ISSN: 1863-5598 Electronics in Motion and Conversion ZKZ 64717 02-15 February 2015 o-f.de COMPARISONS are always interesting! VARIS™ – the modular inverter system Thanks to its modular and flexible design, VARIS™ offers compelling benefits. The desired power can be easily achieved via parallel connection of the modules. You are also free to choose your preferred cooling type. And the use of standard components makes VARIS™ both cost-efficient and sustainable. Talk to the House of Competence, because VARIS™ fears no comparison. Even with your current inverter systems, right? ● ● ● ● ● IGBT classes: 1200V or 1700V, up to 1400A Parallel connection engineered by Air- or water-cooling Compatible rectifier VARIS™ R Compact and powerful with VARIS™ XT GvA Leistungselektronik GmbH | Boehringer Straße 10 - 12 | D-68307 Mannheim Phone +49 (0) 621/7 89 92-0 | www.gva-leistungselektronik.de | info@gva-leistungselektronik.de Welcome to the House of Competence. CONTENT Read online and search for key subjects from all articles in Bodo’s Power Systems by going to Powerguru: www.powerguru.org w w w. e l e c t r o n i c o n . c o m Viewpoint ........................................................................................... 4 Technology for a Better World Events................................................................................................. 4 News................................................................................................ 6-9 Blue Product of the Month.............................................................. 10 MOSFET Design Kit to Evaluate SiC Cree Guest Editorial................................................................................. 12 SiC Power Device Impact in 2015 By Jeffrey Casady, Cree Market............................................................................................... 14 Electronics Industry Digest By Aubrey Dunford, Europartners Technology.................................................................................. 16-17 Frequency Response Measurement of the Plant, Compensator and Loop of our Switch Mode Power Supply By Dr. Ali Shirsavar, Director of Biricha Digital Power Ltd. Scan me! High Voltage and Low Inductance Our recommendation for applications where low selfinductance is to be combined with high currents or voltages. Plenty of capacitance (and absolutely no liquids) in flame-retardant plastic housing. Cover Story................................................................................. 18-22 Unlocking Digital Power By Mark Adams, CUI • Special coating patterns for up to 50kVDC/30kVAC Power Modules........................................................................... 24-25 The Influence of Power, Power Density and Lifetime Demands By Dr. Martin Schulz, Infineon Technologies AG • SINECUTTM windings with SecuMetTM metallization • available with exceptionally low PD levels for extended life for exceptional current strength • Low-inductance connection through robust terminals IGBT Modules............................................................................. 26-28 4in1 400A/1200V Module with T-type Topology for 3-Level Applications By Marco Honsberg and Thomas Radke, Mitsubishi Electric Europe B.V. Sensors....................................................................................... 30-33 Angle Sensor Devices in On-Axis and Off-Axis Applications By Mark J. Donovan, Allegro MicroSystems, LLC Capacitors................................................................................... 34-37 Integration and Miniaturization Trends By Dave Connet, Director IC Reference Design, TDK Portable Power........................................................................... 38-40 PSU ICs use Innovative Technology to Reduce 25W Charger Cost and BOM Count By Mike Matthews, VP Product Development, Power Integrations Inc Lighting....................................................................................... 42-43 A Low-Cost LED DriverModule, 0.5 A/33 V for general use, with efficiency aboe 90% ByValentin Kulikov, FuturoLighting Communication Power............................................................... 44-45 FPGAs Saves Power in Data Centers By Wolfgang Patelay, Freelance Journalist, Bodo´s Power Systems New Products............................................................................. 46-49 More Power for the Future By Wolfgang Patelay, Freelance Journalist, Bodo´s Power New Products............................................................................. 50-64 www.bodospower.com HIGH VOLTAGES, HEAVY CURRENTS, AND LOW INDUCTANCE ELECTRONICON Kondensatoren GmbH · Keplerstrasse 2 · Germany - 07549 Gera Fon: +49 365 7346 100 · email: sales@electronicon.com · web: www.electronicon.com 1 The Gallery Unlocking Digital Power 2 Bodo´s Power Systems® February 2015 www.bodospower.com Now more powerful • Industry’slargestreference designlibrary • Over1,000powermanagement referencedesigns • Enhancedsearchtool:Parameters, topologies,keyword,application, orproduct • Directaccesstofullytestedanalog, embeddedprocessor,and connectivityreferencedesigns This robust tool offers complete solutions across the board. CheckoutourNEW TIDesignforportable computingandindustrial applicationsTIDA-00194 JumpstartyourdesignwithTIDesignsforPowerManagement www.ti.com/powerlabtidesigns TheplatformbarandPowerLabaretrademarksofTexasInstruments.©2015TexasInstruments VIEWPOINT CONTENT A Media Katzbek 17a D-24235 Laboe, Germany Phone:+49 4343 42 17 90 Fax: +49 4343 42 17 89 editor@bodospower.com www.bodospower.com Publishing Editor Bodo Arlt, Dipl.-Ing. editor@bodospower.com Senior Editor Donald E. Burke, BSEE, Dr. Sc(hc) don@bodospower.com Corresponding Editor Dipl.-Ing. Wolfgang Patelay Wpatelay@t-online.de UK Support June Hulme Phone: +44(0) 1270 872315 junehulme@geminimarketing.co.uk Creative Direction & Production Repro Studio Peschke Repro.Peschke@t-online.de Free Subscription to qualified readers Bodo´s Power Systems is available for the following subscription charges: Annual charge (12 issues) is 150 € world wide Single issue is 18 € subscription@bodospower.com circulation print run 24 000 Printing by: Druckhaus Main-Echo GmbH & Co KG 63741 Aschaffenburg, Germany A Media and Bodos Power Systems assume and hereby disclaim any liability to any person for any loss or damage by errors or omissions in the material contained herein regardless of whether such errors result from negligence accident or any other cause whatsoever. Technology for a Better World We all need to work hard to keep up with a better world. Tolerance and acceptance to others must be a mandatory human behavior. We all need to support the freedom of the press in the world. I am shocked of the brutal terrorism that hit “Charlie Hebdo” in Paris. We as Engineers have to work for a better world. Education is the main thing for our kids to develop a better future. The year has started and we are looking forward to our first big conference and show in Charlotte NC for power electronics is the APEC. The heartbeat for any electronics is built on a stable and reliable power supply. APEC has the full focus set to improvement of the power supplies and reduction of losses in conversation. It is an international event that has built up a long tradition. We are now coming together to celebrate the 30th anniversary. What happened within that time frame? Power MOS devices became mature and helped significant in reduction of losses. The MOSFET and IGBT have changed a lot and now the devices in new wide band gap like GaN and SiC are continues improving performance. Infineon as a significant player in Power Semiconductors has also put attention to these new technologies. The purchase of International Rectifier by Infineon gets the GaN expertise. Events Biricha Digital Power Workshop with Microchip MCUs Karlsruhe Feb 10th www.biricha.com When I was a young engineer, 40 years ago, I looked to all these semiconductor companies around the globe. By now we have seen more and more that big players buy others. Texas Instruments got National, Power Integrations got CT Concept and Infineon got International Rectifier. That is real monopoly and not a play. Looking out what will be next. Communication is the only way to progress. We delivered already two issues this year. My contributed articles are all archived on my web-site and also retrievable at PowerGuru. Bodo’s Power Systems serves readers across the globe. If you speak the language, or just want to have a look, don’t miss our Chinese version: www.bodospowerchina.com. My Green Power Tip for February: Replace broken light bulbs with LED bulbs. That has a big impact to energy reduction and also lowers your utility bill for electricity. Best Regards Embedded World 2015, Nuremberg, Germany, February 24-26 www.embedded-world.de Biricha Analog and Digital PFC Workshop with TI C2000 MCUs Garching Feb 24th www.biricha.com APEX 2015, San Diego, CA, Feb. 24-26 www.ipcapexexpo.org/html/main/default.htm ESARS 2015, Aachen, Germany, March 3-5 http://www.esars2015.org/ 4 Bodo´s Power Systems® February 2015 www.bodospower.com KEEP UP WITH THE TIMES LF xx10 Current transducer range Pushing Hall effect technology to new limits To save energy, you first need to measure it! To maximise energy savings, you need to measure the current used accurately! By using the most advanced materials available, LEM’s new LF xx10 transducer range breaks new ground in accuracy for Closed Loop Hall effect transducer performance. LEM ASIC technology brings Closed Loop Hall effect transducer performance to the level of Fluxgate transducers and provides better control and increased system efficiency, but at a significantly lower price. Available in 5 different sizes to work with nominal currents from 100 A to 2000 A, the LF xx10 range provides up to 4 times better global accuracy over their operating temperature range compared to the previous generation of Closed Loop Hall effect current transducers. Quite simply, the LF xx10 range goes beyond what were previously thought of as the limits of Hall effect technology. • Overall accuracy over temperature range from 0.2 to 0.6 % of IPN • Exceptional offset drift of 0.1 % of IPN • Fast response time less than 0.5 μs • Higher measuring range • 5 compact sizes in a variety of mounting topologies (flat or vertical) • Immunity from external fields for your compact design • 100 % fully compatible vs LEM previous generation • -40 to +85 °C operation www.lem.com At the heart of power electronics. CONTENT NEWS Power Electronics for Distributed Generation Systems The 6th International Symposium Aachen, Germany, 22nd to 25th of June 2015 With the “Energiewende” (Energy Transition) towards more renewable and distributed generation in the power system ongoing, the 6th International Symposium on Power Electronics for Distributed Generation Systems (PEDG2015) will be held from 22nd to 25th of June 2015 in Aachen, Germany. Following on the success of the five previous international symposia, the PEDG 2015 Symposium will provide a venue for experts to present the state-of-the-art in power electronics and distributed generation (DG) systems. The Symposium is sponsored by the IEEE Power Electronics Society and organized by the PELS Technical Committee on Sustainable Energy Systems. PEDG 2015 will feature keynote speeches, tutorials regular technical sessions and an Exhibition. www.pedg2015.org Hamburg, Germany, looks forward to host the EU PVSEC 2015 The EU PVSEC 2015 will take place from 14 – 18 September 2015 at the CCH (Congress Centre Hamburg), Germany. Easy access by international air travel, by train and by car and a superior infrastructure make Hamburg with its CCH the ideal location for the EU PVSEC 2015. The CCH building complex allows for a compact layout of the EU PVSEC 2015 with the Conference, Industry Exhibition and Parallel Events located close together. This, together with the venue’s central location in the Hamburg city, guarantees for an efficient and successful participation for all Conference Delegates, Exhibitors and Visitors. The Call for Papers is open: Be part of this leading international PV Conference and present your latest results to specialists and decision-makers from around the globe. Submit your abstract by 16 February 2015! http://www.photovoltaic-conference.com/ Definitive Agreement to Acquire Arlon, LLC Rogers Corporation announced it has signed a definitive agreement to acquire Arlon, LLC, currently owned by Handy & Harman Ltd. (NASDAQ: HNH), for $157 million, subject to closing and post-closing adjustments. The transaction, which is subject to regulatory clearances, is expected to close in the first half of 2015. Rogers intends to finance the transaction through a combination of cash and borrowings under an existing bank credit facility. Bruce Hoechner, President and Chief Executive Officer of Rogers said, “This transaction is truly a unique strategic fit for both Rogers and Arlon. We are energized by the opportunity to serve our customers with our complementary capabilities and technologies in circuit materials and engineered silicones and to enhance value for our shareholders. We look forward to closing this acquisition as another significant milestone in Rogers’ growth as a premier global engineered materials solutions company.” Arlon’s circuit materials product family positions Rogers for additional growth in the rapidly expanding telecommunications infrastructure sector, as well as in the automotive, aerospace and defense sectors. Arlon produces its circuit materials in Bear, Delaware; Rancho Cucamonga, California; and Suzhou, China. www.rogerscorp.com Smart Systems Integration 2015 9th European Conference & Exhibition The event focuses on Integration Issues of Miniaturized Systems – MEMS, NEMS, ICs and Electronic Components. Five keynotes, 55 lectures, two special sessions by EPoSS, a panel discussion and 30 poster presentations are offered to the participants of Smart Systems Integration in Copenhagen, Denmark from 11 – 12 March 2015. The conference is accompanied by an exhibition where e.g. R&D institutes, manufactures of components and systems in the sectors microsystems and nanotechnology, microelectronics, sensor technology and wireless communication present their products and solutions. Exhibitors meet a highly specialized, international audience of 6 Bodo´s Power Systems® experts, users and scientists. An attractive social program will complete the event. The pre-field trip on 10 March 2015 is going to DELTA Dansk Elektronik Lys & Akustik in Horsholm. The traditional conference dinner on 11 March 2015 is taking place at Jacobsen Brewery & Bar and includes a guided tour through the brewery. During the conference dinner the Best Paper Award and Best Poster Award of SSI 2014 will be presented. The complete conference program and further information are available at: www.smartsystemsintegration.com February 2015 www.bodospower.com www.vincotech.com/speed-flexibility Looking for a partner that moves fast, but keeps your options open? Then try Vincotech. Making power modules is what we do. Fast and agile is what we are. EMPOWERING YOUR IDEAS SPEED AND FLEXIBILITY CONTENT NEWS Infineon Technologies AG Successfully Acquires International Rectifier Infineon Technologies AG announced the closing of the acquisition of International Rectifier. With effect from January 13th 2015, the El Segundo based company has become part of Infineon following the approval of all necessary regulatory authorities and International Rectifier’s shareholders. “The acquisition of International Rectifier is an important step for Infineon to foster our position as a global market leader in power semiconductors. We are sure that International Rectifier and its employees will make a great contribution to a joint successful future. Together both companies make a powerful combination”, says Dr. Reinhard Ploss, CEO of Infineon. “We offer our customers an unparalleled product portfolio. Our profound understanding of their needs enables us to provide the best possible and competitive solutions. The acquisition helps us to accelerate our strategic approach ‘from product thinking to system understanding’.” The combined company is led by Reinhard Ploss, CEO, Arunjai Mittal, Member of the Management Board Regions, Sales, Marketing, Strategy Development and M&A, and Dominik Asam, CFO. President of International Rectifier and of Infineon North America is Robert LeFort. International Rectifier is highly complementary to Infineon: the combined company gains greater scope in product portfolio and regions, especially with small and medium enterprise customers in the US and Asia. The merger taps additional system know-how in power management. It expands the expertise in power semiconductors, also combining leading knowledge in compound semiconductors, namely Gallium Nitride. Furthermore, the acquisition will drive greater economies of scale in production, strengthening the competitiveness of the combined company. www.infineon.com Jason Fullerton, Moderator for Two IPC APEX EXPO 2015 Sessions Alpha is pleased to announce that Jason Fullerton, Customer Technical Support Engineer for the Americas Region, was selected by the IPC to moderate two technical sessions during the IPC APEX EXPO taking place in San Diego in late February of next year. The first session, Fluxes I, focuses on the makeup and performance of the flux component of solder paste. The second session, BGA Head in Pillow, discusses the defects on ball grid array packages, known as Head in Pillow. “The material presented during the technical sessions at IPC APEX contain new research and advancements from the industry,” said Ful- lerton. “I was thrilled when asked to moderate on the subject of fluxes and head in pillow because I see first-hand how a lack of understanding these topics can adversely affect a customer’s assembly process. There is a tremendous amount of value in these sessions if you can transfer what you learn to your production floor.” Jason has over 20 years of experience in manufacturing operations in the automotive, high-reliability, and commercial electronics industries, specializing in SMT and wave soldering processes. He has also worked at a failure analysis lab and IPC Training Center near his hometown of Philadelphia. He earned his Bachelor’s Degree in Manufacturing Engineering from GMI Engineering & Management Institute (now Kettering University) in Flint, MI. www.alpha.alent.com 8th Developer Forum Battery Technologies of batteryuniversity.eu At the 8th Developer Forum Battery Technologies, participants will receive information about the latest developments and trends regarding cell selection, battery packaging and safety, charging technologies, power management, standardization, electromobility and stationary energy storage systems. The Developer Forum is organized by the batteryuniversity.eu and takes place from March 24 to 26, 2015 in the Stadthalle Aschaffenburg, Germany. More than 550 international participants are expected to attend this year’s three-day Developer Forum with around 50 high-caliber speakers from research and industry and the accompanying exhibition. Due to the overwhelming response of previous years and ongoing 8 Bodo´s Power Systems® high demand, the three-day Developer Forum again begins on March 24 with two half-day basic training seminars on the topics of “Battery Management Systems” and “Lithium-ion Battery Technologies” offered both in German- and English-language. “The use of lithium-ion batteries is steadily increasing in all areas of daily life. It is, therefore, important for system developers from all kinds of different fields not only to become familiar with the basics of this technology, but also to keep up-to-date with the latest developments. Many of our now well over one thousand training participants use the training seminars of batteryuniversity.eu not only as an introduction to the topic, but also to regularly gain a quick and comprehensive overview of the latest materials, technologies, standards, regulations, etc.,” said Dr. Jochen Mähliß, director of batteryuniversity.eu. February 2015 www.batteryuniversity.eu www.bodospower.com CONTENT NEWS Powervation Raises USD7M in Debt and Equity Financing Powervation Ltd., the Intelligent Digital Power™ company, announced it has closed a $3.0 million term debt agreement with Ares Capital Corporation that supplements a $4 million private equity financing that closed in the December quarter. All existing investors participated in the equity financing, including: Scottish Equity Partners (SEP), Braemar Energy Ventures, Intel Capital, VentureTech, 4th Level Ventures, and Semtech Corporation The funding will be used to scale the business in response to strong adoption of the Company’s Intelligent Digital Power™ IC products in the cloud server, high performance computing, communications, and power supply markets. The Company’s integrated digital control and digital power management IC products are based on a proprietary digital control platform which delivers best in class regulation, full auto-tuning, dynamic performance and breakthrough flexibility. Powervation’s intelligent digital DC/DC controllers provide superior programmable power solutions to the perennial power design challenges of efficiency, size, cost and time to market. The funding round will also enable the company to accelerate the development and deployment of its new digital controllers with industry leading xTune™ intelligent auto-tuning technology, and ITM™ intelligent, fast transient technology for multi-rail, multi-phase and integrated point of load (POL) applications. www.powervation.com www.aresmgmt.com Indium10.1 Pb-Free Solder Paste at APEX Indium Corporation will feature its new solder paste, Indium10.1, at IPC APEX Expo 2015 on Feb. 24 in San Diego, CA. Indium10.1 is a Pb-free halogen-containing solder paste with the lowest levels of voiding for QFNs, BGAs, and pads with large ground planes. The oxidation-inhibiting properties of Indium10.1 provide industry-leading headin-pillow and graping resistance, with complete coalescence, even after long reflow profiles. The exceptional soldering ability of Indium10.1 makes it the best solution for components with less-than-ideal solderability and challenging RF shield metallizations. Indium10.1 offers the lowest cost of ownership to PCB assembly manufacturers through best-in-class printing and soldering performance, including best-in-class print definition and transfer efficiency, low-voiding performance, and head-in-pillow and graping resistance. Indium Corporation will be exhibiting at booth 1027. www.indium.com POWER TO MAKE LIFE COOLER With its best-in-class performance enabling heat loss reduction, the UMOS IX helps to keep you cool. Our DTMOS family with its compact design delivers high efficiency and power density. So whatever your application,Toshiba has the power to make it happen. UMOS IX: 40V MOSFETs with RDS(on) down to 0.85mΩ DTMOS - low loss performance in 600V, 650V & 800V class Smallest packaging (SMOS line-up) SiC Diodes Automotive MOSFETs toshiba.semicon-storage.com/eu/power www.bodospower.com February 2015 Bodo´s Power Systems® 9 BLUE PRODUCT CONTENTOF THE MONTH Configurable Half Bridge Circuit Design Kit Cree, Inc., a market leader in silicon carbide (SiC) power devices, has introduced a new Cree MOSFET design kit that includes all of the components needed to evaluate Cree® MOSFET and Schottky diode performance in a configurable half bridge circuit. Quick and easy to assemble and use, the new design kit enables comparative testing between IGBTs and Cree MOSFETs, and provides an effective layout example for properly driving Cree MOSFETs with minimal ringing. Designed to assist engineers new to the higher switching speeds of SiC devices, the kit provides easy access to critical test points, enabling simple and accurate measurements, including VGS, VDS, and IDS. The kit is also easily configurable to several different power conversion topologies in buck or boost configurations. Half bridge and three-phase configurations can be constructed and analyzed by respectively combing two and three kits. The design kit includes two 80mOhm, 1200V Cree MOSFETs; two 1200V, 20A Cree Schottky diodes in standard TO-247 packages; a half bridge configured design board equipped with isolated gate drives; power supplies; and all of the other components necessary to assemble the power stage. The kit also includes a gate driver schematic and layout reference for a TO-247-packaged Cree MOSFET, as well as a comprehensive user manual and sourcing sheet with basic block diagrams and specifications. To learn more about Cree’s new MOSFET design kit, please visit: http://response.cree.com/choosewisely to watch a video that demonstrates the advantages of designing with Cree MOSFETs, download the user manual and SiC reference designs, or purchase the Cree MOSFET design kit through one of Cree’s trusted distributors. www.cree.com Profit from More than 40 years experience in general and power electronics Design of complete or parts of SMPS, lamp ballasts, LED ps, D amplifiers, motor electronics, amplifiers, measuring instruments, critical analog hardware. Experience with SiC and GaN. EMI expertise. Minimum design times and favorable costs due to experience and a large stock of SMPS components. Assistance with your own designs in any design phase. Design approvals, failure analyses, Redesigns to weed out problems or to reduce cost. Seminars, Articles and Books. Translations of technical and other critical texts German - English, English - German, French - German, French - English. Former manager of R & D / managing director in D, USA, NL, A. Consultant and owner of an electronics design lab since 23 yrs. 140 publications resp. patent applications, inventor of the current-mode control in SMPS (US Patent 3,742,371). Names and business affairs of clients are kept strictly confidential. 10 Bodo´s Power Systems® DR.-ING. ARTUR SEIBT Lagergasse 2/6 A1030 Wien (Vienna) Austria February 2015 Tel.:+43-1-5058186 Fax: 5037084 Mobile:+43-699-11835174 email: dr.seibt@aon.at http:// members.aon.at/aseibt www.bodospower.com Shut Down Power Amplifier Self Protects With Over Current Shut Down THE NEW MP118FD IS ALSO THERMALLY EFFICIENT BY DECREASING QUIESCENT POWER DISSIPATION – A LOW 26mA The MP118FD power operational amplifier is a next generation product design targeting industrial piezo drive applications. This open frame design integrates several new layers of onboard circuit protection safe guards. In addition to temperature shut down and external shut down, the device provides a new twist that replaces the more common over current limit functionality with the ability to completely shut down its output drivers when put into an over current situation. This will protect the power amplifier from over stress due to excessive current and unsafe power dissipation. Onboard temperature monitoring circuitry, also new, enables the MP118FD to shut down the system before any permanent damage can occur. The MP118FD is compatible with supplies up to 200V and is capable of 10A of continuous output current, or 12A PEAK. RF +VS RI PRINT NOZZLE COMMAND VOLTAGE +VS +VB GND SD -ISD MP118FD RESET -VS -VB GND +ISD RLIM OUT TEMP CC 1 CC2 PIEZO TRANSDUCER CC -VS apexanalog.com/bpsmp118fd © 2014 Apex Microtechnology, Inc. All rights reserved. Product information is subject to change without notice. The Apex Microtechnology logo is a trademark of Apex Microtechnology, Inc.BPS062014 34-PIN DIP STYLE PACKAGE DF Footprint 55.8mm X 41.4mm Power up at www.apexanalog.com/bpsmp118fd GUEST CONTENT EDITORIAL SiC Power Device Impact in 2015 By Paul Kierstead and Jeffrey B. Casady, Ph.D., Cree, Inc. Current status As 2015 begins, the power semiconductor industry has more than 10 device makers with commercially qualified silicon carbide products, including Schottky diodes from 600V to 1700V in single die current ratings from 1A to 50A. SiC MOSFETs in the same power range have been gaining market acceptance, with five vendors now competing with SiC MOSFETs. In addition, most of the top power module suppliers are offering integrated SiC-based power modules in several circuit configurations and power ratings. Following years of promise, SiC power sales have grown past $200M in 2014 and are expected to grow even more in 2015. Fueling the growth are the usual suspects--server and telecommunications power supplies and solar inverters. However, as the portfolio of devices and packages has expanded, applications and new end systems are adopting rapidly. Electric vehicle (EV) chargers, both on-board and gridtied, are amongst the fastest growing segment adopting SiC power devices. EV chargers adopting can be in pure EV or hybrid EV, generically grouped together as x-EV. Broad adoption is also occurring in the industrial power space led by high-density power supplies and converters for industrial automation, medical power, induction heating and motor drives. 12 a much broader range of applications including new lower voltage SiC MOSFETs for x-EV drive-train inverters, on-board chargers, and grid-tied chargers in the automotive space. In 2014 a major breakthrough was demonstrated with developmental 1200V SiC MOSFETs achieving 2.7 mΩ·cm2, a new record low (~50 percent lower than best commercial offerings) for the planar, reliable SiC DMOS structure. This breakthrough performance enabled a highly competitive team selected by the United States Department of Energy (DoE) to develop, benchmark, and automotive qualify 900V, 100A SiC MOSFETs for automotive x-EV drive-train applications by 2016. The Cree-led team includes a top North American based automotive OEM and an advanced module manufacturer. Similarly, a 2014 announcement by Toyota that SiC would improve its Prius hybrid fuel efficiency up to 10 percent provides momentum for SiC in x-EV. Developmental lower-voltage SiC MOSFETs are also being evaluated for aerospace, telecom and industrial PS, micro-grid high-power converters, and solar inverters with input voltages < 850V. Relative to 650V Si MOSFETs below 300 mΩ, new lower voltage SiC MOSFETs offer improved voltage margin, lower QG, flatter positive RDSON temperature coefficient, dramatically lower output capacitance, and a better body diode for applications which value high power density, low losses, and rugged performance. For medium voltage, 2.5-15kV SiC MOSFETs continue to make great strides. Highlights include the successful demonstration of a new 3.3kV, 40A MOSFET for rail and HVDC applications, which received a great deal of interest from selected customers in this space. At least two SiC vendors are offering engineering samples of 3.3kV SiC die and full-SiC modules. Odakyu Electric Railway of Japan has already announced that they have ordered 3.3kV, 1.5kA, all-SiC power modules, and they expect energy savings of 20-36 percent, plus size and weight savings of the main circuit to be as much as 80 percent. What typically drives adoption is the ability to successfully make systems cheaper and better. SiC MOSFETs (> four years in the market) and SiC diodes (>13 years in the market) often enable system switching frequencies to be increased up to six times. With higher frequency operation, reductions in component ratings for magnetic and capacitor elements often enables SiC based power systems to be shrunk dramatically. In most cases the increased frequencies have been achieved at higher energy efficiency than the incumbent silicon based system providing additional benefit in system thermal performance. SiC power devices often results in smaller, more reliable and lower cost power conversion solutions. Many new SiC-based end systems have been introduced to the market in 2014 and many more are in production qualification entering 2015. RDSON,SP of developmental 10 kV MOSFETs improved by 25 percent in 2014 and are being evaluated in grid-tied solar and similar applications where the low frequency, large transformers are replaced with solid-state transformers. One DoE program underway is aiming to demonstrate a >100 kW grid-tied inverter from panel to grid using this “transformer-less” SiC solid-state transformer to dramatically lower the cost of utility solar installations. Advantages include flexible sizing of the system (no limits of transformer size), lower cabling costs (higher voltage transmission), higher efficiency, better reliability (fewer components) and more information sharing and control options. These benefits can be extended beyond solar applications to numerous grid-tied power systems to allow breathtaking new options in power distribution. Future Development Looking forward, we expect to see future SiC products in more applications over a broader voltage range, with significantly enhanced performance features. Building on the success of the current SiC MOSFET portfolio, Cree’s SiC development efforts are expanding to With the rapid proliferation of new products aimed at different markets, we expect SiC adoption in 2015 to continue to accelerate to new heights. Bodo´s Power Systems® February 2015 www.cree.com www.bodospower.com electrical engineering soft ware THE SIMULATION SOFTWARE PREFERRED BY POWER ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS KEY FEATURES Electrical Fast simulation of complex systems Control Code generation Thermal Frequency analysis Magnetic Available as standalone program Mechanical or Simulink blockset se Get a free test licen al w w w.plexim.com/tri carabinbackhaus.com MODELING DOMAINS CONTENT MARKET Electronics Industry Digest By Aubrey Dunford, Europartners The total production value of electronic systems is projected to increase 5 percent in 2014 to $ 1.49 trillion and climb to about $ 1.82 trillion in 2018, which represents a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 5.2 percent from $ 1.41 trillion in 2013, so IC Insights. SEMICONDUCTORS WSTS anticipates the world semiconductor market to show a solid growth of 9 percent up to $ 333 billion in 2014, driven mainly by double digit growth of Memory product category. All other major product categories are also forecasted to have positive growth rates. The highest growth rates are shown for the Memory (17.3 percent), Discretes (12.3 percent) and Analog (10.3 percent) categories. The semiconductor market growth will be largely driven by smartphones and automotive. The German semiconductor market is expected to grow by 7.2 percent to € 11.3 billion this year, so the Central Association Electronic Components and Systems. This will be the first time that the semiconductor market will exceed the pre-crisis levels of 2007. For 2015, the ZVEI expects the market to achieve a five percent growth to € 12 billion. Automotive electronics is expected to be the largest market segment in 2014, with a market share of 43 percent. At 4.9 billion euros, it has the largest growth in the segments (+10 percent). Industry electronics has replaced the technology data as the second largest market segment in 2013. This year, its market share will be 24.3 percent. The European semiconductor market is expected to increase by 6.5 percent to $ 36 billion this year. In 2015, the European semiconductor market could grow by over 3 percent to more than $ 37 billion. Infineon and UMC announced the extension of their manufacturing partnership into power semiconductors for automotive applications. 14 Bodo´s Power Systems® SEMI projects that worldwide sales of new semiconductor manufacturing equipment will increase 19.3 percent to $ 38.0 billion in 2014. In 2015, strong positive growth is expected to continue, resulting in a global market increase of 15.2 percent before moderating in 2016. Wafer processing equipment, the largest product segment by dollar value, is anticipated to increase 17.8 percent in 2014 to total $ 29.9 billion. The market for assembly and packaging equipment will increase by 30.6 percent to $ 3.0 billion in 2014. The market for semiconductor test equipment is forecast to increase by 26.5 percent, reaching $ 3.4 billion this year. For 2014, Taiwan, North America, and South Korea remain the largest spending regions. In terms of percentage growth, SEMI forecasts that in 2015, Europe will reach equipment sales of $ 3.9 billion (47.9 percent increase over 2014), Taiwan will reach $ 12.3 billion (28.1 percent increase), and South Korea sales will hit $ 8.0 billion (25.0 percent increase). OPTOELECTRONICS 2014 is undoubtedly a fruitful year for the panel industry. In addition to the overall increase in panel price, the four major applications (TV, monitor, notebook and tablet) still reached a total panel shipment of 826.8 million units, showing a 2.2 percent annual growth rate, so WitsView. PASSIVE COMPONENTS TE Connectivity officially opens its new facility to design and manufacture highly engineered temperature sensors in Andover, Minnesota. The new facility will be one of TE’s largest sensor innovation centers, with a temperature technology center of expertise. With its acquisition of Measurement Specialties, TE is one of the largest connectivity and sensor companies in the world, engineering sensor solutions that help customers transform their concepts into smart, connected creations. OTHER COMPONENTS Delta Electronics announced that its 100 percent owned subsidiary Deltronics (Netherlands) will acquire Eltek for NOK 3.9 billion ($ 530 M). Established in 1971 and headquartered in Drammen, Norway, Eltek designs power supplies and has 2,400 employees at 60 offices in almost 40 countries worldwide. February 2015 DISTRIBUTION The German component distribution market has grown by 6 percent in Q3/2014, and the booking situation remains stable, so the FBDi. The turn-over grew to € 741 M, and the incoming orders rose to € 738 M. Thus, the book-to bill-rate was exactly 1. The semiconductors grew above average with 8.1 percent to € 510 M, their market share remains at 69 percent. During Electronica, TTI, a specialist distributor of passive, connector, electromechanical and discrete components, was presented with several awards by its suppliers: From Nichicon TTI received the award for “Distributor of the Year EMEA 2014”. TTI was awarded by Bourns “Distributor of the Year Europe 2014 for Demand Discovery and Conversion”. Kingbright presented TTI with its “Silver Award Europe 2014”. Molex recognized TTI with its “FY2014 European Large Distributor of the Year” award. From Omron TTI received the award for “2014 Demand Creation Excellence” and by 3M TTI was awarded for “2014 Fastest Growth in Europe”. For the second straight year, Mouser Electronics has been named the Global e-Catalog Distributor of the Year by interconnect manufacturer Molex. Mouser has also expanded its worldwide distribution agreement with Analog Devices to include ADI’s recently acquired RF and microwave products from Hittite Microwave. Mouser also announced the introduction of their new Motor Control Applications site. Mouser’s new applications site provides developers with the resources they need to learn about the latest advances in motor control, and the newest components available from Mouser Electronics for building motor control systems. This is the comprehensive power related extract from the «Electronics Industry Digest», the successor of The Lennox Report. For a full subscription of the report contact: eid@europartners.eu.com or by fax 44/1494 563503. www.europartners.eu.com www.bodospower.com Motor Control Automotive Consumer Products + Power Transmission * Renewables Traction = Always first-class results: Power Devices from Mitsubishi Electric. Precise and efficient control of dynamic processes puts heavy demands on the components used. When it counts, power devices from Mitsubishi Electric are always first choice. Because, in addition to many innovations, they consistently provide added quality, performance and robustness – and therefore reliably ensure first-class results. More information: semis.info@meg.mee.com / www.mitsubishichips.eu * 6 th Generation IGBT Module NX-Package – Excellent thermal conductivity by AlN substrate – Superior power cycling capacity by optimized bonding – 6 th Generation IGBT with CSTBT ™ Chip Technology – Integrated NTC for TC-sensing – Comprehensive line-up for 1200V and 1700V TECHNOLOGY CONTENT Biricha Lecture Notes on Analog and Digital Power Supply Design Part 1.B Foundations: Frequency Response Measurement of the Plant, Compensator and Loop of our Switch Mode Power Supply By Dr Ali Shirsavar and Dr Michael Hallworth, Biricha Digital Power Ltd Introduction In the last article we discussed Bode plots and how we can use the information displayed on a Bode plot in order to make an assessment of the stability of a power supply. At the end of that article we showed a Bode plot displaying real measurement data of the loop of a power supply. In this article we are going to discuss how to physically make this measurement, what you will need to do to your power supply, the hardware required and how to connect it to your power supply. We will also cover how to measure the plant and compensator individually. A typical power supply is shown in Figure 1. The power supply consists of a plant, which in turn can be sub-divided into a power stage and the PWM stage and a compensator. The output voltage is fed into our compensator, which is implemented using an op-amp and the appropriate selection of capacitors and resistors (much more on compensator design in later articles). The output of our compensator is fed into a comparator which generates our new value of duty cycle thus closing the loop. Of course the comparator and compensator opamp are usually implemented inside our controller IC. as our ground; therefore we must use an injection transformer as shown in Figure 1. Then, we connect channel 1 of the Bode 100 to point A and channel 2 to point B as shown. Channel 1 will measure the input signal, i.e. the injected sinusoid. Channel 2 will measure the sinusoid as it appears on the output voltage of our converter - i.e. after it has passed through the loop. Using this configuration we will be able to measure the open loop response of our power supply. An easy way of working out what we are measuring is to simply put your finger in the position of channel 1 and then follow its path through our circuit until you get to channel 2. For example in Figure 1 we can see that we will first go through the compensator, then the PWM and then the power stage; so we are measuring the entire loop. We will show later in the article how this measurement can be imported in into our automated power supply design software (Biricha WDS) Figure 2 - Measuring the frequency response of the plant Figure 1 - Set up of a typical switched mode power supply showing the injection resistor and measurement points, A, B and C. Measuring the loop response As we discussed in the first article, in order to measure the loop, all we have to do is inject a sinusoidal signal into our system and measure how this signal changes as it passes through the system. In order to do this, we will break the loop by inserting an injection resistor into the feedback path of our output voltage. Figure 1 shows the location of the injection resistor. The location is chosen such that it will not affect the overall operation of the loop. The most common location for the injection resistor is on the top of the compensator’s potential divider. The value of the injection resistor should be small compared to those of the potential divider so that it does not impact the correct operation of our compensator - typically it is around 20Ω. Across the injection resistor, we will inject a sinusoidal signal of varying frequencies using a network analyser. In our case we used a Bode 100 vector network analyser from OMICRON Lab. We cannot connect the Bode 100 directly across the injection resistor as the potential at the bottom of the injection resistor is not the same 16 Bodo´s Power Systems® Measuring the plant It is always prudent to measure the plant to make sure that our transfer function (much more on this in later articles) is correct and the same as the real power supply. We can easily superimpose our measurement with our calculated transfer function using Biricha WDS. In order to measure the plant, all we have to do is move the location of our Bode 100’s channel 1 probe to point C as shown in Figure 2. The injection resistor and signal that we are injecting remain the same. If we now put our finger on channel 1 and follow it path to channel 2, we will see that the signal goes through the PWM stage followed by the power stage i.e. we are measuring our plant. The Bode 100 will now compare these two signals and the resulting Bode plot will be the measurement of the plant of our system. Measuring the compensator It is always important to also measure the frequency response of our compensator to make sure that we have not made any mistakes in our calculations and are not trying to operate the IC’s op-amp beyond its capabilities. To measure the compensator we are interested in seeing how the signal changes as it passes from point A in our diagram to point C. Therefore, we should connect Channel 1 to point A and Channel 2 to point C. This measurement will be the frequency response of the compensator within our system and again can be February 2015 www.bodospower.com TECHNOLOGY CONTENT imported into Biricha WDS so that a direct comparison can be made with the calculated results. Real Life Measurement As a real life example we will now measure the loop of an analog voltage mode controlled Buck converter. This EVM is used during our Analog Power Supply design workshop [1] and all attendees get hands-on practice of measuring the loop, compensator and plant of this EVM and others during the workshop. By connecting the Bode 100 vector network analyzer to the Buck converter as described in the loop measurement section, we are able to obtain the real measurement data. This data can then be imported into Biricha WDS for comparison with our calculated results. This is shown in Figure 4. The black trace in Figure 4 is the measured result from the Bode 100 and the green trace is the result calculated by WDS. You can see that we have an almost perfect match. There are also almost perfect matches between the calculated and measured results of the plant and the compensator, but we have not shown them here due to the shortage of space. In the previous article we discussed what to look for in a Bode plot in order to assess stability. In short we are interested in the cross-over frequency, phase margin, gain margin and the slope of the gain plot at cross-over (please see previous article). We can clearly see these from the Bode plot of Figure 4. However WDS also displays these automatically in its “Stability Box”; this is shown in Figure 5. Figure 3 - Measuring the frequency response of the compensator You see from the above figure that not only WDS has designed a very robust and stable power supply, in fact the real measurement is a very close match with the designed value. Concluding Remarks In this article we have explained how to measure the loop, compensator and plant of your power supply using a vector network analyzer. The measurements were made by injecting a sinusoidal of varying frequency into the loop and measuring how this signal changed as it passed through the system. The connection setup for the loop, the plant and the compensator were shown in Figures 1 to 3 respectively. In the next article, we will be discussing transfer functions from first principles and how you can use them to analytically design a compensator for a power supply in order to meet the stability criteria. For the PDF version and related videos please visit: www.biricha.com/bodo1b Figure 4 - Real measurement data of the loop (black trace) imported into WDS and compared with the simulated loop (green trace) Stability Fx P.m. G.m. Slope at Fx RHPZ Nominal 11156Hz 62° 33dB-23.0dB/dec n/a Measured 11156Hz 55° 23dB-25.3dB/dec Figure 5 - Stability of WDS simulated (nominal) loop and real measured loop Things to Try 1 – Check out our videos which complement this article: www.biricha.com/bodo1b 2 – Visit OMICRON Lab’s website for more information about Bode 100 3 – Try out a trial version of Biricha WDS from www.biricha.com/wds Bibliography [1] Biricha Digital’s Analog Power Supply Design Workshop Manual [2] OMICORN Lab website www.omicron.com Capacitor expertise to help your ideas take off At ICW we specialise in capacitors for demanding power electronics applications. An extensive product catalogue, short lead times and competitive prices ensure that we are able to respond to your varying demands. In addition, when you have a specific requirement; perhaps an unusual capacitance, a high ripple current, a difficult physical dimension or terminal arrangement then ICW has the electrical, mechanical and thermal expertise to quickly and cost effectively engineer an application specific capacitor. www.bodospower.com Innovative solutions So, if you want capacitor expertise and knowledgeable product advice, in a package that enables your ideas to take off...Talk to us now! February 2015 Bodo´s Competitive prices Industrial Capacitors (Wrexham) Ltd Miners Road, Llay, Wrexham North Wales, UK. LL12 0PJ Tel: 44 (0)1978 853805 Fax: 44 (0)1978 853785 Email: sales@icwltd.co.uk Web: www.icwltd.co.uk Power Systems® World class lead times 17 COVER CONTENT STORY Unlocking Digital Power This is a story of change, a story that began 5 years ago when a small power company entered an uncertain market dominated by larger firms. Unlocking the true potential of digital power has required an approach very different to what had traditionally existed in the power supply industry. This company’s vision to collaborate and think creatively has changed the way the entire industry now approaches the board mount power market. By Mark Adams, CUI CUI is the company that entered into the digital power market at a time when only a few large firms dominated the space. As is typical with any new and exciting technology, the introduction of digital power to the market was not smooth. CUI knew that their approach to the market had to be different because this was a very different technology compared to analog solutions of the past. The technology had the potential to open up a range of new possibilities for system and board level designers, but with this potential also came a perception of complexity. CUI knew that in order for digital power to spread beyond the large tier 1 organizations with vast in-house design resources, they needed to take this technology and simplify it, similar to the way the FPGA market did in the late 90’s to address a space that was dominated by ASICs. Up until CUI entered the market, digital power technology was primarily being implemented at a discrete semiconductor level. Power module companies were primarily focused on custom designs rather than general market release products for two primary reasons. First, many module companies perceived the customer support requirements for a standardized digital module platform as too great. Second, the digital power marketplace was in the midst of a significant lawsuit that forced a delay in product development by numerous power supply and semiconductor companies. In 2005, Power One went to court versus Artesyn for a series of patents that they had on serial bus communication within a digital point of load (POL) device. In 2007, the courts sided with Power One, immediately stalling the development path of many power supply and semiconductor companies designing with the technology. When CUI started looking at the market in early 2009, they knew that the Power One patent for this technology was a major barrier to entry. At the time, Power One had only licensed this patent to semiconductor companies because they had their own interests in the point of load space. In September of 2009, CUI and Power One announced that they had signed a non-exclusive license agreement for their digital power IP - a first for a power supply company. This was a major step for the market in opening up the technology beyond a single source solution, and representative of the way CUI would approach the market moving forward - to work collaboratively with others in an open, transparent, and honest manner - with their customers, technology partners, and competitors. With the intellectual property concerns addressed, CUI began development of their first modules with the understanding that their product was only as good as the IC technologies that they integrated. With this in mind, CUI began to look for strategic partnerships with semiconductor companies that possessed IP that would help to simplify implementation of digital power for the customer. Based on initial 18 Bodo´s Power Systems® market feedback, one of the most complicated factors in implementing this new technology was proper compensation of the circuit. Finalizing the circuit compensation required special tools and many dedicated man hours. To address this, CUI partnered with Powervation; a controller company founded in 2006 out of Cork, Ireland and backed by Intel and TSMC. Powervation had technology that would allow for auto-compensation within the circuit, providing customers with the means to bypass the traditional practice of building in margins to account for factors such as component ageing, manufacturing variations, and temperature. The ability for the module to dynamically achieve optimum stability in real time as conditions change was important to not only provide a superior product to the market, but also to allow for the technology to be more easily adopted. In September 2009, CUI announced the industry’s first auto-compensated digital POL modules in a push to take the technology beyond the traditional tier 1 companies in an initiative they dubbed as “Simple Digital”. The market began to embrace digital power technology for the value it added to the system and the fact that it could dramatically shorten designs in the most sophisticated circuits—but this was still not a simple transition for many customers. In the power space, “sole source” is a dirty word. Because digital power was still a relatively new technology, multi-source options were not yet available to customers, creating another barrier to digital power’s mass adoption. To address this, CUI and Ericsson Power Modules began talks to create a cooperation based on a set of common footprints. For the previous 2 years, Ericsson Power Modules and CUI had competed in the same space for the same customers. However, they also competed against the fact that customers would not accept a single source design. Thus, in July 2011, Ericsson Power Modules and CUI announced a collaboration to provide their customers with an alternate source for their digital power products, an industry first. Figure 1 – The NDM2Z Series based on an Intersil controller was the first fully digital POL module to offer a dual source option to customers. February 2015 www.bodospower.com Pre-Applied Thermal Interface Material (TIM) The Infineon-qualified solution With the ongoing increase of power densities in power electronics the thermal interface between power module and heatsink becomes a larger challenge. A thermal interface material, especially developed for and pre-applied to Infineon’s modules outperforms the general purpose materials available. TIM does not only provide the lowest thermal resistance, it also fulfills the highest quality standards given for power modules to achieve the longest lifetime and highest system reliability. Benefits Reduced process time in manufacturing Simplified mounting Increased system reliability Increased system lifetime Optimized thermal management Improved handling in case of maintenance www.infineon.com/tim 110 100 90 Tj–Tamb [K] Main Features Best in class thermal resistance Pre-applied to Infineon Modules Dry to the touch Optimized for dedicated Infineon Modules 80 70 60 50 1 2 3 Time in HTS* [Weeks] *HTS: High Temperature Storing, Stresstest 1000 h, 125 °C 4 5 n MOD-3 n MOD-2 n MOD-1 n IFX-Solution COVER CONTENT STORY As part of this collaboration, CUI uncovered yet another possible barrier to mass-adoption of digital power technology. PMBus was established as an open standard power-management protocol. The command language is intended to enable communication between components of a power system: CPUs, power supplies, power converters, and more. However, it doesn’t guarantee interoperability between digital ICs from different manufacturers. To address traffic issues on the main bus, semiconductor manufacturers developed their own proprietary serial busses to alleviate the burden. The commands transferred over the secondary serial busses are not standard, varying from vendor to vendor. If an engineer were to mix ICs from different vendors within a digital system, it becomes imperative that the documentation is extremely thorough. If the software platform on a board is not accurately written, catastrophic failures could occur. For example, in Figure 2 you will see a system with a host controller. This controller sends out a simple Vout command to change the voltage of each rail to 1.0 V. The data format and exponent value for each rail is provided from 4 leading digital power IC vendors. 1.0 V is sent to the first rail with the appropriate command, and then subsequently sent to the other 3 power rails. In this example, the other controllers will change output voltages anywhere from 1.6 V to 8.0 V—creating the potential of catastrophic failure on this board. In short, a PMBus logo does not guarantee compatibility. Figure 2 – The same PMBus Vout command sent to 4 different digital controllers creates 4 unique and potentially catastrophic outputs. This is evident when you look at the transition in power supplies needed for a technology that is abundant across all markets, the FPGA. As FPGA geometries reduce with each successive generation, so have the core voltages and allowable voltage tolerances within the device. Figure 3 – As FPGA geometries reduce with each successive generation, so have the core voltages and allowable voltage tolerances within the device. To address this rapidly growing challenge, CUI set out to acquire IP that could integrate with digital control technology to better address the lowering core voltages, rising current densities and tightening tolerances of advanced ICs. In March 2010, CUI signed an exclusive license agreement for a SEPIC-fed buck topology that would be branded as “Solus”. This technology would allow CUI to reach performance levels that others could not. CUI’s Solus® Power Topology provides advantages in isolated and non-isolated dc-dc converter designs through a significant reduction in switching and conductivity losses. Very simply, the Solus Topology combines a single-ended primary-inductor converter (SEPIC) with the conventional buck topology to form the SEPIC-fed buck converter. Lower voltage and current stresses in the topology coupled with an inherent GCE (gate charge extraction) process allows the new topology to reduce switching turn-on losses by 75% and switching turn-off losses by 99% on the control FET when compared to a conventional buck converter. Total efficiency is further increased by distributing the energy delivery into multiple paths, reducing circuit conduction losses by nearly 50%. The rich feature set of the Solus Topology is allowing CUI to accelerate the performance trend trajectories for the big-four power conversion needs in their latest designs: higher power density, higher efficiency for “greener” systems, faster transient response, and lower EMI. With this revelation in hand, CUI set out to educate customers, partners, and even competitors that interoperability was an issue that needed to be considered and addressed in order for digital power to propagate throughout the industry. And because the existing Powervation design could not provide a true 2nd source to the Ericsson footprint due to the PMBus interoperability issues between the controllers, CUI created a second POL family based on Intersil’s digital controllers. Since 2011, CUI has been focused on the continuation of product development to create a platform of easy to implement digital solutions. This has never been a more daunting task as the power supply requirements of today’s advanced designs become more complex. The market has made a shift, in a very quick manner, to a new era of power conversion. Simply converting one voltage to another is no longer adequate. Now, converting one voltage to a perfect voltage, under all conditions, all of the time is mandatory. 20 Bodo´s Power Systems® Figure 4 – Solus Power Topology’s Sepic-Fed Buck design allows for a significant reduction in switching losses compared to a standard buck design. February 2015 www.bodospower.com Capacitors for Power Electronics IGBT Snubbers RF Mica Capacitors DC Link Capacitors -High Current, High Voltage Film -High Capacitance Aluminum Electrolytic AC Output Harmonic Filter Capacitors www.cde.com COVER CONTENT STORY In March of 2014, CUI released its first non-isolated digital POL based on the technology. The NDM3ZS-60 was a 60A module that delivered 20% more power in the same space as competing products, equivalent transient performance with one-third the output capacitance of other solutions, and a reduction in power losses by almost 25% versus best in class products on the market, thus addressing the needs brought on in today’s application – power loss, power density, and power accuracy. Figure 5 – CUI’s NDM3ZS-60 was the company’s first non-isolated digital POL based on Solus Power Topology. On top of the growing need for perfect power conversion, the capabilities of digital power are quickly moving from an “optional” to a “required” technology thanks to the effects of Moore’s Law. As the geometries of new semiconductors continue to drop, semiconductor manufacturers are looking for ways to increase yields and also provide options to customers that allow them to optimize between performance and power consumption. However, in order to achieve this, power rails need to be digitally controlled and need to have the capability to be adjusted dynamically with a simple command. An example of this is Altera’s new SmartVoltage ID. In Altera’s Arria 10 FPGA, they will program an “ID” into the chip during testing that will allow a customer to read that ID. They will then know how low they can operate the core voltage while still meeting the performance benchmarks of the device. The customer can then adjust their power supply rail accordingly. The trends driving digital power to a “required” aspect of today’s power systems are highlighted in recent forecasts from market analysts. According to Jonathon Eykyn, Power Supply and Storage Component Senior Analyst for IHS, digital power is now well-established in the server and telecommunication markets. However, IHS is now starting to see growing adoption across a much broader range of products and applications, which is driving rapid growth. IHS expects the market for digital power to grow 3.5-5 times between now and 2018 with the majority of the growth coming from customers outside of the traditional server and telecom space. Due to this accelerating market growth, CUI has recognized the need for further collaboration in the industry to meet customer needs and stay ahead of technology advancements. In October 2014 CUI, Ericsson Power Modules, and Murata announced the founding of a new power industry consortium, the Architects of Modern Power (AMP Group). The goals of the Group go far beyond the ambitions or achievements of established trade associations in the power industry. The AMP Group will be characterized by deep collaboration between its member firms in developing leading-edge digital power technology, in terms of both functionality and efficiency. Common standards will encompass mechanical, electrical, communications, monitoring and control specifications. Members will focus on developing products that deliver high efficiency power conversion under all operating conditions and provide supply chain security to customers through true plug-andplay compatibility between their products. Figure 7 – Architects of Modern Power was founded to be a unique, long-term strategic consortium that will enable the power design community to benefit from world-class technology innovation and true plug-and-play product compatibility. Though still a relatively new entrant into the market, CUI has recognized that the key to unlocking digital power’s true value has required a very different way of thinking. Through collaboration with customers, vendors, and industry peers, barriers that have had the potential to limit adoption of the technology have been broken down. Moving forward, CUI will be a leader and a voice in the industry as the boardlevel power landscape continues to change. CUI will be at the Applied Power Electronics Conference (APEC) in Charlotte, NC from March 15~19 demonstrating their latest digital products. In addition, Mark Adams will be speaking at 2 different industry sessions, Industry session #1: PMBus Considerations for Interoperability in a Complete Digital Power Ecosystem – as part of the PMBus Track and Industry session #2: Multi-Sourcing Standards for PoL and IBC Digital Power Supplies. Figure 6 – According to IHS, the digital power market is expected to grow 3.5 to 5 times over the next 4 years. 22 Bodo´s Power Systems® February 2015 www.cui.com www.bodospower.com POWER CONTENT MODULES Power Semiconductor Development The Influence of Power, Power Density and Lifetime Demands In 1983, GROWIAN, the world’s largest wind energy conversion system of its era went live with an output power of 3MW and an overall conversion efficiency of about 80%. With the absence of suitable power electronics, the necessary energy conversion was achieved by rotating machines consuming a tremendous amount of material, several cubic meters of space and a vast amount of money. This way of mechanical conversion became obsolete with the introduction of modern power semiconductors which massively increased the conversion efficiency, too. Despite the impressive capabilities they reached by today, the market demands for future generations of power modules to be developed remain challenging. Dr. Martin Schulz, Infineon Technologies AG Why power density matters even in wind power plants are recognized as huge entities. The space available to integrate the necessary subsystems is heavily limited. Inside a windmill’s nacelle, the mechanical setup consumes most of the space, especially if a gearbox adds to the drive train’s volume. Besides the obvious space restrictions, losses that heat up the nacelle have to be considered. Air condition is often needed to keep the ambient temperature inside the housing at tolerable limits during operation. Given a system efficiency of 95% from rotor shaft to the power inverter output, 5% of losses in modern wind energy of up to 6MW need to be handled. If, additionally, solar load at the installation site needs to be considered, air conditioning inside the nacelle may have to cope with up to several hundred of kW of losses generated. The basic components of a wind energy converter (WEG) are sketched in Figure 1. DC-link capacitors. In this scenario it becomes obvious, that power density is of utmost importance for this application. Throughout the last decades, power semiconductors have grown in both, current carrying capability and efficiency. Figure 2 summarizes 25 years of development in power semiconductors: Modern power electronic converters today feature an average volumetric power density of about 1kW per liter; a converter for handling 1MW thus consumes about 1m³ of space. This includes the bare power section with the heat sinks as well as inductors, filter- and Figure 2: Power semiconductor development 1990-2015 The figure also includes the fact that the growth in current density reached the factor 4. At the same time, the losses were reduced by about 50%. As a consequence, the power loss density increases and thus the temperatures in a given environment grow as well. At a first glance this seems to be a drawback, as higher chip temperatures and higher temperature swings are considered detrimental in regards of lifetime. As a rule of thumb, an increase in chip temperature by 20K reduces the predicted lifetime of a given power semiconductor constellation by 50%. Figure 1: Subsystems of a wind mill showing sensors (1), communications (2), temperature control (3), pitch- and azimuth control (4), drive train with generator (5) and power electronics (6) 24 Bodo´s Power Systems® An increase in power density can only be considered positive if the lifetime and the reliability of the application are not decreased. Moreover, the market expectation is that power density and lifetime increase simultaneously. With this requirement, only a holistic approach to enhance power semiconductor modules promises substantial progress. This is especially true for the application specific overload conditions in various modes of operation in windmills. These may lead to short periods of time with very high peak power demand. February 2015 www.bodospower.com CONTENT NEW VIEWS TO NEW WORLDS To tackle the challenges described above Infineon developed the .XT technology: a combination of new interconnection processes and technology changes featuring the newest power semiconductors available. This new setup allows achieving higher power density levels while even increasing the cycling capability as depicted in Figure 3. ViPS-40 User-friendly Interface Digitally Controlled (P) 1.559.651.1402 PC Compatible APEC BOOTH #717 VMI’s Newest, Digitally Controlled 40kV High Voltage Power Supply SPECIFICATIONS Figure 3: Cycling capability comparison between IGBT4 and .XT Keeping the same temperature levels as today, an increase in lifetime in a range of factor 10 is achieved. Trading lifetime for output power for the cost of higher power density, additional 25% of output power can be gained without enlarging the current design’s cabinets. A state of the art 6MW offshore wind mill today carries up to 12 racks with power electronic components. The power density increase demonstrated by .XT leads to a noteworthy reductions; the same output power can now be handled by only 10 racks. Besides the savings in space inside the nacelle, further benefit arises for the application. Less material is in use, less weight needs to be shipped and a lower number of units has to be handled. Resources spent per kW installed System cost within energy conversion systems is a complex issue. It is often stated that the power semiconductors contribute a noteworthy part to the financial aspect. An increase in the power density that can be delivered by modern power modules also influences other parts of the overall systems. From Figure 3 it can be taken that even at higher temperature levels, the same output power can be achieved while keeping the lifetime. Figure 4: New materials like copper will help in achieving high market demands for power density, lifetime and reliability For the designer, this leads to possible reductions in the size of cooling systems or heat sinks in use. Increasing the switching frequency and shifting the thermal budget to switching losses in turn, allows reducing the physical size of grid filters, saving material in wound goods as well as in grid connected filter capacitors. Eventually, inverters based on the new power components make more efficient use of the resources needed per kilowatt installed, thus leading to a reduction in size, weight and – most important – in system cost. www.bodospower.com I���� V������ R����: 6V�.�. - 10V�.�. O����� V������ (����): -4�V �� -40�V F������� V������ M��.: 2V��� � 0 �� 300�A O����� C������ M��.: 200�A O����� P���� M��.: 4W PHYSICAL DIMS 6.5” ������ � 2.1” ���� � 1” H����� 165�� ������ � 53.3�� ���� � 25.4�� H����� WWW.VOLTAGEMULTIPLIERS.COM (P) 559.651.1402 (F) 559.651.0740 Dedicated to the application Paradigms in building power electronic components have just recently seen a transition. Traditionally, new developments were driven by new chip technologies. After introducing a lead type, the new technology subsequently was migrated to different power module families and various power ranges or frame sizes. This approach became less helpful when modern IGBT modules reached a maturity that made other influences than bare switching behavior reach higher priority. A rethinking took place to start improving power electronic components as an inherent part of an overall system instead of a standalone entity. Intense discussions about the most urgent issues were part of the change process. Additionally, experts were asking how to eliminate the root causes of troubles specifically related to dedicated applications. For the semiconductor manufacturer, deep system understanding was now necessary – and attained – to create a technology platform for new generations of power devices that solve these major issues in power electronic designs. Future prospects The face of power electronic components is about to change. The most visible feature will be the replacement of aluminum materials and surfaces by copper, new materials in interconnection technologies and ultimately new designs for power semiconductor modules. With its .XT technology, Infineon introduced the next step in highly reliable power devices that will continue to serve a demanding market. Besides these enhanced power semiconductor components, a new philosophy in optimizing these parts will ensure that Infineon Power Semiconductor remains a seal of quality and innovation. February 2015 www.infineon.com/power Bodo´s Power Systems® 25 IGBT CONTENT MODULES 4in1 400A/1200V Module with T-type Topology for 3-Level Applications A growing demand for 3-level inverter technology combining reduced power loss and increased power capacity is originating from power conversion applications like wind and PV inverter as well as from industrial equipment such as uninterruptible power supplies (UPS) and recently active frontends of 4-quadrant drives. By Marco Honsberg and Thomas Radke, Mitsubishi Electric Europe B.V. Much attention has focused on the further development of power semiconductor modules being the key devices in inverters, that offer low power consumption, reduced package size and especially low inductance to help maximizing the 3-level inverter’s performance. Mitsubishi Electric launched the CM400ST-24S1 IGBT, e.g. a 4in1 400A/1200V IGBT module as part of a new family of power semiconductor modules optimized for 3-level inverters to meet these demands by adopting new packages that help reducing inductance, thereby contributing to reduced power consumption and downsizing in largecapacity industrial equipment. Module ratings This new 400A/1200V module represents the biggest current rating of a planned lineup of 4in1 3-level IGBT modules planned in the same package. Based on electrical and thermal evaluations the CM400ST24S1 is supposed to operate in 125kW-class inverters. The photo of the CM400ST-24S1 reveals the outline of the package and figure 2 indicates the drawing of this new package. With baseplate dimensions of 115mm x 82mm and the innovative step terminal design this new outline provides new degrees of freedom in designing a power stage including the mechanical design of a gate driver Printed Circuit Board and an efficient utilization of the heatsink in case of parallel connection of modules. The next paragraph will introduce the design features that have led to such an innovative IGBT module packaging concept. Figure 1: Photo of CM400ST-24S1 Figure 3: Design considerations for 3-level modules Design considerations for the CM400ST-24S1 Figure 3 shows at a glance the design considerations that have significantly influenced the concept of this new IGBT module CM400ST24S1. In fact a state-of-the-art 3-level IGBT module shall reflect a best adoption of design aspects as shown in figure 3 to deliver the desired performance. Figure 2: Outline drawing 26 Bodo´s Power Systems® Chip performance IGBT / Di Obviously the chip performance itself of the IGBTs and Diodes play one major role in the design of a 3-level IGBT module. In case of the CM400ST-24S1 the latest chip generation of Carrier Stored Trench February 2015 www.bodospower.com SEMiX® 5 Enhanced Standard for Superior Thermal and Dynamic Performances Up to 350kVA Superior dynamic performance Optimised thermal performance Competitive and wide product range Easy and solder-less assembly Baseplate solution Press-Fit Technology and screw power terminals Motor Drives Wind Energy Power Quality www.semikron.com/contact Power Supplies IGBT CONTENT MODULES gate Bipolar Transistors (CSTBT™) have been adopted. Thus, for 1200V blocking voltage class a 6.1st generation CSTBT™ chip has been selected offering today’s best trade-off between switching and conduction loss in this voltage class along with 650V CSTBT™ chip of the 7th generation chip technology for the first time introduced in an industrial grade IGBT module. Figure 4 shows the innovative 7th generation chip technology which has improved trade-off between static loss Vce(sat) and dynamic loss as specific turn off energy E(off). inductance for at least those two commutation paths. The CM400ST24S1 has reached for both mentioned 3-level commutation loops stray inductance levels of less than 30nH (approximately 26nH) and additionally a commutation stray inductance of about 30nH in the 2-level commutation path from terminal “P” to terminal “N”. The balanced low stray inductance layout of this new package incorporates a new degree of freedom to alter from 3-level commutation strategy to a 2-level commutation operation providing a better thermal exploitation of the semiconductor chips at high current and low modulation indices to cover for example extraordinary operating conditions of uninterruptible Power Supplies (UPS). Chip size and thermal resistance (Rth) The CM400ST-24S1 employs Silicon – Nitride substrate (Si3N4) to provide the required thermal performance of the package. This material’s thermal conductivity is in between the superior performance of the Aluminum Nitride (ALN) and the worse performing Aluminum oxide (Al2O3). Referring to the topology as shown in figure 5 the thermal performance of each chip could be optimized for certain applications. Hence, an anti-paralleled Di to Tr1 or Tr4 could be sized comparatively small for a motor drive application operating at high power factor but they should be sized much bigger for a module placed in an active frontend mainly operating in Power factor Correction (PFC) mode. Indeed the CM400ST-24S1 chip size ratio has been selected to satisfy both applications. Figure 4: 7th generation chip technology In this 7th generation 650V chip substantial modifications of the fabrication technology have led to a significant performance improvement. The manufacturing techniques applied to this novel 650V CSTBT™ allowed an about half-size shrinkage of the transistor unit cell through a fine pattern process and a LPT (Light Punch Through) structure utilizing an advanced thin wafer process technology. Topology For DC-link voltage ranges up to about 850V a so called “Ttype” topology has proven to be the best choice considering the switching frequency range of the application. The CM400ST-24S1 is made for DC-link voltages of up to 850V and is following this topology indicated in figure 5 utilizing the aforementioned 6.1st Figure 5: “T-type” topology generation CSTBT™ 1200V class IGBT and anti-paralleled diodes for Tr1 and Tr4 and the novel 650V 7th generation CSTBT™ chips with anti-paralleled diode for Tr2 and Tr3. Paralleling capability Paralleling capability is an essential feature of the CM400ST-24S1, since it permits utilizing the same module for a modular design for output power requirements of more than the mentioned 125kW. Providing paralleling as dedicated feature implies constructing the module in order to minimize the distance between DC-link terminals of the paralleled modules and to provide a (simple) layout that utilizes the heatsink area and blower construction efficiently. The module dimensions of 82mm x 115mm, whereas the shorter 82mm is the dimension that advantageously decreases the distance between two adjacent modules efficiently. The step terminal approach for the output terminal simplifies the connection to parallel modules while this different height level will refrain from disturbing the DC-link construction of terminals “P”, “C” and “N”. The CM400ST-24S1 has been designed to provide a high performing low inductive IGBT module solution for 3-level applications with a maximum DC-link voltage of 850V. The innovative package construction realizes low inductance in all possible commutation loops and by the step terminal it is dedicated for paralleling application for active frontend (PFC) as well as for PV and UPS output application. The low thermal resistance along with the loss performance of the latest generation of utilized IGBT and diode chips provides unprecedented output power performance of a 3-level IGBT module in this configuration. The first module that is available is a 400A class current rated module. A further lineup of smaller current ratings is planned. Stray inductance The module’s internal stray inductance in conjunction with the blocking voltage capability of the chosen chips their dynamic loss performance and the desired performance of the module are key optimization objectives. Referring to the complexity of potential current and commutation paths of a T-type 3-level IGBT module, e.g. at least from terminal “P” to terminal “C” and from terminal “C” to “N” in a typical 3L commutation loop the module design must minimize the 28 Bodo´s Power Systems® February 2015 marco.honsberg@meg.mee.com thomas.radke2@meg.mee.com www.mitsubishichips.eu www.bodospower.com www.apec-conf.org SENSORS CONTENT Angle Sensor Devices in On-Axis and Off-Axis Applications This article provides a basic under- standing of how Allegro’s precision Circular Vertical Hall based angle sensor integrated circuits are used in on-axis and off-axis applications. Allegro MicroSystems, LLC Hall based angle position sensor ICs are increasingly preferred over other Hall and non-Hall based sensor solutions for position monitoring applications. They are particularly sought after in automotive and industrial markets. Specific automotive applications for precision angle sensor ICs include, but are not limited to, wheel and motor position in electronic power steering and braking systems, transmission systems (PRNDL, clutch, inhibitor switch), windshield wipers, turbo charger exhaust gate valves, accelerator and brake pedals, and fuel tank level sensing. Similarly, in the industrial market, angle sensor ICs are sought after for motor control, valve, lever and joystick applications. There are a number of key factors on why the demand for Hall based angle position sensor ICs has grown so rapidly in recent years. First, the level of accuracy available with Hall based angle sensor ICs has improved dramatically in recent years. Today’s Hall based angle sensor ICs can now measure angles from 0º to 360º, with an accuracy of less than 1º, or <0.3%. Both linear position Hall sensor ICs and some non-Hall based sensor ICs cannot match this level of accuracy performance. Second, the measurement of an angular position provides system level cost savings over other sensor technologies. Instead of having to measure a long stroke displacement using one or more traditional linear position Hall sensor ICs and a complicated mechanical assembly, many applications today can instead use a single angle sensor and cheaper mechanical assembly to accomplish the same task. And again, with an angle sensor they can do so with better accuracy. In many cases a simple puck magnet attached to the end of a rotating shaft and placed in close proximity to an angle sensor is all that is required to obtain accurate position information of a mechanical component in a system. Lastly, Hall based angle sensor ICs can accurately measure magnets rotating at very high rates of speed. In this application note, I describe and demonstrate the use of Circular Vertical Hall (CVH) technology based angle sensor ICs in several onaxis (end-of-shaft) and off-axis (side-shaft) applications. Circular Vertical Hall Technology Overview Unlike other angle sensor technologies that employ orthogonal Hall plates (with or without concentrators) or magnetoresistive elements to measure target magnetic field amplitudes, CVH technology utilizes a circular Hall element with a ring of electrical contacts to measure the target magnetic field and produce a single channel front-end output. The front-end output’s phase relationship, after being digitally processed, is then compared relative to an internal reference signal to produce an angle measurement. 30 Bodo´s Power Systems® The actual CVH ring structure is monolithically and inseparably integrated into the silicon along with the backend digital signal processing functions and interface circuitry. There are no unique processes required to fabricate a CVH based sensor IC. It is constructed by implanting X vertical contact elements (e.g. 64) in a ring shaped Nchannel well. Due to the vertical contact elements, CVH based angle sensor ICs measure planar fields emanating out from an interface magnet. Other competitive angle sensor technologies produce two front-end outputs from two separate Hall element or magnetoresistive sensor element channels. These front end signals are then processed through a CORDIC algorithm to produce an angular output. With this type of approach, performance and accuracy issues arise when the two channels are mismatched either in channel offset or sensitivity. Additionally, if either of these channel output signals saturate, then the output signal will exhibit large errors. Saturation can occur when there is air gap variation between the target magnet and the angle sensor IC. CVH based angle sensor ICs on the other hand are much less affected by these types of channel mismatch issues. Since a single front-end channel is produced by the CVH ring there are no mismatch concerns. And since the CVH front-end channel’s phase, instead of amplitude, is compared to an internal reference signal, field level saturation is not a concern. Moreover, since the CVH based angle sensor doesn’t measure magnetic field amplitudes it provides high levels of air gap independence. Shown in Figure 1 is a representation of a target magnet placed over a CVH ring structure. Again, it is important to note that the CVH ring is actually part of the angle sensor silicon die. With the magnet stationary over the CVH ring, the angle sensor digitally switches between groups of CVH ring contact elements to effectively create an array of miniature Hall plates. Figure 1: Target Magnet Field Placed Over a CVH Ring Structure February 2015 www.bodospower.com SENSORS CONTENT In total, 64Miniature Hall plates, in this example, are dynamically constructed and measured during one full electronic rotation of the CVH ring. The result is a coarse sine wave that constitutes output voltage from each of the contact elements in the CVH ring. The coarse sine wave is then passed through a series of filters to produce a smooth sine wave. The smooth sine wave is then processed through a zero crossing comparator. The phase of the IC. Its “zero crossing point” is then compared to an internal reference signal’s “zero crossing” point. The phase difference between the two zero crossing points represents the angle measurement of the target magnet. Due to the fact that the digital switching between the 64 contact elements can be performed at very high speeds, refresh rates as fast as 25 µs can be achieved. As a result, CVH based angle sensor ICs can produce highly accurate angle measurements even on target magnets rotating at very high RPM rates. The only issue with increasing target magnetic rotational rates is an increasing lag factor relative to where the target magnet is actually located over the CVH ring, and when the angle last measured is transmit- ted out of the device. However, with a steady rotational velocity or a rotational speed calculation algorithm in the system micro- processor that interpolates “zero crossing point” is proportional to the phase or vector direction of the external magnetic field sensed by the angle sensor IGBT IPMs (Intelligent Power Modules) n High Integration n High Flexibility n High-Efficiency ROHM Semiconductor´s Intelligent Power Modules combine several components like gate drivers, bootstrap diodes, IGBTs or Power MOSFETs (PrestoMOSTM), fly wheel diodes as well as various protection functions within one compact package. Figure 2: On-Axis Angle Sensing Figure 3: Typical On-Axis EPS Application www.bodospower.com Key Features Applications • Package includes: IGBT, FWD, bootstrap diode and gate driver • Full Protection Circuits (Short Circuit, Under Voltage, Thermal Shutdown) and Fault Signal Output • Various range of currents available (1.5A, 2.5A, 10A, 15A, 20A, 30A) • Motor Drives for appliances and consumer electronics (e.g. AC Air compressors) • Motor Drivers for VRMS, AC =100V-240V • Motor Control for White Goods • Low Power Industrial Motor Control Bodo´s Power Systems® February 2015 Technology for you Sense it Light it Power it ! 31 www.rohm.com/eu SENSORS CONTENT between at least 2 angle data points from the angle sensor IC, this lag factor can easily be accounted for at the system timing level. Use of CVH based Angle Sensor ICs in an On-Axis Application On-axis angle sensing is the most common type of angular position measurement application. It involves measuring the displacement of a rotationally moving magnet that is commonly placed on the end of a shaft or underneath a gear (see Figure 2). Compared to off-axis applications, on-axis angle measurements yield higher accuracy results and require less digital post processIng such as harmonic linearization. However, the attachment of button magnets to a shaft (for example a motor shaft), typically used in onaxis applications, creates mechanical mounting and EPS Module cost challenges. Mounting a magnet on the end of a shaft often involves the use of non-ferromagnetic fixtures (i.e. brass) to hold the magnet in place. Despite the cost of the brass fixture, on-axis sensing is common in most motor position applications. Figure 3 shows a typical on-axis Electronic Power Steering (EPS) application configuration. In the EPS sensing module, along with two linear position sensor ICs for measuring handwheel torque, there resides a Hall based angle sensor IC for measuring steering wheel rotational position. The angle sensor IC is positioned underneath a puck magnet that is fastened into the underside of a spur gear. The top surface of the angle sensor IC and the puck magnet are separated by a small air gap with minimal tolerance variation. Typically the airgap is in the range of 1 mm to 3 mm. The smaller the air gap the stronger the magnetic field presented to the angle sensor IC, which results in better angle measurement and improved accuracy over a wider temperature range. As Figure 4 illustrates, the smaller the air gap, the stronger the field level presented to the surface of the angle sensor IC, and the more accurate the angle measurement. Figure 4: Changes in Peak Angle Error Over Air Gap Variations Relative to a 1.76 mm Air Gap with 900 G Field Use of CVH based Angle Sensor ICs in an Off-Axis Application Off-axis angle sensing is another common type of angular posi- tion measurement application. It involves an angle sensor IC measuring the angular position of a magnetic field generated by a ring magnet that is attached around a shaft. As observed in Figure 5, the angle sensor IC is located adjacent to the shaft and ring magnet. As the shaft and ring magnet turn, the angle sensor IC measures the resulting angle position. Figure 6: A1332 Harmonic Linearization Results Figure 5: Location of Angle Sensor IC Figure 7: A1332 Harmonic Linearization Results 32 Bodo´s Power Systems® One major issue with off-axis angle sensing is that a wide variation in magnetic field orientation and strength is observed by the angle sensor IC as the magnet and shaft rotate. As a result, the angle sensor IC requires significantly more digital post processing of the raw angle measurement to achieve an accurate final angle measurement output. February 2015 www.bodospower.com SENSORS CONTENT The additional post processing adds cost and complexity to the angle sensor integrated circuit, and typically does not produce the same level of angle accuracy measurement as an on-axis angle measurement system. This said, mounting a ring magnet around a shaft is usually less complex and lower cost to produce than an on-axis angle measurement system. As shown in Figure 6, the raw angle measurement (described in the figure as prelinearization or Pre Lin) observed by Allegro MicroSystems’ A1332 angle sensor positioned in an off-axis orientation, is non-linear and does not meet the required accuracy of many target applications. In this particular application the raw angle error measured is ≈ +10º to -14º. Post processing, however, of the raw angle measurement with such techniques as harmonic linearization can dramatically reduce the angle error output from the angle sensor IC. As observed in Figure 7, the raw input angle error measurement, similar to what is shown in Figure 6 and indicated by the black line, is dramatically reduced after performing harmonic linearization on it. (see Post Lin curves). The raw angle error observed by the magnetic sensor IC in an off-axis application can be reduced by increasing the strength and uniformity of the ring magnet. The field strength that the sensor IC sees can be further improved by positioning the angle sensor IC closer to the ring magnet, however mechanical tolerances of the system (e.g. run-out of the rotating shaft) can limit how close the angle sensor IC can be positioned next to the ring magnet. www.bodospower.com Arc Magnets in Off-Axis Applications Arc magnets can also be used in off-axis angle measurements, as shown in Figure 8 below, for “Short Stroke” applications. In short stroke applications the shaft does not rotate a full 360º. As depicted in Figure 8, the arc magnet is located on only one half of a circular plate that is attached to a rotating shaft. Since the application doesn’t require a full rotation of the shaft, the cost of the magnet and the overall sensor system can be reduced. Short stroke off-axis angular sensor systems, however, usually require the same level of additional post signal processing as full stroke/ring magnet off-axis applications. Figure 8: Arc Magnet in Off-Axis Application Conclusion Hall based sensor integrated circuits have proven to be preferred sensing solutions for harsh automotive and industrial environments. They are rugged, highly reliable, contactless, and can effectively “see through” non-ferrous materials. As such, they are insensitive to dust, dirt and humidity often found in harsh environments. Allegro MicroSystems’ CVH based angle sensor ICs offer all of the same benefits of their Hall based predecessor devices, but with improved accuracy and speed, and support for a wider array of harsh and demanding sensing applications. They also offer unmatched precision and repeatability, and are more immune to air gap variations that can cause magnetic field saturation in other Hall based ICs. Moreover, with integrated features, such as linearization, extensive on-chip diagnostics, and redundancy package options, Allegro’s MicroSystems’ angle sensor ICs are ideal for automotive and industrial safety critical applications. Although CVH based angle sensor ICs are designed as standard off-the-shelf devices, magnetic sensor subassemblies and systems are complex and require careful magnetic and mechanical system design. This application note only touches upon the various factors that need to be considered when designing a magnetic based sensor system. For more information please contact: Michael Doogue, Business Unit Director, Advanced Sensor Technologies: Wmdoogue@allegromicro.com www.allegromicro.com February 2015 Bodo´s Power Systems® 33 CAPACITORS CONTENT Integration and Miniaturization Trends Passive embedding for performance and reliability Thanks to new materials and integration technologies the embedding and integration of passive components is making great advances. New miniaturized components designed specifically for embedding enable even more compact and reliable systems. By Dave Connet, Director IC Reference Design, TDK The dimensions of passive components and their ruggedness for further processing often determine whether they are suitable for specific embedding and integration technologies. TDK has developed innovative capacitors and thermistors and employs state-of-the-art integration technologies that enable superior passive embedding solutions. Embedding capacitors in IGBT modules Traditionally, IGBT modules in the mid power range and based on Si and SiC technologies employ external snubber capacitors. Until now, it was not possible to embed these components and thus shorten the long leads that are afflicted with parasitic inductances. Irrespective of their dimensions, conventional capacitors are insufficiently resistant to the heat involved in the direct assembly of the IGBT module. In addition, some have only a low capacitance per volume and suffer considerable loss of capacitance at high rated voltages. at 150 °C. As a result, this prevents the feared uncontrolled thermal runaway from occurring. Its parasitic effects are also very low: ESR is only 50 mΩ at 100 kHz and drops to only 10 mΩ at 1 MHz, resulting in very low losses. The ESR declines even further as the temperature rises: at 85 °C it is already less than 20 percent of its original value at 25 °C. This results in charge and discharge times of between 25 ns and 30 ns. The ESL of CeraLink capacitors is below 5 nH, making this technology particularly suitable for fast-switching inverters. All these advantages make CeraLink technology predestined to be embedded in IGBT modules as snubber capacitors. Two SMD types with rated voltages of 500 V DC are available for this purpose (Figure 2). The low-profile 1 µF variant with dimensions of only 4.35 mm × 7.85 mm × 10.84 mm and the 5 µF type with dimensions of 13.25 mm × 14.26 mm × 9.35 mm are particularly compact and may be placed very close to the semiconductor with negligible ESL. Now, with the EPCOS CeraLink™, a completely new kind of capacitor has been developed that suffers none of these drawbacks. CeraLink technology is based on the ceramic material PLZT (lead lanthanum zirconate titanate). In contrast to conventional ceramic capacitors, CeraLink has its maximum capacitance at the application voltage, and this even increases proportionately to the share of the ripple voltage (Figure 1). Figure 2: EPCOS SMD CeraLink for integration in IGBT modules. The CeraLink low-profile 1 µF variant (left) and the 5 µF type (right) are designed for embedding in IGBT modules. They feature compact dimensions and can withstand high temperatures of up to 150 °C. Embedding temperature protection in IGBT modules IGBT modules in inverters achieve the highest possible efficiency when they are operated at their upper temperature limit. Thus, exact monitoring of the operating temperature is required in order to prevent damage to the semiconductors. The suitability of standard SMD NTC thermistors used for this purpose up until now, however, is rather limited because they are not compatible with all semiconductor assembly processes. In particular, these include high-temperature soldering and silver sintering under pressure. Figure 1: Capacitance of the EPCOS CeraLink as a function of voltage. In contrast to other capacitor technologies, the effective capacitance of the EPCOS CeraLink rises with increasing voltage. The impact of the ripple voltage amplifies this effect additionally. Another advantage is its high insulation resistance. The RC time constant τ is 70 000 ΩF at 25 °C and this value drops only slightly even 34 Bodo´s Power Systems® In order to solve this problem, a wafer-based manufacturing process for EPCOS chip NTC thermistors was developed (Figure 3). The new components are now able to withstand the thermal and mechanical stresses encountered during assembly. Moreover, they save space because they need no special pads for soldering to the semiconductor substrate. February 2015 www.bodospower.com CAPACITORS CONTENT A key advantage of the NTC thermistors manufactured from wafers is the configuration of their electrical contacts. In this case, they are located on the top and bottom surfaces of the chip. This allows the lower terminal to be contacted directly and with complete surface contact onto the semiconductor substrate using conventional semiconductor processes. The upper terminal is contacted via conventional wire bonding, as is usual for IGBT modules. The contact surfaces are optionally available in gold or silver plating in order to achieve the best possible bonding results. Figure 3: Wafer and EPCOS NTC thermistor with contacts on the top and bottom surfaces. Complete EPCOS NTC wafer with carrier (left) and an individual NTC chip (right). The flat contact areas are on the top and bottom surfaces, rather than on the sides, which is more usual. Among the other advantages of these chip NTC thermistors are their minimal electrical and thermal tolerances. This precision is achieved by means of a special process technology: Before separating the individual elements from the wafer, the total resistance of the wafer is measured with respect to a rated temperature of 100 °C. The size of the thermistors to be separated is then determined based on this. This ensures that the tolerances of the separate components is much smaller than those of standard NTC thermistors rated at 25 °C, as is shown in Figure 4. 3D integration with LTCC and SESUB As smartphones and other portable electronic devices are designed to support more bands and offer greater functionality, a maximum level of integration that goes beyond the miniaturization of the single components is required in order to keep these devices compact. LTCC technology (low temperature co-fired ceramic) is an established technology that enables the functions of passive components such as inductors, capacitors and resistors to be embedded within the thin ceramic layers. Depending on the level of integration, LTTC technology, which is used mainly to manufacture RF modules for smartphones, can save up 80 percent space compared with discrete solutions. However, because the LTTC sintering process takes place at temperatures higher than 500 °C, heat-sensitive components such as semiconductors must be mounted in piggyback mode on the upper side of the modules after sintering. By actually embedding the ICs in the substrate, TDK’s SESUB technology (semiconductor embedded in substrate) represents a new approach to integration. Even including the embedded ICs, the overall thickness of the SESUB substrate is only 300 µm, (Figure 5). Figure 5: Cross-section through a TDK SESUB substrate. The four micro-structured substrate layers are only 300 µm thick – including of all connections and vias. Even ICs with numerous fine-pitch I/Os can be embedded into the TDK SESUB substrate. The discrete passive components required can be placed on the surface of the substrate. The discrete passive components required can be placed on the surface of the substrate. In order to increase the integration density even further, thin passive components will also be embedded in the substrate in a next step. Because SESUB modules make use of the third dimension, their area is 50 to 60 percent smaller than conventional discrete solutions, depending on the design. Figure 4: Comparing the precision of NTC technologies. In the temperature range of around 120 °C, which is critical for semiconductors, the chip NTC thermistor has a high measurement accuracy of ±1.5 K. In contrast, the standard type rated at 25 °C exhibits a relatively large tolerance of >±5 K. Because EPCOS chip NTC thermistors have a narrow tolerance of only ±1.5 K at 100 °C, IGBT modules can then be operated without premature derating at temperatures very close to their maximum permissible values and thus be utilized more efficiently. This solution is also suitable for new power semiconductor generations such as those based on SiC. 36 Bodo´s Power Systems® The shorter line connections within the substrate layers of the modules lead to improved parasitics and thus support better system performance. EMC performance is also improved due to the shielding effect of the metal layers inside the SESUB substrate. In addition, SESUB delivers excellent thermal attributes due to the fact that the IC is completely embedded. All surfaces of the chip are in full contact with the laminate, which optimizes the heat transfer from the semiconductor into the substrate layers. These layers themselves contain the copper micro-interconnection grids, which provide for a very homogenous and efficient heat dissipation. In particular, their superior thermal performance is important for applications in the area of power management, transceivers, processors, and the power amplifier – or all the main components of a smartphone. In addition to miniaturization, a key criteria for the use of both LTCC and SESUB technologies are their high reliability and significantly reduced logistics outlay. A typical example of a SESUB design is the extremely compact TDK Bluetooth 4.0 low energy module, developed for the Bluetooth 4.0 low energy (LE) specification, which is being marketed as Bluetooth February 2015 www.bodospower.com CAPACITORS CONTENT Smart (Figure 6 left). With a footprint of only 4.6 × 5.6 mm2 and a low insertion height of 1 mm, the new SESUB-PAN-T2541 Bluetooth 4.0 LE module sets the industry benchmark for Bluetooth Smart modules. The module is also very well suited for use in wearable devices thanks to its compact size. Figure 6: Space-saving TDK SESUB module. Left: The TDK Bluetooth low energy module worldwide, developed for the Bluetooth 4.0 low-energy unit with dimensions of only 4.6 mm x 5.6 mm. The complete power management of a smartphone is integrated in the TDK power management unit (right). SESUB is also highly suitable for handling the power management in smartphones. In the TDK power management unit (PMU) module (Figure 6 right), the IC for managing the power supply was embedded directly into the substrate for the first time. This innovative step allows manufacturers of end equipment to reduce their development costs and times still further. In combination with newly developed capacitors and power inductors in SMD versions, the module dimensions are only 11.0 mm x 11.0 mm x 1.6 mm. They also contain a highly efficient power supply for the buck converter in a 5-channel configuration with an output current of up to 2.6 A as well as low-noise, high PSRR (power supply rejection ratio) low dropout regulators for up to 23 channels and an extremely efficient charge circuit for lithium-ion rechargeable batteries. Utilizing the integration potentials of PC boards Multilayer PC boards have long ceased to be merely carriers of components. In order to utilize their integration potentials more efficiently, TDK is working jointly with industry partners on the further development of technologies for embedding active and passive electronic components. Among other things, theembedding standardization of>> the integra<< Table 1: TDK MLCC-CU series for in PCBs tion technologies, which play a critical role in the implementation of highly to be driven forward. Type miniaturized modules, isCUA2 CUA1 Especially the MLCCs that are needed in nearly every circuit for buffMax. capacitance [µF] 1 0.1 ering and noise suppression offer significant potential for integration Shape ((BILD s.u.)) ((BILD s.u.)) and thus miniaturization. TDK has developed the MLCC-CU series, Lengthcan [mm] 1.0 Unlike conventional MLCCs, 0.6their which be embedded in PCBs. electrodes are not tin-plated, but rather made of copper and inserted Width [mm] 0.5 0.3 directly into the laminate layers of the PC boards. These MLCCs are Max. insertion height [mm] 0.11 to 0.25 0.11 to 0.25 distinguished by their very low insertion heights, which, depending on Terminal width [µm] 350 230 the type, are between 0.11 mm and 0.25 mm (Table 1). Table 1: TDK MLCC-CU series for embedding in PCBs www.epcos.com 1 Author Epcos_Table 1.docx 37 PORTABLE CONTENTPOWER PSU ICs use Innovative Technology to Reduce 25W Charger Cost and BOM Count Using new Fluxlink safety-isolated communication technology, InnoSwitch ICs combine primary- and secondary-switcher circuitry to reduce component count, eliminate slow and unreliable optocouplers, outperform primary-side controllers and slash manufacturing costs of power supply designs. By Mike Matthews, VP Product Development, Power Integrations Inc Manufacturers of smart mobile devices, set-top boxes, networking equipment and computer peripherals are constantly challenged to develop low-cost, efficient adapters and chargers that meet increasinglydemanding energy consumption regulations. Flyback designs using primary-side regulation (PSR) techniques are often used because of their simplicity and cost. However, more accurate control is delivered by secondary-side regulation (SSR); such designs are also less sensitive to production tolerances in the transformer and other external components. The major issue with all PSR solutions is that it is only possible to see what is happening on the output after switching the primary-side transistor: effectively, every time the transistor switches you get a glimpse of the power supply output load conditions. However, high energy efficiency requirements demand that the switching frequency is reduced at light loads, therefore these ‘glimpses’ become less frequent, compromising the ability of the power supply to respond to fast transient loads. The system is always playing catch up, inevitably leading to system compromises. A further disadvantage with PSR controllers is that they infer what is happening on the power supply output from waveforms on the primary bias winding of the transformer – rather than directly measuring output voltage and current. This means that transformer manufacturing tolerances, along with primary clamp circuit design, become factors that must be ‘allowed for’ during development and mass production. Figure 1: Magnetic coupling between the primary and secondary side is created without the need for high permeability magnetic cores. Full internal galvanic isolation is achieved, meeting UL, TÜV and all other global safety standards, while external pin-to-pin creepage of over 9.5mm is achieved with a custom surface-mount package 38 Bodo´s Power Systems® Transformers are infamous for manufacturing variances, complicating the management of high-volume production with PSR solutions, ultimately impacting cost effectiveness if yields suffer. Let’s now look at secondary-side regulation, which requires an isolated feedback mechanism –commonly an optocoupler - which increases circuit complexity and cost. Reliability can also be compromised if low-cost optocouplers are used as these devices suffer from aging, temperature drift and varying current gain. Another approach is to use capacitive coupling techniques. Capacitors themselves are inexpensive, but they are also difficult to integrate. High-voltage capacitive coupling on a single die is expensive to build in, especially when it is necessary to meet the typical 6kV high-potential isolation required during testing for AC/DC power supplies. But perhaps the most serious challenge that is raised by the use of capacitive feedback is coping with system ESD pulses. In many modern consumer electronic specifications, such pulses can exceed +/-15kV and are applied directly at the output of the power supply, giving rise to capacitive currents through the isolation barrier that can damage control circuitry. Also, common-mode effects due to voltage fluctuations can cause problems that require extra circuitry – and associated design and BOM costs. The third approach used to implement SSR of a power supply is to use a pulse transformer. Magnetic coupling is extensively used in high-end communications products, but has – until now – been prohibitively expensive for low-cost charger/adapters. Leading power IC company Power Integrations took a long, hard look at the problem and with its new InnoSwitch family of highly integrated switcher ICs has come up with a digital magnetic communications function – termed FluxLink – within the IC package at virtually no extra cost. Effectively, a magnetic coupling between the primary and secondary side is created without the need for high permeability magnetic cores, using only the standard bill of materials for the manufacture of the IC package (figure 1). Full internal galvanic isolation – exceeding that used in most optocouplers – is achieved, meeting UL, TÜV and all other global safety standards, while external pin-to-pin creepage of over 9.5mm is achieved with a custom surface-mount package, designed for this application. Furthermore, by occupying the space on the PCB normally reserved for the primary to secondary isolation region, the InnoSwitch IC essentially takes no PCB area. In fact, the package and pin-out are designed so that the most convenient location in most layouts is directly underneath the power transformer, making compact layout very simple for space saving and PCB cost reduction. The design allows for simple resistor divider direct sensing February 2015 www.bodospower.com The perfect place to do business See you at HUSUM Wind! 15 – 18 September 2015 in Husum, Germany ! d now n a t s r u o y Book MESSE HUSUM & CONGRESS in co-operation with Partners of HUSUM Wind 2015 www.husumwind.com DC/DC CONTENT CONVERTER of the power supply output voltage while the power supply output current measurement is fully integrated inside the package, eliminating external current sense circuitry altogether. Secondary sensing brings several other benefits. As well as eliminating the often unreliable optocoupler, it enables a simple transformer to be specified since the circuit will not be sensitive to the bias winding location or transformer inductance tolerances. Switching frequency jitter effectively spreads the EMI spectrum, enabling designs using only standard magnetic-wire primary and Triple Insulated Wire (TIW) secondary windings without the need for copper shields. But perhaps the most significant benefit of InnoSwitch ICs is the provision of simple and rugged synchronous rectification – resulting in high efficiency – without the usually expected cost penalty. Synchronous rectification (SR) improves efficiency by replacing lossy diodes with power MOSFETs on the output of the power supply. The voltage drop of a standard diode is typically between 0.7V and 1.7V, but even high-efficiency Schottky diodes will typically exhibit a voltage drop of 0.4 – 0.5V, which in a 5V system, such as a USB charger, represents a 10% loss in the output stage. Figure 2: Switching frequency jitter effectively spreads the EMI spectrum, enabling designs using only standard magnetic-wire primary and Triple Insulated Wire (TIW) secondary windings without the need for copper shields By contrast, MOSFETs can be specified with an on-resistance as low as 10 mOhm. Therefore in a typical charger design, the voltage drop might be 50mV, representing a loss of only 1% – ten times less than with Schottkys. The latest SR power MOSFETs are even 20 – 40% cheaper than Schottkys, so SR seems to be the obvious approach for flyback topology power supplies. However, anyone who has designed a flyback with SR will be aware that timing is key. Simultaneous conduction of primary transistor and SR FET creates an effective short-circuit condition across the primary transformer winding which usually leads to primary transistor damage. On the other hand, a delay in turning on the SR FET once the primary transistor has turned off compromises efficiency. In traditional SR solutions, the need for a separate secondary-side controller to drive the SR FET also adds cost and complexity to the circuit, which is why SR has sometimes had the reputation of being an expensive luxury. This is all set to change. With InnoSwitch ICs, the FluxLink element introduces precise cycle-by-cycle, digital communication controlling both the primary transistor and secondary SR FET switch timing. For the first time, users therefore have a truly fool-proof SR solution where the complete operation is integrated in a single IC rather than having to wrestle with the independent operation of separate primary and secondary controllers normally required in SR solutions with optocoupled SSR or PSR power supplies. In addition, the instantaneous communication afforded by FluxLink technology allows the secondary controller to determine the optimum turn-on and turn-off times of the 40 Bodo´s Power Systems® SR FET across the entire load range, whether the power supply is operating in discontinuous mode, continuous mode, and even under fault conditions. This optimized SR function allows Innoswitch ICs to easily comply with even the most stringent future efficiency standards such as the California Energy Commission, European Union Code of Conduct Tier 2 and DoE6. A further benefit of the instantaneous FluxLink communication is extremely fast-transient response. As can be seen in figure 2, if an event happens on the output, the primary side will receive a signal to turn on within a single switching cycle period (<10µsecs),virtually eliminating output voltage undershoot, even for 0 - 100% load transients. This allows output capacitor values to be reduced compared to PSR solutions where the slow response to transients typically requires large capacitors to meet the transient energy requirements. Figure 3: A typical 2.5A, 5V mobile device charger can be achieved using just 30 components, roughly 33% fewer than equivalent performance solutions InnoSwitch power-supply ICs include the high-voltage power MOSFET, primary- and secondary-side controllers, FluxLink feedback link and an integrated synchronous rectifier (SR) controller within a single, safety-rated, 16-pin eSOP surface-mount package. Devices feature highly accurate CV and CC control (+/-3% and +/-5% respectively) and low ripple. Operating efficiency is typically better than 84% in a 5V output 10 watt power supply at full load (as high as 88% in higher output voltage designs) – even higher under medium-load conditions – and no-load consumption is below 10 mW. InnoSwitch ICs start up using bias current drawn from a high-voltage current source connected to the Drain pin, eliminating the need for external start-up components; an external bias winding reduces no-load and increases system efficiency during normal operation. The ICs also include comprehensive system-level safety features such as output over-voltage protection, overload power limiting, hysteretic thermal protection and frequency jitter to reduce EMI. A typical 2.5A, 5V mobile device charger can be achieved using just 30 components, roughly 33% fewer than equivalent performance solutions. And as smart mobile devices become larger, they will require higher currents for fast charging. Where previously the idea of 5V/4A chargers would have raised eyebrows, now such devices are starting to appear. InnoSwitch ICs facilitate highly efficient, cost-effective charger designs up to 25W and are designed to be compatible with emerging rapid charge technologies, easily justifying the claim to be the most effective and efficient means of implementing flyback power supply designs. http://www.power.com/?Adsource=PRen_410420 February 2015 www.bodospower.com esars2015 3rd International Conference on Electrical Systems for Aircraft, Railway, Ship propulsion and Road Vehicles Aachen - Germany march 3-5 2015 CONTENT LIGHTING A Low-Cost LED Driver Module, 0.5 A/33 V For general use, with efficiency above 90% This article describes a simple constant current driver module with fast PWM input that can be used for driving mid and high power LEDs. By Valentin Kulikov, FuturoLighting This module operates from 8V to 33V and the output current can be configured from 0.1 to 0.5A in several steps. Component selection is presented for design implementation. Specification: Topology: Buck Regulation, Hysteretic Input voltage: 8-33 VDC Output current: 100-500 mA Switching frequency: 1 MHz max Current ratio: 0.13 Ohm / 1 A Dimensions: 16 x 16 x 5.5 mm (0.63 x 0.63 x 0.22 in) Weight: 1.6 g -Thermal shutdown -Current protection Dimming: -PWM up to 20kHz Hysteretic regulation, as outlined in [1] is summarized as: the internal switch of the TS19376 driver connects the input voltage to the load through inductor L1. Current through the inductor linearly increases and is monitored as the voltage drop on (R1 II R2 II R3). Once the voltage drop reaches 149.5 mV (130 mV + Vcsn_hys (15% = 19.5 mV)), the integrated switch turns off and current flowing through inductor and D1 linearly decreases until it drops down to 110.5 mV (130mV – Vcsn_hys (15% = 19.5 mV)), when the switch turns on again. This process repeats in cycle as shown in Figure 2. The switching frequency is given by output current (ILED), input voltage (Vcc), output voltage and L1 value. Short description The LED driver module (Figure 1) utilizes the buck driver IC, TS19376 in the SOT89-5 package, as produced by Taiwan Semiconductor. This buck driver involves hysteretic regulation, thus it reach relatively high efficiencies, above 90%, without need for compensation. Output current is set by a combination of parallel R1-R3 (Figure1) with the ratio 0.13 Ohm/1 A. Figure 1: LED driver schematic 42 Bodo´s Power Systems® Figure 2: Current and voltage waveform at switching node (oscilloscope GND connected to Vcc) February 2015 www.bodospower.com CONTENT PWM dimming The average LED current can be controlled by the PWM signal. This type is popular and easily implemented through the MCU or by other techniques, such as a 555 timer. A PWM signal is connected to the PWM input of the module and accepts logical values Lo <0.3 V, Hi > 2 V (CMOS). The TS19376 accepts relatively high PWM frequencies and therefore it is not a problem to realize fast PWM dimming with more than 8 bit resolution. The PWM input has a pull-up resistor, therefore once the PWM input of the module is unconnected, ILED reaches the maximum current value. Recommended PWM frequency is above 100Hz, because of visible flickering. Figure 3 LED Driver module connection diagram Practical realization The TS19376 requires a cooling, such as is formed by the cooper layer on the back side of the PCB, thermally connected with top side through vias. A low ESR input capacitor is required to suppress current spikes during driver switching. The recommended value for C1 is 4.7 to 100 uF and dielectric material should be chosen from X7R, X5R or better. C1 must be placed as close as possible to the IO1 supply pads. The optimal range of the L1 inductance is 47 -120 uH, where lower inductance is more appropriate for higher currents and higher inductances are more appropriate for lower currents, in order to eliminate switching delay. Placement of the components should follow normal design rules to obtain the lowest switching loop, in order to minimize EMI. The start of the inductor winding should be connected to switching node (SW pad of IO1) as well. D1 was selected to keep leakage current low at the highest expected operational temperature, and a low trr. D1 Forward voltage influences efficiency and a lower Vf results in higher efficiency and lower heat dissipation. It is recommended to use a 30% margin for maximum forward diode current as compared to ILED. In this case, SS16 (1A / 60V), from Taiwan Semiconductor, was selected. C2 capacitor suppress output current ripple, where its higher capacity results in lower ripple and lower PWM frequency. It should be noted that the value of C2 influences maximum PWM frequency. The TS19376 includes thermal shutdown. Once die temperature reaches 150°C, the driver is disabled until temperature drops below 115°C. This protection is useful to prevent burning of the module PCB. The driver module can be attached to a heat-sink by two-sided thermo-conductive tape (e.g. Bergquist Bond Ply). It is possible to ex- www.bodospower.com tend the driver module with an EMI filter and reverse protection (e.g. a P-MOS switch), but this depends on specific application requirements. The Driver module is populated on double-sided FR4 PCB, with 1 mm thickness and dimensions of 16x16 mm. Conclusion Dhis LED driver has numerous applications, from driving of mid and high power LEDs, through battery charging and others where a constant current source is required. The number of LEDs in a serial string is determined from minimum allowed input voltage (Vcc). As can be seen from Fig.4, close VLED string to Vcc offers higher efficiency. For example for Vcc=12V, 3xLED in series is a good choice (VLEDF~3V). All measurements were acquired on an automatized measurement equipment at room temperature. This LED driver module, with selectable output current from 0.1 to 0.5 A, is available for purchase through the FuturoLighting store [2]. The TS19376 and diode SS16 can be purchased in MOQ from Microdis Electronics [3], authorized distributor of Taiwan Semiconductor. At conclusion, I would like to thank Mr. Bilik from Wurth Elektronik and Mr. Reguli from Microdis Electronics for their great support on this project. BOM IO1 C1 C2 D1 L1 R1 PCB TS19376,Taiwan semi 4u7/50V (X7R, SMD 1210) 1uF/50V (X7R, SMD1206) SS16, Taiwan semi Wurth 74404064101 0.39 Ohm (SMD 0805) FuturoLighting 376, Rev.O Literature [1]www.taiwansemi.com [2]www.fulit.eu/store [3] http://www.microdis.net/ February 2015 Bodo´s Power Systems® 43 CONTENT FPGAs Saves Power in Data Centers The growing use of web services and the emerging trend to the Internet of Things (IoT) creates big data which has to be handled in data centers. But huge server farms waste a lot of power which again increases cost. A power saving solution is the combination of CPU and FPGAs enabling cluster computing in which FPGAs are used for parallel computing tasks and the CPU acts as the host. This leads to massive savings in power and therefore cost. By Wolfgang Patelay, Freelance Journalist, Bodo´s Power Systems In over 30 years since its formation Altera developed itself to one of the largest global leaders in programmable semiconductors providing leading FPGA (field programmable gate arrays), SoC (Systems on Chip) and CPLD technologies. The company, headquartered in Silicon Valley engages today approx. 3,000 employees in 20 countries around the world and has revenue of $1.73 billion with 70% gross margin in the fastest growing industry segment. The company generates 41% of its revenue in the telecomm and wireless market, 22% in the industrial, automotive, military market, 19% in the networking, computer, storage market, and 18% in other industries. By far the largest market by region is Asia/Pacific with 40% share of revenue, followed by EMEA with 26%, Japan 18%, and North America 16%. These figures prove the importance of the European market for Altera. Efforts focused on strategic markets The global activities of the company are well accepted: according to Forbes it is “one of the world´s 100 most innovative companies” and it ranks as one of the “Silicon Valley Top 50 Companies”. Altera concentrates its innovative efforts into six strategic vertical markets namely Wireless Communication, Optical Transport Networks (OTN), Compute & Storage, Automotive, Industrial and Military. In Figure 1: John Daane: these markets the company enables the „Modern high perforusers to cope with the general trends in mance FPGAs are suited the semiconductor industry: increasing for many various applica- development costs, greater need for diftions and show very good ferentiation, limitless need for bandwidth, power efficiency” and stringent system power requirements. According to John Daane, President, CEO & Chairman of Altera, is the success of FPGAs based on the fact that this technology combines the highly flexible software programmability of general processors with the highly efficient and power efficient hardware acceleration of application specific devices. This “silicon convergence” results in high performance devices due to the hardware programmability of integrated virtual microprocessors, DSPs, ASICs, and ASSPs. This yields in Figure 2: Jeff Waters: turn in great flexibility, what means that “Data center applications just one of these SoCs is suited for many are the fastest growing various applications and has very good market for Altera” power efficiency. 44 Bodo´s Power Systems® Compute & Storage is fastest growing market segment According to Jeff Waters, Senior Vice President and General Manager, Business Units, is Compute & Storage the fastest growing market segment for Altera. He claims that his company is the #1 FPGA supplier in this market and its growth is driven by the trends to big data, software-defined data centers, and cloud computing. To confirm these trends he presented a diagram of the global data center IP traffic growth from Cisco Global Cloud Index which shows a 25% GAGR between 2012 and 2017. In 2012 the global data center IP traffic was 2.6 Zettabytes/year and is expected to reach 7.7 ZB/year in 2017. To cope with this increased data traffic network acceleration is paramount which includes minimizing memory bottlenecks and lower latency. Furthermore power and cooling has to be managed and CPUs has to be off-loaded to reduce power consumption. Accelerated access to data is also necessary to enable fast data analytics and data mining. Nowadays data centers are faced with the following challenges: CPU architectures are inefficient for most parallel computing applications in data centers like big data and search functions which leads to excessive power consumption. CPU bottlenecks are starving the CPU for data which results in slow performance due to high latency. And there is also the bottleneck to the memory which makes the situation even worst. The market reacts to these challenges with customized hardware and architectures but this does not result in desired standardized solutions. To overcome the problems with traditional data center architectures a new approach of software defined data centers is emerging in which FPGAs plays a major role. First of all the combination of CPU and FPGAs enables cluster computing in which the clusters are interconnected via fast interfaces. FPGAs are used for parallel computing tasks and the CPU acts as the host. Due to virtualisation of computation storage, networking resource sharing is realised as well as accelerated access to data. Due to the hypervisor offload the network and used algorithms are also accelerated. This leads to the situation that the systems in the data center will be operated workload optimised in an infrastructure which is software defined and in which analytics will be pervasive. FPGAs can greatly enhance CPU-based data center processing by accelerating algorithms and minimizing bottlenecks. Waters highlights, that the Altera Arria 10 FPGAs and SoCs achieve a more than tenfold increase in performance per watt. This results from the massive parallel architecture of the device which has 10 to 100 times the number of computations units compared to CPUs. Furthermore FPGAs enables pipelined designs that perform multiple / different instructions in a single clock cycle and the better localized memory avoid bottlenecks. The programmability of FPGAs enables also application-specific ac- February 2015 www.bodospower.com celerators. Altera performed an internal performance per watt benchmark which proved the advantages of FPGAs in typical data center applications. In this benchmark an Altera FPGA accelerator was compared against an Intel Xeon W3690 and an nVidia Tesla (C2075) device. In the search application of unstructured data including analytics the FPGA accelerator achieved a 10 times better performance / power in MT/sec/W (million terms per second and watt) compared to the competing devices. In the image scaling application it showed a 9 times better performance/power measured in frames/ sec/W. The greatest improvement by 25 times was made in the financial modelling application where the devices had to perform option pricing, Monte Carlo simulation and Heston models measured in MSIM/sec (Million simulations per second). And Waters could also announce a first real application: Microsoft uses Altera FPGAs in its Catapult board to speed up web services. Figure 3: Stratix V FPGA on the Microsoft The use of FPGAs delivers 2 times faster Bing Catapult board search results and therefore the deployment of FPGAs in Microsoft data centers will start in 2015. Microsoft is convinced that FPGAs can not only speed up Bing searches but also change the way the company runs all sorts of other online services. International Conference and Exhibition on Integration Issues of Miniaturized Systems – MEMS, NEMS, ICs and Electronic Components Copenhagen, Denmark, 11 – 12 March 2015 smartsystemsintegration.com BE PART OF IT! Knowledge exchange Trends and innovations Networking Main conference topics: • Smart energy systems • Smart Medtech systems • Smart production • System integration and packaging ation More inntfoegrram tion.com smartsystem OpenCL makes FPGAs “programmer-friendly” Bringing performance and power efficiency of FPGAs to system programmers Altera favours OpenCL, a programming language optimized for the use of FPGAs. Up to date most electronic systems consisting of hardware and software are developed in easy to implement C-based code for software and HDL code for hardware which allows for the best performance per watt. OpenCL combines both of these advantages. Today OpenCL achieved a great impact on data centers because 4 of the 6 largest server suppliers und 3 of the top 5 largest investment banks are developing and evaluating Altera FPGAs and OpenCL for their future applications. Therefore Waters is expecting that about 50% of all Altera data center business opportunities will use OpenCL by 2016. Today the FPGA supplier collaborates already with Baidu, a Chinese web services company, on cloud search acceleration with FPGAs and OpenCL and meets the complex requirements of the Chinese company regarding search, big data and deep learning. Therefore Waters believes that OpenCL is a game changer and will help FPGAs penetrate the mainstream heterogeneous computing world in data centers. With its high-speed FPGAs and OpenCL Altera is well positioned to meet software defined data center requirements and therefore software defined data centers are an expanding market and as already mentioned the fastest growing segment for the company. www.altera.com Co-organizer: www.bodospower.com Part of the activities of: Contact: +49 711 61946-16 smart@mesago.com si NEW CONTENT PRODUCTS More Power for the Future In October and November 2014 a variety of electronic exhibitions were organised in Germany and therefore a multitude of new products were introduced as well. This article features a short selection of new power related products introduced at theses exhibitions which are available immediately to the market. By Wolfgang Patelay, Freelance Journalist, Bodo´s Power Low-Peak Upgrade Program for Circuit Protection Eaton announced the introduction of the new Bussmann Low-Peak Upgrade program. The program is a complimentary service and is focused on generating customized inventory consolidation recommendations. Eaton’s team of experts first conducts a full audit of the customer’s fuse inventory. This audit collects all necessary data to be analyzed (part number, description, manufacturer, quantity on hand, and bin location). Next, the company takes the data gathered during this audit and conducts a thorough analysis, which generates an inventory and consolidation summary report. The report includes SKU reduction recommendations and estimated savings, a recommended inventory list and a quote for the purchase of new Low-Peak fuses. Eaton’s Bussmann series Low-Peak fuses include a current-limitation feature, helping to ensure reduced arc flash hazards. They also offer 50 percent more protection than any other Underwriters Laboratories (UL) listed fuse. Should customers wish to purchase Low-Peak fuses recommended by the audit and analysis, Eaton provides environmentally-friendly disposal of old inventory and a training module so that customers can implement a seamless transition of circuit protection products. www.cooperbussmann.com Bipolar power modules in solder bond technology Infineon Technologies Bipolar launched bipolar power modules in solder bond technology to address the specific requirements of cost-effective applications. With these new PowerBlock modules the company expands its already comprehensive power module portfolio which, so far, was only using pressure contacts. With market prices of approximately 25 percent (depending on module/application) less than related pressure contact variants solder bond modules offer significant cost advantages in modules with smaller packages sizes of up to 50mm. The new PowerBlock modules are available in package types with base plate widths of 20mm, 34mm or 50mm. For each package five module types for easy rectifier designs (2 x Thyristor/ PowerBlock solder bond modules are available in package types with base plate widths of 20mm, 34mm or 50mm 46 Bodo´s Power Systems® Thyristor TT, 2 x Thyristor/Diode TD and 1 x Diode/Diode DD) are offered. Infineon is covering the main current ratings per package size; all types are available with 1600V blocking voltage. The PowerBlock modules with isolated copper base plate provide a lower transient thermal resistance than modules using only a DCB substrate for heat transfer to the heat sink. This leads to higher robustness in case of overload. The optimized housing and cover construction of the PowerBlock solder modules provide a very low torsion during screwing of the main terminals while the modules offer best in class soldering quality. In addition the modules show lowest power dissipation which leads to high system efficiency. www.infineon.com/cms/en/product/promopages/ifbip/ Prewired Rack for High-Power DC Applications Keysight introduced a rack system for high-power DC applications. The prewired N8900 Series reduces system complexity and saves time for engineers designing and implementing high-power systems for challenging applications requiring up to 90kW. When engineers design high-power racks, they face system design, debugging and safety challenges associated with high voltages. The N8900 Series rack system helps engineers easily overcome these challenges for voltages up to 1500V and currents up to 3060A, allowing them to focus on Rack system enables single-output power suptheir core business ply that delivers up to 90kW objectives. The new rack system allows users to install up to six 15-kW N8900 Series autoranging DC power supplies in a parallel configuration that can deliver up to 90kW and up to 3060 amps. February 2015 www.bodospower.com NEW PRODUCTS CONTENT Autoranging capability allows users to get full-power output at a wide range of voltages. The rack system’s internal communications wiring allows users to treat the entire rack as a single power supply that delivers up to 90kW. Engineers can communicate with the rack through one master power supply with communications to the individual power supplies being handled within the rack. Users can communicate with the N8900 Series rack system via LAN (LXI Core), USB or GPIB interfaces, all of which come standard with the system. EMI field as well as a solution for the “power analysis” area. The test system consists of special PC software, an oscilloscope, as well as a current probe and a voltage probe for connection with the test object. There are three areas of measurements implemented in the software: www.keysight.com/find/N8900Rack Software for testing switching power supplies Rigol has released a new PC Software, which enables users to perform standard measurements on switching power supplies. This software, in combination with Rigol oscilloscopes (series DS/MSO2000A, DS4000 or DS6000) allows customers to set up small test systems, which represent a reasonably priced alternative for measuring switching power supply parameters during the development phase. Switching power supplies are commonly used in both, the electronics and consumer industry. For example, you will find switched power supplies in TVs, computers, halogen illuminations and in many other consumer devices. Various parameters of these power supplies have to be measured and compared with limits during the development and also during the production phase. All built-in switching power supplies must be tested and have to be compliant with the European standard IEC61000-3-2. Similar to the EMI testing (CISPR-Norm) there is also a split between pre-compliance test (mostly during the development phase) und compliance test (Certification). Rigol is now able to offer a very competitive pre-compliance test solution for the www.bodospower.com Ultra power-analyzer software implements three areas of measurements 1. Measurements at the input: power quality, harmonics (IEC61000-32), and In-rush current. 2. Measurements at the „switch“: switch loss, save operating area, and modulation. 3. Measurements at the output: output analysis of the switching power supply. February 2015 http://www.rigol.com/ Bodo´s Power Systems® 47 International Exhibition with Workshops on Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) Stuttgart, Germany, 24 – 26 March 2015 Take the chance to step into the European market! Safe the date and come to Germany to be part of Europe's marketplace for electromagnetic compatibility. Intelligent power modules for high-performance switching Rohm Semiconductor unveiled its new IPM (Intelligent Power Module) family for power-efficient motor driving and inverter applications. Based on its experience with power devices the new module series includes IGBT based modules optimized for low or high speed operation as well as MOSFET based IPMs which incorporates proprietary Low Ron SuperJunction MOSFET (PrestoMOS).This offers developers of white goods and industry motors a multitude of cost-efficient design options. The full line-up includes 10A, 15A and 20A versions of 600V IGBT-IPM. Applications with built-in motor drives demand compactness, high integration and reliability and have to operate in rugged environments for a long time. In response to this ROHM has developed this highly functional IPM series based which combine several components like gate drivers, bootstrap diodes, IGBTs or Power MOSFETs (PrestoMOS), fly wheel diodes as well as various protection functions within one compact HSDIP25 package. Devices feature proprietary isolation and advanced energy-saving characteristics for embedded motor driving and inverters It leverages a number of proprietary technologies and material enhancements to facilitate current surveillance, heat dissipation and reliable operation. It significantly reduces power loss at light and heavy loads while increasing power capability. Featuring an innovative aluminium-based Silicon-on-isolator (SOI) technology, the module provides enhanced high-voltage capacity, high heat conductivity and low leak current and, at the same time, prevents latch-up. For excellent reliability, the IC additionally features a comprehensive range of protection attributes such as a current limit for the bootstrap diode, under voltage lock-out for floating supply, fault output, thermal shutdown and short circuit protection as well as a FWD (IGBT version) to eliminate flyback. Designers can choose from different set-ups – with integrated IGBT or MOSFET - in order to identify the ideal solution for their application and save time and costs. www.rohm.com/eu Further information: web: e - emc.com phone: + 49 711 61946 63 email: emv@mesago.com Ruggedized power inductors for automotive TDK/Epcos has developed a new series of rugged power inductors for use in automotive electronics. The CLF6045NI-D wirewound SMD power inductors feature high efficiency and reliability over a very wide temperature range extending from -55°C to +150°C and offer rated inductance values from 1.0μH to 470μH (E6 series). Measuring in at 6.3x6.0x4.5mm, the CLF6045NI-D types are available for rated currents of 0.28A to 6.7A and offer DC resistance values ranging from 1.1mΩ to 1.30Ω. Mass production will be launched in February 2015. The new products are qualified to AEC-Q200, and thus fulfil the rigorous requirements of the automotive industry. Thanks to advanced materials technology the new components feature outstanding www.bodospower.com CWT Mini Ad Quarter Oct'14.1.3.qxp_Layout 1 16/10/2014 12:58 Page 1 CONTENT 30MHz screened Rogowski probes measure faster rise-times heat resistance. A new bonding process for the terminals enables a solderless structural design that features improved mechanical strength. The fully automated manufacturing process ensures the high reliability and quality of these components. As a result, the new inductors are suitable for use in applications in demanding automotive environments such as the power supply circuits of engine control modules (ECM) and ECUs for airbags, ABS, and headlights. In addition to the 6 mm square form factor, TDK will subsequently introduce 5 mm, 7 mm, 10 mm and 12.5 mm square types, in order to offer a broad lineup of power inductors that is suitable for a wide range of applications. The new CWT MiniHF is an AC current probe featuring: • Novel electrostatic shielded Rogowski coil provides excellent immunity to interference from fast local dV/dt transients or large 50/60Hz voltages • Extended (-3dB) high frequency bandwidth 30MHz for a 100mm coil • Peak dl/dt capability up to 100kA/µs • Wide operating temperature from -40 to +125°C • Thin 4.5mm Rogowski coil with 5kV peak insulation • Zero insertion impedance CWT MiniHF Please contact us to discuss your application Inductors in solderless structural design with improved mechanical strength and high reliability www.epcos.de Integrated DrMOS power stages deliver high power density Vishay introduced a new family of VRPower integrated DrMOS power stage solutions in three PowerPAK package sizes to meet the various design challenges in high-power and high-performance multiphase POL applications. The Siliconix SiC789 and the SiC788 are offered in the MLP66-40L with an Intel 4.0 DrMOS Standard (6mm by 6mm) footprint, while the SiC620 and the SiC620R are offered in the new 5mm by 5mm MLP55-31L package and the SiC521 is available in the 4.5mm by 3.5mm MLP4535-22L. The devices are optimized for on-board DC/DC converters in computing and storage equipment, telecom switches and routers, graphics cards, and bitcoin mining hardware with high current requirements and limited board space. info@pemuk.com Tel: +44 (0)115 946 9657 Power Electronic Measurements www.pemuk.com/cwtminihf The 6mm by 6mm package of the SiC789 and SiC788 offers an easy upgrade path to higher output power in designs already using the Intel standard DrMOS 4.0 footprint, while the new 5mm by 5mm and 3.5mm by 4.5mm footprints are ideal for new designs where board space constraints require more compact voltage regulators. The PowerPAK MLP55-31L and MLP4535-22L also feature several design enhancements that bolster the dynamic performance of state-of-the art Vishay Gen IV MOSFETs by improving package parasitics and thermals. For example, the SiC620R in a dual side cooling MLP5531L delivers 70A and 95% efficiency in typical multiphase buck converter designs. The ability to cool the device from both the top and bottom of the package results in 20% lower losses compared to the previous-generation package while shrinking the footprint by 33%. In notebook designs and for peripheral rails in servers, telecom switches, and gaming motherboards, the compact 3.5mm by 4.5mm SiC521 delivers continuous current up to 25A and peak current to 40A. The VRPower family gate driver IC is compatible with a wide range of PWM controllers and supports tri-state PWM logic of 5V and 3.3V. In addition, the driver IC incorporates diode emulation mode circuitry to improve light-load efficiency, while an adaptive dead time control helps to further improve efficiency at all load points. Protection features for the devices include undervoltage lockout (UVLO), shoot-through protection, and a thermal warning feature that alerts the system in case of an excessive junction temperature. www.vishay.com DrMOS power stage solutions meet the various design challenges in high-power and high-performance multiphase POL applications www.bodospower.com February 2015 Bodo´s Power Systems® 49 NEW CONTENT PRODUCTS Play Key Role in Testing Electric Bikes Test instruments supplied by Yokogawa are playing a key role in the final testing of motors for electric bikes manufactured by Heinzmann in the village of Schönau in Germany’s Black Forest region. Heinzmann has been developing and manufacturing electric drives for over 30 years. The company’s drives are used in a range of industrial applications as well as in various types of electric vehicles. The first products for electric bikes were introduced by the company in 1994 and one of its great successes was the development of motors for the cargo bikes used by the German mail carrier Deutsche Post AG. This particular application uses mainly DC hub motors with gearing to ensure a high torque during acceleration. However, in electric bikes for leisure purposes, Heinzmann installs brushless synchronous disk motors. These are not only maintenance-free, but distinguish themselves compared to a conventional electric motor by being based on a flat design which offers the benefits of small size and low weight. In addition, these motors offer high efficiency and quiet running. They can be used in both front- and rear-wheel drive systems, and can also facilitate energy recovery during braking or downhill running. A full Heinzmann electric bike drive system includes the electric motor, a controller, a battery pack, a torque sensor in the bottom bracket and a display/control unit on the handlebars. Heinzmann delivers the drive systems to various bicycle manufacturers, but they are also available as a retrofit kit and can also be incorporated into customers’ own electric bikes. Engine assembly and final test In Schönau the disk motors are assembled and a functional test is carried out. At the test stand the assembled motor is fixed into a mount, the power and sensor cables are connected and the motor shaft is connected via an adapter coupling and torque shaft to a brake motor. The operator then scans the identification label which is fixed to the motor. On the basis of the type of motor, the test system retrieves the appropriate motor data from a database and determines the respective test parameters and limits for the individual tests. For each motor a high-voltage test and power measurements are performed in the idle state and under load conditions, allowing the efficiency of the motor to be calculated from the measured values. Short-circuit tests are also carried out at random. In the event of failure, the test is immediately aborted and an error log is produced. Following each faultless run, a test label is printed. All measured data, along with the serial number of the motor, are stored in a database to ensure traceability. The test rig was completely designed and produced to Heinzmann’s specifications by ETU. It includes, among other things, a Yokogawa WT1800 power analyser, a programmable DC power supply for voltages up to 80 V and currents up to 60 A, a high-voltage tester and a measuring range extension for the power analyser with three current transformers. The interface of the test rig operates intuitively via a PC with a touch screen, whereas for the total control of the system a PLC is used. In order to provide realistic control of the motors, different electric bike motor controllers can be integrated into the system. “ETU chose the WT1800 power analyser largely based on previous experience, but also because it could be upgraded to six channels and combined with a torque sensor to measure the mechanical performance of the drive units. This way, we are ready to meet future challenges”, says Jürgen Bläsi, Managing Director of ETU GmbH. The laboratory power supply device simulates the battery and feeds a current of up to 50 A into the motor controller. The output current of the power supply is measured by the fourth channel of the WT1800. The motor controller generates a corresponding 3-phase signal to drive the motor. The actual power delivered to the motor is measured using the current transformer and power analyser, and the mechanical power on the torque transducer is detected by the WT1800. In this way, the efficiencies of both the individual powertrain components as well as the overall efficiency of the system can be determined. www.yokogawa.com 1.2kV, 80mΩ, All-Silicon Carbide Six-Pack and Associated Six-Channel Gate Driver Richardson RFPD, Inc. announced the availability from stock and full design support capabilities for a new 1.2kV, 80mΩ all-SiC six-pack (three-phase) module and associated six-channel gate driver from Cree, Inc. The CCS020M12CM2 includes C2M™ MOSFETs and Z-Rec™ diodes and features ultra-low loss, high-frequency operation, zero reverse recovery current from the diodes, zero turn-off tail current from the MOSFETs, fail-safe operation, ease of paralleling, and a copper baseplate and aluminum nitride insulator. 50 Bodo´s Power Systems® February 2015 The module enables compact and lightweight systems, offers high efficiency operation, mitigates over-voltage protection, and facilitates reduced thermal requirements and system cost. The CCS020M12CM2 is ideally suited for a range of applications, including solar inverters, three-phase power factor correction, regenerative drives, UPS and SMPS, and motor drives. It is pin-compatible to the industry-standard EconoPACKTM2 package (45mm). www.richardsonrfpd.com www.bodospower.com International Exhibition and Conference for Power Electronics, Intelligent Motion, Renewable Energy and Energy Management Nuremberg, 19 – 21 May 2015 Power meets electronics – Join the PCIM Europe! Your market place for power electronics More information at +49 711 61946-0 pcim@mesago.com or pcim-europe.com NEW CONTENT PRODUCTS 40V 0.99mOhm MOSFET in a DFN5x6 Package Alpha and Omega Semiconductor Limited, a designer, developer and global supplier of a broad range of power semiconductors and power ICs, announced the release of AON6590, the flagship device in its new 40V medium voltage portfolio. The AON6590 is designed to address a wide range of applications including primary-side and secondary-side switching in telecom and industrial DC/DC converters, secondary-side synchronous rectification in DC/DC and AC/DC converters, as well as POL modules for telecom systems. The AON6590 is the lead product in what will be a new portfolio of 40V products that are optimized for switching power conversion. Compared to previous generations, this new product improves onresistance by 30% which reduces conduction losses and allows lower case temperatures during heavy load operation. AON6590 also offers low output capacitance, reducing turn-off energy loss, thus enabling higher efficiencies in hard-switched applications. In addition to the performance benefits, this device has been designed with a robust UIS capability to handle extreme conditions such as output short circuits or start-up phases. The AON6590 is available in a compact DFN5x6 power package. “AON6590 marks a new generation of products designed to enable rugged system solutions with higher power density. The new device allows our customer to design power supplies that run cooler and improve overall system reliability.” said Stephen Chang, Sr. Product Marketing Director at AOS. AON6590 Technical Highlights www.aosmd.com Buck Regulator added to Family of Automotive-Grade Regulator ICs The A8590 buck regulator from Allegro MicroSystems Europe is the latest addition to the company’s industry-leading family of automotivegrade AEC-Q100 qualified regulator ICs. The device has been designed to provide the power-supply requirements of next-generation car audio and infotainment systems, and provides all the control and protection circuitry for a 3 A regulator which will withstand the rigours of a wide automotive battery input voltage range. The A8590 can also be used in cluster and centre stack applications and in advanced driving assistance systems. The A8590 employs pulse frequency modulation to draw less than 50 μA from a 12 V input while supplying a 3.3 V/40 μA output. After startup, the A8590 operates down to an input voltage (falling) of at least 3.6 V, and maintains ±1% output voltage accuracy. Other features of the A8590 include PWM/PFM mode control and the ability to synchronise PWM frequency to an external clock. It also has a “sleep” pin for an ultra-low current shutdown mode. The device has external compensation to accommodate a wide range of frequencies and external components, and provides a power-on reset signal validated by the output voltage. www.allegromicro.com Wireless Power Chips Used for State-of-the-Art ‘Cube’ Remote Control Integrated Device Technology, Inc. announced that its wireless power chips are enabling wireless charging in 4MOD Technology’s innovative new “Cube” remote control. The French company chose IDT’s magnetic induction transmitter and receiver solutions to develop its wireless charging system, compliant with the Wireless Power Consortium (WPC) 1.1 Qi specification. The Cube is a revolutionary remote that allows users to control all functions of their entertainment center—TV, video, music and radio—with a few simple gestures. The sleek black box is charged wirelessly by placing it atop its base. The Cube deploys the IDT P9038 single-chip WPC 1.1 5V wireless power transmitter in the base unit and the IDT P9025B single-chip ultra-compact wireless power receiver in the remote control. www.idt.com/go/wirelesspower 52 Bodo´s Power Systems® February 2015 www.bodospower.com NEW CONTENT PRODUCTS Power Factor Corrected Ac-Dc Drivers for LED Lighting ON Semiconductor, driving energy efficient innovations, announces two series of power factor corrected (PFC) offline Ac-Dc drivers for high performance LED lighting applications. Extending the NCL3008x family of products, the NCL30085, NCL30086 and NCL30088 address single stage design implementations up to 60 watts (W) that require high power factor. The NCL30030 broadens the existing solutions which support higher power (up to 150 W) two stage topologies that require low optical ripple and wide LED forward voltage variation. The NCL30085, NCL30086 and NCL30088 utilise a power factor corrected current control algorithm which makes them suitable for flyback buck-boost, and SEPIC topologies. By operating in quasiresonant mode these devices are able to deliver optimum efficiency across wide line and load levels. The innovative control methodology they employ allows strict current regulation to be achieved (within 2 percent typically) solely from the primary side. The non-dimmable NCL30088 is complemented by the NCL30086, which is ‘smart-dimmable’, supporting analog and/or pulse-width modulation (PWM) dimming with a single input that controls the average LED current. Completing the series is the NCL30085 which supports three levels of log step dimming (70 percent, 25 percent and 5 percent). The NCL30030 is a two stage PFC controller plus quasi-resonant flyback controller optimized for medium and high power LED lighting applications up to 150 W. This device is best suited for commercial lighting such as lowbay, highbay and streetlighting. The NCL30030 makes use of a proprietary multiplier architecture to achieve low harmonic distortion and near-unity power factor while operating in critical conduction mode (CrM). http://www.onsemi.com PROGRAMMABLE DC POWER Magna-Power’s high frequency IGBT-based programmable DC power supply line spans 1.5 kW to 2000 kW+ with hundreds of models to target a variety of different applications. Using a Magna-Power supply is as simple or sophisticated as the application demands with front panel control, 37-pin isolated analog-digital I/O and a computer interface. Remote programming is supported through a variety of development environments by a provided National Instruments LabVIEW™ driver, IVI driver and SCPI command set over RS232, TCP/IP Ethernet, IEEE-488 GPIB and USB. Designed and manufactured in the USA. Available worldwide. www.magna-power.com SL Series XR Series TS Series MS Series MT Series 1.5 kW, 2.6 kW, 4 kW 2 kW, 4 kW, 6 kW, 8 kW, 10 kW 5 kW to 45 kW 30 kW, 45 kW, 60 kW, 75 kW 100 kW to 2,000 kW+ 1U Rack-mount 2U Rack-mount 3U to 9U Rack-mount Floor Standing Floor Standing No. of Models 54 70 80 80 65 Voltage Range 0-5 Vdc to 0-1,000 Vdc 0-5 Vdc to 0-10,000 Vdc 0-5 Vdc to 0-4,000 Vdc 0-5 Vdc to 0-4,000 Vdc 0-16 Vdc to 0-4,000 Vdc Current Range 0-1.5 Adc to 0-250 Adc 0-0.2 Adc to 0-600 Adc 0-1.2 Adc to 0-2,700 Adc 0-7.2 Adc to 0-4,500 Adc 0-24 Adc to 0-24,000 Adc Power Levels Package www.bodospower.com February 2015 Bodo´s Power Systems® 53 SMT2015_KV_E_90x270 16.09.14 12:40 Seite 1 International Exhibition and Conference for System Integration in Micro Electronics Reference Design for High-Power LED-Lighting Applications Power Integrations, the leader in high-efficiency, high-reliability LEDdriver ICs, announced a reference design for LED streetlights, highbay lights and other high-power LED-lighting applications. The new design, RDR-382, describes a constant current, 43 V (nominal), 150 W reference power supply for 90-265 VAC solid-state lighting, utilizing Power Integrations HiperPFS™-2 PFC controller ICs and HiperLCS™ integrated LLC power stage ICs. Nuremberg, 5 – 7 May 2015 The place to be! smt-exhibition.com Traditional dual-stage drivers with separate PFC and LLC stages produce a constant-voltage (CV) output requiring multiple DC-DC converters to convert the output to constant current (CC). In contrast, RDR-382 uses a novel feedback and control scheme which enables the LLC to provide constant current directly at the output. As a result, component count is cut by approximately one-third, efficiency is increased to > 93 %, and the elimination of the DC-DC converter stage significantly reduces size. Additionally, the high nominal LLC switching frequency (250 kHz) reduces the size of the required magnetics, while the use of a continuous-conduction-mode, variable-frequency PFC stage reduces EMI compared to fixed-frequency alternatives. Comments Andrew Smith, senior product marketing manager for Power Integrations: “Reliability is especially important for high-power lighting applications above 75 W output. Because this design is high efficiency, less heat is generated. In combination with a reduced component count, this ensures a long lifetime.” Power Integrations Launches New Reference Design for High-Power LED-Lighting Applications RDR-382 can be used to drive single or multiple LED strings and allows analog dimming to be implemented with a 0-10 VDC input. The reference design can be downloaded from: http://led-driver.power.com/sites/default/files/PDFFiles/rdr382.pdf www.power.com Organizer: Mesago Messe Frankfurt GmbH Rotebuehlstr. 83 – 85 70178 Stuttgart, Germany Tel. +49 711 61946-828 Fax +49 711 61946-93 smt@mesago.de 54 www.bodospower.com NEWCONTENT PRODUCTS 125 °C Hybrid Polymer-Aluminum Electrolytic Capacitors Cornell Dubilier Electronics, Inc. (CDE) announces the release of type HZC Hybrid Polymer-Aluminum electrolytic capacitors. Rated for 125 °C, type HZC combines the advantages of aluminum electrolytic and aluminum polymer technology. These hybrid capacitors have the ultra-low ESR characteristics of conductive aluminum polymer capacitors packaged in a V-chip, SMT case with high capacitance and voltage ratings that were previously available only in aluminum electrolytic technology. Applications for type 125 °C hybrid capacitors include a variety of industrial power conversion, lighting control and automotive applications. Capacitance values for type HZC range from 10 to 330 µF at voltage ratings from 25 to 63 VDC and ripple current values exceeding 2000mA for some of the larger chip sizes. When operated at their rated temperature of 125 °C and rated voltage at full ripple current rating, type HZC capacitors have a load life exceeding 4,000 hrs. “The hybrid series gives the design engineer the best of both worlds” says Bill Haddad, Product Manager. “Hybrid capacitors utilize a combination of liquid electrolyte and solid polymer giving them high ripple current capability at high capacitance and voltage ratings. They allow the design engineer to use fewer capacitors to meet the capacitance and ripple current demands for their power conversion application.” Haddad continued. www.cde.com/resources/catalogs/HZC.pdf Universal PMIC Offers Up to 40V Input Exar Corporation introduced the XR77129, a quad output programmable Universal PMIC with an input operating voltage range of 6V to 40V. Its patented control architecture is well suited for 40V inputs using a 17-bit wide PID voltage mode VIN feed forward architecture. This controller offers a single input, quad output, step-down switching regulator controller with integrated gate drivers and dual LDO outputs. It can also monitor and dynamically control and configure the power system through an I2C interface. Five configurable GPIOs allow for fast system integration for fault reporting and status or for sequencing control. The XR77129 is quickly configured to power nearly any FPGA, SOC or DSP system through the use of Exar’s design tool, PowerArchitectTM and programmed through an I²C based SMBus compliant serial interface. PowerArchitect 5.2 has been upgraded to support the additional capabilities of the XR77129 including output voltage ranges beyond the native 0.6V to 5.5V with the use of external feedback resistors. The XR77129 wide input voltage range, low quiescent current of 450uA (standby) and 4mA (operating) make it an excellent choice for a wide range of systems including 18V to 36VDC, 24VDC or rectified AC systems used in the industrial automation and embedded applications. www.exar.com/xr77129 www.exar.com Our Power Inductor family from small and filigree to LARGE and POWERFUL No “next generation” issues! Available from stock samples within 24 hrs Design kits with free refills Software tools for product selection On-site Design-In consultations IC reference designs Free www.bodospower.com www.we-online.com February 2015 embedded world Hall 2 Booth 420 Bodo´s Power Systems® 55 NEW CONTENT PRODUCTS 500 & 600W Quarter Brick Bus Converters with PMBus Murata announced the DRQ series of single output digitally controlled 500 and 600 Watt DC-DC converters from Murata Power Solutions. Incorporating a 32-bit ARM7 Processor, the 600W DRQ-12/50-L48 & 500W DRQ-12/42-D48 models are the second product families offered by Murata Power Solutions to include a PMBusTM compatible digital interface. The DRQ family is packaged in the industry standard quarter-brick format incorporating the Advanced Bus Converter (ABC) pinout for PMBus communications to an isolated DC-DC converter. Both the DRQ-12/50-L48 (600 Watt) and the DRQ-12/42-D48 (500 Watt) units are packaged in an industry standard quarter-brick format that will support the evolving Advanced Bus Converter (ABC) footprint for isolated board mounted power modules. The –L48 module has a 12 VDC 50 Amp output, accommodates an input voltage range from 44 to 57 VDC and is ideal for Intermediate Bus Applications (IBA) with a tightly controlled power source. The –D48 converter provides a 11.5 VDC 43.5 Amp output and supports the TNV 2:1 wide input voltage range of 38 to 75 VDC. These highly efficient units, typically 95.5%, run much cooler than less efficient units making them ideal for use in modern space constrained telecoms and data networking equipment. Typical applications include MicroTCA, servers, Storage, Networking equipment, POE applications, wireless Networks along with industrial applications and test equipment. The PMBus interface facilitates power management features not previously available in an isolated power module rated at 500-600W in a 1/4tr brick format. By interfacing the DRQ module to the system’s I2C bus a system engineer can monitor critical system level performance requirements that include Vin, Iin, Vout, Iout and operating temperature. The PMBus can also be used to set warning flags for temperature, Vin, Vout, Iout and allows the user to customize parameters such as Vout, Vin Turn on/off thresholds, output over voltage protection and output current limit and ramp-up characteristics to name a few. www.murata.com www.bodospower.com February 2015 Bodo´s Power Systems® 57 AaBbCcDdEeFfGg NEW CONTENT PRODUCTS 10 Watt Class Wireless Power Solution Toshiba Electronics Europe (TEE) has announced the launch of a wireless power receiver IC, TC7765WBG, and a transmitter IC, TB6865AFG Enhanced Version, as a 10-watt-class wireless power solution for smartphones, tablets and mobile accessories using the Qi Standard Low Power Specifications version 1.1, defined by the Wireless Power Consortium (WPC). With increasing awareness of the use of wireless power supplies to charge portable devices, such as smartphones, tablets and their accessories, demand is growing for higher-power wireless charging systems that shorten charge times. The receiver IC, TC7765WBG, increases power by boosting the output voltage from 5V/1A to 7-12V/1A. The transmitter IC, TB6865AFG Enhanced Version, realizes a 10-watt- class wireless power solution based on a revised peripheral circuit configuration and new software. The TC7765WBG’s built-in protocol authentication logic circuit for power supply control eliminates the need for set makers to develop software. The TB6865AFG Enhanced Version also supports the software necessary for the higher power supply Important Author Dates January 15th , 2015: Digest submitted via the website May 1st, 2015: Notification of acceptance or rejection July 1st, 2015: Final papers with IEEE copyright forms Other Important Dates February 16th, 2015 : Submission of Tutorial proposals March 31, 2015: Submission of Special Session proposals : www.bodospower.com operation, allowing makers to easily incorporate 10-watt-class solutions into their products. This advance will reduce development times for 10-watt-class wireless power supplies for manufacturers’ systems. www.toshiba.co.jp/index.htm The Seventh Annual IEEE Energy Conversion Congress and Exposition (ECCE 2015) will be held in Montreal, Canada, on September 20 - 24, 2015. ECCE 2015 is the pivotal international conference and exposition event on electrical and electromechanical energy conversion. To be held for the first time outside USA, ECCE 2015, in Montreal, Canada, will feature both industry-driven and application-oriented technical sessions, as well as industry expositions and seminars. ECCE 2015 will bring together practicing engineers, researchers and other professionals for interactive and multidisciplinary discussions on the latest advances in various areas related to energy conversion. Please visit http://2015.ecceconferences.org for more information or contact the ECCE 2015 Technical Program Chairs at ecce2015tpc@gmail.com. For exhibiting at ECCE 2015, please contact Exhibition Chair, Steve Sprague at ssprague@protolam.com. For more about Montreal and its surrounding areas, please visit http://www.tourisme-montreal.org/. February 2015 Bodo´s Power Systems® 59 Bodo´s Power Systems ® Free Subscription Offer Country: First Name: Austria Belgium Czech Republic Denmark Finland France Germany Greece Hungary Ireland Italy Israel Last Name: Company: Job Title: Department: Street/PoBox: City Postal Code: New Subscription Fax to: +49 4343 42 17 89 Address change Netherlands Norway Poland Portugal Russian Federation Spain Sweden Switzerland Turkey United Kingdom Others Reconfirmation of subscription Telephone: Fax: E-mail: Job Function:*(select best only) Design/Development Engineering Services Test Manufacturing Procurement/Purchasing Sales/Marketing Research Institute Education Consulting Others Industry:*(select best only) Medical Test & Measurement Procurement/Purchasing Sales/Marketing Research Institute Education Consulting Others Computers Communication Automotive Aircraft, Avionics, Marine, Space & Military Industrial Control Motion Control Robotics Power Supplies Batteries Products:*(select all) Power Semiconductors Power Modules Power Managment ICs Optoelectronic Devices Passive Components Thermal Management Sensors & Transducers Power Supplies Batteries Test & Measurement Software Power Quality Actuators Others Free Subscription Offer Bodo´s Power Systems ® Bodo´s Power Systems ® magazine serves the Power Electronics, Power Managment, Power Conversion, Intelligent and Embedded Motion Control markets for Systems Design Engineers. To ensure receiving your free subscrition to Bodo´s Power please complete this form. Systems ® magazine, Free subscriptions to qualified application are limited to residents of Europe and will be assigned +49 4343 42 17 89 www.bodospower.com CONTENT 400 W Ac-Dc Power Supplies Comes in Four Compact Chassis Mount Case Styles CUI Inc announced a family of compact 400 W ac-dc power supplies to its power portfolio. The PCM-400 series is housed in four optional chassis mount case styles, including a compact U-frame measuring 6 x 4 x 1.5 inches (152.4 x 101.6 x 38.1 mm) and enclosed versions with top or rear fan options. Featuring a wide range of available volt- ages, multiple protections and peak power capabilities up to 700 W within a 500 µs duty cycle, this series is ideally suited for numerous ITE, telecommunications and industrial applications. The PCM-400 power supplies meet EN60950-1 standards, carry UL/ cUL and TUV safety certifications, and provide EN55022 class B EMI compliance. They feature 3000 Vac input-to-output isolation and an output-to-ground isolation of 1500 Vac. The series provides a universal 90~264 Vac input for global operation and comes available in eight separate single output models ranging from 12 to 54 Vdc. Dual output versions are also available. The power supplies are rated for operation at full load from 0° to 50°C ambient, derating to 50% load at 70 °C. Additional features include active PFC, remote on/off control and protections for over voltage, over current, short circuit, and over temperature. www.cui.com Reliable 48W & 60W Open Frame AC/DC Power Supplies Anz_ITPR_3_Blau.qxp 17.07.2009 RECOM’s new RAC48/OF and RAC60/OF Class II open frame power supplies offer 48W or 60W output power with excellent performance, even at high ambient temperatures. With an operating temperature range of -20°C to +50°C at 100% load and up to 70°C at derated load, there is typically no need for active cooling. These compact AC/DC modules are highly efficient, have a long hold-up time (60ms) and are also compliant with the European ErP directive (<0.5W in standby). The PSUs 17:00 Seite 1 high quality components to are also built with ensure a long, trouble-free life. Both series are available with output voltages of 5VDC, 12VDC, 15VDC and 24VDC, adjustable via the on-board preset. The DC outputs are fully protected with OCP, OVP and hiccup SCP. With their universal input voltage range of 90V to 265VAC and 3kVAC/1 minute isolation, they are suitable for worldwide use. www.recom-electronic.com Power Your Recognition Instantly Based in Munich, Germany, ITPR Information-Travels Public Relations is a full-service consultancy with over a decade of experience in the electronics sector. As a small exclusive agency, we offer extremely high ROI, no-nonsense flexibility and highest priority to only a handful of companies. Strategical Support Corporate/Product Positioning, Market/Competitive Analysis, PR Programs, Roadmaps, Media Training, Business Development, Partnerships, Channel Marketing, Online Marketing Tactical PR Writing: Press Releases, Feature Articles, Commentaries, Case Studies, White Papers Organizing: Media Briefings, Road Shows, Product Placements in Reviews and Market Overviews, Exhibitions, Press Conferences Monitoring and Research: Speaking Opportunities, Editorial Calendars, Feature Placement, Media Coverage, Competitive Analysis Translations: Releases, By-Lined Articles, Websites, etc. Call or contact us today for a free consultation on how PR can dramatically affect your company’s bottom line. ITPR Information-Travels Public Relations Stefanusstrasse 6a, 82166 Gräfelfing-Munich, Germany Tel ++49 (89) 898687-20, Fax ++49 (89) 898687-21, electronics@information-travels.com www.information-travels.com www.bodospower.com February 2015 Bodo´s Power Systems® 63 CONTENT The 1st Power Analyzer ... that lets you have it both ways. Two paths. One measurement. In half the time. Zero compromises. The LMG670 with its unique DualPath architecture is the longawaited solution to a well known dilemma. When optimizing designs for power applications with high-frequency content, engineers were forced to choose between analysis on the full power spectrum or a specific portion only. Simultaneous measurements were impossible. To filter, or not to filter - that was the question. Up to 7 channels · DC – 10 MHz · Accuracy 0.025 % · 500 µA to 32 A DualPath is the answer. 3 mV to 1000 V · Touchscreen · Gbit-Ethernet · DVI / VGA interface Experience the new LMG670 with DualPath live at: ZES ZIMMER (Headquarter): +49 6171 628750 · sales@zes.com Motor & Drive Systems 2015 January 21-22 (Orlando, FL, USA) APEC 2015 March 15-19 (Charlotte, NC, USA) EMV 2015 March 24-26 (Stuttgart, Germany) ZES ZIMMER Inc. (US): +1 760 550 9371 · usa@zes.com www.zes.com NexFET™ N-Channel Power MOSFETs Achieve Industry’s Lowest Resistance Texas Instruments introduced 11 N-channel power MOSFETs to its NexFET™ product line, including the 25-V CSD16570Q5B and 30-V CSD17570Q5B for hot swap and ORing applications with the industry’s lowest on-resistance (Rdson) in a QFN package. In addition, TI’s new 12-V FemtoFET™ CSD13383F4 for low-voltage batterypowered applications achieves the lowest resistance at 84-percent below competitive devices in a tiny 0.6 mm by 1 mm package. For more information, samples or a reference design, visit www.ti.com/ csd16570q5b-pr-eu. The CSD16570Q5B and CSD17570Q5B NexFET MOSFETs deliver higher power conversion efficiencies at higher currents, while ensuring safe operation in computer server and telecom applications. For instance, the 25-V CSD16570Q5B supports a maximum of 0.59 milliohms of Rdson, while the 30-V CSD17570Q5B achieves a maximum of 0.69 milliohms of Rdson. Read a blog, “Power MOSFET safe operating area (SOA) curves for designing with hot-swap and ORing FET controllers.” Download a 12-V, 60-A hot swap reference design featuring TI’s CSD17570Q5B NexFET. TI’s CSD17573Q5B and CSD17577Q5A can be paired with the LM27403 for DC/DC controller applications to form a complete synchronous buck converter solution. The CSD16570Q5B and CSD17570Q5B NexFET power MOSFETs can be paired with a TI hot swap controller such as the TPS24720. Download the application note “Robust Hot Swap Designs” to understand how a transistor is selected as a pass element and how to ensure safe operation under all possible conditions. www.ti.com Advertising Index ABB Semiconductor C3 APEC 29 APEX11 Bodos Power systems 60 CDE21 cps43 Dr. Seibt 10 ECCE 59 electronicon1 EMV 48 EPE ECCE 56 esar41 Fuji 23 GvAC2 64 Bodo´s Power Systems® Hitachi 37 Husum Wind 39 ICW 17 Infineon 19 IRC4 ITPR 58 Kendeil33 Lem5 Magna Power 53 Mitsubishi 15 Payton 47 PCIM Asia 35 PCIM Europe 51 PEM UK 49 February 2015 Plexim13 Rohm31 Semikron 27 Smart Systems Integration 45 SMT54 Texas Instruments 3 Thermal Management 57 Toshiba 9 Vincotech 7 VMI25 Würth 55 ZES Zimmer 64 www.bodospower.com Fast thyristor. When burning for induction heating solutions. Melting systems, surface hardening or preheating – Induction heating applications are manifold. ABB’s fast thyristors deliver the performance induction heating applications are asking for. ABB’s family of fast switching thyristors are available with blocking voltages from 1,200 to 3,000 volt, average forward currents from 500 to 2,700 ampere and turn-off times from 8 to 100 microseconds. For more information please contact us or visit our website: www.abb.com/semiconductors ABB Switzerland Ltd. / ABB s.r.o. www.abb.com/semiconductors abbsem@ch.abb.com Tel.: +41 58 586 1419 StrongIRFET™ Rugged, Reliable MOSFETs Specifications Package PQFN 5x6 DirectFET Med.Can D2-Pak D2-Pak 7pin D-Pak TO-220AB TO-247 Features: Qg@ Vgs = 10V (nC) • Ultra low RDS(on) BVDSS (V) ID @25°C (A) 25 100 0.95 56 IRFH8201TRPbF 25 100 1.05 52 IRFH8202TRPbF 30 100 1.1 58 IRFH8303TRPbF 30 100 1.3 50 IRFH8307TRPbF 40 100 1.4 134 IRFH7004TRPbF 40 85 2.4 92 IRFH7440TRPbF 40 85 3.3 65 IRFH7446TRPbF • DC Motors 30 192 1.3 51 IRF8301MTRPbF • Inverters 40 90 1.4 141 IRF7946TRPbF 60 114 3.6 120 IRF7580MTRPBF 40 195 1.8 150 IRFS7437TRLPbF 40 120 2.8 90 IRFS7440TRLPbF 60 120 5.34 86 IRFS7540TRLPbF 40 195 1.5 150 IRFS7437TRL7PP 60 240 1.4 236 IRFS7530-7PP 40 90 2.5 89 IRFR7440TRPbF 60 90 4 86 IRFR7540TRPbF 40 195 1.3 300 IRFB7430PbF 40 195 1.6 216 IRFB7434PbF 40 195 2 150 IRFB7437PbF 40 120 2.5 90 IRFB7440PbF 40 118 3.3 62 IRFB7446PbF 60 195 2.0 274 IRFB7530PbF 40 195 1.3 300 IRFP7430PbF RDS(on) max @Vgs = 10V (mΩ) Part Number For more information call +49 (0) 6102 884 311 or visit us at www.irf.com • High current capability • Industrial qualified • Broad portfolio offering Applications: • UPS • Solar Inverter • ORing or Hotswap • Battery Packs
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