Mission-Profile-Based Lifetime Study for SiC/IGBT Modules in a Propulsion Inverter
Paper in proceeding, 2021

This work studies the lifetime of two silicon carbide (SiC) and one silicon insulated gate bipolar transistor (Si-IGBT) power modules in a three-phase propulsion inverter for two different driving cycles. The ECE-City manual and the Worldwide Harmonized Light Vehicles Test Cycle (WLTC) are used as the mission profiles for the lifetime comparisons. For the WLTC, the urban and highway phases are included. The effect of blanking time and the MOSFET's reverse conduction is considered on the power loss analysis. The lifetime versus different fluid rates of the heatsink are also compared for the three modules over the two mission profiles. The analysis shows that, the WLTC drive cycle causes considerably larger accumulated damage on the three compared modules' devices, in comparison to ECE-City manual. Moreover, its impact on the SiC-based devices is higher compared to that of the Si-IGBTs. However, the SiC modules present substantially higher lifetime, (> 80%) for WLTC and (>90%) for ECE-City manual, compared to Si-IGBTs. In addition, it is observed that, a reasonable range of fluid flow rate in the heatsink can play a considerable role in improving or reducing the lifetime of the power devices in a reliability-wise optimization.

reliability

electric vehicle

voltage source inverters (VSI)

—silicon carbide (SiC)

thermal stress

MOSFET reverse conduction

Author

Sepideh Amirpour

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Electric Power Engineering

Torbjörn Thiringer

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Electric Power Engineering

Dan Hagstedt

Proceedings - 2021 IEEE 19th International Power Electronics and Motion Control Conference, PEMC 2021


978-1-7281-5660-6 (ISBN)

2021 IEEE 19th International Power Electronics and Motion Control Conference (PEMC)
Gliwice, Poland, Poland,

Areas of Advance

Information and Communication Technology

Subject Categories

Electrical Engineering, Electronic Engineering, Information Engineering

DOI

10.1109/PEMC48073.2021.9432583

More information

Created

11/15/2024