Hello, first post here!
I would like some help for my first high power project: an hot-plate capable of heating up to 55°C (won't use it for that much, planned for more to have some margin)
The hotplate is made of an aluminum pcb with the usual snake-like trace on one side.
I'm ecountering difficulties in choosing the MOSFET to control the resistive load, but before we talk about that I'd like to explain my design and thought process so that someone can spot potential issues.
Given the conductor width and lenght I choose, I used the Saturn PCB Design tool to get an estimate of what amount of power is needed to heat the plate to the required temperatures:
- track width: 2mm
- track length: 14 meters
- total track resistance: 4.5 Ohm
- voltage drop across the heater: 15.5V
- amp draw: 3.4A
- total power needed: 52W

At this point I needed to choose a PSU that is capable of more than 15.5V and 52W, so I choose an AC/DC brick that is capable of 24V and 90W.
This might seem excessive, but being my first high power project and taking into account the uncertainties of the Saturn tool I think 90W is perfect, almost double of what I theoretically need and the price is nice. (see bottom for parts lists)
At this point I have a 24V PSU and a 2Ohm load, which would result in 12A current, which is too much for both the wanted result and the PSU to handle, so I need to add some resistance such that the current drawn by the circuit is actually 3.5A. This can be done by operating an N-Channel MOSFET in the ohmic region and regulate Vgs to have the right resistance in the circuit for the wanted power draw.
How much resistance do I need to add? V = I*R, 24 = 3.5 * X, X = 6.8 OHms, I already have 2 Ohms from the heater, so I need to regulate the MOSFET to have ~6.8 Rds resistance. All of this is just theoretical, I might as well forget about thes numbers and just crank up Vgs slowly and stop when I have the power draw that I want.
At this point I realized I was basically building a variable load with a default resistance of 2 Ohms.
So I watched a bunch of examples online and came up with the attached schematic.
The problems that I'm having are:
- finding a logic level MOSFET that can withstand the remaining (allegedly) 3.5^2 * 6.8 = 80W of power loss
- a suitable OpAmp for the application
Let's consider PJQ4448P as an example.
Vgsth is 2V, which means its a logic level MSOFET, perfect. Then I scroll down to the SOA graph and I see that if I want to switch a 3.5A @ 24V load I'm at the limit of the SOA (preferably stay away, right?). And so I'm left confused, this was supposed to be a 40V 42A MOSFET, what am I missing?

Up until now I've only used mosfets as switches, and not as resistors, so I'm having an hard time making sense of all the different graphs etc.
Can you help me sort this out?
Do some of my calculation have errors in them?
Am I approaching this the right way?

Thanks
Components:
- AC/DC brick:
https://www.mornsun-power.com/html/pdf/LD90-23B24R2.html- dac 10 bit:
https://ww1.microchip.com/downloads/en/DeviceDoc/22272C.pdf- MCU: ESP32