methods
1 GW
So in an 18 fet controller there are 3 phases
Each phase has 3 mosfets on the positive and 3 on the negative
I propose that if we swap one of those three mosfets with a high quality TO-220 schottky diode the overall temperature of the controller would go down allowing for a cooler running controller - especially at partial throttle.
The IRFB4110 has something like 4mohms rdson
Three in parallel makes for ~1.33mohms rdson
Ok - so if we pull one of those from each group of three we now have a 12fet controller with about 2mohms rdson right?
But... a great deal of the heat is really coming from the body diodes of the fets freewheeling all that nasty motor current around. This is part of why our big 100V controllers tend to run hotter at a 20A current limit than running wide open. Of course turning the fets on and off is obviously a huge part of that waste heat...
Anyway - the Vf of a Schottky is so much lower than the Vf of the body diodes that significantly less waste power will be developed on the heat sink allowing for a lot more system performance before overheat.
I recently saw this implemented in a cheap DC controller. They had just a single nChannel fet doing the PWM and a second TO-220 that was strapping it.
Anyone try this yet?
If I were not a lowlife I would try it right now.
Actually I am just sitting here driving 60A CC through my new LVC Breaker
-methods
Each phase has 3 mosfets on the positive and 3 on the negative
I propose that if we swap one of those three mosfets with a high quality TO-220 schottky diode the overall temperature of the controller would go down allowing for a cooler running controller - especially at partial throttle.
The IRFB4110 has something like 4mohms rdson
Three in parallel makes for ~1.33mohms rdson
Ok - so if we pull one of those from each group of three we now have a 12fet controller with about 2mohms rdson right?
But... a great deal of the heat is really coming from the body diodes of the fets freewheeling all that nasty motor current around. This is part of why our big 100V controllers tend to run hotter at a 20A current limit than running wide open. Of course turning the fets on and off is obviously a huge part of that waste heat...
Anyway - the Vf of a Schottky is so much lower than the Vf of the body diodes that significantly less waste power will be developed on the heat sink allowing for a lot more system performance before overheat.
I recently saw this implemented in a cheap DC controller. They had just a single nChannel fet doing the PWM and a second TO-220 that was strapping it.
Anyone try this yet?
If I were not a lowlife I would try it right now.
Actually I am just sitting here driving 60A CC through my new LVC Breaker
-methods