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Gate Drive Design of Wide Bandgap Semiconductors for Voltage Source Converter Applications Zheyu Zhang For ECE 620 – CURENT Course September 23, 2015 What is a Gate Driver Gate driver is a link between world of control and world of power World of control is world of 1.8V, 3.3V, 5V…… World of power is world of thousands of Volts and thousands of Ampers A good gate driver is not NICE to have, it is a MUST 2 Outline I. Gate Driver for Wide Bandgap Power Semiconductors Gate Driver Fundamentals Main Functions of a Gate Driver Basic Functional Blocks of a Gate Driver Gate Driver Related Characterization of Power Semiconductors Gate Driver Design Basics Protection for Voltage Source Converter Applications Summary and Key Message 3 Outline I. Gate Driver for Wide Bandgap Power Semiconductors Gate Driver Fundamentals Main Functions of a Gate Driver Basic Functional Blocks of a Gate Driver Gate Driver Related Characterization of Power Semiconductors Gate Driver Design Basics Protection for Voltage Source Converter Applications Summary and Key Message 4 Fundamentals of a Good Gate Driver Static requirement Keep the switch in ON state Minimize ON state voltage and corresponding conduction losses Safely keep the switch in OFF state Minimize leakage current Prevent spurious change of the switch state due to external or internal disturbances Dynamic requirement Drive the switch from ON to OFF and OFF to ON state, with Low switching losses Acceptable EMI Low commutation over-voltage Protection (Advanced function) Protect the switch in case of any hazardous situation Over-current Over-voltage Over-temperature 5 Basic Functional Blocks of a Gate Driver Function of each gate driver block Gate driver IC & Buffer: switch the power device with sufficient driving capability Signal Isolator: provides galvanic isolation between the control loop and power loop Isolated Power Supply: power secondary side of isolator, gate driver IC & buffer 6 Gate Driver for Wide Band-gap Switches Wide band-gap vs. Silicon High breakdown electric field High doping density High drift velocity High thermal conductivity Wide band-gap switches vs. Silicon switches High breakdown voltage → High voltage application Small ON state resistance → High dv/dt, di/dt, more parasitic ringing Fast switching speed Small thermal resistance → High operation temperature Special requirements of gate driver for wide band-gap switches High galvanic isolation capability High common mode transient & ringing immunity capability High operation temperature capability 7 Outline I. Gate Driver for Wide Band-gap Power Semiconductors Gate Driver Fundamentals Gate Driver Related Characterization of Power Semiconductors Static Characteristics Dynamic Characteristics Gate Driver Design Basics Protection for Voltage Source Converter Applications Summary and Key Message 8 Static Characteristics Output characteristics Minimize the on-state voltage drop and conduction loss • VCC = 15 V for Si • VCC = 20 V for SiC Gate voltage maximum ratings Control gate-source voltage within the required range Type Manufacturer Model Gate voltage maximum ratings Si MOSFET Microsemi APT34M120J +30 V / -30 V SiC MOSFET CREE C2M0080120D +25 V / -10 V 9 Switching Commutation — Load Current Flows In Ac current source If current flows into middle point Commutation between lower switch & upper diode Upper switch operates as a synchronous switch 10 Switching Commutation — Load Current Flows Out Ac current source If current flows out of middle point Commutation between upper switch & lower diode Lower switch acts as a synchronous switch 11 Equivalent Circuit of Switching Commutation Load current flows out of the middle point Load current flows into the middle point Switching performance is impacted by Power semiconductors Gate driver 12 Operating Conditions Dynamic Characteristics Power semiconductors Gate driver Crss: Miller capacitance (i.e., Cgd) Ciss: input capacitance (i.e., sum of Cgd & Cgs) Coss: output capacitance (i.e., sum of Cgd & Cds) Rg(in): internal gate resistance of device Vth: threshold voltage gfs: transconductance Rg(ext): external gate resistance Rg(dr): internal resistance of gate driver Vdr: output voltage of gate driver Operating conditions Vdc: dc bus voltage IL: inductive load current Tj: junction temperature 13 Outline I. Gate Driver for Wide Band-gap Power Semiconductors Gate Driver Fundamentals Gate Driver Related Characterization of Power Semiconductors Gate Driver Design Basics Gate Driver Configuration Gate Driver Isolations Gate Driver IC & Gate Resistor Case Study Protection for Voltage Source Converter Applications Summary and Key Message 14 Gate Driver Configuration Gate driver mainly consists of Signal isolator Isolated PS Gate driver IC Gate resistor Decoupling cap 15 Signal Isolator Isolate the ground of micro-controller and gate driver IC and safely transfer the control and error signal from the input to the output of the gate driver Micro-controller Gate driver IC Selection criteria: Galvanic isolation capability: greater than voltage rating of power switches CM transient immunity: greater than dv/dt during switching transients Maximum/minimum frequencies: cover required switching frequency range Propagation delay: determined by switching frequency & control accuracy Galvanic isolation CM transient immunity Minimum frequency > 1500 V Propagation delay > 50 kV/µs Input to output capacitance 0 Hz (DC) Maximum frequency 16 < 100 ns 1..10 pF 10 kHz…1MHz CM Transient Immunity for Signal Isolator CM transient immunity: source & effects Switching transitions cause high dv/dt across the signal isolator Coupling capacitances offer the parasitic paths dv/dt coupled through the parasitic paths leads isolator to lose control by inadvertently triggering a function or causing false feedback. Typical dv/dt for wide bandgap switches SiC discrete switch (CREE CMF20120D): ~ 30 kV/µs SiC power module (CREE CPM212000025B): ~ 80 kV/µs GaN transistor (Transphorm TPH3006PD): ~ 140 kV/µs Commercial available signal isolator Types Opto-coupler Magnetically-coupler Capacitive-coupler CMTI 30 kV/µs 35 kV/µs 50 kV/µs 17 Isolated Power Supply Power supply is the “gas tank” of a gate driver. Provides necessary voltage for operation of the gate driver circuits • Signal isolator Provides necessary voltage for driving the switch into ON and OFF state • The output stage supply Selection Criteria: Galvanic isolation capability: greater than voltage rating of power switches CM transient immunity: greater than dv/dt during switching transients Output power: greater than power dissipation by secondary side of signal isolator, gate driver IC, and output stage 𝑷𝒐𝒖𝒕 > 𝑷𝒊𝒔𝒐 + 𝑷𝒈𝒅 + 𝑷𝒔𝒘 (1) 𝑷𝒔𝒘 = (𝑽𝑪𝑪 − 𝑽𝑬𝑬 ) × 𝑸𝒈 𝒇𝒔 (2) Piso: power dissipated by secondary side of isolator, obtained from the datasheet of the isolator Pgd: power dissipated by gate driver IC, obtained from the datasheet of the gate driver IC Psw: power dissipated during switching transition, calculated by (2) VCC / VEE: positive/negative output voltage of gate driver IC Qg: gate charge, obtained from the datasheet of the power device Output voltage: static & dynamic requirements, maximum ratings 18 Output Voltage for Isolated Power Supply Static requirement Minimize ON state resistance and conduction losses • VCC = 15 V for Si • VCC = 20 V for SiC Safely keep power switches in OFF state • Minimize leakage current • Sufficient margin to prevent spurious change of switch state due to the external or internal disturbance Dynamic requirement Fast turn-on and turn-off power switches Maintain sufficient margin to not exceed gate voltage maximum ratings of power switches 19 Gate Driver IC Gate driver IC is the “engine” of a gate driver. Provides necessary voltage for driving the switch into ON and OFF state Provides sufficient current to charge and discharge the switch input capacitance Provides low impedance loop with quick response for fast switching Selection criteria: Operating voltage range: greater than VCC - VEE Peak source / sink drive current: greater than 𝑉𝐶𝐶 − 𝑉𝐸𝐸 𝑅𝑔 Propagation delay: determined by switching frequency & control accuracy 20 Gate Driver IC (cont’d) Selection criteria (cont’d): Rise / fall time of gate driver IC output voltage: shorter than switching delay time On state resistance of S1 and S2: smaller than desired gate resistance 21 Gate Resistor Gate resistor is the “gas pedal” of a gate driver, controlling the speed of switching transients. Different turn-on & turnoff gate resistance Selection criteria: Resistance • Datasheet • Analytical calculation • Finally, tuned by set of experiments Power rating 𝑷𝑹𝒈 = (𝑽𝑪𝑪 − 𝑽𝑬𝑬 ) × 𝑸𝒈 𝒇𝒔 22 Decoupling Capacitor Decoupling capacitor is the “fuel injector” of the gate driver, providing the current pulse during switching transients Selection criteria: Voltage ratings: 𝑽𝑪𝟏 > 𝑽𝑪𝑪 𝑽𝑪𝟐 > |𝑽𝑬𝑬 | Capacitance: 𝑪𝟏 > 𝑸𝒈 ∆𝑽𝑪𝑪 𝑪𝟐 > 𝑸𝒈 ∆𝑽𝑬𝑬 Types: ceramic (low equivalent series inductance) 23 Outline I. Gate Driver for Wide Bandgap Power Semiconductors Gate Driver Fundamentals Gate Driver Related Characterization of Power Semiconductors Gate Driver Design Basics Gate Driver Configuration Gate Driver Isolations Gate Driver IC & Gate Resistor Case Study Protection for Voltage Source Converter Applications Summary and Key Message 24 Gate Driver Design — Case Study Parameters of device under evaluation Model Voltage rating Current rating Rds(on) C2M0080120D 1200 V 20 A @ 100oC 80 mΩ 1. Signal Isolator 2. Isolated PS 3. Gate driver IC 4. Gate resistor 5. Decoupling capacitor 25 Gate Driver Design — Signal Isolator Signal isolator Galvanic isolation capability: > 1200 V [based on datasheet] CM transient immunity: > 50 V/ns [based on datasheet] Fall time Rise time 18.4 ns 13.6 ns dv/dt (on) dv/dt (off) 35 V/ns 47 V/ns Test conditions VDD = 800 V ID = 20 A Maximum/minimum frequencies: > 100 kHz [based on applications] Propagation delay: < 100 ns (1 % of minimum switching period) Transformer based isolator ADuM 5240 is selected Insolation voltage 2500 Vrms Maximum frequency 1 MHz CM transient immunity 35 V/ns Propagation delay < 75 ns Secondary side power dissipation 13 mW 26 Gate Driver Design — Isolated PS Isolated power supply Galvanic isolation capability: > 1200 V [based on datasheet] CM transient immunity: > 50 V/ns [based on datasheet] Output voltage: 20 V to -5 V [based on datasheet] Output power: > 0.159 W [based on datasheet and applications] 𝑷𝒐𝒖𝒕 > 𝑷𝒔𝒘 + 𝑷𝒊𝒔𝒐 + 𝑷𝒈𝒅 (1) VCC 20 V VEE 𝑷𝒔𝒘 = (𝑽𝑪𝑪 − 𝑽𝑬𝑬 ) × 𝑸𝒈 𝒇𝒔 (2) -5 V Qg 49.2 nC fs 100 kHz Piso: power dissipated by secondary side of isolator 13 mW Pgd: power dissipated by gate driver IC 23 mW Psw: power dissipated during switching transition, calculated by (2) 123 mW Traco power THB 3 series DC/DC converter is selected Isolation voltage 3000 Vrms Input-Output capacitance 13 pF Power 3W Output voltage 24 V / 5 V 27 Gate Driver Design — Gate Drive IC Gate drive IC Operating voltage range: > (VCC - VEE) = 30 V [based on datasheet] Peak source / sink drive current: = (VCC - VEE)/Rg < (VCC - VEE)/Rg(in) = 6.5 A [based on datasheet] Propagation delay: < 100 ns (1 % of minimum switching period) Rise / fall time of the output voltage of gate driver IC: < min (td(on), td(off)) = 12 ns [based on datasheet] Pull-up / pull-down resistance: < Rg(desire) or << Rg(in) = 4.6 Ω Rg(in) 4.6 Ω td(on) 12 ns td(off) 23.2 ns Ciss 950 pF IXYS IXDN_609 gate driver IC is selected Operating voltage 4.5 V to 35 V Peak source/sink current 9A Rise / fall time 7 / 5 ns (@ 1.5 nF) Propagation delay 40 ns (@ 25 V) Pull-up / pulldown resistance 0.5 / 0.33 Ω (@ 25 V) Quiescent power dissipation 23 mW (@ 20 oC) 28 Gate Driver Design — Gate Resistor Gate resistor Resistance: based on datasheet and finally tuned by set of experiments Different turn-on & turn-off gate resistance Using diode Usually, turn-off gate resistance is smaller than turn-on Power rating: > 0.123 mW [based on datasheet and applications] 𝑷𝑹𝒈 = (𝑽𝑪𝑪 − 𝑽𝑬𝑬 ) × 𝑸𝒈 𝒇𝒔 VCC 20 V VEE -5 V Qg 49.2 nC fs 100 kHz It is preferred to use several gate resistors in parallel to tune the resistance 29 Gate Driver Design — Decoupling Capacitor Decoupling capacitor Voltage ratings [based on datasheet] 𝑽𝑪𝟏 > 𝑽𝑪𝑪 = 𝟐𝟎 𝑽 𝑽𝑪𝟐 > |𝑽𝑬𝑬 | = 𝟓 𝑽 Capacitance [based on datasheet] 𝑪𝟏 > 𝑸𝒈 ∆𝑽𝑪𝑪 = 𝑸𝒈 (𝒌𝑮𝑺 × 𝑽𝑪𝑪 ) = 𝟎. 𝟐𝟒𝟔 𝝁𝑭 𝑪𝟐 > 𝑸𝒈 ∆𝑽𝑬𝑬 = 𝑸𝒈 (𝒌𝑮𝑺 × 𝑽𝑬𝑬 ) = 𝟎. 𝟗𝟖𝟒 𝝁𝑭 VCC 20 V VEE -5 V Qg kGS: Gate voltage ripple coefficient during switching transient Types: surface mount ceramic capacitor 30 49.2 nC 1% Outline I. Gate Driver for Wide Bandgap Power Semiconductors Gate Driver Fundamentals Gate Driver Related Characterization of Power Semiconductors Gate Driver Design Basics Protection for Voltage Source Converter Applications Cross-Talk Over-Current Summary and Key Message 31 Mechanism Causing Cross-Talk (Turn-On) Lower switch as the device under test Lower switch turned on, Vds_H rises Displacement current 1 from Cgd_H Current 1 flows into gate loop (2) & Cgs_H (3), inducing +Vgs_H If positive Vgs_H > Vgs(th) Excessive switching losses Generate shoot through current 4 32 Mechanism Causing Cross-Talk (Turn-Off) Lower switch as the device under test Lower switch turned off, Vds_H falls Displacement current 1 from Cgd_H Current 3 flowing into Cgs_H induce -Vgs_H If negative Vgs_H < Vgs_max(-) * Overstress the upper switch * Vgs_max(-) refers to maximum negative biased gate voltage required by power device itself. 33 Cross-Talk for WBG Switches (SiC as an Example) Characteristics of Several Comparable Si / SiC Power Devices Type Manufacturer Si IGBT IR Si MOSFET Microsemi SiC MOSFET CREE VDS / ID (100 oC) Qgs Vgs(th) (25 oC) Vgs_max(-) IRGP20B120U 1200 V / 20 A 169 nC 4.5 V -20 V APT34M120J 1200 V / 22 A 560 nC 4.0 V -30 V C2M0080120D 1200V / 20 A 49.2 nC 2.2 V -10 V Model Properties of high voltage SiC devices Faster switching speed Lower threshold voltage Lower maximum allowable negative gate voltage SiC devices in a phase-leg configuration are easily affected by crosstalk, leading to Extra switching losses & reliability issues 34 Basic Ideas for Cross-Talk Suppression To suppress cross-talk, we need to minimize spurious Vgs_H Reduce gate loop impedance during the switching transient • Gate impedance regulation (GIR) assist circuit Pre-charge the gate-source capacitance before the switching transient • Gate voltage control (GVC) assist circuit Turn-on transient of lower switch as an example 35 Gate Impedance Regulation (GIR) Assist Circuit Gate Impedance Regulation (GIR) assist circuit Logic signals Compared with conventional gate driver, GIR assist circuit adds • One auxiliary transistor (Sa_H or Sa_L) in series with one capacitor (Ca_H or Ca_L) for each device in a phase-leg. 36 Operating Principle of GIR Circuit (Turn-On) Lower switch as the device under test Lower switch turned on; Sa_L remained off; Sa_H turned on Lower switch Ca_L disconnected Turn-on performance of lower switch not affected Upper switch Ca_H connected; gate impedance of the upper switch minimized Cross-talk mitigated; turn-on energy loss reduced 37 Operating Principle of GIR Circuit (Turn-Off) Lower switch as the device under test Lower switch turned off; Sa_L remained off; Sa_H remained on Lower switch Ca_L disconnected Turn-off performance of lower switch not affected. Upper switch Ca_H connected; gate impedance of the upper switch minimized Cross-talk mitigated; negative spurious gate voltage minimized 38 Parameter Design Criterion Simplified equivalent circuit of upper switch during switching transient of lower one Spurious gate voltage & auxiliary capacitor voltage To avoid cross-talk Spurious gate voltage ∈ (𝑉𝑔𝑠_max(−) , 𝑉𝑔𝑠(𝑡ℎ) ) ∆𝑉+ + |∆𝑉− | ≤ 𝑉𝑔𝑠 𝑡ℎ − 𝑉𝑔𝑠_max(−) , where ΔV+ & ΔV- are related to C 𝑉𝑔𝑠_𝑚𝑎𝑥(−) + ∆𝑉− ≤ 𝑉2 (𝑖. 𝑒. , 𝑉𝐸𝐸 ) ≤ 𝑉𝑡ℎ − ∆𝑉+ where ∆V+, ∆V-, and V2 refer to positive spurious gate voltage, negative spurious gate voltage, and negative turn-off gate voltage, respectively. C is the auxiliary capacitor 39 GIR Assist Circuit Design — Case Study Parameters of device under evaluation Cgd 13 pF Cgs 1900 pF Vgs(th) 2.5 V Vgs_max(-) -5 V Vdc 800 V aON* 27 V/ns Rg(in) 5Ω aOFF* 23 V/ns Selection ranges of C * determined according to test results. Selection ranges of V2 40 Turn-on Transient of the Lower Switch 8.4% ↑ 7.5% ↑ 9.7% ↑ 6.7% ↓ 8.3% ↓ 10.6% ↓ [1] Zheyu Zhang, “Active gate driver for cross talk suppression of SiC power devices in a phase-leg configuration”, in Proc. IEEE Trans. Power Electronics, vol. 29, no. 4, 2014. 41 Turn-on Transient of the Lower Switch (cont’d) Total Eon reduction 13.0% ↓ 15.9% ↓ 19.4% ↓ 42 6.3% ↓ 7.6% ↓ 8.8% ↓ Turn-off Transient of the Upper Switch 43 Outline I. Gate Driver for Wide Bandgap Power Semiconductors Gate Driver Fundamentals Gate Driver Related Characterization of Power Semiconductors Gate Driver Design Basics Protections for Voltage Source Converter Applications Cross-Talk Over-Current Summary and Key Message 44 Short Circuit Modes & Causes Arm Short Circuit Transistor or diode destruction S1 S3 Series Arm Short Circuit Faulty gate drive signal S5 S1 S3 S5 ia ia ib DC ib DC ic S2 S4 ic S6 S2 Short in LoadMiswiring or load short circuit S1 S3 S4 S6 Ground FaultMiswiring or dielectric breakdown S1 S5 S3 S5 ia ia ib DC ib DC ic ic S2 S4 S2 S6 [1]:Fuji IGBT modules application manual, 2004. 45 S4 S6 Fault Type-Hard Switching Fault (HSF) HSF--Short circuit fault at turn-on switching transient vin Lσ C1 vshort Short Circuit Control Switch iL vshort g1 Gate Driver L Vcc Vee e1 vge Vth Fault inductance Vee ic vin Gate Driver E1C2 Cdc Vdc ic + Rg g2 + vce vge Vdc vce Kelvin Emitter e2 E2 Power Emitter t Hard switching fault circuit and related waveforms 46 Fault instant Fault Type-Fault Under Load (FUL) FUL--Short circuit fault during the on-state condition vin Lσ C1 vshort Short Circuit Control Switch iL vshort g1 Gate Driver L Vcc Vee e1 Vee ic Rg Gate Driver Gate and fault current spike Vth Fault inductance vin vge E1C2 Cdc Vdc ic + g2 + vce vge Vdc vce Kelvin Emitter e2 E2 Power Emitter t Fault under load circuit and related waveforms 47 Fault instant Fault Type - Example A protection circuit (e.g., desaturation protection) should be activated within the short circuit withstand time tsc HSF & Tj = 25 oC FUL & Tj = 25 oC Gate voltage spike tsc=12 μs vgs (10 V/div) tsc=11.5 μs vgs (10 V/div) id (66 A/div) id (66 A/div) vds (200 V/div) vds (200 V/div) vpt (10 V/div) vpt (10 V/div) t (5 us/div) t (5 us/div) Test Condition: Vgs = +20/-2V, Vdc = 600 V, CREE 1G SiC MOSFETs (1200 V / 24 A) 48 IGBT Desaturation Protection Under steady-state conduction, IGBT operates in saturation region Under short circuit condition, IGBT operation point moves from saturation region to active region, so-called “Desaturation” or 150 “Desat” 12V Typical IGBT output characteristics 140 Vce A short circuit protection can be triggered by the increased collector-emitter voltage Vce 11.5V 120 Collector Current Ic (A) Ic Saturation Region Active Region 11V 10.5V 100 10V 9.5V 80 9V 60 8.5V 8V 40 7.5V 7V 20 0 6.5V 6V 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Collector Emitter Voltage Vce (V) 49 8 9 10 Desaturation Protection for SiC MOSFET Challenges : Commercial IGBT/MOSFET gate drivers usually have slow fault response time (>3 μs) versus short short-circuit withstand time (SCWT) of SiC devices SCWT tsc (us) Critical Energy Ec (J) 5 20 4.5 18 4 16 3.5 3 2.5 2 14 CREE_2G_Critical Energy 12 ROHM_Critical Energy 10 CREE_1G_SCWT 8 CREE_2G_SCWT 6 1.5 4 1 2 0.5 0 300 400 500 600 DC Voltage Vdc (V) 700 50 800 CREE_1G_Critical Energy ROHM_SCWT Desaturation Protection for SiC MOSFET Challenges (cont’d): Protection threshold for SiC MOSFETs is not straightforward due to unclearly defined active region 140 Vgs = 20 V --- 25 °C — 150 °C 120 Output characteristics Drain Current Id (A) 100 80 60 N 40 20 0 M: Operating point N: Protection point M 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 Drain Source Voltage Vds (V) 51 14 16 18 20 Blanking Time vs. Noise Immunity Challenges (cont’d): The noise immunity and fault response time become sharp contradictions Buffer Output Vds id Cj Dss Vds d Ij Rsat1 Rsat2 + Rg g + vds Rdg Mdg s Comparator + Vdesat_th Cblk vgs - Dblk Vdesat -5V Protection circuit can be falsely triggered due to high dv/dt during turnon/turn-off transients Large Cblk/Cj, large Rsat2 could more effectively suppress the impact of dv/dt on Vdesat, while blanking time will increase 52 Blanking Time Setting Solution Reduction of fault response time with acceptable noise immunity capability so that fault response time << short-circuit withstand time Buffer Output Dss Rsat1 id Buffer Vcc d Rsat2 Buffer Output DESATAURATION DETECTION Vdesat + Rg g vds + Gate Drive Input PWM Cblk Dblk Rdg Mdg - + Vdesat_th vgs s Vee Comparator -5V LOGIC CONTROL Gate Voltage Clamping & Soft Turn-off D1 D3 D5 S1 Rs1 S2 Rs2 Manual Shunt-Down/ Fault Current Evaluation Gate Drive Input PWM R Rr D2 D4 D6 Fault Report Protection Mode Control -5V Blanking time is determined by the RC network (Rsat1, Rsat2, and Cblk) : The blanking time is: tblk ln Vcc , Rsat1 Rsat 2 Cblk Vcc Vdesat _ th Blanking time tblanking > Turn-on switching time ton Z. Wang, X. Shi, Y. Xue, L.M. Tolbert, F. Wang, B.J. Blalock, “Design and Performance Evaluation of Overcurrent Protection Schemes for Silicon Carbide (SiC) Power MOSFETs”, IEEE Transactions on Industrial Electronics, Volume: 61 , Issue: 10, Publication Year: 2014, Page(s): 5570 - 5581 53 Desaturation Technique – Testing Results Vdc = 750 V, 200 oC, Vgs = +20/-2V, Blanking time:100 ns, CREE 2G SiC MOSFET Hard Switching Fault Drain-Source Voltage (200 V/div) Drain-Source Voltage (200 V/div) Drain Current (50 A/div) Drain Current (50 A/div) Threshold:5 V t1 Fault Under Load Capacitor Voltage t2 t3 (5 V/div) Gate Voltage (10 V/div) Threshold:5 V Capacitor Voltage t1 t2 t3(5 V/div) t (200 ns/div) Total response time: 195 ns Gate Voltage (10 V/div) t (200 ns/div) Total response time: 85 ns Blanking time delay (t1~t2): 20 ns Comparator response delay (t2~t3): 65 ns Blanking time delay (t1~t2): 130 ns Comparator response delay (t2~t3): 65 ns 54 Outline I. Gate Driver for Wide Bandgap Power Semiconductors Gate Driver Fundamentals Gate Driver Related Characterization of Power Semiconductors Gate Driver Design Basics Protections for Voltage Source Converter Applications Cross-Talk Over-current Summary and Key Message 55 Summary & Key Message No power conversion without power semiconductors Power semiconductors is NOTHING without a gate driver! The gate driver will properly drive a power semiconductor and bring the maximum performance. For WBG devices, • Driving capability of gate driver IC (rise/fall time, pull-up/pull-down resistance) & CM transient immunity of gate driver isolation are special requirements. The gate driver will protect a power semiconductor and entire converter if something goes wrong. For WBG devices, Cross-talk is easily induced, leading to potential hazard of shootthrough failure and gate terminal reliability issues. A gate assist circuit was introduced for cross-talk suppression. Short circuit capability is limited. The desaturation protection circuit with < 200 ns response time was described for device reliability enhancement. 56 57