Zener vs Avalanche Breakdown: Key Differences & When Each Occurs
Zener breakdown happens when a strong electric field yanks electrons free across a narrow, heavily doped p-n junction; avalanche breakdown occurs when higher-energy electrons collide and multiply in a wider, lightly doped junction.
Engineers swap “Zener” and “avalanche” because both look like sudden voltage snaps on a curve tracer; only after reading the part number do they realize one diode is quietly clamping while the other is shouting overvoltage.
Key Differences
Zener: <5 V, steep knee, low doping, quantum tunneling. Avalanche: >5 V, softer knee, high doping, impact ionization. Temperature coefficients oppose: Zener drifts negative, avalanche drifts positive.
Which One Should You Choose?
Pick Zener for precise low-voltage references and shunt regulators. Use avalanche diodes for high-voltage transient suppression and ESD clamps; their positive temp coefficient eases thermal runaway design.
Examples and Daily Life
Your 3.3 V Arduino reset line uses a 3.6 V Zener. The 600 W TVS diode saving your laptop charger from 400 V spikes is avalanche in action.
Can a diode exhibit both effects?
Yes—around 5 V the mechanisms overlap, giving a flat temperature coefficient. Diodes marketed as “Zener” in that range blend both.
Does temperature affect which breakdown dominates?
Absolutely. Warmer junctions favor Zener tunneling below ~5 V and suppress avalanche multiplication above it, shifting the threshold upward.