zombiess
10 MW
did you happen to make note of the ringing frequency as you added capacitance?
Frequency stays the same the size of the ring goes down as I switch slower.zombiess said:did you happen to make note of the ringing frequency as you added capacitance?
I am not going to run more then 200nf added the gate on the igbt is 90nf at 10v so ~ 140 nf at 15v my goal was for a 1:1 ratio or even less. I just wanted to try going that far to see if I could ever make it perfect and I could not.Lebowski said:be carefult with the high gate capacitance, 600nF at 15V, 5 kHz will lead to almost 1W of dissipation in the gate resistors, so make sure they can handle the heat.
Ok the last 4 pictures are the lower IGBT I will see if the diff probe shows the same. BTW I solved the desat problem a long time ago. It's a timing issue. But solved.HighHopes said:u should only EVER be using differential probes for anything measured on the gate driver. best probes are made by tektronics, u need 1000V rated min.
common mode noise.. next is to see if it is the probe or true common mode noise. was your dif probe on the yellow? if not, take a shot with diff probe on yellow (nothing on blue since u have only one diff probe). and also both diff probes on gate pin. probably you will see the same as you already showed for yellow trace. make sure to twist the leads. using the diff probe on G/E should be useful to know if it is probe common mode noise or real. if u still see it, chances are its real.
fixing common mode nosie measured G/E. for an upper IGBT, basically what's happening here is you have ground bounce between the "ground" on your gate driver (which is the mid point of your power supply which needs good connection to your IGBT emitter pin) with respect to the phase out node (upper IGBT E, lower IGBT C). using only ONE diff probe (two if you had two diff probes) also eliminates the chance that your scope is bouncing via normal probe's ground clip. its similar for lower IGBT but we're talking more about lower IGBT E, DC Link Neg. if you have an inductance between these two nodes then its not a solid connection and that would account for the ground bounce common mode noise. if this is the case, its not easy to fix.. though there are a couple of things you can try which are easy but if that don't work.. likely u have to scrap the design. i hope it doesn't come to that but this is the whole reason behind learning at lower power levels how to do things properly because at higher power levels you have less margin to success. anyway, we'll see.
its hard to say if any of that common mode noise is contributing to your desat tripping off when it should not. noise can do funny things though.
not sure what TP- is.. hopefully not "test point". its not good to have test points in gate driver circuit.. way too much noise these things act like antennas. i've only done that once with a gate driver about your power level and it was hard. i put series resistor with each test point so that i could de-populate resistor and let test points float so they out of circuit normal operation.then 1 of the TP-
I will try them again because the info is convoluted with different tests. I actually made things better and the only thing I did was remove snubber caps you wanted me to put onHighHopes said:I am suspecting the same. But how it makes G/E ring like that. This is why I posted those three drawings last night
If you have already done those experiments and know the results you do not need to repeat its ok.
I think the 2.5 MHz ring left when I removed the snubbers. (what HH calls snubbers NOT the other guys)zombiess said:Large overshoot at turn off often means large layout inductance. I noticed in the above shots that your ringing freq is 2.5MHz. I have only seen ringing frequencies in the +20MHz area in my limited experience. This ringing freq is determined by layout inductance and the devices output capacitance. Being that your ringing is 2.5MHz and the large overshoot at turn off, I suspect you have a large inductance present in the layout.
The on looks fine.Njay said:Arlin, do you have this trace but for the turn on part, in as much detail (zoom on time and voltage) of the switching on as possible (with info on time and voltage scales)?
yes I know, this is just data to try to estimate your layout's inductance.Arlo1 said:The on looks fine.
I am working on the off events its what needs attention if I make the off better I might then re-visit the on and see If I can speed it up. But for now its fine.
Yellow is probe x10 and 1.76mV/A, right?Arlo1 said:Here is a picture. The Blue trace Is E-C (DC- to Phase) on the low side. Don't worry about he yellow its very zoomed in of the current measurement.
As you can see the on is very clean. The Diff probe is 200:1
HighHopes said:I am suspecting the same. But how it makes G/E ring like that.
On the turn on it starts with a slow slope then a second faster slope. Blue trace as you asked for on the left side where is goes down. When it goes up its a off event that I need to address.Njay said:Which 2 slopes?