2 research outputs found
In-situ Health Monitoring Applied to High-Voltage IGBT Power Modules
PhD ThesisThis thesis addresses an important issue of identifying insulated gate bi-polar transistor
(IGBT) chip failures in multichip IGBT power modules. IGBT power modules are the
dominant semiconductor devices of choice in high-voltage (HV) high-power converter
applications which include domestic, commercial, automotive, railway, marine,
aerospace and industrial applications. Commonly available HV IGBT power modules in
the market are rated at 3.3 kV, 4.5 kV and 6.5 kV. These HV IGBT modules comprise
several IGBT chips connected in parallel to achieve high-current capability; hence they
are also known as multichip IGBT power modules.
IGBT power modules are not flawless. The increased complexity of IGBT power
module construction and inhomogeneous semiconductor chips make HV power
modules less reliable. IGBT chips and electrical and mechanical interface material
within the modules wear out and fail due to thermal cycling, operating environment or
mishandling. IGBT failures while in application have repercussions on safety and
failure costs. Thus the reliability of IGBTs while in their application is crucial
especially in HV applications which comprise critical and large loads. To improve the
reliability, an in-situ (online) health monitoring interface for HV IGBT power modules
is proposed in this thesis. Two distinct advantages of in-situ IGBT health monitoring are
that it allows IGBT module replacement prior to complete failure thus reducing safety
and reliability risks. The second advantage is that the interval time for IGBT
maintenance work can be tailored towards the real degradation rather an obligatory
fixed time interval thus reducing maintenance costs.
In large power modules, it is common to have IGBT chips as well as anti-parallel diode
chips within the power module. This research focusses only on the health monitoring of
the IGBT chips and not the diode chips. The main reason is that IGBT chips experience
higher thermal stresses compared to diodes hence IGBT chips are more susceptible to
failures compared to diode chips. In practice, IGBT chip failures are accompanied by a
change in junction temperature. Thus this thesis proposes the use of temperature-
sensitive electrical parameters (TSEPs) for in-situ health monitoring of IGBT power
modules.
Following a comparison of twelve traditional online TSEPs from literature and five new
TSEPs proposed in this thesis, this thesis employs a novel TSEP, gate-emitter prethreshold voltage (VGE(pre-th)) as a health-sensitive parameter (HSP) for chip failure
detection in multichip HV IGBT power modules. A VGE(pre-th) online chip loss
monitoring circuit has been successfully implemented on a commercially available
IGBT gate driver. VGE(pre-th) is measured at a fixed pre-determined instant of the gateemitter voltage (VGE) between the VGE zero-crossing (VGE(0)) and threshold voltage
(VGE(th)) during IGBT turn-on. VGE(pre-th) requires low hardware with only a voltage
sensor and a counter. Since it is based on the low-voltage (LV) gate side rather than the
HV collector side of IGBT, VGE(pre-th) does not require HV isolation or HV insulation.
Simulation and experimentation of 16-chip 3.3kV 800A DIM800NSM33-F IGBT
power modules from Dynex Semiconductor Limited (Ltd) have shown that VGE(pre-th)
has a good accuracy and repeatability; a linear sensitivity of 500 mV/chip loss with
IGBT chip failures; a linear virtual junction temperature (Tvj) sensitivity of -2.2 mV/°C
and tracks the highest chip temperature. It has thus been concluded that VGE(pre-th) can be
used for both Tvj and IGBT chip failure monitoring in HV IGBT power modules.
VGE(pre-th) can be tested during normal IGBT turn-on operation or during the off-state of
the IGBT. In both cases the same information about temperature and loss of chip
number can be detected which makes VGE(pre-th) more versatile than any other TSEP or
HSP.Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
(EPSRC), Newcastle University