1 optimized load sharing control by means of thermal reliability management carsten nesgaard *...

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1

Optimized Load Sharing Control by means of Optimized Load Sharing Control by means of Thermal Reliability ManagementThermal Reliability Management

Carsten Nesgaard* Michael A. E. Andersen

Technical University of Denmark

in collaboration with

*Currently with: International Rectifier HI-Rel Analog Devices

2

• Load Sharing

• Power System Evaluation

• Current Sharing

• Thermal Load Sharing

• Reliability

• Conclusion

OutlineOutline

3

Load sharing is utilized when applications call for:

• Modular structure – increase maintainability

• Simple power system realization

• Short time to market

• Increased reliability – redundancy and fault tolerance

• High-current low-voltage applications

• Distributed networks

Load SharingLoad Sharing

4

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

Number of units in N+1 system

Po

wer

'ove

rsh

oo

t' re

du

ctio

n i

n %

Power System EvaluationPower System Evaluation

Number of parallel-connected units to use:

0.751)-(xindex Price -x indexcircuitry LS index Complexity

100

(x)unit pr. P

1)(xunit pr. P - (x)unit pr. P

Max

MaxMax

• Power ’overshoot’

• Circuit complexity

• Component count

•Overall reliability

Increasing N:

5

Power System EvaluationPower System Evaluation

Power system under consideration:

Converter 1 (T 1)

Converter 2 (T 2)

Converter 3 (T 3)

I1

I2

I3

IOUTI in

• N+1 redundant system (N = 2)• Output voltage = 5 V

• Maximum output current = 30 ARMS

• Single MOSFET buck topology• Three different ON-resistances

P RDS(ON) P Radiation + P Convection

R jc R cs

T c T SurfaceT j

T Ambient

Power losses + Power dissipation

Thermal evaluation

6

Power System EvaluationPower System Evaluation

System equations and constraints:

R d s (O N ) ()

0 .0 2 5

T e m p e ra tu re1 2 51 0 07 55 02 5 1 5 0-2 5

0 .0 5 0

0 .0 7 5

0 .1 0 0

0 .1 2 5

0 .1 5 0

P C o n ve ctio n (W )

5

1 0

1 5

2 0

2 5

T S u rfa ce (oC )

1 4 01 2 01 0 08 06 0

T Am b ie n t = 4 0oC

A H e a ts in k = 2 0 c m . x 2 0 cm .

P R a d ia tio n (W )

0 .2

0 .4

0 .6

0 .8

1 .0

T S u rfa ce (oC )

1 4 01 2 01 0 08 06 0

T Am b ie n t = 4 0oC

A H e a ts in k = 2 0 c m . x 2 0 c m .

DS(ON)2RMSR RI P

DS(ON)

4

5AmbientSurface

Convection h

T - TA1,34 P

4Ambient

4Surface

8Radiation T - TA015,7 P

7

Powercomponents

PWM control

Load sharecontrol

Currentmeas. OutputInput

R MEAS

+ 9V

- 9V

LS controller

R 3

R 1 R 2

R 4

OP-amp

High side sensing

DC/DC converter

Loadcontrol

DC/DC converter

Loadcontrol

DC/DC converter

Loadcontrol

Load

Load

sha

ring

bus

Current SharingCurrent Sharing

Power loss calculations limited to MOSFET conduction losses

Additional losses to include:

• Current sensing resistor losses

• Switching losses

• Diode losses

• Other circuitry losses

Ref [9] in the paper provides calculations for the abovementioned losses.

8

Theoretical advantages of the current sharing technique include:

• Equalization of current stress

Among the disadvantages of the technique are:

• Non-equalized thermal stress• Non-optimized overall system reliability• High side sensing in non-isolated systems• Added control circuitry• Increased component count

Transition to thermal load sharing is straight forward, since the same load share controller can be utilized.

Current SharingCurrent Sharing

9

Load

sha

ring

bus

DC/DC converter

DC/DC converter

DC/DC converter

Load

Loadcontrol

Temp

Loadcontrol

Temp

Loadcontrol

Temp

Powercomponents

PWM control

Load sharecontrol

Currentmeas. OutputInput

2,7V - 20V

R 1

R 2

T Sense

Part of

Thermal Load SharingThermal Load Sharing

Temperature sensing device is mounted on the MOSFET casing.

Continuous Unequal reliability currentoptimization distribution

Allows for:

Power system realization by means of converters with different power ratings

Different operating environments within the power system

Equal ”operating” temperature

10

Another advantage of the thermal load sharing is the dynamic power throughput capability:

Load sharing is now based on both current and thermal information.

Thermal Load SharingThermal Load Sharing

Powercomponents

PWM control

Load sharecontrol

Currentmeas. OutputInput

Current Limit (I LIM )

IMAX

IOUT

TemperatureT MAX

LS controller

V TEMP

R 1

R 2

C 1ISENSE

0

V Temp.

0+

ILimit

0

R 2

R 1+R 2I'SENSE

t

t

t

11

Temperature distribution for reliability evaluation:

TAmbient = 40C

TS-avg, current = 104.4C

TS-avg, thermal = 95.7C

Transformer

Heatsink

Transistor

ICIC

Misc. components

Temperature

Distance

T SurfaceT Transformer

T Ambient

T IC

PCB

T End of PCB

Resulting unavailabilities:

Current Sharing

Thermal Load Sharing

Complex calculations

2.60% 0.0260 .97400 - 1 Prob - 1 P System

1.26% 0.0126 .98740 - 1 Prob - 1 P System

ReliabilityReliability

12

• Three parallel-connected buck converters controlled by a dedicated load share IC formed the basis for the theoretical assessment.

• The point of origin was a power system controlled by a current sharing scheme.

• Concept of thermal load sharing: Presented and analytically proven.

• After transition to thermal load sharing the power system improved significantly reliability-wise.

• The gain in reliability is solely due to a much lower operating temperature.

• Efficiency improved due to redistribution of losses.

ConclusionConclusion

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