Protection
Protection
4
Cooling and Heat Sinks
Due to on-state and switching losses, heat is
normally generated within the power device
This heat must be transferred from the device to a
cooling medium to maintain the operating junction
temperature within the specified range
Keeping the junction temperature of a power
device within reasonable bound is the joint
responsibility of the device manufacturer and the
device user
5
Cooling and Heat Sinks
How:
(a) The manufacturer minimizes the thermal
resistance RJC between the interior of the
device where the power is dissipated and the
outside of the case enclosing the device
6
Cooling and Heat Sinks
The user responsibility is made easier by wide
availability of heat sinks (aluminium) of various
shapes that are used for cooling of the power
semiconductor devices
The choice of the proper heat sink depends on the
allowable junction temperature that the device can
tolerate
7
Cooling and Heat Sinks
Calculation of junction temperature of devices is
therefore a necessary part of the design process
of the power electronic circuitry
8
Cooling and Heat Sinks
Heat energy flows from the interior of a power
electronic component mounted on external heat
sink by means of conduction
In the steady state, the process is modelled by a
series connection of thermal resistance
Heat transfer from the heat sink to the ambient is
controlled by two heat transfer mechanisms,
convection and radiation
The junction temperature calculations are
modelled by a thermal resistance that has several
components and is expressed in oC/W
9
Cooling and Heat Sinks
Three components are generally considered when
a power semiconductor device is mounted on a
heat sink
a) Thermal resistance between the device junction
and the device case denoted as RJC
b) Thermal resistance RCS which models the
imperfect interface between the semiconductor
device case and the hear sink
P TA
11
Cooling and Heat Sinks
The junction temperature of a device, TJ is given
by T T P R R R Where
J A JC CS SA
12
Cooling and Heat Sinks
Once the power loss, PA of the device is known,
the required thermal resistance of the heat sink
can be calculated for a known ambient
temperature, TA
14
Cooling and Heat Sinks
It is necessary, however, to use distilled water to
minimize corrosion. Oil is flammable, thus may be
restricted to some applications, however, provides
good insulation and eliminates the problems of
corrosion. Heat pipes and liquid-cooled heat sinks
are commercially available
15
Cooling and Heat Sinks
Example:
16
Cooling and Heat Sinks
Solution:
TJ T A P( R JC RCS RSA )
175 85 12(0.83 0.2 RSA )
RSA 6.47 C / W
o
18
Rapid Change of Semiconductor Voltage and
Current (dV/dt, di/dt)
Two operating conditions may produce
undesirable conditions for the switching devices
a) The rate of change of voltage:
Excessive dv/dt may cause unwanted device
turn-ON and possible damage
The charging current, i C dVdt of the capacitive
C
AK
dV AK dV AK iC
iC C
dt dt C
Besides the reduction of dV/dt , a path has been created for the
charging for current ic through the connected capacitance
During the turn-ON however, and since the capacitor was charging
due to ic’ the charging
21
Rapid Change of Semiconductor Voltage and
Current (dV/dt, di/dt)
current at turn-ON of the device, the capacitor will
discharge into the device and possibly damage it.
Thus, you connect a resistor in series with the
capacitor to limit the current that flows as follows
TH R
VS
+
C
-
22
Rapid Change of Semiconductor Voltage and
Current (dV/dt, di/dt)
But now, when the thyristor is OFF, the path for the
charging current might not be easy to reduce the
dVAK
dt
Since the current will also be limited by the
resistance. You thus include a diode to easy the path
of the charging current when the thyristor is OFF, as
shown in the diagram
+
TH R
VS -
C
23
Rapid Change of Semiconductor Voltage and
Current (dV/dt, di/dt)
Thus, we conclude by saying that;
The introduction of extra element called snubbers to
protect the switching device from dV/dt is usually
done by capacitors, but other elements are
frequently added to the capacitor as shown before
The diode provides a path around the resistor so
that the snubber is effectively the capacitor
If only the capacitor were used, then on subsequent
turn-ON of the device, the capacitor would be
rapidly discharged through the switching device
24
Rapid Change of Semiconductor Voltage and
Current (dV/dt, di/dt)
25
The Rate of Change Current (di/dt )
If the device’s rate of change of current becomes
very high, the switching device may be damaged
The device requires a minimum time to spread the
current conduction uniformly throughout the
junctions
If the rate of rise of anode current is very fast
compared to the spreading velocity of a turn-ON
process, a localized “hot spot” heating will occur
due to high current density and the device may fail,
as a result of excessive temperature. The device
must be protected against di
dt
26
The Rate of Change Current (di/dt )
Consider the following circuit diagram
T1
im
-
Load
VS Dm
+
di di VS
The forward dt is given by, dt LS
LS is the added series inductance, including the
stray inductance
28
Protection against Overvoltages
Understand the reverse recovery time of a
semiconductor device
When the diode is in forward conduction mode and
then its forward current is reduces to zero (due to
the natural behaviour of the diode circuit or by
applying a reverse voltage), the diode continues to
conduct due to minority carriers which remain
stored in the pn-junction and the bulk
semiconductor material
The minority carriers require a certain time to
recombine with opposite charges and to be
neutralized
29
Protection against Overvoltages
This certain time …is called the reverse recovery
time of the semiconductor
The reverse current associated with this recovery
time di
I RR t a
dt trr
IF
ta
IRR
30
Protection against Overvoltages
Now consider the following circuit
IRR
i
L
Device under
VS Dm recovery
+ L I
+
C
VS V Dm Open circuit
R
- -
Damping Circuit
Normally, R and C are chosen such that the circuit is
slightly underdamped. Critical or Insufficient damping
results in large overshoot of transient voltage
32
Protection against Overvoltages
An R-C snubber circuit with the initial zero voltage
Safe value
IRR
VS Safe value
-I
33
Protection against Overvoltages
The snubber circuit is expressed as
di 1
(i) L Ri idt VC (t 0 ) VS
dt C
di
(ii) Before including R and C in the circuit, VS L
dt
i
L
Reverse current
VS Dm
34
Protection against Overvoltages
With RLC circuit and initial conditions,
i( t 0) I RR and VC (t ) 0
t I RR t
(t ) VS (VS RI RR )(cos t sin t )e e sin t ....(a)
C
R
Where
2L 1
The underdamped natural frequency, o
LC
35
Protection against Overvoltages
The damping ratio is
R C
o 2 L
d 2 2 t
VS RI RR 2 cos t sin t e
dt
I RR t
cost - sin t e ............(b)
C
36
Protection against Overvoltages
The initial reverse voltage and d can be found by
dt
letting t = 0, in (a) and (b) respectively
V(t 0 ) RI RR
d IR
and VS RI RR 2
dt t 0 C
VS RI RR R I R
L C
VS o 2 4d 2 d ........................(c)
IR L I RR
Where d is given by d called the current
VS C Ip
factor
37
Protection against Overvoltages
Example 1
The recovery current of a diode I RR 20 A and the circuit
inductance is L 50H . The input voltage is VS 220V .
The graph on optimum snubber parameters for
compromise design gives the optimum current factor,
do = 0.75 and the optimum damping factor o 0.4
(a) Determine the snubber capacitance (with d = do)
2
IR L I L
d d
2
d VS C I R L
2 2
R
2
2
VS C V C S
38
Protection against Overvoltages
Solution 1 IR
2
C 2 2 L
d VS
2
IR
C L
dV S
2
20
50
0 .75 220
0 .735 F
39
Protection against Overvoltages
Solution 1
(b) The snubber resistance,
L 50
R 2 2 0 .4 6 .6
C 0 .735
41
Protection against Overvoltages
Solution 2
dv VS R 220 6
VS 2 29 V / s
dt t 0 L 50
42
Protection against Overvoltages
Solution 2
2
sin t1 2 . . . . (f)
2
43