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Die vorliegende Erfindung betrifft ein Transmission Line Pulssystem zum Erzeugen eines elektrischen Pulses, sowie ein diesbezügliches Verfahren. Dabei umfasst das Transmission Line Pulssystem: eine Transmission Line, eine Energieversorgungsquelle zum Aufladen der Transmission Line und einen Entladungsschalter zum Auslösen einer Entladung der aufgeladenen Transmission Line, dadurch gekennzeichnet, dass die Transmission Line eine Vielzahl von Einzelsegmenten umfasst, wobei jedes Einzelsegment über ein zugehöriges Einstellglied mit einem gemeinsamen Massepotential elektrisch verbunden ist, und wobei zumindest eines der Einstellglieder einen Einstellkondensator und einen Einstellschalter aufweist.
The experimental characterization of the thermal impedance Zth of large power MOSFETs is commonly done by measuring the junction temperature Tj in the cooling phase after the device has been heated, preferably to a high junction temperature for increased accuracy. However, turning off a large heating current (as required by modern MOSFETs with low on-state resistances) takes some time because of parasitic inductances in the measurement system. Thus, most setups do not allow the characterization of the junction temperature in the time range below several tens of μs.
In this paper, an optimized measurement setup is presented which allows accurate Tj characterization already 3 μs after turn-off of heating. With this, it becomes possible to experimentally investigate the influence of thermal capacitances close to the active region of the device. Measurement results will be presented for advanced power MOSFETs with very large heating currents up to 220 A. Three bonding variants are investigated and the observed differences will be explained.
In this work, a comparison between different brushless harmonic-excited wound-rotor synchronous machines is performed. The general idea of all topologies is the elimination of the slip rings and auxiliary windings by using the already existing stator and rotor winding for field excitation. This is achieved by injecting a harmonic airgap field with the help of power electronics. This harmonic field does not interact with the fundamental field, it just transfers the excitation power across the airgap. Alternative methods with varying number of phases, different pole-pair combinations, and winding layouts are covered and compared with a detailed Finite-Element-parameterized model. Parasitic effects due to saturation and coupling between the harmonic and main windings are considered.
This paper investigates the electrothermal stability and the predominant defect mechanism of a Schottky gate AlGaN/GaN HEMT. Calibrated 3-D electrothermal simulations are performed using a simple semiempirical dc model, which is verified against high-temperature measurements up to 440°C. To determine the thermal limits of the safe operating area, measurements up to destruction are conducted at different operating points. The predominant failure mechanism is identified to be hot-spot formation and subsequent thermal runaway, induced by large drain–gate leakage currents that occur at high temperatures. The simulation results and the high temperature measurements confirm the observed failure patterns.
We present a compact battery charger topology for weight and cost sensitive applications with an average output current of 9A targeted for 36V batteries commonly found in electric bicycles. Instead of using a conventional boost converter with large DC-link capacitors, we accomplish PFC-functionality by shaping the charging current into a sin²-shape. In addition, a novel control scheme without input-current sensing is introduced. A-priori knowledge is used to implement a feed-forward control in combination with a closed-loop output current control to maintain the target current. The use of a full-bridge/half bridge LLC converter enables operation in a wide input-voltage range.
A fully featured prototype has been built with a peak output power of 1050W. An average output power of 400W was measured, resulting in a power density of 1.8 kW/dm³. At 9A charging current, a power factor of 0.96 was measured and the efficiency exceeds 93% on average with passive rectification.
The impact of pulse charging has been evaluated on a 400Wh battery which was charged with the proposed converter as well as CC-CV-charging for reference. Both charging schemes show similar battery surface temperatures.
On-chip metallization, especially in modern integrated BCD technologies, is often subject to high current densities and pronounced temperature cycles due to heat dissipation from power switches like LDMOS transistors. This paper continues the work on a sensor concept where small sense lines are embedded in the metallization layers above the active area of a switching LDMOS transistor. The sensors show a significant resistance change that correlates with the number of power cycles. Furthermore, influences of sense line layer, geometry and the dissipated energy are shown. In this paper, the focus lies on a more detailed analysis of the observed change in sense line resistance.
In this work we investigate the behavior of MIS- and Schottky-gate AlGaN/GaN HEMTs under high-power pulsestress. A special setup capable of applying pulses of constant power is used to evaluate the electro-thermal response in different operating points. For both types of devices, the time to failure was found to decrease with increasing drain-source voltage. Overall, the Schottky-gate device displays a higher pulse robustness. The pulse withstand time of the MIS-gate device is limited by the occurrence of a thermal instability at approximately 240°C while the Schottky-gate device displays a rapid increase of the gate leakage current prior to failure. The mechanism responsible for this gate current is further investigated by static and transient temperature measurements and yielded activation energies of 0.6 eV and 0.84 eV.
The loss contribution of a 2.3kW synchronous GaN-HEMT boost converter for an input voltage of 250V and an output voltage of 500V was analyzed. A simulation model which consists of two parts is introduced. First, a physics-based model is used to determine the switching losses. Then, a system simulation is applied to calculate the losses of the specific elements. This approach allows a fast and accurate system evaluation as required for further system optimization.
In this work, a hard- and a zero-voltage turn-on switching converter are compared. Measurements were performed to verify the simulation model, showing a good agreement. A peak efficiency of 99% was achieved for an output power of 1.4kW. Even with an output power above 400W, it was possible to obtain a system efficiency exceeding 98 %.
This paper presents a control strategy for optimal utilization of photovoltaic (PV) generated power in conjunction with an Energy Storage System (ESS). The ESS is specifically designed to be retrofitted into existing PV systems in an end-user application. It can be attached in parallel to the PV system and connects to existing DC/AC inverters. In particular, the study covers the impact such a modification has on the output power of existing PV panels. A distinct degradation of PV output power was found due to the different power characteristics of PV panel and ESS. To overcome such degradation a novel feedback system is proposed. The feedback system continuously modifies the power characteristic of the ESS to match the PV panel and thus achieves optimal power utilization. Impact on PV and power point tracking performance is analyzed. Simulation of the proposed system is performed in MATLAB/Simulink. The results are found to be satisfactory.
In many automotive applications, repetitive selfheating is the most critical operation condition for LDMOS transistors in smart power ICs. This is attributed to thermomechanical stress in the on-chip metallization, which results from the different thermal expansion coefficients of the metal and the intermetal dielectric. After many cycles, the accumulated strain in the metallization can lead to short circuits, thus limiting the lifetime. Increasing the LDMOS size can help to lower peak temperatures and therefore to reduce the stress. The downside of this is a higher cost. Hence, it has been suggested to use resilient systems that monitor the LDMOS metallization and lower the stress once a certain level of degradation is reached. Then, lifetime requirements can be fulfilled without oversizing LDMOS transistors, even though a certain performance loss has to be accepted. For such systems, suitable sensors for metal degradation are required. This work proposes a floating metal line embedded in the LDMOS metallization. The suitability of this approach has been investigated experimentally by test structures and shown to be a promising candidate. The obtained results will be explained by means of numerical thermo-mechanical simulations.