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    System and Component Level Risk Assessment for SiC MOSFET Based Inverter for Traction Application at High Coolant Temperatures and Off-Road Mission Profile

    Source: Journal of Electronic Packaging:;2021:;volume( 144 ):;issue: 002::page 21107-1
    Author:
    Mohammad Nafis, Bakhtiyar
    ,
    Mahmud, Mohammad
    ,
    Wang, Zhongjing
    ,
    Wu, Yuheng
    ,
    Huitink, David
    ,
    Zhao, Yue
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4052408
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: Monitoring and predicting temperatures at critical locations of a power electronic system is important for safety, reliability, and efficiency. As the market share of vehicles with electric powertrains continues to increase, there is also an important economic cost of failing electronic components. For inverters present in such a drive system, exceeding the temperature limit for certain critical components, such as DC-link capacitors and Silicon carbide MOSFETs, can lead to failure of the system. In such an application, extracting the temperatures using sensors from locations such as dies and capacitors require expensive modifications and poses technical challenges. It is therefore necessary to create a thermal model for the inverter system to estimate the temperature at various components in order to ensure operation within temperature limits. The model approach is also suitable for predicting the effect on the component temperature and reliability of boundary conditions such as coolant, ambient temperature, and mission profile. This study assesses the reliability of a 250 kW liquid cooled inverter system designed for traction application. The critical failure areas are the DC-link capacitors, and the SiC MOSFET dies, which are rated at 175 °C. The system is modeled as a compact system by reasonably considering each component as a lumped capacitance and estimating the thermal resistance using physical dimensions. Results from the model are then compared against experimental data from constant power testing, and good agreement is observed for the cold plate and gate driver temperatures. With the model fidelity established, the model is then used to implement drive cycles from the Environmental Protection Agency for nonroad applications. The resulting temperature profile for each component is a series of temperature peaks and troughs that contribute to damage and failure. Rainflow counting algorithm is then used to quantify the damage per mini-cycles and used to estimate the predicted life for each component based on their manufacturer provided reliability qualification, and the mission profile is executed on the test bench for validation. The results are then used to generate a system risk matrix that relates the failure risk associated with a certain mission profile and the cooling scheme. It therefore demonstrates that an automotive inverter with SiC switching devices can be credibly assessed for failure risk using a compact model that is independent of boundary conditions, in combination with established reliability correlations and techniques.
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      System and Component Level Risk Assessment for SiC MOSFET Based Inverter for Traction Application at High Coolant Temperatures and Off-Road Mission Profile

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4284723
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    contributor authorMohammad Nafis, Bakhtiyar
    contributor authorMahmud, Mohammad
    contributor authorWang, Zhongjing
    contributor authorWu, Yuheng
    contributor authorHuitink, David
    contributor authorZhao, Yue
    date accessioned2022-05-08T09:05:38Z
    date available2022-05-08T09:05:38Z
    date copyright10/6/2021 12:00:00 AM
    date issued2021
    identifier issn1043-7398
    identifier otherep_144_02_021107.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4284723
    description abstractMonitoring and predicting temperatures at critical locations of a power electronic system is important for safety, reliability, and efficiency. As the market share of vehicles with electric powertrains continues to increase, there is also an important economic cost of failing electronic components. For inverters present in such a drive system, exceeding the temperature limit for certain critical components, such as DC-link capacitors and Silicon carbide MOSFETs, can lead to failure of the system. In such an application, extracting the temperatures using sensors from locations such as dies and capacitors require expensive modifications and poses technical challenges. It is therefore necessary to create a thermal model for the inverter system to estimate the temperature at various components in order to ensure operation within temperature limits. The model approach is also suitable for predicting the effect on the component temperature and reliability of boundary conditions such as coolant, ambient temperature, and mission profile. This study assesses the reliability of a 250 kW liquid cooled inverter system designed for traction application. The critical failure areas are the DC-link capacitors, and the SiC MOSFET dies, which are rated at 175 °C. The system is modeled as a compact system by reasonably considering each component as a lumped capacitance and estimating the thermal resistance using physical dimensions. Results from the model are then compared against experimental data from constant power testing, and good agreement is observed for the cold plate and gate driver temperatures. With the model fidelity established, the model is then used to implement drive cycles from the Environmental Protection Agency for nonroad applications. The resulting temperature profile for each component is a series of temperature peaks and troughs that contribute to damage and failure. Rainflow counting algorithm is then used to quantify the damage per mini-cycles and used to estimate the predicted life for each component based on their manufacturer provided reliability qualification, and the mission profile is executed on the test bench for validation. The results are then used to generate a system risk matrix that relates the failure risk associated with a certain mission profile and the cooling scheme. It therefore demonstrates that an automotive inverter with SiC switching devices can be credibly assessed for failure risk using a compact model that is independent of boundary conditions, in combination with established reliability correlations and techniques.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleSystem and Component Level Risk Assessment for SiC MOSFET Based Inverter for Traction Application at High Coolant Temperatures and Off-Road Mission Profile
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume144
    journal issue2
    journal titleJournal of Electronic Packaging
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4052408
    journal fristpage21107-1
    journal lastpage21107-7
    page7
    treeJournal of Electronic Packaging:;2021:;volume( 144 ):;issue: 002
    contenttypeFulltext
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