22–28 Jun 2019
DoubleTree at the Entrance to Universal Orlando
America/New_York timezone

Analysis of Commercial off-the-shelf 1200 V Silicon Carbide MOSFETs Under Short Circuit Conditions

24 Jun 2019, 10:30
15m
Gold Coast I/II (Double Tree at the Entrance to Universal)

Gold Coast I/II

Double Tree at the Entrance to Universal

Oral 10.2 Components, magnetics, switches, capacitors 10.1/10.2 Converters, Components,Magnetics, Swiches and Capacitors

Speaker

Jonathan Forbes (Texas Tech University)

Description

Silicon carbide (SiC) power semiconductor devices are experiencing an increasingly widespread adoption in many power electronics and pulsed power applications such as high-power DC-DC converters and inverters, battery chargers, industrial motor drives, as well as high-power solid-state pulse generators such as a Marx generator or a linear transformer driver (LTD). The wide-bandgap (WBG) and thermal properties of SiC provide inherent advantages over silicon power devices especially in high power density applications. These advantages include higher blocking voltages, increased switching speeds, physically smaller implementations of power electronics and pulsed power circuits, improved system efficiencies, and higher operating temperatures. To improve the overall confidence in the ability of SiC devices to reliably replace equivalent silicon solutions, independent reliability testing and analysis must be conducted. In this research, a short circuit test board was developed to analyze the short circuit ruggedness of 1200 V MOSFETs. Using the test board, commercially available 1200 V / 10 A SiC MOSFETs from 3 different manufacturers were subjected to both single and repetitive short circuit events, and the short circuit ruggedness of each device was measured and analyzed. The purpose of this research is to independently measure and report on the short circuit capabilities of commercially off-the-shelf 1200 V SiC MOSFETs.

Authors

Jonathan Forbes (Texas Tech University) Fernando Salcedo (Texas Tech University) Cedrick Tchoupe-Nono (Texas Tech University Center for Pulsed Power and Power Electronics) Dr Stephen Bayne (Center for Pulsed Power and Power Electronics, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Texas Tech University)

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