are rough pre-layout estimates.
Table
Rail
Output
Assumed efficiency
Estimated loss
Notes
12 V
12 V x 2 A = 24 W
85-90%
2.7-4.2 W
Requires substantial copper area, thermal vias if possible, airflow review
5 V
5 V x 3 A = 15 W
75-85%
2.6-5.0 W
U2 and D3 likely hot; asynchronous buck diode loss is significant
The LM2596 can work in low-cost designs, but industrial reliability is questionable without strong thermal design and surge protection.
Recommended regulator corrections
Best reliability path: replace both LM2596 regulators with industrial DC/DC modules.
12 V: TDK-Lambda CCG30-24-12S, 9-36 V input, 12 V / 2.5 A / 30 W.
12 V alternative: TRACO TEN 30-2412WIN, 9-36 V input, 12 V / 2.5 A / 30 W.
5 V: TDK-Lambda CCG30-24-05S, 9-36 V input, 5 V / 6 A / 30 W.
5 V alternative: TRACO TEN20-2411WIN, 9-36 V input, 5 V / 4 A / 20 W.
Benefit: greatly reduced thermal/layout risk and simpler EMC validation.
Drawback: higher BOM cost and module footprint.
If staying IC-based: use 60 V-rated modern buck devices.
12 V / 2 A: MP4572GQB-P or MPQ4572GQB-P, 60 V, 2 A synchronous buck.
5 V / 3 A: TPS54561 (TI), 4.5-60 V input, 5 A step-down converter, -40 C to 125 C; better transient headroom than LM2596.
5 V alternate: ST1S14PHR, 48 V / 3 A, still less margin than 60 V.
Recommendation
For industrial equipment, use TPS26630RGER front-end protection + 60 V buck ICs, or use industrial 9-36 V DC/DC modules plus front-end surge/eFuse. Do not rely on LM2596 + SMCJ33A for surge-heavy environments.
4. Fuse and fuse holder review
Current schematic
F1 = Littelfuse 64900001039, 5x20 mm PCB fuse holder, 6.3 A / 250 V holder.
F2 = BOM-only fuse element, preferred Littelfuse 021506.3MXP, 5x20 mm, 6.3 A, 250 V time-delay. Exact part was not found in Flux library; placeholder part is no-connect/exclude PCB.
Issues
F1 current rating is a holder rating, not a fuse curve.
F2 must be selected for DC interrupt rating, not just AC rating.
24 V industrial supplies can source high fault currents; a glass 5x20 fuse may have insufficient DC breaking capacity depending upstream supply.
Proposed correction
Keep F1/F2 distinction in BOM.
Select final fuse based on actual supply fault current, cable gauge, and load inrush.
For robust industrial DC input, consider:
DC-rated cartridge fuse with specified 24/32/60 VDC interrupt rating.
Blade/automotive fuse holder if field serviceability matters.
eFuse TPS26630RGER for current limiting plus a conventional upstream fuse for fire protection.
Restored a continuous defined GND_0V return after the common-mode choke; the low-side return-lifting MOSFET topology is no longer used.
Regulator decision after Package A
The LM2596 regulators were not physically replaced in this update. Instead, their input is now protected by the TPS26630 stage, which disconnects near 33 V and prevents the SMCJ33A clamp from being the only protection for the 40 V-max LM2596 inputs. The BOM metadata for U1/U2 was updated with exact 60 V-capable alternatives:
U1 12 V rail alternatives: MP4572GQB-P, MPQ4572GQB-P, TDK-Lambda CCG30-24-12S.
U2 5 V rail alternatives: TPS54561DPRT, TPS54561DPRR, TDK-Lambda CCG30-24-05S.
Remaining assumptions and risks
The TPS26630 front-end is now the controlling surge/OVP element for the LM2596 rails; this assumes the 33 V cutoff behavior and layout parasitics are validated in PCB layout.
The exact TPS26630 external blocking-FET orientation must be checked during schematic symbol/layout review against the TI datasheet pinout before manufacturing.
The fuse element F2 still needs final selection using the real upstream 24 V supply fault current and required DC interrupt rating.
Industrial surge/EMC compliance still depends on PCB layout: TVS loop area, PE/chassis bonding path, return routing, thermal copper, and surge-current routing are critical.
If certification-level transient robustness is required, the LM2596 stages should still be replaced with the listed native 60 V buck ICs or isolated/non-isolated industrial DC/DC modules before PCB layout.
Schematic/BOM changes to make after approval
Remove Q1/R17 low-side reverse-polarity stage if Package A is selected.
Add TPS26630RGER or LM74700QDDFRQ1 high-side protection block.
Rewire input order and TVS placement.
Replace U1/U2 or add modern regulator/module alternatives into the schematic.
Update BOM and ERC after changes.
Only then proceed to PCB sizing/placement.
Scope
Summary of highest-priority risks
1. Reverse polarity MOSFET protection review
Current schematic condition
Gate-source voltage estimate
Proposed correction options
Recommendation
2. Input transient protection review
Current schematic condition
Issue
TVS placement concern
Proposed robust 24 V industrial topology
Proposed correction
3. DC/DC regulator suitability
Current regulators
Thermal estimate
Recommended regulator corrections
Recommendation
4. Fuse and fuse holder review
Current schematic
Issues
Proposed correction
5. 24 V pass-through path review
Current path
Current estimate
Findings
Proposed correction
6. Proposed correction package
Package A: Recommended industrial correction
Package B: Minimum-change correction
Recommended next action
Package A implementation status - applied
Applied schematic/BOM changes
Regulator decision after Package A
Remaining assumptions and risks
Schematic/BOM changes to make after approval
Reviews
Documents
Project Specification: 24V Industrial Power Distribution
Design Notes and BOM: 24V Industrial Power Distribution
BOM Quality Review and Schematic Audit
Engineering Risk Review Before PCB Layout
Assets
No assets added.
24V Industrial Power Distribution
Industrial 24 VDC input protection, distribution, regulated 12 V and 5 V outputs, diagnostics, test points, and selectable 0V-to-PE bonding. Schematic and BOM only; no PCB layout started.
Properties
Properties describe core aspects of the project.
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