Thyristor Terminals: Anode, Cathode, and Gate

* Question

Method for identifying three poles of thyristor

* Answer

To identify the three terminals (poles) of a thyristor (SCR: Silicon Controlled Rectifier) — Anode (A), Cathode (K), and Gate (G) — you can use both physical observation and electrical testing methods.

1. Understanding Thyristor Terminals

Anode (A): Main current input terminal.

Cathode (K): Main current output terminal.

Gate (G): Control terminal that triggers the thyristor into conduction.

2. Method for Identifying the Terminals

Method A: Visual Identification (if marking exists)

Check the package for printed labels: A, K, G.

For TO-220 packages (common for power thyristors), pinout is often:

Pin 1: Gate (G)

Pin 2: Cathode (K)

Tab/Back or Pin 3: Anode (A)

Datasheets or manufacturer documentation confirm this layout.

Method B: Multimeter Test (Diode Mode)

You can use a digital multimeter in diode mode to identify the terminals.

Step-by-step procedure:

Find the Gate and Cathode:

Place the positive probe on the Gate and the negative probe on another terminal.

If the meter shows a low forward voltage drop (~0.6V to 0.8V), the second terminal is the Cathode (K) and the first is the Gate (G).

Find the Anode:

Now place the positive probe on the suspected Anode and the negative on the Cathode.

Normally, an SCR won’t conduct unless triggered.

Temporarily short the Gate and Anode with a wire (simulate trigger), then measure again across Anode to Cathode.

If the meter now shows low resistance or conduction, then the terminals are correctly identified.

Method C: Use of Test Circuit (if multimeter is inconclusive)

Build a simple test circuit with:

A small DC power source (e.g., 9V)

A load resistor in series with the thyristor

A push-button switch from Gate to Anode

Steps:

Connect the circuit with assumed Anode and Cathode.

Press the Gate button; if the load turns on and remains on, you’ve correctly identified the Gate, Anode, and Cathode.

Summary Table

Terminal

Function

Test Method

Gate (G)

Trigger input

Forward diode test with K

Cathode (K)

Negative side of main current

Common to Gate in diode test

Anode (A)

Positive side of main current

Identified via conduction when G is pulsed

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