Advanced MOSFET Loss Calculator

Model power losses across key switching conditions. Compare conduction, thermal rise, and efficiency trends. Design stronger converters using reliable loss estimates faster.

Calculator Inputs

Enter electrical, switching, and thermal values to estimate main MOSFET loss components for one device or a parallel device set.

Applied switching voltage across the device.
Used for conduction loss estimation.
Used for overlap switching loss.
Conduction fraction during the switching period.
Typical on-resistance at a lower reference temperature.
Example: 1.6 means resistance rises by 60%.
Turn-on voltage or current transition time.
Turn-off voltage or current transition time.
Cycle rate used by the converter.
Charge required per drive cycle.
Driver supply swing for gate charging.
Capacitive energy charged and discharged each cycle.
Body diode recovery-related charge estimate.
Voltage across the diode during recovery loss.
Package-to-ambient thermal path estimate.
Starting environmental temperature.
Splits current across identical devices.
Reset

Loss Breakdown Graph

The chart compares each device loss component so you can quickly see which factor dominates total dissipation.

Example Data Table

This sample shows a practical operating point for a converter stage using one MOSFET or identical parallel devices.

Parameter Example Value Unit Description
VDS48VSwitching bus voltage
IRMS10ADevice RMS current
IPK15APeak switching current
Duty Cycle50%On-state fraction
RDS(on)8Reference on-resistance
Hot Multiplier1.6×Temperature-corrected rise factor
tr + tf45nsTotal switching overlap time
fsw100kHzSwitching frequency
Qg45nCGate charge
Coss350pFOutput capacitance

Formula Used

1) Hot on-resistance
RDS(on,hot) = RDS(on,ref) × temperature multiplier
2) Conduction loss
Pcond = IRMS² × RDS(on,hot) × Duty
3) Switching overlap loss
Psw = 0.5 × VDS × IPK × (tr + tf) × fsw
4) Gate-drive loss
Pgate = Qg × VGS × fsw
5) Output capacitance loss
Pcoss = 0.5 × Coss × VDS² × fsw
6) Reverse-recovery loss
Prr = Qrr × VRR × fsw
7) Total device loss
Ptotal = Pcond + Psw + Pgate + Pcoss + Prr
8) Thermal rise
ΔT = Ptotal × θJA

The calculator uses simplified engineering equations for quick design work. Final designs should still be checked against datasheet curves, waveform measurements, and thermal simulation.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter the switching bus voltage and the expected RMS current.
  2. Provide the peak current seen during switching transitions.
  3. Set duty cycle and reference on-resistance in milliohms.
  4. Adjust the hot resistance multiplier from datasheet temperature behavior.
  5. Enter rise time, fall time, and switching frequency.
  6. Add gate charge, gate voltage, output capacitance, and reverse recovery values.
  7. Fill thermal resistance and ambient temperature for junction estimation.
  8. Use parallel count when current is shared across equal devices.
  9. Press the button to display loss, efficiency, and thermal results.
  10. Download the results as CSV or PDF for documentation.
Tip: For best accuracy, pull values from the intended operating point instead of headline datasheet numbers alone.

Frequently Asked Questions

1) What does this calculator estimate?

It estimates major MOSFET losses: conduction, switching overlap, gate-drive, output capacitance, and reverse-recovery. It also gives total loss, efficiency estimate, thermal rise, and junction temperature.

2) Why is hot RDS(on) important?

On-resistance usually increases with temperature. Using only the room-temperature value can understate conduction loss. The hot multiplier helps reflect more realistic operating conditions.

3) Is the switching loss formula exact?

No. It is a fast engineering approximation. Real switching loss depends on waveform shape, parasitics, dead time, driver strength, and current behavior during transitions.

4) When should I include reverse-recovery loss?

Include it when the body diode or a commutating path experiences diode recovery. This is common in hard-switched topologies and synchronous power stages.

5) What does the parallel device count do?

It divides the entered current across equal devices, then calculates per-device loss and total system loss. It assumes balanced current sharing between parallel parts.

6) Is the efficiency value a final converter efficiency?

No. It is only a stage-level estimate using the entered power assumptions. Magnetics, controller, copper, diode, and capacitor losses are not included.

7) Can I use datasheet typical values?

Yes, for early comparison. For final design work, use worst-case values, temperature-corrected data, and measured switching times from your prototype.

8) Why might measured losses differ from this result?

Measurements include PCB parasitics, ringing, snubber behavior, layout effects, uneven current sharing, and thermal coupling. These practical factors can materially change actual loss.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.