Diamond wafer based electronic vehicle power electronics
12581707 ยท 2026-03-17
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
H10D62/83
ELECTRICITY
H10D12/00
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A power device electronics system includes a thermal management configuration in which a power electronics chip is attached to a copper substrate and a single crystal diamond substrate attached to the copper substrate. The copper substrate is sandwiched between a first side of the diamond substrate and the power electronics chip.
Claims
1. A power device, comprising: a first power electronics chip attached to a first copper substrate; and a first diamond substrate attached to the first copper substrate, wherein the first copper substrate is sandwiched between a first side of the first diamond substrate and the first power electronics chip.
2. The device of claim 1, further comprising one or more pressure jets, each pressure jet being configured to direct pressurized coolant toward a second side of the first diamond substrate that is opposite the first side of the first diamond substrate.
3. The device of claim 2, wherein the one or more pressure jets include one or more pressure jets configured to deliver a perpendicular impact flow of coolant to the second side of the first diamond substrate.
4. The device of claim 1, wherein the first diamond substrate is a single crystal diamond (SCD) substrate.
5. The device of claim 1, wherein the first power electronics chip is a gallium nitride chip, a silicon carbide chip, or an insulated gate bipolar transistor silicon chip.
6. The device of claim 1, wherein the first power electronics chip includes one or more metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistor (MOSFET) devices.
7. The device of claim 6, wherein the one or more metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistor (MOSFET) devices include one or more Silicon Carbide (SiC) MOSFET devices.
8. The device of claim 7, wherein the one or more SiC MOSFET devices include three SiC MOSFET devices.
9. The device of claim 1 wherein a drain of the first power electronics chip is conductively coupled to the first copper substrate.
10. The device of claim 9 further comprising one or more conductive pillar structures coupled to the first copper substrate and conductively coupled to the drain of the first power electronics chip.
11. The device of claim 1 wherein the first power electronics chip includes a conductive source pad on a side of the first power electronics chip opposite the side of the first power electronics chip attached to the first copper substrate and conductively coupled to a source connection of the first power electronics chip.
12. The device of claim 11 further comprising a conductive clip coupled to the conductive source pad of the power electronics device wherein the conductive clip is conductively coupled to the source connection of the first power electronics chip.
13. The device of claim 12 wherein the conductive clip is conductively coupled and physically attached to the conductive source pad.
14. The device of claim 1 wherein the first power electronics chip includes a conductive gate pad on a side of the first power electronics chip opposite the side of the first power electronics chip attached to the first copper substrate and conductively coupled to a gate input of the first power electronics chip.
15. The device of claim 14 further comprising a gate router circuit conductively coupled to the gate pad of the first power electronics chip.
16. The device of claim 15 wherein the gate router circuit includes gate driver and current sense circuits.
17. The device of claim 15 wherein the gate router circuit includes a thin-flex printed circuit board.
18. The device of claim 1 further comprising a second power electronics chip attached to a second copper substrate and a second diamond substrate attached to the second copper substrate, wherein the second copper substrate is sandwiched between a first side of the second diamond substrate, and the power electronics chip wherein the second power electronics chip, second copper substrate, and second diamond substrate are arranged such that the first side of the first diamond substrate and the first side second diamond substrate are facing each other.
19. The device of claim 18 wherein the second power electronics chip is configured to operate anti-parallel with the first power electronics chip and the first and second power electronics chip form a first half bridge inverter.
20. The device of claim 19 further comprising a second half bridge inverter device conductively coupled to the first half bridge inverter forming a full H-Bridge inverter, wherein the second half bridge device is configured as set forth in claim 19.
21. The device of claim 19 further comprising two additional half bridge inverter devices conductively coupled to the first half bridge inverter forming a three-phase power inverter wherein the two additional half bridge devices are configured as set forth in claim 19.
22. The device of claim 21 further comprising at least one rigid conductive bus bar connecting the two additional Half bridge inverter devices and the first half bridge inverter.
23. A powered vehicle system comprising: at least one half bridge device having a power electronics chip mounted to a copper substrate and the copper substrate sandwiched between the power electronics chip and a diamond substrate; and a motor conductively coupled to the at least one half bridge device.
24. The powered vehicle system of claim 23 further comprising a wheel coupled to an output shaft of the motor wherein the output shaft of motor rotates the wheel.
25. The powered vehicle system of claim 23 further comprising a propeller coupled to an output shaft of the motor wherein the output shaft of the motor rotates the propeller and propeller is configured to generate thrust in a medium.
26. The powered vehicle system of claim 23 further comprising a differential coupled to an output shaft of the motor, wherein the differential is configured to deliver rotation from the output shaft of the motor to a differential output shaft.
27. The powered vehicle system of claim 25 further comprising at least one wheel attached to the differential output shaft wherein the differential output shafts delivers rotation to the wheel.
28. The powered vehicle system of claim 23 further comprising a gearbox coupled to the output shaft of the motor wherein in the gearbox is configured to convert a portion of rotational velocity the output shaft of the motor into torque.
29. The powered vehicle system of claim 23 further comprising at least one battery conductively coupled to the at least one half bridge device.
30. The powered vehicle system of claim 23 further comprising a controller communicatively coupled to the at least one half bridge device.
31. The powered vehicle system of claim 23 further comprising a cooling block coupled to the at least one half bridge device wherein the coolant block includes at least one pressure jet, each pressure jet being configured to direct pressurized coolant toward a side of the diamond substrate that is opposite the side of the diamond substrate that the copper substrate is attached.
32. The powered vehicle system of claim 31 wherein the at least one pressure jets include one or more pressure jets configured to deliver a perpendicular impact flow of coolant to the second side of the first diamond substrate.
33. The powered vehicle of claim 23 wherein the at least one half bridge device includes two half bridge devices operating as a full H-bridge.
34. The powered vehicle of claim 23 wherein the at least one half bridge device includes three half bridge devices operating as a three phase inverter.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
(14)
(15)
(16)
(17)
(18)
(19)
(20)
(21)
(22)
(23)
(24)
(25)
(26)
(27)
(28)
(29)
(30)
(31)
(32)
(33)
(34)
(35)
(36)
(37)
(38)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
Introduction
(39) The advent and now proven volume scaling and cost reduction of Diamond Foundry's novel single-crystal diamond wafer enables significant advances in electric vehicle power electronics, improving driving range by up to 5.3% as well as lifetime well beyond 300,000 miles.
Overview
(40) Electronic vehicle (EV) power electronics has increasingly become heat dissipation limited, and the potential range of electronics architectures has been limited by available materials. The thermal stress induced into power semiconductor switches has been a hard call to semiconductor and inverter companies, up to desperation. Engineers across the entire industry have been stuck using materials in their electronics design that do not truly meet the characteristics required for advancing EV power electronics, such in particular including a material that combines extreme thermal conductivity with extreme voltage insulation.
(41) Single-crystal diamond (SCD) is a most extreme materialin multiple dimensions and by a decisive factor eachin particular through its combination of extreme thermal conductivity and extreme electrical insulation. SCD exhibits remarkable dielectric properties including a low dielectric constant of 5.7, a loss tangent below 0.0001 at 35 GHz and a high dielectric strength of MV/cm. This means 20 um of SCD can insulate 20 kV while at the same time delivering thermal conductivity as high as 3,000 W/mK.
(42) Diamond Foundry, Inc. of South San Francisco, California has achieved production of single-crystal diamond in wafer dimensions covering the die sizes required by all commercially relevant computer and power-electronics chips.
(43) The Power Traction Inverter Dilemma
(44) An EV's Power Traction Inverter (PTI) is a critical element of electric mobility. Because of its level of complexity, electrical and thermal stress and eventually cost, PTIs have always been one of the weakest links of the electric mobility implementation, with a remarkable level of failure on the early development of this emerging market, and certainly a technological barrier of entry for OEM adoption. Driving conditions and style often induce substantial electrical and thermal stress to the active components of the inverter and their surrounding elements and if not properly addressed leads to drastic life reduction and eventually failures of the system.
(45) Power inverter advancement has been slow and incremental due to complex design and manufacturing aggravated by custom subsystems requirements, sophisticated integration of high-power electronics, material science, mechatronics, and thermal management. Power density is certainly the key metric of performance for modern power inverters underscoring technology and efficiency. As a reference, state-of-the-art designs exhibit 33 kW/L (Tesla Model 3 is 12 L, 4.8 kg, 400 kW) and 36 kW/L (Audi e-Tron is 5.5 L, 8 kg, 200 kW).
(46) Power semiconductors are essentially driven by two factors: Thermal conductivitythe path to cool them downand electrical conductivitythe path to carry high currents. Though the electrical path has been worked on for many years with more or less success, the thermal path has always been the main challenge.
(47) Besides the need for high thermal and electrical conductivity, power semiconductors need to be electrically isolated from the rest of the environment because they carry high voltages; this is a safety requirement. Unfortunately, voltage isolation barriers (like DBC substrates) usually demonstrate poor thermal conductivity. Common isolation barriers like high thermal conductivity compounds exhibit 2 to 5 W/mK, state of the art oxides such as Aluminum Oxide (Al2O3) show a 24 to 28 W/mK, more modern Aluminum Nitride (AlN) realistically offer 150 to 180 W/mK, therefore keeping a substantial undesirable thermal difference in between the semiconductor junction temperature (Tj) and the cooling mechanism (usually liquid glycol) at the thickness required to ensure electrical isolation.
(48) Power semiconductors such as Silicon Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistors (Si IGBTs) and Silicon Carbide metal oxide semiconductor field effect transistors (SiC MOSFETs) have the same electrical and thermal path through their bottom side unlike other power dissipating devices such as MCU, logic, memory and DSP chips. Today's most common solution to ensure electrical insulation, and high current carrying capability for Si IGBT and SiC MOSFETs are Direct Bonded Copper (DBC) substrates. Unfortunately, they do not provide high heat carrying capacity.
(49) Diamond Based Power Electronics
(50) Because of its remarkable properties, diamond and diamond based solutions have always been on the far reaching scope of power semiconductors developers. Someone would call it the Holy Grail for semiconductors applications. This is the only known material in nature that exhibits ultra-high thermal conductivity and ultra-high band gap. Unlike graphene (another allotrope of carbon) which is electrically conductive, diamond is a premium isolator. Diamond Foundry now offers a practical and cost affordable solution to a very old issue: How to implement a cool down path efficiently to a power semiconductor and insure dielectric isolation at the same time.
(51) The advantages of diamond have long been well-known, indeed this not being any surprise or novelty. What is new and disruptive is that Diamond Foundry has now managed to a. produce high-quality single-crystal diamond wafers for all chip die sizes; b. drive down cost to the levels required by automotive power electronics; and c. novel power electronics architectures that fully utilize the capabilities of novel diamond wafers.
(52) Prior work by our team as well as other groups has shown that diamonds reduce peak temperature by as much as 20% for various semiconductors, such reduction improving power efficiency by 10% during such periods.
(53) SCD wafers can be used close to the switching semiconductor device junction in multiple ways: replace ceramics (e.g., Aluminum Oxide (Al.sub.2O.sub.3), Aluminum Nitride (AlN), Silicon Nitride (Si.sub.3N.sub.4)) in direct-bonded-copper (DBC) substrates; replace heat spreaders in novel discrete packages; allow for thinning the semiconductor wafer. SCD wafers allow inverter size, weight, and cost reductions based on any and all semiconductor technologies, not requiring a bet on a novel form of a semiconductor gaining commercial traction.
(54) The Importance of Sustaining a Lower Junction Temperature
(55) The thermal stress induced into power semiconductor switches yields failure as well as energy efficiency loss. As a general rule of thumb, every 10 C. increase in temperature reduces the semiconductor life expectancy by half, setting for example the trend to higher-temperature resilient silicon designs to 200 C from 175 C for Silicon Carbide power switches. Unlike IGBTs who have an almost constant V.sub.ce(sat) versus temperature coefficient, MOSFET's (including SiC) RdsON is a Positive Temperature Depending Parameter (TDP) which means that RdsON increases with temperature.
(56)
(57)
(58) Since onboard EV's coolant temperature is set to be 80 C as a standard, the challenge here is to keep the Tj as close as possible to coolant to eliminate the unnecessary conduction losses induced by the Tj in the exponential region and part of the linear region too for SiC and allow for a die surface area reduction for IGBTs. Bipolar structures such as IGBTs are quite resilient in respect of forward current as long as temperature dependency latch up conditions are not triggered. It is generally admitted that current density of up to 1000 A/cm2 set the limit and IGBTs manufacturer stay usually in the 80 to 90% of this limit over the temperature range. Mastering the junction temperature for IGBTs under the latch up condition enables a substantial die size active area reduction proportionately impacting the switching losses that IGBTs have been suffering since inception. Properly applied thermal management solutions such as Diamond Foundry solutions could see the equalization of modern SiC and antique IGBTs technologies for E-Mobility frequency switching range (10-20 kHz) at the of the cost.
(59) Specific Impact on EV Driving Range
(60)
(61) The Inverter Power Losses to be Saved column shows the energy to be saved from the battery at various Tj, and the range is calculated accordingly from the battery capacity. Assuming the power switches Tj can be kept near by the coolant temperature (80 C) the total power losses saving could reach up to 2812 W per battery charge or 11.72 miles or 5.33% range increase.
(62) This study is conservative in that it does not take in consideration the regenerative power saving which is estimated to be 15-20% of these figures. This includes power losses temperature dependency in Fast Recovery Diodes (FRD) associated to IGBTs, thermal dependency losses of the SiC MOSFET intrinsic diodes (which exhibit poor performances vs temperature) and the reduction of associated circuitry such as gate driver and collateral components. Size reduction in such proportion open the possibility to a direct integration inverter-motor eradicating power losses in cables length and terminals accounting for another few fractions of percent of the battery capacity.
(63) Beyond Temperature: Enabling Single-Form Factor Architecture for EV Power Electronics
(64) Combining the extraordinary thermal-conductivity, voltage-insulation, and wafer-finish properties of single-crystal diamond wafers, now available from Diamond Foundry, novel device and system designs as well as more efficient assembly processes are enabled that the industry has not yet had the opportunity to pursue for GaN, SiC and IGBTs silicon chips.
(65) In particular, Diamond Foundry's SCD wafer enables single-form-factor power inverters to exceed 1000 kW/L (e.g., 400 kW for a 0.4 L system). This comes with a greater system efficiency, losses and system cost reduction translating into energy saving and electric mobility range extension.
(66) A novel thermal management configuration according to aspects of the present disclosure is shown in
(67) One or more pressurized coolant jets 8 deliver coolant 6 to the exposed surface of the diamond wafer 7, offering a perpendicular-impact flow yielding greater performance than laminar, turbulent, or turbulent thin fins solution. The corresponding thermal impedance model depicted in
(68) Because the dramatic reduction of total Rth (0.0155 from state of the art 0.11) the silicon die Tj is now intimately related to the coolant temperature in a lockdown position creating a Tj clamp at around 12 C above the coolant enabling significant saving in conduction losses compared to those described with respect to
(69) The advanced material and thermal management technology of a configuration like that of
(70) Example Implementation
(71) 400 kW Power Inverter Design Introduction:
(72) 1) Single Switch Description
(73) In this example, single switch construction starts with, a 19.50.6 mm silver (Ag) plated copper Top substrate 102 attached to a 200.3 mm SCD chip 104. Next, as shown in
(74) By way of example, and not by way of limitation the MOSFETs 106 may be 130 A 1200V silicon carbide (SiC) MOSFET devices formed on 88 mm silicon chips. Next, as shown in
(75) As shown in
(76) Subsequently, two identical structures of the type shown in
(77) Two of the half bridge inverter devices may be arranged together to create a full H-bridge for motor control or as a power converter, such as an AC-to-AC converter, DC-to-DC converter, or DC-to-AC converter.
(78) Three half bridge devices may be arranged in parallel as shown below in
(79) The single crystal diamond chip (SCD) 104 allows for efficient cooling of the MOSFETS in each half-bridge device. Cooling blocks 130 may be coupled to each side of the three-phase inverter device as shown in
(80) The cooling block 130 may include multiple bell nozzles 135 for example and without limitation, one for each of the MOSFETs 106. As previously discussed, each nozzle 135 may be located such that it is directly behind one of the MOSFETS and directs a jet flow of coolant onto the SCD 104 directly behind the MOSFET. A coolant O-ring seal 137 may prevent the escape of coolant from around the SCD 104.
(81) The front view of
(82)
(83)
(84) According to additional aspects of the present disclosure the three-phase inverter device may be integrated into an electric vehicle for example an electric car, plane, helicopter, train, ship, or submarine.
(85)
(86)
(87)
Glossary
(88) MOSFET: Metal Oxide Field Effect Transistor: A power Switch IGBT: Insulated Gate Bipolar Transistor: A power Switch V.sub.ce(Sat): Voltage Collector-Emitter when Saturated RdsON: Resistance Drain Source ON state of a MOSFET transistor PTI's: Power Traction Inverters OEM: Original Equipment Manufacturer (i.e. a car brand/manufacturer) DC: Direct Current AC: Alternating Current kW: Kilo Watt, 1000 Watts MW: Mega Watts, 1000 kW SAC305: A solder paste Sn(tin) Ag(Silver) Cu(Copper) respectively 97.3, 0.5% mixt W/mK: Watts per meters (in 3 dimensions) per Kelvin, a measure of thermal impedance IMS: Insulated Metal Substrate Rth: Thermal Impedance kV: Kilo Volts, 1000 Volts SiC: Silicon Carbide, a technology used to produce transistors mOhm: Milli Ohm, an Ohm divided by 1000. Tj: Temperature Junction, the temperature of a silicon chip