Self-Sustained Turn-Off Oscillation of SiC MOSFETs: Origin, Instability Analysis, and Prevention
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Experimental Identification
2.1. The Type I Self-Sustained Oscillation
2.2. Type II Self-Sustained Oscillation
2.3. The Impact of on Self-Sustained Oscillation
3. The Small-Signal Ac Model
4. The Analysis of Parametric Sensitivity on the Oscillatory Instability
4.1. The Parametric Sensitivity of the Type I Oscillation
4.2. The Parametric Sensitivity of the Type II Oscillation
5. Oscillation Prevention
- (1)
- Reducing the inductance : Since voltage on the is the major driving force of type I oscillations, the reduction of can greatly reduce and suppress type I oscillations.
- (2)
- Reducing the inductance : As shown in Figure 13e, the damping ratio significantly increases with the reduction of . can greatly lose its driving force when is small enough. Therefore, the reduction of is a very effective way to suppress type I oscillations.
- (3)
- Increasing the gate resistance : As shown in the Figure 13d, the damping ratio greatly increases with the raise of . Increasing is an obvious choice to avoid the self-sustained oscillation.
- (1)
- Reducing the inductance : With the reduction of , the instable region significantly compresses, as shown in Figure 14d. When is small enough, the type II oscillation can be eliminated.
- (2)
- Optimizing the gate inductance : The gate inductance has a great impact on type II oscillations. Many researches on the gate driver design claim that the gate driver should be very close to the MOSFET to avoid oscillations induced by the large [15,16]. Reducing is supposed to be the primary way to suppress the switching oscillation [8]. However, in this study, the analyses presented in Figure 14a,d reveal that the reduction of does not necessarily suppress type II oscillations. Its influence greatly depends on the operating condition, which is determined by parameters like and . Therefore, to suppress a type II oscillation, the value should be carefully chosen based on the operating condition.
- (3)
- Increasing the gate resistance : As shown in Figure 14f, the gate resistance has a very strong damping effect on the type II oscillation. Few ohms of are able to completely suppress the oscillation.
- (4)
- Increasing the supply voltage : Since the oscillation is biased by the supply voltage , the increase of can elevate the central tendency of the oscillation. As shown Figure 14a, with a high , a type II oscillation can be suppressed.
6. Experimental Validation
6.1. Experiment Setup
6.2. Experiment Results
6.2.1. Type I Oscillation
6.2.2. Type II Oscillation
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
References
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Parameter | Value | Parameter | Value |
---|---|---|---|
0.1 S | 25 nH | ||
0.2 | 824 pF | ||
1 | 2000 pF | ||
0–40 nH | 25 pF | ||
400 nH | 170 pF |
Parameter | Value | Parameter | Value |
---|---|---|---|
0.1 S | 2 nF | ||
0.2 | 246 pF | ||
824 pF | 37 pF | ||
7 nH | 8 nH | ||
150 nH | 200 nH | ||
19, 34, 46, 60, 73, 90 nH | |||
110, 170, 260, 330, 450 nH |
26 nH | 41 nH | 53 nH | 67 nH | 80 nH | 97 nH | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.5 | −0.019 (9) | −0.059 (inf) | −0.073 (inf) | −0.082 (inf) | −0.087 (inf) | −0.091 (inf) | |
2 | 0.007 (8) | −0.043 (12) | −0.059 (inf) | −0.070 (inf) | −0.076 (inf) | −0.081 (inf) | |
3 | 0.024 (8) | −0.017 (8) | −0.035 (9) | −0.049 (11) | −0.057(inf) | −0.063 (inf) | |
3.6 | 0.030 (6) | −0.005 (7) | −0.023 (8) | −0.037 (9) | −0.046 (10) | −0.053 (inf) | |
5 | 0.033 (6) | 0.014 (6) | −0.001 (6) | −0.014 (6) | −0.023 (7) | −0.031 (7) |
26 nH | 41 nH | 53 nH | 67 nH | 80 nH | 97 nH | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
150 nH | −0.026 (6) | −0.033 (6) | −0.035 (7) | −0.037 (7) | −0.038 (8) | −0.039 (8) | |
260 nH | −0.028 (9) | −0.046 (10) | −0.053 (12) | −0.058 (inf) | −0.061 (inf) | −0.063 (inf) | |
320 nH | −0.021 (9) | −0.048 (15) | −0.058 (inf) | −0.065 (inf) | −0.069 (inf) | −0.072 (inf) | |
410 nH | 0.007 (8) | −0.043 (12) | −0.059 (inf) | −0.070 (inf) | −0.076 (inf) | −0.081 (inf) |
22 nH | 41 nH | 56 nH | 68 nH | 82 nH | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
200 nH | 0.020 (5) | 0.153 (5) | 0.137 (5) | 0.127 (7) | 0.118 (8) | |
310 nH | −0.003 (inf) | 0.125 (6) | 0.119 (6) | 0.114 (6) | 0.108 (6) | |
460 nH | −0.006 (inf) | −0.008 (inf) | 0.021 (8) | 0.072 (6) | 0.086 (5) | |
530 nH | −0.006 (inf) | −0.013 (inf) | −0.003 (inf) | 0.026 (8) | 0.065 (5) | |
650 nH | −0.005 (20) | −0.015 (inf) | −0.018 (inf) | −0.011 (inf) | 0.011 (6) |
22 nH | 41 nH | 56 nH | 68 nH | 82 nH | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
50 V | −0.006 (inf) | −0.008 (inf) | 0.021 (8) | 0.072 (6) | 0.086 (5) | |
100 V | −0.007 (inf) | 0.017 (7) | 0.094 (7) | 0.099 (7) | 0.097 (7) | |
200 V | −0.003 (inf) | 0.110 (5) | 0.114 (4) | 0.109 (6) | 0.103 (6) | |
300 V | 0.007 (5) | 0.130 (4) | 0.121 (5) | 0.114 (5) | 0.106 (4) |
22 nH | 41 nH | 56 nH | 68 nH | 82 nH | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1.5 | −0.006 (inf) | −0.008 (inf) | 0.021 (8) | 0.072 (6) | 0.086 (5) | |
2 | −0.001 (11) | 0.002 (7) | 0.033 (8) | 0.123 (4) | 0.127 (4) | |
3 | 0.007 (6) | 0.014 (6) | 0.034 (7) | 0.234 (7) | 0.212 (5) |
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Xue, P.; Maresca, L.; Riccio, M.; Breglio, G.; Irace, A. Self-Sustained Turn-Off Oscillation of SiC MOSFETs: Origin, Instability Analysis, and Prevention. Energies 2019, 12, 2211. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12112211
Xue P, Maresca L, Riccio M, Breglio G, Irace A. Self-Sustained Turn-Off Oscillation of SiC MOSFETs: Origin, Instability Analysis, and Prevention. Energies. 2019; 12(11):2211. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12112211
Chicago/Turabian StyleXue, Peng, Luca Maresca, Michele Riccio, Giovanni Breglio, and Andrea Irace. 2019. "Self-Sustained Turn-Off Oscillation of SiC MOSFETs: Origin, Instability Analysis, and Prevention" Energies 12, no. 11: 2211. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12112211
APA StyleXue, P., Maresca, L., Riccio, M., Breglio, G., & Irace, A. (2019). Self-Sustained Turn-Off Oscillation of SiC MOSFETs: Origin, Instability Analysis, and Prevention. Energies, 12(11), 2211. https://doi.org/10.3390/en12112211