Infineon Launches CoolMOS - High-Voltage Power
Transistors for High-End Power Supplies
PhysOrg.com
New MOSFETs Offer World's Lowest On-State Resistance and Fastest
Switching Speed
Continuing its tradition of pioneering innovations for the semiconductor
industry, Infineon Technologies today launched its CoolMOS CS Server
series of high-performance power transistors, designed specifically for
power supplies used in computer servers and other high-power-density
applications such as telecom equipment and flat panel displays. Heat
generated by the power supply can be a major problem and leads to costly
thermal management efforts. Infineon’s new family of power transistors
will enable power supply designs that are smaller, more energy efficient
and generate significantly less heat than alternative power transistors.
The CoolMOS CS Server series is being introduced at the 2005 Applied
Power Electronics Conference, taking place this week. Based on a
technical breakthrough that allows them to overcome the so-called
silicon limit for performance, the new CoolMOS CS Server metal-oxide
semiconductor field-effect transistors (MOSFETs) have the world’s lowest
on-state resistance of 99 mΩ (milliohms) in a standard TO 220 package,
or 45 mΩ in a standard TO 247 package, coupled with the industry’s
fastest switching speeds of 150 V (volts) per nanosecond and a 600 V
voltage blocking capability.
“Our latest generation of high-voltage power MOSFETs will make AC/DC
power supplies more efficient, more compact and easier to use
worldwide,” said Gerhard Wolf, director of marketing of Infineon’s power
management division. “With today’s hunger for power, intelligent and
efficient use of electrical power is a must.”
Infineon is demonstrating a 1000 W (watt) reference design for a server
power supply, with one 99 mΩ CoolMOS CS power transistor. It produces
1.5 per cent higher efficiency compared to a similar power supply made
using two commonly available, standard 250 mΩ MOSFETs, placed in
parallel. This increased efficiency results in more than 10 percent
system cost reduction per watt. It also enables the designer to realize
a smaller form factor for the system. In addition, Infineon is also
demonstrating a 1500 W power factor correction design, which achieves 99
percent efficiency with a 99mΩ CoolMOS CS power transistor, an industry
record.
The silicon limit
The ideal high-voltage switch (MOSFET) for use in a power supply should
have no resistance in its “on state”, when it conducts electricity.
Conversely, in its “off state”, it should block an infinitely high
voltage and prevent any electricity from flowing through it. In reality,
this proves to be impossible. Doubling the voltage blocking capability
typically leads to an increase in the on-state resistance by a factor of
five – a physical law often referred to as the silicon limit for
performance.
Infineon’s researchers overcame this fundamental barrier by clever
design of their high-voltage CoolMOS switch family. “To come as close as
possible to zero resistance we add more and more charge in the device
for current conduction,” said Dr. Gerald Deboy, head of technical
marketing for high-voltage discrete devices at Infineon Technologies,
who led the development team. “This charge is then counterbalanced by
exactly the same amount of charge of the opposite type. The two charges
are separated locally in the device by a very refined technology. In the
end, we get a pattern with very fine pitch. The finer the pitch can be
made, the lower the on-state resistance will be. With every CoolMOS
generation, we increase the fineness of the pitch, moving ever closer to
the zero resistance point without losing voltage blocking capability.”
Additional technical details about the CoolMOS CS Server series
The CoolMOS CS Server series offers the lowest on-state resistance in
every package at 600 V voltage blocking capability. This allows
designers to lower the conduction losses of power supply designs, which
increases efficiency. Higher efficiency allows the designer to have a
smaller form factor for the system, or to increase the output power of
the system without changing anything in the thermal management, directly
driving down system costs per watt. The benefit of low conduction losses
comes with very fast switching speed, which in turn will largely reduce
switching losses of the system. This fast switching speed can be used to
return from complex resonant power supply architectures to simple,
easy-to-design hard-switching AC/DC supply topologies. Additionally, the
new CoolMOS CS Server series requires very low gate-drive power,
allowing the use of low power standard gate drivers and ICs. The overall
result will be less-expensive, more compact systems, due to the
reduction in size and cost of passive components.
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