What Are Circuit Protection?
Circuit protection components safeguard electronic circuits from damage caused by overvoltage, overcurrent, electrostatic discharge (ESD), and transient surges. Key types include TVS diodes (fast voltage clamping), fuses (overcurrent disconnect), varistors/MOVs (surge absorption), ESD protection arrays, PTC resettable fuses (polyfuses), and gas discharge tubes. Every electronic product requires circuit protection to meet safety standards and ensure reliability. LCSC Electronics stocks 30,000+ circuit protection SKUs from 200+ manufacturers.
Circuit Protection — Definition and Sub-Categories
Circuit protection refers to components and designs that prevent damage to electronic circuits from electrical faults. These faults include voltage spikes (from lightning, motor switching, or ESD), overcurrent (from short circuits or overloads), and reverse polarity. Protection devices either clamp voltage, limit current, or disconnect the circuit when a fault is detected.
|
Sub-Category |
Function |
Key Parameters |
|
TVS Diodes |
Fast voltage clamping for transient suppression |
Standoff voltage, clamping voltage, peak pulse power, speed |
|
Fuses |
Overcurrent protection via element melting |
Current rating, voltage, blow characteristic (fast/slow), size |
|
PTC Resettable Fuses |
Self-resetting overcurrent protection |
Hold/trip current, voltage rating, resistance, reset time |
|
Varistors (MOVs) |
Surge absorption for AC line protection |
Clamping voltage, energy absorption (joules), surge current |
|
ESD Protection |
Multi-line protection against static discharge |
Working voltage, ESD rating (kV), capacitance, channels |
|
Gas Discharge Tubes |
High-energy surge protection for telecom/antenna |
Sparkover voltage, surge current capacity, insulation resistance |
How to Choose: Circuit Protection Selection Guide
Match your protection device to the threat: for ESD on data lines (USB, HDMI, Ethernet), use low-capacitance ESD arrays to avoid signal degradation. For power line surges, use TVS diodes rated above your operating voltage but below your circuit’s damage threshold. For AC mains protection, combine MOVs with fuses. For overcurrent, choose between one-time fuses (higher reliability) and PTC resettable fuses (convenience for field-serviceable products). Always verify that the protection device’s clamping voltage stays below the protected IC’s absolute maximum rating.
Circuit Protection Comparison
|
Device |
Threat Protected |
Response Time |
Reusable? |
Price (Qty 10) |
|
TVS Diode (unidirectional) |
Voltage transients, surges |
<1 ns |
Yes |
$0.02–$0.20 |
|
Glass Fuse (fast-blow) |
Overcurrent / short circuit |
Milliseconds |
No (replace) |
$0.05–$0.30 |
|
PTC Resettable Fuse |
Overcurrent (moderate) |
Seconds |
Yes (auto-reset) |
$0.03–$0.15 |
|
MOV (14mm) |
AC line surges, lightning |
<25 ns |
Degrades over events |
$0.10–$0.40 |
|
ESD Array (4-line) |
Static discharge on I/O |
<1 ns |
Yes |
$0.05–$0.20 |
|
Gas Discharge Tube |
Lightning, telecom surges |
Microseconds |
Yes (many events) |
$0.30–$2.00 |
Why Source Circuit Protection from LCSC Electronics
LCSC stocks 30,000+ circuit protection SKUs from 200+ manufacturers including Littelfuse, Bourns, Vishay, and Asian brands like RUILON, TECHFUSE, and YAGEO (Pulse). The catalog covers every protection scenario from sub-$0.02 TVS diodes to industrial-grade surge protectors. Engineers can source complete protection solutions for any design from LCSC’s single catalog.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is a TVS diode and how does it work?
A TVS (Transient Voltage Suppressor) diode clamps voltage spikes by rapidly becoming conductive when voltage exceeds its breakdown threshold. It diverts surge current away from protected circuits. Response time is under 1 nanosecond, making TVS diodes the fastest protection for sensitive electronics against ESD, lightning-induced transients, and switching spikes.
Q: What is the difference between a fuse and a PTC resettable fuse?
A traditional fuse is a one-time device — its element melts during overcurrent, permanently breaking the circuit. A PTC (Positive Temperature Coefficient) resettable fuse increases its resistance dramatically when current exceeds the trip point, limiting current flow. When the fault clears and it cools, it resets automatically. PTCs are convenient but have higher resistance than fuses and slower response.
Q: How do I protect USB ports from ESD?
Place a low-capacitance ESD protection array (typically <0.5pF per line) on the USB data lines as close to the connector as possible. For USB 2.0, choose arrays with working voltage ≥5V. For USB 3.0+ and USB-C, use ultra-low-capacitance ESD devices (<0.2pF) to avoid degrading high-speed signal integrity.
Q: What is the difference between a TVS diode and a Zener diode?
Both clamp voltage, but TVS diodes are optimized for transient surge protection — they handle high peak power (hundreds of watts for microseconds) with very fast response. Zener diodes are optimized for continuous voltage regulation at lower power levels. Don’t substitute a Zener where a TVS is needed for surge protection.
Q: Do I need both a fuse and a TVS diode?
Often yes. TVS diodes handle fast voltage transients but cannot protect against sustained overcurrent. Fuses protect against overcurrent but are too slow for voltage spikes. A complete protection circuit typically uses both: a fuse for overcurrent and a TVS diode for voltage transients.
Q: Does LCSC stock circuit protection for automotive applications?
Yes. LCSC carries AEC-Q qualified TVS diodes, automotive-rated fuses, and surge protection devices designed for the automotive voltage range (12V/24V/48V systems). Filter by automotive grade in the parametric search to find qualified parts.