METAL-COATED, POLYMER-ENCAPSULATED ELECTRONICS MODULES AND METHODS FOR MAKING THE SAME
20220328427 · 2022-10-13
Assignee
Inventors
- Anthony M. Coppola (Rochester Hills, MI, US)
- Seongchan Pack (West Bloomfield, MI, US)
- Ming Liu (Troy, MI, US)
Cpc classification
H01L25/18
ELECTRICITY
H01L2224/32227
ELECTRICITY
H02M7/003
ELECTRICITY
H01L23/552
ELECTRICITY
H01L23/564
ELECTRICITY
B60K1/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B60K1/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01L23/552
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
Presented are metal-coated, polymer-encapsulated power semiconductor modules, methods for making/using such power modules, and vehicles with traction power inverters containing such power modules. A power electronics assembly includes one or more power semiconductor modules packaged inside an assembly housing. Each power module includes a substrate, a semiconductor device mounted on the substrate, a polymeric encapsulant encasing therein the substrate and semiconductor device, and an electrical lead connected to the semiconductor device and projecting from the polymeric encapsulant. A metallic or ceramic coating is applied to select sections of the polymeric encapsulant's exposed exterior surface. The metallic/ceramic coating may be a single metallic layer that covers substantially all of the exposed surface area of the polymeric encapsulant's exterior surface. An optional hydrophobic polymer layer, passivated layer, and/or oxidized layer may cover the exterior surface of this metallic layer. Alternatively, another metallic layer or intercalated lamellar microstructures may cover the metallic layer.
Claims
1. A power electronics assembly, comprising: an assembly housing; and a power module packaged in the assembly housing and including a substrate, a semiconductor device mounted on the substrate, a polymeric encapsulant encasing therein the substrate and the semiconductor device, an electrical lead connected to the semiconductor device and projecting from the polymeric encapsulant, and a metallic and/or ceramic coating on an exterior surface of the polymeric encapsulant.
2. The power electronics assembly of claim 1, wherein the metallic and/or ceramic coating includes a first metallic layer mounted directly onto and covering most, but not all, of an exposed surface area of the exterior surface of the polymeric encapsulant.
3. The power electronics assembly of claim 2, wherein the metallic and/or ceramic coating further includes a hydrophobic polymer layer covering an exterior surface of the first metallic layer opposite an interior surface thereof adjoining the polymeric encapsulant.
4. The power electronics assembly of claim 3, wherein the exterior surface of the first metallic layer covered by the hydrophobic polymer layer includes an etched or roughened finish.
5. The power electronics assembly of claim 2, wherein the metallic and/or ceramic coating further includes a passivated layer and/or an oxidized layer on an exterior surface of the first metallic layer.
6. The power electronics assembly of claim 2, wherein the metallic and/or ceramic coating further includes a second metallic layer covering the first metallic layer, the first metallic layer including a first metallic material, and the second metallic layer including a second metallic material distinct from the first metallic material.
7. The power electronics assembly of claim 6, wherein the first metallic material includes zinc and the second metallic material includes steel.
8. The power electronics assembly of claim 2, wherein the metallic and/or ceramic coating further includes intercalated lamellar microstructures on an exterior surface of the first metallic layer.
9. The power electronics assembly of claim 1, wherein the metallic and/or ceramic coating has a thickness of about 1 micrometer (μm) to about 500 μm.
10. The power electronics assembly of claim 1, wherein the assembly housing includes a first polymeric material and the polymeric encapsulant includes a second polymeric material distinct from the first polymeric material.
11. The power electronics assembly of claim 10, wherein the first polymeric material includes an epoxy with silica, a polyamide, a polyphthalamide, and/or a polyphenylene sulfide, and the second polymeric material includes an epoxy-based, bismaleimide-based, and/or silicone-based mold compound.
12. The power electronics assembly of claim 1, wherein the assembly housing includes an elongated body with an inlet port, an outlet port, and a coolant fluid channel fluidly connecting the inlet and outlet ports, the fluid channel extending longitudinally through the housing body between an interior surface of the assembly housing and a major surface of the power module.
13. The power electronics assembly of claim 12, wherein the power module further comprises: a thermally conductive heat transfer plate attached to the semiconductor device and defining the major surface of the power module; and an array of heat transfer fins mounted onto the major surface of the power module and disposed within the fluid channel.
14. An electric-drive vehicle comprising: a vehicle body with a plurality of road wheels; an electric traction motor mounted to the vehicle body and operable to drive one or more of the road wheels to thereby propel the electric-drive vehicle; a rechargeable traction battery pack mounted to the vehicle body and operable to power the electric traction motor; and a traction power inverter module (TPIM) electrically connecting the traction battery pack to the electric traction motor, the TPIM including a power module package with an assembly housing, a coolant fluid channel within the assembly housing and passing therethrough a coolant fluid, and a plurality of power modules packaged in the assembly housing, each of the power modules including a substrate, a plurality of semiconductor devices mounted on the substrate, a polymeric encapsulant encasing therein the substrate and the semiconductor devices, a plurality of electrical leads connected to the semiconductor devices and projecting from the polymeric encapsulant, and a multilayer metallic coating on an exterior surface of the polymeric encapsulant and located in spaced non-contacting relation from the electrical leads.
15. A method of manufacturing a power electronics assembly, the method comprising: forming an assembly housing; assembling a power module including a substrate, a semiconductor device mounted on the substrate, and an electrical lead connected to the semiconductor device; encasing the substrate and the semiconductor device in a polymeric encapsulant; applying a metallic and/or ceramic coating on an exterior surface of the polymeric encapsulant; and locating the power module encased in the polymeric encapsulant with the metallic and/or ceramic coating in the assembly housing.
16. The method of claim 15, wherein the metallic and/or ceramic coating includes a first metallic layer mounted directly onto and covering most, but not all, of an exposed surface area of the exterior surface of the polymeric encapsulant.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein the metallic and/or ceramic coating further includes a hydrophobic polymer layer covering an exterior surface of the first metallic layer opposite an interior surface thereof adjoining the polymeric encapsulant.
18. The method of claim 16, wherein the metallic and/or ceramic coating further includes a passivated layer and/or an oxidized layer on an exterior surface of the first metallic layer.
19. The method of claim 16, wherein the metallic and/or ceramic coating further includes a second metallic layer covering the first metallic layer, the first metallic layer including a first metallic material, and the second metallic layer including a second metallic material distinct from the first metallic material.
20. The method of claim 16, wherein the metallic and/or ceramic coating further includes an intercalated lamellar microstructures on an exterior surface of the first metallic layer.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022] Representative embodiments of this disclosure are shown by way of non-limiting example in the drawings and are described in additional detail below. It should be understood, however, that the novel aspects of this disclosure are not limited to the particular forms illustrated in the above-enumerated drawings. Rather, the disclosure is to cover all modifications, equivalents, combinations, subcombinations, permutations, groupings, and alternatives falling within the scope of this disclosure as encompassed, for instance, by the appended claims.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0023] This disclosure is susceptible of embodiment in many different forms. Representative examples of the disclosure are shown in the drawings and herein described in detail with the understanding that these embodiments are provided as an exemplification of the disclosed principles, not limitations of the broad aspects of the disclosure. To that end, elements and limitations that are described, for example, in the Abstract, Introduction, Summary, Description of the Drawings, and Detailed Description sections, but not explicitly set forth in the claims, should not be incorporated into the claims, singly or collectively, by implication, inference, or otherwise. Moreover, the drawings discussed herein may not be to scale and are provided purely for instructional purposes. Thus, the specific and relative dimensions shown in the Figures are not to be construed as limiting.
[0024] For purposes of the present detailed description, unless specifically disclaimed: the singular includes the plural and vice versa; the words “and” and “or” shall be both conjunctive and disjunctive; the words “any” and “all” shall both mean “any and all”; and the words “including,” “containing,” “comprising,” “having,” and permutations thereof, shall each mean “including without limitation.” Moreover, words of approximation, such as “about,” “almost,” “substantially,” “generally,” “approximately,” and the like, may each be used herein in the sense of “at, near, or nearly at,” or “within 0-5% of,” or “within acceptable manufacturing tolerances,” or any logical combination thereof, for example. Lastly, directional adjectives and adverbs, such as fore, aft, inboard, outboard, starboard, port, vertical, horizontal, upward, downward, front, back, left, right, etc., may be with respect to a motor vehicle, such as a forward driving direction of a motor vehicle, when the vehicle is operatively oriented on a horizontal driving surface.
[0025] Referring now to the drawings, wherein like reference numbers refer to like features throughout the several views, there is shown in
[0026] Electric-drive vehicle 10 of
[0027] To propel the vehicle 10 during either FWD or AWD operating modes, a first prime mover, which may be in the nature of a front (primary) drive unit 20, generates tractive torque for driving both of the front drive wheels 16, 17. Packaged within the front drive unit 20 is an electric traction motor 22 that is mechanically coupled to the front left and right wheels 16, 17 via a front (first) driveline 25. In accord with the illustrated example, the front driveline 25 utilizes an integrated transmission, differential and axle (transaxle) unit 26 with independent half-shafts 27 for coupling the motor 22 to the wheels 16, 17. A front (first) power inverter module (PIM) 24 electrically connects the drive unit motor 22 to a rechargeable energy storage system (RESS) 14. For a fully integrated drive unit assembly, the motor, inverter, and transmission of a DU 20, 30, 40 are packaged as a unitary construction with internal cooling and high specific power capabilities.
[0028] Operation of the front drive unit 20 and associated PIM 24 is provisioned by a resident vehicle controller 50, which may include a resident memory device 51 and one or more subsystem control modules 53, which may comprise any one or more of a Powertrain Control Module (PCM), an Advanced Driver Assistance System (ADAS) module, an Electronic Battery Control Module (EBCM), a Brake System Control Module (BSCM), etc. Front-left and front-right (disc, drum, or air) friction brakes 28 and 29, respectively, are selectively engaged to decelerate the front drive wheels 16, 17 in response to a braking command, e.g., from BSCM of vehicle controller 50. A high-voltage electrical bus 12 couples the vehicle's three drive units 20, 30, 40 to the RESS 14. In at least some implementations, the RESS 14 is configured as a multi-cell lithium-ion device capable of charging and discharging under a range of conditions. Although portrayed with a single prime mover embodied as a traction motor, the front powertrain PTF may employ multiple traction motors, an engine assembly, or a hybrid combination of an engine and a motor.
[0029] To propel the vehicle 10 during either AWD or, if available, RWD operating modes, second and third prime movers, which may be in the nature of a left-rear (first auxiliary) drive unit 30 and a right-rear (second auxiliary) drive unit 40, generate tractive torque for independently driving the rear drive wheels 18, 19. Packaged within the left-rear drive unit 30 is first auxiliary electric traction motor 32 that is mechanically coupled to the rear-left wheel 18 via a rear-left driveline 35. In the same vein, a second auxiliary electric traction motor 42 is packaged within the right-rear drive unit 40 and mechanically coupled to the rear-right wheel 19 via a rear-right driveline 45. The rear-left driveline 35 utilizes an independent differential unit 36 and dedicated rear half-shaft 37 for coupling the motor 32 to the rear-left drive wheel 18. Likewise, the rear-right driveline 45 utilizes its own independent differential unit 46 and dedicated rear half-shaft 47 for coupling the motor 42 to the rear-right drive wheel 19. For at least some desired applications, each traction motor 22, 32, 42 is a polyphase AC permanent magnet (PM) motor generator unit (MGU).
[0030] A rear-left (second) power inverter module 34 electrically connects the rear-left drive unit motor 32 to the RESS 14 via bus 12, and a rear-right (third) power inverter module 44 electrically connects the rear-right drive unit motor 42 to the RESS 14 via bus 12. Independent operation of the rear drive units 30, 40 and their respective PIMs 34, 44 may also be provisioned by the resident vehicle controller 50. Each PIM 24, 34, 44 is an element of the DU power electronics control (PEC) subsystem that regulates transmission of electrical energy to and from the traction motors 22, 32, 42 and, when desired, converts high-voltage DC power into three-phase AC power, and vice versa, as needed. A traction PIM may include a set of power inverters, high-speed transistors, and capacitor-based filters along with motor control hardware to receive motor control commands for providing motor drive and regeneration functionality. Rear-left and rear-right friction brakes 38 and 39, respectively, are selectively engaged to decelerate the rear-left and rear-right wheels 18, 19 in response to associated braking commands, e.g., from vehicle controller 50.
[0031] RESS 14 is adapted for storing and supplying high-voltage electrical energy used for propelling the electric-drive vehicle 10 of
[0032] Discussed below are representative power electronics systems with active electronics components that are encapsulated within electrically insulating polymers that are covered in moisture-resistant metallic or ceramic coatings. In a power inverter package, for example, the delicate semiconductor electronics are encased within an encapsulating polymer for increased environmental protection and electrical isolation. Over the operational lifetime of the power electronics system, however, an uncoated polymeric encapsulant may deteriorate and eventually begin to absorb moisture. This absorbed moisture, in turn, may reduce the electrical performance of the assembly and may corrode the embedded electronics, potentially requiring repair or replacement. Some existing designs utilize metal cooling plates to allow the polymer-encapsulated electronics to be submerged in a cooling fluid. This approach, however, increases material and fabrication costs, packaging requirements, and overall mass of the system. Electromagnetic noise is also emitted by the device, which may need to be shielded to prevent interference with other systems.
[0033] To minimize the ingress of moisture into a power semiconductor module, a metallic coating and/or a ceramic coating may be applied onto the polymer encapsulant. Use of a metallic and/or ceramic coating on the polymer encapsulant acts a moisture barrier and an EMI shield while enabling the system to be submerged in a liquid coolant to provide direct cooling of the semiconductor devices. This metallic/ceramic layer may have a substantially uniform thickness of about 1 μm to about 500 μm. A predefined clearance (e.g., a gap of approximately 2-4 mm) may be maintained between the metallic coating and the module's high-voltage and low-voltage electrical leads to prevent shorting and electrical interference. A metal/ceramic coating may be applied to additional segments of the power module package to improve bonding of the power modules to a polymer assembly housing. Anti-permeation of moisture into an encapsulated power module may be achieved by application of a structurally engineered metal coating system, which alters surface properties, such as lowering surface energy and increasing surface roughness, and establishes physical barriers to reduce diffusion coefficients of absorbed molecules.
[0034]
[0035] As best seen in
[0036] Mounted onto opposing top and bottom sides of the module body 106 is a pair of heat transfer plates 118 and 120 that sandwich therebetween the semiconductor devices 112, 114. These two heat transfer plates 118, 120 are at least partially uncovered by a mold compound 105 of the module body 106 such that a top (first) major surface 107 of the body 106 of the power module 102 is at least partially defined by the top (first) heat transfer plate 118 and a bottom (second) major surface 109 of the body 106 is at least partially defined by the bottom (second) heat transfer plate 120. The heat transfer plates 118, 120 may be made of a metal and/or a ceramic material that exhibits high thermal conductivity (e.g., greater than about 20 W/m.Math.K at ambient temperature) and a low coefficient of thermal expansion (e.g., less than about 10 ppm/K at ambient temperature). As used herein, the term “metal” or “metallic” may refer to elemental metals as well as metal alloys that include a combination of an elemental metal and one or more alloying elements. For instance, each heat transfer plate 118, 120 may be a direct bonded copper (DBC) sandwich structure with a ceramic core 115 (e.g., alumina or aluminum nitride) and copper skins 117 formed on or bonded to opposing upper and lower surfaces of the core 115, as shown in
[0037] In the body 106 of the power module 102, the semiconductor devices 112, 114 are mounted on the substrate 116, electrically coupled to the leads 108, 110, sandwiched between the heat transfer plates 118, 120, and encapsulated in a polymeric mold compound 105. This mold compound 105 (also referred to therein as “polymeric encapsulant”) may contain any suitable polymeric material, including epoxy-based, bismaleimide-based, and/or silicone-based polymeric materials. Additional encapsulant options may include thermoset polymers, such as polyurethane, phenolic resins, bismaleimides, polyimides, polyesters, silicones, or other amorphous thermosets, as well as thermoplastic polymers, such as polypropylene, ABS, PVC, PPS, PA, PPA, PAI, PEEK, PE or other semi-crystalline thermoplastics. Also featured in available mold compound compositions are release agents, pigments, silicas, phenolic hardeners, cure-accelerating catalysts, and non-conductive fillers (e.g., minerals, glass, fibers, phosphates, hydroxylates, etc.). Free “outboard” ends of the leads 108, 110 protrude out from the mold compound 105 and through sidewalls of the assembly housing 104. The outermost, exposed surface of the mold compound 105, including the outward-facing surface areas not covered by the plates 118, 120 or occluded by the leads 108, 110, may be modified to increase surface energy, such as by chemical etching or plasma treatment, to improve bonding to a metal or ceramic coating 122, described in further detail hereinbelow.
[0038] With collective reference to
[0039] The assembly housing 104, including the housing's top and bottom halves 121, 123 and the housing's inlet and outlet ports 126, 128, may be integrally formed as a unitary, one-piece structure. In such case, the entire housing 104 may be formed, e.g., via two-shot injection molding, around the power module 102 to define the internal fluid channels 101, 103 in a single manufacturing step. In other embodiments, the housing 104 may be a multi-part construction formed from numerous discrete components that are positioned around the power modules 102 and then joined to one another along interfaces therebetween. Portions of the housing 104 that directly interface with an exterior surface of a power module 102 may be physically attached thereto during assembly of the power module package 100, for example. An adhesive or sealant may be used to bond the top and bottom halves 121, 123 of the housing 104 to one another and/or to the interfacing exterior surfaces of the power modules 102. Such an adhesive or sealant may be a silicon-based polymeric material, such as epoxy, parylene, or a room-temperature-vulcanizing (RTV) silicone. The assembly housing 104 may be fabricated from a dielectric polymer, which may be a thermosetting or a thermoplastic polymeric material. The housing 104 may be made from an epoxy-and-silica composition or from any of the polymeric materials identified above with respect to the mold compound 105 of the power module body 106. As yet a further option, the housing 104 may be formed with a polyamide, a polyphthalamide, or a Polyphenylene sulfide, any of which may be glass-fiber, silica, and/or mineral filled.
[0040] To increase heat transfer from the power modules 102 into the coolant fluid C.sub.FL, a top (first) and a bottom (second) array of heat transfer fins 130 and 132, respectively, are mounted onto respective top and bottom major surfaces 107, 109 of the power module body 106 and disposed within respective fluid channels 101, 103. A top array of fins 130 is shown physically mounted along a bottom end thereof onto the top major surface 107 of each power module 102 and along a top end thereof to an inside surface of the housing's top half 121. Likewise, a bottom array of fins 132 is physically mounted along a top end thereof to the bottom major surface 109 of each power module 102 and along a bottom end thereof onto an inside surface of the housing's bottom half 123. In the embodiment depicted in
[0041] The fluid channels 101, 103 direct a flow of coolant fluid C.sub.FL (e.g., water, glycol, or both) across and into direct contact with both major surfaces 107, 109 of the power modules 102. At the same time, the flow of coolant fluid C.sub.FL is guided through and into direct contact with the waveform surfaces of the fins 130, 132 to effectively and efficiently transfer heat away from the power modules 102 via convection. The top coolant fluid channel 101 extends through the housing 104 in a longitudinal direction parallel to the central longitudinal axis A.sub.L between the top 121 of the housing 104 and the top major surface 107 of the power module 102. In the same vein, the bottom coolant fluid channel 103 extends through the housing 104 in a longitudinal direction parallel to the longitudinal axis A.sub.L of the housing 104 between the bottom 123 of the housing 14 and the bottom major surface 109 of the modules 102.
[0042] To greatly minimize the ingress of moisture into the individual power modules 102, a moisture-impermeable metallic and/or ceramic layer 122 may be added onto select sections of the polymeric encapsulant 105.
[0043] Continuing with the discussion of the metallic/ceramic layer 122,
[0044] For at least some embodiments, the non-permeable metallic/ceramic layer 122, including all six of the above-enumerates sections 122A-122F, may be formed as a unitary, single-piece structure. Alternatively, any one or more or all of the above-enumerates sections 122A-122F may be formed as discrete or coterminous sections. Moreover, the metallic/ceramic layer 122 may include greater or fewer sections that are located at the same or different sections to that which are shown in
[0045] As shown in
[0046] Multi-metal coatings may be typified by a non-permeable layer 122 with a primary metallic layer 125 that is formed, in whole or in part, from a first metallic material, and a supplemental layer 127 that is formed, in whole or in part, from a second metallic material distinct from the first metallic material. In a non-limiting example, the primary metallic layer 125 is formed from zinc and the supplemental layer 127 is formed from steel. The auxiliary layer 129 may be formed, in whole or in part, from a third metallic material that is the same as or distinct from the first and/or second metallic materials. Any one or more or all of the layers 125, 127, 129 may be formed from other metallic materials, including aluminum, copper, tin, other ferrous metals, or alloys of any of the herein-described metallic materials. Optionally, the first layer 125 may be a metal-to-plastic adhesive for bonding the second (metallic) layer 127 to the polymeric encapsulant 105, or the second layer 127 may be a metal-to-metal adhesive for bonding the third (metallic) layer 129 to the first (metallic) layer 125.
[0047] Rather than an all-metal construction, the non-permeable layer 122 may include supplemental and/or auxiliary layers 127, 129 formed with a ceramic material or a polymeric material. For instance, the supplemental layer 127 or the auxiliary layer 129 may be formed, in whole or in part, from a hydrophobic polymer, such as a urethane-based or silane-based seal coat. As a further option, one or both of the optional layers 127, 129 may be formed from silicates, phosphates, hydroxylates, etc. To increase contact surface area and bonding strength between adjoining metal and polymeric layers, the interfacing surface areas of the exposed exterior surface of the polymeric encapsulant 105 and/or the primary metallic layer 125 may have an etched or roughened finish. In the same vein, contact surface area and bonding strength between adjoining metal layers may be increased by etching/roughening the interfacing surface areas of the exposed exterior surface of the primary layer 125.
[0048] As noted above, anti-permeation of moisture into the polymeric encapsulant 105 can be achieved by application of a structurally engineered coating system 122 that alters encapsulant surface properties, such as lowering surface energy and increasing surface roughness, and establishes physical barriers to reduce diffusion coefficients of absorbed molecules. Densification processes, such as thermal impact spraying, powder molding, or laser pinning, may apply intercalated lamellar structures onto the primary metallic layer 125 or the secondary metallic layer 127, e.g., to improve stress and energy-dissipation characteristics. Densification may be achieved using thermal spray techniques, power metallurgy processes, or other suitable metal-densification methods. An exterior surface of a metallic layer, such as primary and/or supplemental metallic layers 125, 127 may be modified to include one or more passivated layer and/or oxidized layers. Oxidated layers may be formed using a chemical reaction between oxygen and a metallic coating layer to optimize its potential difference.
[0049] Aspects of the present disclosure have been described in detail with reference to the illustrated embodiments; those skilled in the art will recognize, however, that many modifications may be made thereto without departing from the scope of the present disclosure. The present disclosure is not limited to the precise construction and compositions disclosed herein; any and all modifications, changes, and variations apparent from the foregoing descriptions are within the scope of the disclosure as defined by the appended claims. Moreover, the present concepts expressly include any and all combinations and subcombinations of the preceding elements and features.