If th lamp is feeding with DC, i dont see how a capacitor parallel to the lamp would prevent the arc, at any value
In AC case the value matters, but the capacitor does not have to be significant enough to drop the voltage vs the L. All i wanted is to smooth a bit the peak across the Silicon in case of the current interrupting moentarily
The setup become unstable, leading to oscillations, which then cause the arc current to get interrupted and so the arc extinct. Of course, some small capacitance is tolerated, but that then won't prevent any overvoltage.
The arc exhibits a negative dynamic resistance, what means once some deviation occurs (e.g. temporarily slightly higher conductivity of the plasma), the voltage becomes held firmly by the capacitor for some short time and during that the ionization level increases too much. The extra ionization level then sustain even after the voltage drops down (it will decay, but that takes time) and in the meantime the capacitor will discharge too much bellow the steady state arc voltage. Now this voltage becomes held there by the capacitor (it needs again a time before it gets recharged back) and during that time the voltage is too low to sustain the discharge, so the arc ceases.
So even when we had constant DC current supply, the capacitor effectively quenches the arc.
This behavior is the main reason, why capacitors are used to actually suppress the discharges, mainly across contacts or so. Include e.g. a fluorescent starter (there the capacitance is too low for the rather slow main tube discharge, but sufficient for the rather fast responding discharge in the starter). Of course, this arc quenching happens when the capacitance exceeds some limit (the arc ionization has to respond faster than the voltage).
Moreover it would become an extra danger for the semiconductors as well: If the overvoltage still exceeds the breakover voltage of a thyristor, such thyristor just turns ON. But with the capacitor in parallel it means it will discharge it in a very short moment, creating huge current pulse. And that will exhibit huge stress in all of the components, both thermal, as well as electromagnetic forces. Without the capacitors a turned ON thyristor just gets turned OFF by the AC mains and so cause just a spurious elevated current pulse.
I would expect the Silicn to be possible to destroy if :
- Surge on the line from outside (lightning strike somewhere, ..), not an extreme one but something that Magnetics alone would survive. (That applies if the Silicon is straight on the line and not behind chokes)
- Interruption in the current, whether from cut off of the supply on the line, or the arc going out (aged lamp, column bumped at Earth level, ...)
The high power devices are capable of standing high currents, but what about breakdown at exceeding allowed reverse voltage (for diode), Vgs or Vds-off (for mosfet), ... I dont expect that the "high power" devices are any better on the voltage ratings too (especially if we want to keep the ON losses down, as i understand those come along with compromise in the max breakdown voltage ratings)
Generally the breakdown alone won't be a problem (except oxide breakdown in MOSFET's and IGBT's, but that can never come from the power terminal side, so from the mains connection).
What is a problem are two things:
- The heat, coming from the related power dissipation. Here if the energy is limited, the devices can handle it without any problems. Because the 10kW XBO ballast components are way bigger than 11W CFL, while the overvoltage events are the same (the atmospheric discharge does not distinguish which load is connected to the hit wire), there is quite large spectrum of the overvoltage energies the XBO ballast can handle without any problem, but instantly kill the 11W CFL.
But in most cases, this mode is not the one responsible for most overvoltage caused electronic failures. Don't get fooled by blown diodes in a fluorescent ballast, they may have fallen as a victim of the other mechanism.
- The response of the device when such overvoltage happens.
Here the overvoltage does not damage the component at all in any way, but it may cause the component to respond in a way, which leads within the circuit to such consequences, which are then deadly for the components. This does not happens on a simple diodes, but it happens on practically all more complex semiconductors. And in nearly all the cases it means the device gets into a conductive state and remains there when the current is flowing.
With thyristor circuits (e.g. a controlled rectifier,...) this is usually of no problem, because the circuit normally operates so, once the thyristor get activated, something else stops the current and that switches it OFF, while the current remains all the time within safe limits. This is the main reason, why thyristors are known as one of the most reliable components in high power electronic - it is just because the way how they operate in a circuit is preventing their destruction even when exposed to occasional overvoltage event.
With the full controlled switching devices (so starting from GTO and all forms of transistors) the circuit usually expects there is nothing else to break the current (in a functional manner), so it is extremely important the device never ever enters the mode, where the normal control electrode does not respond anymore. Otherwise the device remains ON, the current grows way above what all the components can survive, so something breaks as the result of this overcurrent.
Of course, if the circuit would look like it uses to look with thyristors, nothing bad happens either. But the transistors (and GTO's) are used just because for the normal operation they do not need that complex (and slow) commutation circuit around as the thyristors do.
The robustness against entering such uncontrolled mode is usually one of the key component parameters (the SOA'a), even when it does not influence the main operating parameters (losses,...)
And it is not so uncommon, a transistor overvoltage electrical breakdown (so activating the low voltage drop snap back mechanism), yielding to an overcurrent behind a mains rectifier (in a fluorescent ballast), lead to the only destroyed components being the diodes in the rectifier bridge, while the actual transistors are surviving that event (at most with a damage still not yet interfering with the ballast operation).
But still, the higher power devices needs way higher currents, so overvoltage energies, to enter such uncontrollable modes, so you need a less frequent, more energetic event to cause such problem than with a low power design.