This is the #1 culprit. The ADN432 relies on the PCB copper pour to act as a heatsink. If you have narrow traces, no thermal vias, or a small ground plane, the heat has nowhere to go. The chip will report an overtemperature fault (the diagnostic pin goes low) and shut down.
The ADN432 is a specialized component known for its robust switching capabilities. When we talk about it being "hot," we need to dissect three distinct layers: its rising popularity in demanding industries (market heat), its operational thermal characteristics (physical heat), and the common failure modes that occur when it runs too hot for too long (troubleshooting heat). adn432 hot
This article serves as the definitive guide to understanding why the ADN432 gets hot, how to manage that heat, and why the "hot" versions or configurations are revolutionizing power distribution in aerospace, automotive, and industrial automation. Before we turn up the temperature, let’s establish the baseline. The ADN432 is a quad-channel, high-side driver commonly used in load switching applications. It is part of a family of protected FET drivers that allow low-voltage logic circuits (like an Arduino, Raspberry Pi, or industrial PLC) to control high-voltage, high-current loads such as solenoids, lamps, relays, and DC motors. This is the #1 culprit