NEW PRODUCTS

TI GaN power design drives 200-V AC servo drives and robotics with 99-percent efficiency

Texas Instruments (TI) (NASDAQ: TXN) today introduced an innovative three-phase, gallium nitride (GaN)-based inverter reference design that helps engineers build 200-V, 2-kW AC servo motor drives and next-generation industrial robotics with fast current-loop control, higher efficiency, more accurate speed, and torque control. Download the reference design today.

Three-phase inverter GaN power stage
The Three-Phase High-Frequency GaN Inverter Reference Design features TI’s newest LMG3410 600-V, 12-A GaN power module with an integrated FET, gate driver and protection, announced last year. The GaN module allows the design to switch up to 5x faster than silicon FETs, while achieving efficiency levels greater than 98 percent at 100 kHz and greater than 99 percent at 24 kHz pulse width modulation (PWM) frequency. With GaN, designers can optimize switch performance to reduce power loss in the motor, and downsize the heat sink to save board space. Operating the inverter at 100 kHz significantly helps improve torque ripple when used with low-inductance motors.

Power, speed and performance
The GaN inverter power stage easily interfaces with microcontrollers (MCU), including TI’s TMS320F28379D drive control system-on-chip to help dynamically adjust voltage frequency and achieve ultra-fast current loop control. TI also introduced today its new DesignDRIVE Fast Current Loop software with innovative sub-cycle PWM update techniques that help push current-loop performance in servo drives to less than 1 microsecond, potentially tripling motor torque response. The Fast Current Loop software outperforms traditional MCU-based current-loop solutions, and is available free with controlSUITE™ software.

In addition to the GaN module, the reference design relies on TI’s AMC1306 isolated delta-sigma modulators with current sensing to increase motor control performance. TI’s ISO7831 digital isolator also provides reinforced isolation between the MCU and the design’s six PWMs.

Key benefits of TI’s new three-phase inverter design

  • High-efficiency power stage: 98 percent at 100 kHz PWM, 99 percent at 24 kHz PWM reduce heat sink size.
  • High pulse width modulation (PWM) frequency: High PWM switching frequency allows for driving low-inductance motor with minimum current ripple.
  • Fast switching transition: Less than 25 ns without any switch node voltage ringing reduces EMI.
  • 600-V and 12-A LMG3410 GaN FET power stage with over 7 million device reliability hours: Allows for fast and easy PCB layout and small form-factor design.

Additional design resources:

Lihi

Recent Posts

Cleveland Clinic, RIKEN, and IBM Model a 12,635-Atom Protein – the Largest Known to Be Simulated with Quantum Computers

Milestone simulation of biologically meaningful molecules expands quantum-centric supercomputing’s role as a scientific tool Scientists…

5 hours ago

Never lose the signal: the Israeli company redefining military communications

Commcrete develops compact satellite communication devices that maintain secure connectivity during combat, rescue, and electronic…

9 hours ago

Yaron Elad and Elik Etzion Launch AlphaDrive, a $100 Million Fund Focusing on Cyber and AI Investments

Leumi Partners has joined the fund as an anchor investor. The fund has already invested…

2 days ago

60W DOE Level VII ready IP42-sealed wall-mount adapters for medical, home healthcare, and industrial applications

XP Power introduces the AMF60 series of 60W wall-mount AC-DC power supplies for medical, home…

1 week ago

ROHM launches an Ultra-Compact Wireless Power Chipset for Wearables

ROHM has developed a wireless power supply IC chipset consisting of the receiver - ML7670 -…

1 week ago

Microchip Expands its Family of Post-Quantum Ready Root of Trust Controllers for Next Generation Systems

Platform Root of Trust and secure boot controllers help system architects prepare for emerging mandates…

1 week ago