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String and Micro Inverter Gate Drivers and Sensing Chains

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This page helps compare string and micro inverter options and then map every key function—gate drivers, current and voltage sensing, synchronous rectification, protection and EMI monitoring—to practical IC choices so that a safe, efficient and standards-compliant design can be implemented with confidence.

What this page solves

This page organizes the core design decisions inside a string or micro inverter that connects rooftop or small commercial PV to the AC grid, with or without a battery behind it. The focus is on the power stage itself: high-voltage switches, gate drivers, sensing chains, synchronous rectification and EMI monitoring.

The content helps compare string and micro inverter architectures in terms of safety, efficiency and service: which topology suits per-module shutdown, how many gate drivers and sensing channels are required, and how fault isolation changes when moving from a central string inverter to distributed micro inverters.

It also brings together the high-voltage semiconductor and protection choices: how 700–1500 V DC inputs drive Si vs SiC device selection, which gate-driver and isolation specifications prevent dv/dt related EMI issues, and where leakage current, ground-fault and EMI monitoring should live inside the inverter.

Battery pack design, BMS functions and site-level EMS or SCADA strategies are not covered here. Those topics belong to the battery, PCS and EMS pages. This page stays inside the string or micro inverter enclosure and concentrates on IC-level hooks for safe, grid-compliant power conversion.

String and micro inverter power-stage overview Block diagram showing PV strings or modules feeding a string or micro inverter core with optional DC-DC, a DC-AC bridge, gate drivers and sensing, and EMI and safety monitoring, delivering AC power to the grid. PV side PV string / modules String / Micro Inverter String mode Micro mode DC link & DC-DC (optional) DC-AC bridge Gate drivers & sensing EMI & safety monitor AC side AC grid / load

Electrical environment & stress map

String and micro inverters operate in very different DC and AC environments. Module-level micro inverters typically work from 30–80 V DC at higher currents and short cable runs, while string inverters handle 600–1500 V DC with longer wiring and much higher insulation and creepage requirements. These levels set the baseline for gate-driver isolation ratings, CMTI targets and the way current and voltage are sensed.

On the AC side, the inverter usually interfaces to 120/230 Vac single-phase circuits or 400/480 Vac three-phase services. Fault and leakage currents must remain within the limits imposed by RCDs and grid protection devices, which drives the ranges and bandwidths for phase-current sensors and residual-current monitoring AFEs used for ground-fault detection and safety shutdown.

Switching frequencies in the 10–50 kHz range for string inverters and up to around 60–100 kHz for micro inverters combine with steep dv/dt and di/dt edges, especially when SiC devices are used. These stresses translate into hard requirements for gate-driver CMTI, isolation devices, sigma-delta modulators and analog front ends that must survive fast common-mode swings while still delivering accurate measurements for control and protection.

The summary below focuses on electrical levels and standards that directly affect power-stage IC selection: gate drivers, sensing amplifiers, isolation components and protection comparators. Detailed surge, ESD and EMC filter design is handled on the dedicated EMI and surge protection pages.

Side Typical level Dynamic stress Standards IC design hook
DC side (micro) 30–80 V DC, high current fsw up to ~100 kHz Basic insulation, IEC 62109 context Compact gate drivers, low-side or simple high-side drive, shunt or CT sensing without reinforced isolation.
DC side (string) 600–1500 V DC High dv/dt and di/dt edges IEC 62109, IEC 61000-4-5 Reinforced-isolation gate drivers, CMTI-friendly isolators or ΣΔ modulators, careful creepage and clearance.
AC side 120/230 Vac 1φ, 400/480 Vac 3φ Fault and leakage currents Grid codes, RCD limits, CISPR 11/EN 55011 Phase-current sensors sized for fault levels, residual-current AFEs with bandwidth towards 1 kHz.
Common to both Fast switching edges dv/dt up to tens of kV/µs IEC 61000-4-x family Isolation and sensing ICs with high CMTI, robust ESD and surge ratings, and suitable measurement bandwidth.
Electrical stress map for string and micro inverters Diagram showing DC and AC sides of a string or micro inverter with voltage ranges, switching frequency and dv/dt stresses, and arrows mapping these to gate-driver, sensing and isolation specifications. Electrical environment & stress map DC side Micro: 30–80 V DC, high current f_sw up to ~100 kHz, short cables String: 600–1500 V DC, longer runs High dv/dt edges, insulation & creepage limits AC side 120/230 Vac 1φ, 400/480 Vac 3φ Fault & leakage currents tied to grid protection RCD limits, CISPR 11 / EN 55011 Drives phase & residual current sensing ranges Dynamic stress f_sw 10–50 kHz (string), up to ~100 kHz (micro), high dv/dt & di/dt Especially with SiC devices: dv/dt in tens of kV/µs Gate-driver spec Isolation, CMTI, drive strength Sensing chain spec Shunt / CT AFE, ΣΔ bandwidth Isolation & comms spec Insulation rating, surge, ESD

String vs micro: topology roles & use cases

String and micro inverters solve the same problem with very different power-stage topologies. A string inverter concentrates several kilowatts up to tens of kilowatts from a 600–1500 V DC string into a single cabinet, while a micro inverter processes only a few hundred watts from a 30–80 V DC module or small group of modules. This choice directly changes the number of bridge legs, gate drivers and sensing channels that need to be designed and monitored.

In a string inverter, higher DC voltage and centralised power flow favour distributed gate-driver and sensing ICs: isolated high-side and low-side drivers per switch, multiple current and voltage sensing points across the DC link and AC phases, and separate sigma-delta modulators or isolation amplifiers feeding the control processor. Faults tend to be detected and cleared at string or inverter level, which puts more responsibility on residual-current sensing and grid-protection coordination inside the unit.

In a micro inverter, each module-level unit can use a smaller number of bridge legs and a compact set of drivers and sensors, often implemented as a highly integrated power-stage SoC. Lower DC bus voltage eases isolation requirements, but higher per-module currents and dense layouts push integration: combined gate-driver and control ICs, embedded ADCs or AFEs, and built-in protection functions to support fast per-module shutdown and compliance with rapid-disconnect and safety regulations.

Fault isolation granularity is therefore very different. String inverters typically disconnect one or more strings or the entire inverter when a fault is detected, whereas micro inverters can isolate only the affected module and keep the rest of the array online. This shifts how leakage current limits, RCD coordination and EMI limits are allocated across the system. Module-level optimizers and hybrid PV–battery architectures build on these roles and are treated on dedicated optimizer and hybrid inverter pages.

String and micro inverter topology roles Two-column comparison showing a central string inverter handling a high-voltage PV string with many gate drivers and sensing channels, versus multiple module-level micro inverters with integrated gate drivers and sensing per module. String vs micro inverter topologies String inverter High-voltage PV string Central string inverter Gate drivers Many bridge legs Many sensors Isolated ΣΔ / AFEs • kW–tens of kW at 600–1500 V DC • More gate drivers and sensing channels per unit • String-level fault isolation and residual-current monitoring Micro inverter Per-module inverters on low-voltage DC Highly integrated power-stage ICs Driver + control SoC Embedded sensing Per-module shutdown and safety functions • 200–1000 W per unit at 30–80 V DC • Fewer gate drivers, often integrated with control and AFEs • Module-level fault isolation and rapid shutdown

HV gate-driver architectures

The choice of gate-driver architecture follows directly from the inverter bridge topology and DC bus level. Single-phase H-bridges, three-phase two-level bridges and multilevel NPC or ANPC stages all need reliable high-side and low-side drive, but the required insulation strength, common-mode transient immunity and number of isolated channels differ widely between low-voltage micro inverters and high-voltage string inverters.

At lower DC voltages, a micro inverter can often use classical half-bridge drivers with level-shift or bootstrap supplies. These devices combine a high-side and low-side driver in one IC and are adequate where dv/dt is moderate and insulation requirements are limited to basic isolation. At higher string voltages and especially with SiC devices, dv/dt and insulation constraints tend to force a move toward fully isolated gate drivers, with one isolated channel per switch or per leg and dedicated isolated power supplies for each floating gate-driver domain.

Gate-driver selection therefore involves more than peak drive current. Required isolation level, CMTI rating, gate-voltage window and the way gate supplies are generated all matter. Reinforced-isolation drivers and isolators must withstand common-mode swings in the tens of kV per microsecond on a 600–1500 V bus, while still delivering clean edges to Si or SiC switches. Many modern drivers also integrate DESAT detection, UVLO and temperature feedback to help implement fast hardware protection at the bridge-leg level.

Si and SiC devices impose different gate-drive requirements. Si-based MOSFETs and IGBTs usually operate around a single positive gate voltage with modest dv/dt, making them more tolerant of traditional level-shift schemes. SiC MOSFETs often need higher drive voltages and negative gate bias for robust turn-off, together with very high CMTI and carefully controlled slew rate. In high-voltage string inverters, this typically points to isolated gate drivers matched with isolated sigma-delta modulators or isolation amplifiers for current and voltage feedback. Multilevel and multi-inverter systems build on these single-bridge choices and are covered on the PCS and system-level pages.

Low-voltage and high-voltage gate-driver architectures Diagram comparing a low-voltage half-bridge driven by a level-shift gate driver with bootstrap supply, versus a high-voltage bridge using isolated gate drivers and isolated power supplies for each switch. HV gate-driver architectures LV / micro inverter half-bridge 30–80 V DC HS switch LS switch Half-bridge gate driver Level-shift & bootstrap Bootstrap • Single IC drives high-side and low-side • Suitable for moderate dv/dt and basic insulation HV / string inverter bridge 600–1500 V DC HV Si / SiC HV Si / SiC Isolated gate driver Isolated gate driver ISO PSU ISO PSU • One isolated driver per switch or per leg • Reinforced isolation and high CMTI for fast SiC edges • Dedicated isolated supplies for positive and negative gate bias

Current & voltage sensing chain

The power stage in a string or micro inverter depends on accurate sensing of DC-link voltage and current, AC phase currents and residual or leakage current. These signals feed both the control loops and the fast protection paths that disconnect the inverter when limits are exceeded. The sensing chain typically combines shunts, current transformers, Rogowski coils or integrated Hall and AMR sensors with analog front ends, isolation components and ADCs or sigma-delta decoders in the controller.

On the current side, low-power micro inverters often favour shunt-based sensing with current-sense amplifiers, while higher-power string inverters benefit from CTs, Rogowski coils or isolated Hall and AMR sensors that reduce dissipation and provide galvanic isolation. DC-link and phase currents may be brought into the controller as conditioned analog voltages through isolation amplifiers, or as bitstreams from isolated sigma-delta modulators that are decoded by digital filters on the MCU or DSP side.

Voltage sensing typically uses resistor dividers and precision amplifiers for medium-voltage nodes, and isolated sigma-delta or dedicated high-voltage AFEs for direct measurement of DC-link and AC line voltages. Bandwidth, CMTI rating, noise and offset performance of these isolation and AFE devices determine how quickly the controller can react to faults and how much accuracy is available for metering, efficiency optimisation and grid-code compliance.

Error budgeting and protection strategy link the sensing chain directly to overcurrent and short-circuit detection. Fast comparators and desaturation monitors provide sub-microsecond trip paths, while ADC and sigma-delta measurements feed slower control and diagnostic loops. Typical IC roles include current-sense and isolation amplifiers, isolated sigma-delta modulators, differential ADCs and precision references. Cell-level and battery-pack current sensing remains in the scope of Pack BMS and BMU/CMU pages, while this section focuses on the inverter power stage itself.

Current and voltage sensing chain for string and micro inverters Block diagram showing DC-link and AC phase currents sensed by shunts, CTs, Rogowski coils and Hall sensors, feeding AFEs and isolation or sigma-delta modulators, and then ADCs and a controller. A separate leakage path uses a differential CT and AFE to drive fast protection. Current & voltage sensing chain DC side AC side Leakage path DC-link V & I Shunt / CT / Rogowski Hall / AMR options Resistor divider for Vdc AFE & isolation Current-sense amp / ISO amp ΣΔ modulator options ADC & controller ΣΔ decimation filters Control & diagnostics Protection thresholds AC phases Ia, Ib, Ic CT / Rogowski / Hall Per-phase current AFEs / ΣΔ modulators Phase current bitstreams Isolation & CMTI Differential CT / RCM Leakage / residual I AFE & comparator Fast trip path Protection logic RCD coordination Inverter shutdown

Synchronous rectification & efficiency features

Synchronous rectification is a key tool for squeezing efficiency from small and medium power stages in string and especially micro inverters. Replacing diode conduction with actively switched MOSFETs reduces losses in DC/DC stages, in AC-side current paths and in auxiliary supplies that support control and communication. Lower conduction loss translates directly into higher efficiency, reduced temperature rise and more margin against thermal derating in compact rooftop and module-level designs.

Implementations range from dedicated synchronous-rectifier controllers that sense current and device voltage to decide when to drive SR MOSFETs, through to firmware-based schemes that use precise timers and PWM units inside the MCU or DSP. In all cases the SR timing must respect dead time, body-diode conduction intervals and current direction so that devices switch on only when they genuinely reduce losses and do not create shoot-through across the power stage.

Gate-driver integration is an important architectural choice. Some designs use multi-channel gate-driver ICs that combine main bridge drive and synchronous-rectifier control in a single package, easing layout and skew control. Others keep the SR controller separate from the main gate drivers to gain flexibility in how many phases are implemented or to reuse the same driver set across different power ratings. In either case, the SR control signals and gate drivers must coordinate closely to meet efficiency targets without compromising stability or protection response.

IC families involved in synchronous rectification include SR controller ICs for DC/DC and AC stages, power management ICs with integrated MOSFET drivers and SR functions, and MCUs or DSPs with advanced timer and PWM peripherals to generate complementary gate signals with adjustable dead time. MPPT algorithms, DC bus energy scheduling and PV power tracking remain on the MPPT charge controller and system-level pages; this section keeps synchronous rectification in the context of inverter efficiency and thermal design.

Synchronous rectification in inverter power stages Block diagram showing a power stage with MOSFETs and body diodes, current sensing into an SR controller or MCU, and gate drivers that coordinate main switches and synchronous rectifiers to reduce conduction loss. Synchronous rectification & efficiency DC / AC input Power stage with synchronous rectification Main FET SR FET Shunt To AC / DC stage Shunt AFE / comparator Current direction & level SR controller / MCU Direction & timing calculation Dead-time & body-diode control PWM outputs for main & SR FETs Multi-channel gate driver Main bridge drive Synchronous rectifier outputs Efficiency & thermal benefits Reduced conduction loss and temperature rise More headroom for compact designs

EMI, protection and monitoring hooks

High dv/dt switching in string and micro inverter bridges creates significant common-mode and differential noise, which directly constrains EMI filters, gate-driver selection and PCB layout. Higher switching speed, especially with SiC devices and 600–1500 V DC buses, demands gate drivers and isolators with robust CMTI, carefully managed return paths and well-damped gate networks so that switching edges do not cause false triggering or excessive EMI emissions through the filter and cabling.

Leakage and residual current sensing sits at the intersection of safety and EMI. Differential current transformers or residual-current monitoring AFEs measure the imbalance between conductors and feed comparators and protection logic inside the inverter. These circuits coordinate with external RCDs and, where required, arc-fault detection devices by providing trip signals, status lines and measured values that can be reported to a controller. Dedicated AFEs can perform band-limited energy detection to support AFDD functions while still presenting clean digital outputs to the protection logic and MCU.

At the input and output terminals, surge and overvoltage protection elements such as MOVs, GDTs and EMI filter stages are complemented by IC-based supervision. Resistor dividers and window comparators implement OVP and UVP thresholds on DC-link and AC lines, while eFuse, hot-swap and active-clamp controllers provide inrush control, current limiting and controlled shutdown during faults. These devices interface to gate drivers, contactors and the digital controller through fault pins, enable lines and status outputs so that protection and restart behaviour can be tuned at the system level.

EMI monitoring completes the picture. Dedicated EMI sensing AFEs can observe common-mode or differential noise at critical nodes and feed envelope or filtered metrics into the controller. Digital power controllers may then adjust switching frequency, spread-spectrum modulation, slew rate or dead time to balance EMI against efficiency and thermal constraints. Detailed EMI filter dimensioning, surge coordination and lightning test strategies are handled on dedicated EMI and surge design pages; this section focuses on the hooks that the inverter power stage exposes to sensing, protection and EMI monitoring ICs.

EMI, protection and monitoring hooks around an inverter power stage Block diagram with an inverter power stage in the centre, connected to EMI filters, surge and overvoltage comparators, residual current and arc-fault AFEs, eFuse and hot-swap controllers and an EMI sensing AFE, all feeding protection logic and a digital controller. EMI, protection and monitoring hooks Inverter power stage Bridge legs, DC-link, AC filter Bridge dv/dt source EMI filter Common-mode & differential Gate drivers & isolators CMTI & dv/dt robustness OVP / UVP comparators DC-link & AC line supervision eFuse / hot-swap controller Inrush, current limiting, soft-start RCM / AFDD AFE Leakage & arc-fault detection Trip & measurement outputs EMI sensing AFE Common-mode / differential metrics Protection logic Trip, latch & status Digital controller hooks Reads EMI and residual-current metrics Adjusts switching, logs events and coordinates restart

Digital control, grid sync and communication

The digital controller is the central node that ties together gate drivers, sensing AFEs, EMI monitors and communication interfaces in a string or micro inverter. Smaller micro inverters often rely on a single MCU or DSP that generates PWM, decodes sigma-delta bitstreams, executes control loops and handles communication. Higher-power string inverters frequently partition functions between a real-time digital power controller or FPGA and a supervisory MCU, so that high-speed PWM, protection and signal processing can be implemented alongside protocol stacks, logging and lifecycle management.

Grid synchronisation requires accurate measurement of AC voltage and current to track frequency, phase and amplitude. Digital PLLs using αβ or dq transformations estimate the grid phase and support current control and power-factor adjustment, while zero-crossing detection and over/under-frequency logic provide additional protection thresholds. These algorithms operate on the same voltage and current signals delivered by the sensing chain, linking the design of AFEs, isolation and ADCs directly to compliance with grid codes and ride-through requirements.

Safety hooks inside the controller architecture include watchdogs, brown-out monitors and dedicated fault-handling paths. Fast hardware-level trips from comparators, RCM and AFDD AFEs or desaturation monitors can shut down gate drivers within microseconds, while the MCU or DSP records the event, updates counters and decides whether and how to restart. Interfaces to gate drivers, AFEs and EMI monitors use PWM, complementary outputs with dead time, SPI, LVDS sigma-delta channels and simple GPIO fault lines, so pin multiplexing and timing resources are critical selection criteria for the controller IC.

Toward the system level, the inverter exposes measurement points and control points to EMS and site gateways over communication interfaces. Protocols such as Modbus/TCP, SunSpec mappings or IEC 61850-90-7 profiles carry voltages, currents, power, energy, temperature, insulation status, RCD and AFDD flags, as well as enable, power setpoint, power-factor and ramp-rate commands. Plant-level dispatch algorithms, multi-inverter coordination and microgrid energy management strategies belong to EMS and gateway pages; this section keeps the focus on the digital controller of a single inverter and how it synchronises with the grid and links to higher control layers.

Digital control, grid synchronisation and communication interfaces Block diagram showing a digital controller with real-time control and supervisory domains, connected to gate drivers, sensing AFEs, EMI monitors and protection logic on one side and to EMS and site gateway interfaces on the other side. Digital control, grid sync & communication Digital controller & comms Real-time control PWM & dead-time units ΣΔ decode & AFEs PLL & grid sync Fast protection handling Supervisory & comms Watchdog & brown-out Fault logging & counters EMS / gateway protocols Local service & HMI Gate drivers PWM, enable, fault Sensing AFEs & ΣΔ Voltage & current samples LVDS / SPI interfaces EMI monitor Noise metrics & status Protection logic Trips, interlocks, fast paths Fault pins to controller EMS / site gateway Modbus/TCP, SunSpec IEC 61850-90-7 profiles Local HMI / service Display, tool port, logging Inverter as a controllable grid node Exposes measurements: V, I, P, Q, energy, temperature, insulation, protection status Accepts commands: enable, power limits, power factor, ramp rates

Design checklist & IC mapping

This checklist only covers string and micro inverter power stages and the ICs that sit around the bridge, DC-link and AC filters. Battery management systems, MPPT controllers, energy-management systems and site gateways are covered on dedicated pages elsewhere in the site.

This checklist helps review a string or micro inverter design from the perspective of gate drivers, sensing chains, synchronous rectification and EMI monitoring. It focuses on the IC roles that frame the power stage and the key parameters that should be locked before layout, type testing and certification.

  • DC-link voltage range, topology (string or micro) and switching frequency targets are defined, and selected gate drivers and isolators meet or exceed the required insulation class and CMTI for the worst-case dv/dt.
  • Slew-rate limits on bridge legs are consistent with EMI, efficiency and thermal constraints, and can be tuned via gate resistance, driver settings or digital slew-control features where available.
  • Each bridge arm has a documented short-circuit and overcurrent detection path with a reaction-time budget from fault onset to gate-off that meets the target protection requirement, including desaturation detection, comparator delays and driver shutdown time.
  • Gate-driver UVLO thresholds, fault-latch behaviour and reset strategy are aligned with the DC-link architecture and safe restart policy, including coordination with any contactors or eFuse and hot-swap devices.
  • DC-link and phase-current sensing technologies (shunt, CT, Rogowski, integrated Hall or AMR sensors) are chosen according to power level, dissipation limits and required isolation class for the target installation.
  • Bandwidth, noise and offset performance of current-sense amplifiers, isolation amplifiers and sigma-delta modulators support both control-loop bandwidth and fault-detection requirements over temperature and tolerance.
  • Voltage-sense dividers, AFEs and references are dimensioned so that DC-link and AC-line measurements cover all operating, test and surge conditions without saturating ADC or sigma-delta input ranges.
  • Leakage and residual current measurement range and bandwidth cover the applicable RCD and standard limits, and the RCM or AFDD front ends provide both a fast trip output and a measurable value for logging and diagnostics.
  • Synchronous rectification is applied where conduction losses materially impact efficiency, and SR timing is coordinated with gate-driver dead time and body-diode conduction so that shoot-through is avoided across the full operating envelope.
  • Surge and overvoltage protection elements at DC and AC terminals are paired with window comparators or supervision circuits that can command controlled shutdown and record over-stress events for later analysis.
  • If EMI sensing AFEs are used, measurement points, bandwidth and metrics are defined so that digital controllers can meaningfully adjust switching frequency, spread-spectrum and slew-rate settings rather than only passively filtering noise.
  • The control architecture (single MCU or DSP, or MCU plus FPGA or digital power controller) provides sufficient PWM, complementary-output and high-speed capture resources to implement bridge control, synchronous rectification, PLL and protection without pin or timer conflicts.
  • Grid-synchronisation algorithms are matched to available voltage and current measurements and validated against the target grid codes and ride-through requirements for the intended markets.
  • The inverter exposes a consistent set of measurements (voltages, currents, P, Q, energy, temperature, insulation status and protection counters) and control points (enable, active and reactive power limits, power factor and ramp rates) over the chosen communication protocols toward the EMS or site gateway.
Function block IC type Example vendors & part numbers
HV bridge gate drive Isolated half-bridge / single-channel gate drivers TI UCC21530, UCC21750, ISO5852S; ADI ADuM4135, ADuM4136; Infineon 1ED31xx SiC drivers; onsemi NCP51561 family.
Isolation for PWM & fault signals Digital isolators for control and feedback lines TI ISO77xx, ISO78xx; ADI ADuM14xx, ADuM12xx; Infineon 1EDI/2EDI digital isolator families.
Shunt current sensing (DC or AC) Current-sense amplifiers / bidirectional sense amps TI INA240, INA282, INA293; ADI AD8418A, AD8210; onsemi NCV2187 current-sense amps.
Isolated current / voltage feedback Isolation amplifiers and isolated ADC / ΣΔ modulators TI AMC1301, AMC1302 (isolated amps), AMC1304/AMC1305 (ΣΔ modulators); ADI ADuM7703, AD7403, AD7405; Infineon XENSIV™ TLI4971 integrated current sensors.
Voltage sensing for DC-link & AC line Precision op amps, differential ADCs, references TI OPA320/OPA350, ADS1115/ADS868x; ADI ADA4522, LTC24xx series ADCs; references such as TI REF50xx or ADI ADR44xx.
Residual current & leakage sensing RCM AFEs, CT interfaces, comparators for trip and measurement ADI ADE7953 / ADE9xxx metering AFEs; TI TLV180x / LMV723x high-speed comparators with CT front-ends; Infineon / onsemi CT plus multi-channel ADC implementations for RCM.
Arc-fault detection front ends Band-limited AFEs feeding ADC / DSP algorithms TI OPAx series high-bandwidth op amps plus MCU or DSP; ADI ADA4807/ADA489x AFEs combined with digital arc-detection algorithms in a C2000 or ARM MCU.
Synchronous rectification control (DC/DC, AC stage) Dedicated SR controllers or PMICs with SR drivers TI UCC24610, UCC24612, UCC24624; Infineon ICE3Rxxx families with SR support; ADI LT8390/LTC38xx controllers with synchronous MOSFET drive.
DC / AC OVP & UVP supervision Precision and window comparators, supervisor ICs TI TLV6700 window comparators, TLV1805; ADI LTC6752 comparators; onsemi NCS2250/NCS333 as part of OVP/UVP front ends.
DC input eFuse & hot-swap control Hot-swap controllers, eFuse ICs with current limiting and reporting TI LM5069, TPS25940, TPS25982; ADI LTC4215, LTC4218; onsemi NIS5021, NIS6350 and related eFuse devices.
EMI monitoring & noise metrics Wide-band AFEs feeding FFT or envelope analysis in the controller TI OPA835/OPA836 AFEs plus C2000 DSP; ADI ADA4807 or ADA4897 front ends with FFT in an ARM MCU or FPGA.
Digital power controllers with spread-spectrum / slew control Digital power controllers and PWM controllers with jittered frequency TI UCD3138 digital power controller family; TI LM5035/LM5088 devices with spread-spectrum options; ADI ADP105x series digital power controllers.
Inverter control MCU / DSP Real-time motor and power-control MCUs, digital signal controllers TI C2000 TMS320F2800x/F2837x families; NXP MC56F8xxx or i.MX RT series for combined control and gateway functions; Infineon XMC4000 microcontrollers.
Optional FPGA / CPLD for PWM & protection Small FPGAs and CPLDs for PWM, ΣΔ decode and fast interlocks AMD (Xilinx) Artix-7 or Spartan-7, Intel Cyclone 10 LP, Lattice MachXO2/MachXO3 families for high-speed protection and timing offload.
Communications & security for EMS interface Ethernet PHYs, industrial interfaces, secure elements TI DP83xx Ethernet PHYs; Microchip KSZ88xx switches; NXP EdgeLock and A71CH secure elements; Microchip ATECC608A for key storage and secure boot support.

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FAQs about string and micro inverter IC choices

This FAQ collects common design questions for string and micro inverters from the perspective of gate drivers, sensing chains, synchronous rectification and EMI monitoring. Each answer points back to the section where assumptions, trade-offs and IC roles are explained in more detail.

1. How do you decide between a string inverter and a micro inverter for a small commercial PV system?
For small commercial PV, the choice often comes down to roof layout, shading patterns, desired monitoring granularity and maintenance strategy. String inverters suit higher power, simpler layouts and lower cost per watt, while micro inverters improve per-module MPPT, safety and uptime in shaded or fragmented arrays. For detailed topology and use-case examples, see the section “String vs micro: topology roles & use cases”.
2. What DC-link voltage range forces the use of isolated gate drivers instead of high-side level-shift drivers?
As DC-link voltage climbs toward 800–1500 V in string inverters, insulation requirements, CMTI targets and switching-node slew rates typically exceed what simple level-shift drivers can handle. Isolated gate drivers with reinforced insulation and high CMTI provide safer control and cleaner switching margins at these voltages. For driver-architecture guidance, see the section “HV gate-driver architectures”.
3. At what dv/dt level does SiC switching begin to create severe EMI filter stress and layout constraints?
High-voltage SiC bridges routinely reach dv/dt of tens of kV per microsecond, which can drive large common-mode currents through parasitic capacitances and EMI filters. When rise times enter the low tens of nanoseconds, filter design, creepage, shielding and driver CMTI become dominant constraints. For stress mapping and EMI hook recommendations, see the sections “Electrical environment & stress map” and “EMI, protection and monitoring hooks”.
4. How many gate-driver channels are typically required for a three-phase string inverter topology?
A three-phase two-level bridge needs six driven switches, often realised as three half-bridges. Designs may add extra channels for active clamps, brake choppers or parallel devices. The total gate-driver channel count must match the chosen topology and redundancy strategy. For mapping between topologies and driver channels, see the section “HV gate-driver architectures”.
5. What protection reaction time is acceptable for overcurrent and desaturation shutdown in residential PV inverters?
Acceptable reaction time depends on device ratings and grid-code expectations, but residential PV bridges typically target microsecond-range responses from fault inception to gate turn-off. The budget must include sensing delay, comparator or desaturation detection time and driver shutdown latency. For protection-chain design tips, see the sections “HV gate-driver architectures” and “EMI, protection and monitoring hooks”.
6. Which current-sensing method works best when both control-loop bandwidth and fault detection speed are critical?
Shunt-based sensing with fast current-sense amplifiers or isolated sigma-delta modulators gives good bandwidth and accuracy for control while supporting rapid overcurrent detection. CTs and Rogowski coils can help at higher power levels but add conditioning complexity. The final choice balances dissipation, isolation and bandwidth. For detailed sensing-chain trade-offs, see the section “Current & voltage sensing chain”.
7. Can synchronous rectification be effective in low-power micro inverters without excessive BOM cost?
Even in low-power micro inverters, synchronous rectification can significantly reduce conduction losses in DC/DC and AC stages if timing is well controlled. Using integrated SR controllers or drivers that share resources with existing PWM logic helps contain BOM and complexity. For efficiency-oriented SR options, see the section “Synchronous rectification & efficiency features”.
8. How do leakage current limits in safety standards influence IC selection for RCM and AFDD monitoring?
Leakage-current limits define the measurement range, bandwidth and accuracy that residual-current monitors and AFDD front ends must achieve. IC choices need to support low-noise sensing of small imbalances while providing deterministic trip thresholds and status reporting toward the controller and any external RCD. For leakage and protection-hook considerations, see the section “EMI, protection and monitoring hooks”.
9. What EMI monitoring hooks should be exposed to the digital controller for spread-spectrum or slew-rate control?
Useful EMI hooks include common-mode and differential noise metrics at key nodes, envelope or band-limited energy indicators and counters for protection events. These signals allow the digital controller to adjust switching frequency, spread-spectrum profiles and slew-rate settings in a controlled way. For examples of such hooks, see the sections “EMI, protection and monitoring hooks” and “Digital control, grid sync and communication”.
10. How many PWM and high-speed capture resources should the controller provide for bridge, SR and sensing functions?
The controller must cover bridge legs, synchronous rectifiers, auxiliary switches and sample-synchronisation triggers while leaving margin for future features. This often means several complementary PWM pairs, multiple high-speed capture or compare units and flexible routing for protection inputs. For resource-planning guidelines, see the section “Digital control, grid sync and communication”.
11. Which communication interfaces are typically required by EMS or site gateways in string and micro inverters?
EMS and site gateways commonly expect Ethernet or RS-485 interfaces carrying Modbus, SunSpec mappings or IEC 61850-90-7 profiles, along with local service ports such as USB or UART. Interface IC choices must match cabling distance, isolation needs and cyber-security requirements. For communication and integration hooks, see the section “Digital control, grid sync and communication”.
12. Which parameters should appear in a final design checklist before layout and type testing start?
A final checklist should lock DC-link voltage and topology, gate-driver insulation and CMTI, sensing technologies and bandwidths, SR strategy, protection reaction times, EMI and surge hooks, controller resources and communication interfaces. Mapping these items to concrete IC choices and series helps avoid late redesigns. For a structured view, see the section “Design checklist & IC mapping”.