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The superior electrical and thermal properties of silicon carbide (SiC) allow further shrinking of the active area of future power semiconductor devices. A lower boundary of the die size can be obtained from the thermal impedance required to withstand the high power dissipation during a short-circuit event. However, this implies that the power distribution is homogeneous and that no current filamentation has to be considered. Therefore, this work investigates this assumption by evaluating the stability of a SiC-MOSFET over a wide range of operation conditions by measurements up to destruction, thermal simulations, and high-temperature characterization.
This paper addresses the turn-on switching process of insulated-gate bipolar transistor (IGBT) modules with anti-parallel free-wheeling diodes (FWD) used in inductive load switching power applications. An increase in efficiency, i.e. decrease in switching losses, calls for a fast switching process of the IGBT, but this commonly implies high values of the reverse-recovery current overshoot. To overcome this undesired behaviour, a solution was proposed which achieves an independent control of the collector current slope and peak reverse recovery current by applying a gate current that is briefly turned negative during the turn-on process. The feasibility of this approach has already been shown, however, a sophisticated control method is required for applying it in applications with varying currents, temperature and device parameters. In this paper a solution based on an adaptive, iterative closed-loop ontrol is proposed. Its effectiveness is demonstrated by experimental results from a 1200 V/200A IGBT power module for different load currents and reverse-recovery current overshoots.
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.
Influence of metallization layout on aging detector lifetime under cyclic thermo-mechanical stress
(2016)
The influence of the layout on early warning detectors in BCD technologies for metallization failure under cyclic thermo-mechanical stress was investigated. Different LDMOS transistors, with narrow or wide metal fingers and with or without embedded detectors, were used. The test structures were repeatedly stressed by pronounced self-heating until failure (a short circuit) was detected. The results show that the layout of the on-chip metallization has a large impact on the lifetime. A significant influence of the detectors on the lifetime was also observed, in our case causing a reduction of more than a factor of two, but only for the test structure with narrow metal fingers. The experimental results are explained by an efficient numerical thermo mechanical simulation approach, giving detailed insights into the strain distribution in the metal system. These results are important for aging detector design and, morever, for LDMOS on-chip metal layout in general.
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 compact 3 kW bidirectional GaN-HEMT DC/DC converter for 360V to 400-500 V. A very high efficiency has been reached by applying a zero voltage turn-on in conjunction with a negative gate-source voltage, even though normally-off HEMTs are used. Further improvements were achieved by adapting the switching frequency to the load current and output voltage, as will be explained by means of the loss contribution of the specific elements for a constant and an adaptive switching frequency. Measurements have shown a high converter efficiency exceeding 99% over a wide output power range of up to 3 kW.
This paper presents an efficient implementation of a reconfigurable battery stack which allows full exploitation of the capacity of every single cell. Contrary to most other approaches, it is possible to electrically remove one or more cells from the battery stack. Therefore, the overall capacity of the system is not restricted by the weaker cells, and cells with very different states of health can be used, making the system very attractive for refurbished batteries. For the required switches, low-voltage high-current MOSFETs are used. A demonstrator has been built with a total capacity of up to 3.5 kWh, a nominal voltage of 35 V, and currents up 200 A.
This work investigates the electro-thermal behavior and failure mechanism of a 600V depletion-mode GaN HEMT by experimental analysis and numerical thermal simulations. For this device, the positive temperature coefficient of the draingate leakage current can lead to the formation of hot spots. This localized thermal runaway which ultimately results in a breakdown of the inherent drain-gate junction is found to be the dominant cause of failure.