Abstract

Medium-voltage (MV) silicon carbide (SiC) devices have opened up new areas of applications which were previously dominated by silicon-based IGBTs. From the perspective of a power converter design, the development of MV SiC devices eliminates the need for series connected architectures, control of multilevel converter topologies which are necessary for MV applications, and the inherent reliability issues associated with it. However, when SiC devices are used in these applications, they are exposed to a high peak stress (5–10 kV) and a very high $dv/dt$ (10–100 kV/ $\mu$ s). Using these devices calls for a gate driver with a dc–dc isolation stage that has ultralow coupling capacitance in addition to be able to withstand the high isolation voltage. This paper presents a new MV gate driver design to address these issues while maintaining a minimal footprint for the gate driver. An MV isolation transformer is designed with a low interwinding capacitance, while maintaining the clearance, creepage, as well as insulation standards. A dc isolation test has been performed to validate the integrity of the insulating material. The key features include low input common mode current, and a short-circuit protection scheme specifically designed for 10 kV SiC mosfet s. The performance of the gate driver is evaluated using double pulse tests and continuous tests. Experimental results validate the advantages of the gate driver and its application for MV SiC devices exhibiting very high $dv/dt$ . The proposed gate driver concept is aimed at providing an efficient and reliable method to drive MV SiC devices.

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