IGBT Gate Driver ICs: -VGOFF, DESAT, Soft/Two-Level Turn-Off
A switch-technology deep dive: negative gate bias, DESAT short-circuit detection, and soft/two-level turn-off for traction and industrial power stages.
H2-1. Definition & Boundary: What “IGBT Gate Driver” Means Here Scope Lock
Intent: Define a strict boundary for this page: an IGBT-specific gate-driving strategy reference for traction/industrial systems—focused on rails, protection timing, and fail-safe shutdown behavior.
Where it sits in the system
The IGBT gate driver is the energy interface between low-voltage PWM logic and a high-energy switching device. It translates logic edges into controlled gate charge/discharge, enforces timing and interlocks, and executes fast protection actions when the power stage enters unsafe states.
- Input domain: PWM / isolator / interface (noise-tolerant signaling and timing integrity).
- Driver domain: gate rails (+VGE/−VGOFF), UVLO, DESAT, soft-turn-off, fault logic, and disable path.
- Power domain: gate loop + Kelvin emitter return, IGBT switching behavior, and DC-link disturbance coupling.
Why IGBT is different (driver-facing differences)
Only differences that directly change driver rails, protection timing, or gate-loop constraints are included here.
- Turn-off tail current: raises sensitivity to VCE overshoot and dissipation → favors controlled turn-off (soft/two-level).
- Miller injection under dv/dt: can lift VGE during fast commutation → requires −VGOFF and/or active clamp behavior.
- Short-circuit energy window: protection must act within a microsecond-scale budget → DESAT speed is a hard requirement.
- Traction/industrial fault semantics: shutdown must be deterministic and auditable → fault-disable path design is first-class.
What “traction/industrial” changes
In traction and industrial drives, the driver is evaluated as part of a safety and reliability chain. That elevates requirements from “it switches” to “it shuts down correctly every time under stress”.
- Fail-safe priority: hardware interlocks and disable paths must dominate software intent.
- Defined recovery policy: latch vs retry must be explicit (no ambiguous auto-restart behavior).
- Temperature and lifetime: UVLO thresholds, delays, and clamp margins must be robust across temperature and aging.
- Protection and shutdown responsibilities are assigned to a single owner block (no “split-brain” shutdown paths).
- Four mandatory knobs exist and are testable: +VGE/−VGOFF, DESAT, two-level/soft off, fault-disable path.
- System documentation includes a measurable definition for: VCEpk < X, false turn-on = 0 / Y hours (placeholders).
H2-2. IGBT Switching Physics You Must Budget For Driver-Centric
Intent: Explain only the IGBT physics that directly drives rail selection, protection timing, and turn-off shaping. This is a budgeting chapter: every mechanism later in the page must map to a measurable risk here.
VGE(th) vs usable VGE (why “half-on” is dangerous)
VGE(th) indicates the onset of conduction, not a safe operating gate level. Operating near threshold can force the IGBT into high dissipation, where temperature rise accelerates and margin collapses.
- Driver implication: UVLO must prevent operation in the “half-on” region; ON/OFF thresholds should be distinct and robust under rail droop.
- Design knobs: UVLO ON/OFF, +VGE nominal, Rg,on (turn-on energy vs switching stress).
Miller plateau & dv/dt induced turn-on (why clamp/−VGOFF exists)
During fast commutation, dv/dt can inject displacement current through Miller capacitance and lift VGE. In bridge environments, that can create unintended current overlap (shoot-through risk) even when logic is “off”.
- Driver implication: the OFF state must be an actively defended state, using −VGOFF and/or active Miller clamp.
- Design knobs: −V magnitude, Rg,off split, clamp location inside the gate loop (Kelvin return).
Turn-off tail current & overshoot coupling (why two-level/soft off matters)
IGBT turn-off includes tail current behavior that can amplify overshoot sensitivity. Aggressive turn-off reduces loss but can increase VCE overshoot and ringing, raising both stress and EMI.
- Driver implication: controlled turn-off shaping is often required—fast initial action followed by a gentler slope (two-level/soft off).
- Design knobs: stage-2 slope, soft-off current source (if available), and coordination with external clamps/snubber strategy.
Short-circuit energy window (why DESAT speed is a hard requirement)
Short-circuit energy accumulates on a microsecond-scale window; protection must act before device stress exceeds safe limits. “Slow but stable” protection is not acceptable in traction/industrial switching environments.
- Driver implication: DESAT must detect quickly without false trips; turn-off action must avoid destructive overshoot (soft/two-level off).
- Design knobs: DESAT blanking/filter, threshold setting method, and fault policy (latch vs retry) as part of system semantics.
- Turn-off overshoot: VCEpk < X (measured at defined operating point).
- False turn-on: unintended conduction events = 0 over Y hours under dv/dt = Z kV/µs.
- Short-circuit action: detect + gate action < X µs with repeatable test setup and stated criteria.
H2-3. Gate Drive Rails & −VGOFF Strategy (Traction/Industrial) Rail Strategy
Intent: Convert −VGOFF from “trial-and-error” into an auditable strategy: define when it is required, how it is sized, and how success is verified under a stated dv/dt stress condition.
Typical rail sets (placeholder ranges)
Rail selection starts from the device’s recommended VGE operating region and is then tightened by dv/dt-induced false turn-on risk. Use placeholders until a specific IGBT family is targeted: +VGE = X V, −VGOFF = Y V.
- Decision trigger: if OFF-state VGE is lifted by dv/dt events, negative bias is introduced to restore OFF margin.
- Sizing principle: choose the minimum −VGOFF that satisfies OFF margin in worst-case dv/dt and temperature.
- Audit requirement: the dv/dt condition used for sizing must be stated (dv/dt = Y kV/µs).
Negative bias trade-offs (risk vs cost)
−VGOFF improves dv/dt immunity, but it also changes reliability and power budgets. Engineering decisions must track both sides.
- Reliability: excessive negative bias can stress the gate structure or reduce lifetime margin; keep within device limits and use the minimum effective value.
- Power: larger gate swing increases drive energy; confirm driver thermal rise and supply headroom.
- Noise coupling: a noisy negative rail can re-inject disturbances into the gate loop; local decoupling and return control are mandatory.
Gate resistor split (Rg,on / Rg,off)
Split resistors decouple two conflicting objectives: turn-on efficiency and turn-off stress/EMI control. The split enables independent tuning without sacrificing OFF-state robustness.
- Turn-on path (Rg,on): sets charge speed and di/dt; tuned for switching loss and controllability.
- Turn-off path (Rg,off): shapes dv/dt and overshoot; tuned for VCEpk, ringing, and false turn-on avoidance.
- Verification method: sweep Rg,on and Rg,off independently and record VCEpk and OFF-state margin under a defined dv/dt stress.
Gate clamp / TVS placement rules (location, not theory)
Clamp effectiveness is dominated by loop geometry. A far-away clamp is often a non-clamp. Placement rules must explicitly reference the Kelvin emitter return.
- Rule 1: clamp/TVS must sit inside the gate loop, physically near the gate pin.
- Rule 2: the clamp return must close to Kelvin emitter, not a noisy power emitter node.
- Rule 3: define measurement points (TPs) so overshoot and margin are not “probe-dependent”.
- OFF margin: VGE(off) margin ≥ X V under dv/dt = Y kV/µs (defined test condition).
- Overshoot bounds: VGE overshoot within [X1, X2] using the stated probe/TP definition.
- Thermal sanity: driver supply and output stage remain within thermal limits at target switching frequency (placeholder gate-loss budget).
H2-4. DESAT Fast Short-Circuit Detection (Make it Fast and Stable) Protection Timing
Intent: Treat DESAT as the primary short-circuit protection loop for IGBT stages: explain the sensing chain, parameterize blanking and filtering, and define a verification path that balances fast action with low false-trip rate.
DESAT sensing path anatomy
A DESAT loop is a chain of functional blocks that converts a VCE abnormality into a deterministic gate action. The chain must be explicit so that “fast” and “stable” can be tuned independently.
- External path: DESAT diode + RC/clamp shape the sense signal and protect the pin.
- Internal path: blanking timer removes turn-on transients, filter suppresses spikes, comparator triggers action.
- Action path: soft turn-off limits overshoot; latch/retry defines system recovery semantics.
Blanking time sizing (t_blank = X)
Blanking must cover the known “non-fault” transient window at turn-on, but it cannot be so long that a real short-circuit is ignored. Express sizing as a bounded engineering requirement: t_blank = X.
- Lower bound drivers: turn-on transient, diode recovery behavior, and layout-coupled spikes.
- Upper bound drivers: short-circuit energy window and required protection action time budget.
- Tuning order: set blanking first, then filter, then threshold—avoid using threshold as the first fix.
Filtering vs response time (avoid “filtering out the fault”)
Filtering reduces false trips but consumes timing budget. Excess filtering can delay detection until device stress exceeds safe limits. Treat filter strength as a constrained variable, not a comfort knob.
- More filtering: fewer spikes → lower false trips, but slower detection.
- Less filtering: faster detection, but higher sensitivity to dv/dt coupling and supply droop.
- Engineering rule: filtering may only be increased if the short-circuit action budget remains satisfied.
False trip checklist (fast isolation of root cause)
False trips are rarely “random”. They usually align with a small set of coupling paths and measurement mistakes. Debug should prioritize root causes that shift comparator input or reference unexpectedly.
- Common-mode dv/dt coupling: transient current lifts the sense node during commutation.
- Gate loop / sense loop geometry: long return paths and shared inductance inject spikes into DESAT.
- Supply droop: driver supply dip shifts comparator behavior or internal references.
- DESAT diode recovery: reverse recovery and placement errors create pseudo-fault signatures.
- Protection speed: SC detect + gate action < X µs (with stated start/stop definitions).
- False trips: false trip rate < X / Y hours under dv/dt = Z kV/µs.
- Repeatability: the measurement defines “detect” and “gate action” points consistently (TP + probe condition placeholders).
H2-5. Soft Turn-Off & Two-Level Turn-Off (Survive SC + Control EMI) Turn-Off Action
Intent: Define soft/two-level turn-off as an implementable action sequence with tunable knobs and measurable acceptance criteria. The goal is to survive short-circuit events while keeping overshoot, stress, and system disturbance within budget.
Why hard turn-off kills
Hard turn-off can force excessive dv/dt and di/dt into parasitics. The result is elevated VCE overshoot, ringing, and repeated electrical stress that can degrade reliability. System-level effects often include false triggers and disturbance coupling into sensing and control domains.
- Stress axis: VCEpk and repetitive ringing increase device and insulation stress.
- Disturbance axis: high dv/dt increases coupling into gate and sensing loops, raising false-event risk.
- Constraint: the turn-off path must be shaped, not merely “made slower”.
Two-level sequence definition (Stage1 fast → Stage2 controlled)
Two-level turn-off is a defined sequence: Stage1 rapidly removes gate drive to exit the dangerous region quickly; Stage2 enforces a controlled slope to keep VCE overshoot and disturbance within budget.
- Stage1 (fast): a strong pull-down segment that prioritizes immediate risk reduction during fault entry.
- Stage2 (controlled): a slope-limited segment (I_soft or Rg2) that targets a dv/dt budget.
- Exit condition: Stage2 must end deterministically (time window t2 or threshold-based completion).
How to tune (I_soft, Rg2, t2, dv/dt target)
Tuning should follow a constrained order to prevent “fixing” overshoot by violating short-circuit timing budgets. Use placeholders until a specific IGBT and inverter operating point are finalized.
- Step 1: lock Stage1 so fault entry exits the unsafe region within the required time budget.
- Step 2: set a dv/dt target (placeholder) constrained by VCEpk and disturbance limits.
- Step 3: tune Stage2 slope using I_soft or Rg2 to meet VCEpk < X.
- Step 4: set t2 to balance ringing settlement versus Eoff/temperature rise.
External clamps coordination (interface-point rules)
External clamps (RC snubber, TVS, active clamp) must be coordinated with the turn-off sequence. A clamp cannot compensate for an undefined gate action, and an overly aggressive gate action can overload clamps thermally.
- Interface rule: clamp threshold/activation must align with the VCEpk budget and turn-off slope.
- Loop rule: clamp current loops must be short and explicitly closed (no “long return” clamps).
- Thermal rule: clamp dissipation must remain within temperature rise limits during repeated events.
- Overshoot: VCE overshoot < X (measured at defined node and probe condition).
- Energy / thermal: turn-off energy and temperature rise remain within X (placeholder budget).
- Determinism: Stage2 completes within t2 and fault-latch semantics remain consistent.
H2-6. Protection & Control Set That IGBT Systems Actually Need Minimum Set
Intent: Provide the minimum sufficient protection set used in traction/industrial IGBT systems. This is not a generic protection encyclopedia; it defines module roles, priority, and measurable fault-to-disable behavior.
UVLO with separate ON/OFF thresholds (avoid half-conduction)
UVLO is a gate-drive safety boundary. Separate ON/OFF thresholds prevent operation in marginal regions where the device can dissipate heavily. UVLO should force a defined OFF state and must not allow ambiguous re-enable behavior.
- Core requirement: UVLO ON and UVLO OFF thresholds are specified as X/Y (placeholders).
- Action: UVLO asserts a hardware-level disable (not a software-only event).
Active Miller clamp (division of labor vs −VGOFF)
−VGOFF provides OFF-state bias margin, while active Miller clamp provides dynamic defense during fast dv/dt windows. Both are layered protections; clamp effectiveness depends on being inside the gate loop and referenced to Kelvin return.
- −VGOFF: static margin against dv/dt-induced lift of VGE(off).
- Miller clamp: dynamic gate pin clamping during switching transitions to suppress false turn-on.
Fault reporting & safe disable path (/FLT, /RDY, hardware kill)
Fault reporting must be observable by the system, and safe disable must be deterministic. In traction/industrial systems, the hardware disable chain must override PWM intent.
- /FLT: reports protection events with a defined hold/clear rule (placeholders).
- /RDY: defines when the driver is allowed to accept PWM.
- HW disable: forces gate OFF even if PWM toggles (priority correctness requirement).
Retry vs latch policy (explainable traction/industrial semantics)
Recovery behavior must be explicit and auditable. Latch policies maximize safety and explainability; retry policies require bounds and cooldown. Define placeholders: N_retry and cooldown.
- Latch: fault remains latched until a defined clear condition is met (e.g., reset or command sequence).
- Retry: limited attempts (N_retry) with cooldown to prevent oscillation and thermal escalation.
- UVLO thresholds: UVLO triggers at X/Y (defined and repeatable).
- Fault-to-disable timing: fault-to-disable propagation < X (with stated start/stop definitions).
- Priority correctness: hardware disable overrides PWM at all times during a fault.
H2-7. Interfaces, Timing, and Interlock (Don’t Shoot-Through) Timing Budget
Intent: Treat interlock, deadtime, and delay matching as a measurable timing budget. The objective is to guarantee non-overlap conduction across temperature and supply corners, while keeping channel skew within specification.
Input types (single-ended vs differential; isolator interface definition)
Input selection is an interface contract. The key requirements are threshold compatibility, noise behavior, and a defined reference/return model. Differential inputs are typically used to increase immunity in high dv/dt environments; single-ended inputs require explicit reference integrity.
- Single-ended: define VIH/VIL placeholders and reference return integrity (avoid ambiguous “ground”).
- Differential: define common-mode tolerance and termination intent (placeholders).
- Isolator compatibility: state output type (CMOS/open-drain/differential) and required conditioning (pull-up/termination placeholders).
Propagation delay & skew (half-bridge / 3-phase impact)
Mean propagation delay shifts phase and can be compensated at the control level, but channel-to-channel skew consumes deadtime margin and directly increases shoot-through risk. Timing must be budgeted with corner drift.
- tpd_mean: impacts alignment; typically manageable.
- tpd_skew: subtracts from deadtime margin (critical constraint).
- Corner drift: skew varies with temperature and supply; use placeholders in ns.
Deadtime definition vs effective deadtime (budgeted, not assumed)
“Set deadtime” is a controller-level value. “Effective deadtime” is what remains after the full chain delay and device behavior are included. Budget effective deadtime explicitly: DT_eff = DT_set − Σ(Δt).
- Chain terms: isolator skew + driver skew + gate-edge asymmetry + device current response delay (placeholders).
- IGBT reality: turn-off tail and commutation dynamics can extend overlap-sensitive windows.
- Engineering rule: DT_eff must remain positive with margin at worst-case temperature and supply.
Hardware interlock priority (hardware > firmware)
Hardware interlock must override PWM intent. Even if firmware glitches or commands overlap, the driver must prevent HS/LS simultaneous conduction. Interlock behavior and re-arm conditions must be deterministic and testable.
- Priority correctness: interlock blocks overlap regardless of PWM input state.
- Independence: protection remains active during controller reset or fault handling.
- Injection test: apply deliberate overlap patterns; verify outputs remain non-overlapping.
- Channel skew: channel skew < X ns (defined measurement point).
- No overlap: no overlap current under worst-case temperature and supply corners (defined test condition).
- Deadtime margin: DT_eff remains ≥ X ns after summing worst-case Δt terms.
H2-8. Isolation, CMTI, and High-Voltage Practicalities (IGBT Context Only) HV Boundary
Intent: Define isolation requirements and placement rules in an IGBT drive context without duplicating a dedicated isolated-driver page. The focus is on measurable immunity targets, packaging hooks, and return-path boundaries that prevent false triggering.
Functional vs reinforced isolation (placeholders)
Isolation must be specified using auditable fields, not marketing adjectives. Define placeholders for kVrms = X and working voltage = Y, and treat these as system-level constraints that must remain valid with production tolerances and installation environment.
- Functional isolation: supports signal integrity and noise separation (system-defined constraints).
- Reinforced isolation: supports safety boundary requirements (system-defined constraints).
CMTI requirement in IGBT drives (dv/dt immunity with defined method)
CMTI is a primary robustness metric in high dv/dt environments. A numeric CMTI target is meaningless without a consistent measurement definition. Define placeholders: CMTI ≥ X kV/µs under a stated dv/dt waveform and node definition.
- Why it matters: common-mode transients can shift thresholds and trigger false switching or false protection events.
- Method requirement: specify where dv/dt is measured and what constitutes “false triggering”.
Creepage/clearance packaging hooks (board reality)
Package creepage/clearance is only a starting point. Board-level geometry, slots, coatings, and manufacturing tolerances determine final spacing. Use placeholders: creepage ≥ X mm and clearance ≥ Y mm.
- Hook: do not assume package numbers equal board numbers; validate the full path.
- Hook: keep high dv/dt copper and sensitive control copper separated by defined keepouts.
Isolated bias noise coupling (interface-point rules)
Isolated bias noise can couple into the gate loop and control references. Treat bias as a noise source unless proven otherwise. The objective is to constrain return paths and decouple locally without expanding into a full isolated-supply tutorial.
- Local decoupling: place secondary-side decoupling at the driver rails and close the loop locally.
- Return control: keep control references from sharing high-current power returns.
- Interface rule: align sensitive sampling/control windows away from the noisiest switching edges (placeholder rule).
- No false triggering: no false triggering under dv/dt = X kV/µs (defined measurement method).
- Spacing: creepage meets X mm (board-level definition).
- Isolation fields: kVrms = X, working voltage = Y (placeholders) are traceable to system requirements.
H2-9. Layout & Gate Loop: Parasitics, EMI, and Measurement Hooks Make It Auditable
Intent: Convert layout into an auditable engineering artifact using rules + checkpoints. The focus is the gate loop, partition/returns, and measurement hooks that prevent “false fixes” caused by poor probing.
Gate loop minimization (short loop, Kelvin emitter, driver proximity)
Gate drive quality is dominated by loop geometry. A short and explicit gate current loop is mandatory, and the return must reference the Kelvin emitter rather than a high-current power return.
- Rule: driver → Rg → gate pin path is short; Rg is placed close to the gate pin.
- Rule: gate return uses Kelvin emitter (no sharing with power emitter return).
- Rule: minimize layer hops and vias in the gate loop (via count as a proxy term).
Split Rg and ferrite bead usage (damping vs control)
Split gate resistors and ferrite beads are tuning tools, not substitutes for a correct loop. Use split Rg to shape turn-on/turn-off asymmetrically; use a bead to damp high-frequency ringing when the loop is already short and well-defined.
- Split Rg: separate Rg_on and Rg_off to tune dv/dt and overshoot independently (placeholders).
- Ferrite bead: applied inside the gate loop to reduce HF ringing; avoid using bead as a “fix” for long routing.
- Constraint: do not tune damping in a way that violates DESAT/turn-off timing budgets.
Power/control partition and returns (no-cross return rules)
Partitioning is a return-path rule. Control references must not share or cross high-current power returns. Any signal crossing a split requires an explicit, local return path; otherwise, false triggers and unstable protection behavior are likely.
- Rule: keep control domain returns local; keep power domain returns local.
- Rule: never route sensitive returns across split lines or switching nodes.
- Rule: driver reference follows Kelvin emitter; do not “help” it with long ground bridges.
Instrumentation points (VGE, VCE, DESAT, fault signals)
Measurement must be designed in. Define test points for critical waveforms and use probing rules that avoid creating false ringing. A consistent measurement definition is required for bring-up comparison and for lab-to-lab reproducibility.
- VGE: measure gate-to-Kelvin-emitter at a defined TP pair.
- VCE: measure close to the device nodes; avoid remote bus points for overshoot decisions.
- DESAT: provide a TP at the diode/RC node to validate blanking/filter behavior.
- /FLT: expose a TP for fault observability and timing correlation.
- Loop proxy: geometry checklist meets proxy rules (short loop, Kelvin return, limited vias/layer hops).
- Knob mapping: EMI symptoms map to approved knobs (Rg split, bead, Stage2 slope, clamp interface) without breaking timing budgets.
- Measurement hooks: defined TPs exist for VGE/VCE/DESAT//FLT with a consistent probing definition.
H2-10. Engineering Checklist (Design → Bring-up → Production) Quality Gates
Intent: Compress the full page into a practical checklist for consistent reviews, bring-up, and production readiness. Each item is phrased as a pass/fail gate with placeholders (X/Y/N) to match project-specific requirements.
Design checklist (device, rails, protection, timing, layout)
- Rails: +VGE = X V, −VGOFF = Y V defined and verified against device limits.
- UVLO: separate ON/OFF thresholds set to X/Y with deterministic disable behavior.
- DESAT: blanking t_blank = X and SC detect + gate action < X µs budgeted.
- Turn-off shaping: Stage1/Stage2 defined; VCE overshoot < X and Eoff/ΔT within X.
- Interlock/timing: channel skew < X ns; DT_eff margin ≥ X ns across corners.
- Isolation: kVrms = X, working voltage = Y, CMTI ≥ X kV/µs with defined method.
- Layout: gate loop proxy checklist passes (Kelvin return, short loop, no-cross returns).
- Measurement hooks: TPs exist for VGE/VCE/DESAT//FLT with consistent probe definition.
Bring-up checklist (stepwise power-up, waveform acceptance, fault injection)
- Stepwise enable: validate rails and UVLO behavior before applying PWM (X steps).
- VGE waveform: overshoot within [X1, X2] and OFF-state margin ≥ X under dv/dt = Y.
- VCE waveform: VCEpk < X under representative current Y and bus voltage Z.
- DESAT validation: blanking covers normal events; SC action occurs within X µs without false trips.
- Interlock injection: apply overlap PWM patterns; outputs remain non-overlapping (0 events / Y runs).
- Fault semantics: latch/retry policy behaves as defined (N_retry = X, cooldown = Y).
- Thermal check: repeated events do not exceed ΔT = X in a defined window.
Production checklist (test points, fixtures, parameter lock, documentation)
- Test coverage: production tests include rails/UVLO, /FLT, and key timing checks (X items).
- Fixture readiness: fixture validates defined TPs for VGE/VCE/DESAT and logs pass/fail.
- Parameter lock: Rg values, deadtime settings, and fault policy values are version-locked.
- Corner definition: worst-case temp/supply limits are documented for acceptance tests.
- Traceability: driver/IGBT revisions and key safety notes are traceable in released documentation.
- Release criteria: all gates pass with X/Y/N thresholds satisfied and recorded.
- Design Gate: all design checklist items pass with thresholds X/Y/N.
- Bring-up Gate: waveform acceptance and fault injection pass with thresholds X/Y/N.
- Production Gate: fixture and documentation completeness pass with thresholds X/Y/N.
H2-11. Applications (Traction / Industrial Playbooks)
Intent: Deliver “combination playbooks” (not topology lessons). Each playbook ties required subpages, key constraints, and measurable acceptance criteria.
H3. Traction inverter stack
System reality: safety-oriented shutdown + harsh dv/dt + long service life. Design must be reviewable and testable.
- Negative off-bias stability: VGE(off) margin ≥ X V at dv/dt = Y kV/µs.
- Short-circuit reaction: SC detect + gate action < X µs (including blanking).
- Interlock integrity: no overlap current at worst-case temp/aging.
- EMI vs stress balance: VCE overshoot < X, ringing within X cycles.
- Isolated gate driver IC (DESAT + Miller clamp): TI UCC21750-Q1 (alt: TI UCC21751-Q1), Infineon 1ED020I12-F2, Broadcom ACPL-332J-000E.
- Isolated bias (example): Murata MGJ2D051505SC (5V in → +15V/−5V out) or RECOM R12P215D (12V in → ±15V out).
- DESAT high-voltage diode (example): Vishay BYV26E (use HV/fast class per VCE rating).
- Gate clamp TVS (example): Littelfuse SMBJ18A (select clamp level per IGBT VGE abs max).
- Gate damping bead (example): Murata BLM21PG221SN1D (220Ω @ 100MHz, 0805).
- Split gate resistors (examples): Vishay CRCW060310R0FKEA (10Ω, 0603), Panasonic ERJ-3EKF10R0V (10Ω, 0603).
- Small fast diode (example for local clamp networks): Nexperia BAS21H (HV switching diode class; verify voltage class vs node).
- False trip rate < X per Y hours at dv/dt = Z kV/µs.
- VGE(off) never crosses X V during worst-case common-mode transients.
- Fault-to-disable propagation < X ns; safe disable path verified (fault injection test = N cases).
H3. Industrial drives / welding / UPS
Priority: explainable fault policy (latch/retry/cooldown), thermal drift, and repeatability in production tests.
- UVLO with separate ON/OFF thresholds prevents half-conduction loss.
- Fault policy must be deterministic: N_retry = X, cooldown = Y ms, latch conditions = N.
- DESAT blanking & filter tuned to avoid false trips while staying < X µs reaction.
- Driver IC (industrial-ready): Infineon 1ED020I12-F2, Broadcom ACPL-332J-000E, TI UCC21750 (non-Q1).
- Isolated bias module: RECOM R12P215D (±15V), Murata MGJ2D051505SC (+15/−5V).
- Gate damping / EMI knob: Murata BLM21PG221SN1D, resistors CRCW060310R0FKEA / ERJ-3EKF10R0V.
- False trip rate < X / Y hours in worst noise condition.
- UVLO triggers at X/Y (ON/OFF) and never oscillates during brownout.
- Fault-to-disable propagation < X ns; reset policy verified by N fault-injection runs.
H3. HV DC/DC / PFC
Focus: “fast + stable” protection chain and controlled turn-off to survive switching stress and EMI audits.
- SC detect + gate action < X µs, while blanking = Y ns avoids turn-on spikes.
- Two-level/soft turn-off tuned to keep VCE overshoot < X and reduce ringing.
- Interlock and timing margin verified under temperature corners.
- Driver IC: TI UCC21750-Q1 / UCC21750, Infineon 1ED020I12-F2, Broadcom ACPL-332J-000E.
- DESAT diode: Vishay BYV26E; Gate clamp TVS: Littelfuse SMBJ18A.
- Bias: Murata MGJ2D051505SC (−VGOFF ready) or RECOM R12P215D (± rails).
- VCE overshoot < X; turn-off ringing settles within X cycles.
- No false triggering at dv/dt = X kV/µs across N switching events.
H3. What changes across environments (cold start / surge / pollution)
- Cold start: UVLO thresholds and bias stability become first-order risks (avoid UVLO chatter).
- Surge / brownout: ensure /FLT path and disable chain stay deterministic (no partial drive).
- Pollution / creepage: packaging and PCB spacing margins must meet X mm audit rules.
Acceptance: same switching test plan must pass at temperature corners and worst-case dv/dt (X/Y/N placeholders).
H2-12. IC Selection Logic (Key Specs → Decisions → Risks)
Intent: Turn “IGBT gate driver selection” into a decision workflow (no part-number dumping). Each spec must map to risk + test method + pass criteria.
H3. Must-have specs for IGBT (traction/industrial)
- Negative turn-off capability: supports VEE2 / negative bias usage (−VGOFF = X V), or provides strong Miller clamp when −VGOFF is not used.
- DESAT short-circuit detection: tunable blanking/filter + controlled shutdown (soft / two-level).
- UVLO with separate ON/OFF thresholds: prevents half-conduction and “brownout oscillation”.
- Fault reporting + safe disable: /FLT, /RDY and a deterministic disable chain across isolation.
- TI UCC21750-Q1 / UCC21750 (DESAT + internal Miller clamp + soft turn-off class).
- Infineon 1ED020I12-F2 (isolated gate driver with DESAT + Miller clamp class).
- Broadcom ACPL-332J-000E (smart gate drive optocoupler with DESAT + Miller clamp class).
H3. Timing specs that actually matter (delay / skew / jitter)
Definition rule: “effective deadtime” = controller programmed deadtime − (driver/isolator mismatch) − (power-stage current tail effects).
- Propagation delay (pin-to-pin) must be budgeted end-to-end: PWM → isolator → driver → gate.
- Inter-channel skew must stay < X ns across temp/aging; otherwise deadtime margin collapses.
- Noise immunity to short pulses must be stated as a testable filter/blanking rule (X/Y/N).
H3. Isolation & package constraints (working voltage / creepage / thermal)
- Isolation level: functional vs reinforced must match working voltage and audit requirements (kVrms = X, working V = Y).
- CMTI target: define test method and dv/dt corner case; acceptance: no false trigger at dv/dt = X kV/µs.
- Creepage/clearance hooks: package + PCB slots/coating are implementation knobs (do not rely on “typical only”).
- Thermal path: driver dissipation + bias converter dissipation must fit the enclosure thermal budget.
- Isolated bias: Murata MGJ2D051505SC (+15/−5V) or RECOM R12P215D (±15V).
- DESAT diode: Vishay BYV26E (HV/fast class; select by VCE rating and recovery behavior).
- Gate clamp: Littelfuse SMBJ18A (adjust clamp voltage per VGE abs max).
H3. Selection matrix (Spec → Why → Risk → Test → Pass criteria)
| Spec | Why it matters | Risk if wrong | Test method | Pass criteria |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DESAT chain (blanking/filter/threshold) | Fast SC detect without false trips | IGBT damage or nuisance shutdown | Fault injection; observe DESAT & gate action at TP | SC action < X µs; false trip < X/Y hours |
| Soft / two-level turn-off | Controls VCE overshoot and EMI | Overvoltage, ringing, stress | Turn-off event capture (VGE/VCE/IC) | VCEpk < X; settle < X cycles |
| UVLO ON/OFF thresholds | Prevents half conduction | Thermal runaway / loss spikes | Brownout sweep test | Trips at X/Y; no chatter (N runs) |
| Miller clamp + −VGOFF strategy | Suppress dv/dt induced false-on | Shoot-through risk | Worst dv/dt switching; monitor VGE(off) | VGE(off) margin ≥ X at dv/dt=Y |
| Propagation delay & skew | Defines deadtime margin | Overlap current or efficiency loss | Measure end-to-end PWM→IGBT current timing | Skew < X ns; no overlap at corners |
| CMTI / dv/dt immunity | Avoid false triggering under CM steps | Intermittent faults, field failures | CM transient test plan (defined fixture) | 0 false triggers at dv/dt=X |
| Package creepage/clearance | Safety spacing and audit | Certification failure / re-spin | Mechanical measurement + documentation | Creepage ≥ X mm; clearance ≥ Y mm |