Quote:
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Originally Posted by Joe Johnson
Don't forget that each leg of the h-bridge is really 3 fets. So, 40A per fet means 120A for the h-bridge total.
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As I said above, thermal analysis of FET installations can get complicated. To see how, let's use the Victor as an example:
As an extreme case, let's consider operating the FETs in free air with no convection. For this case, the data sheet provides a figure of 62 Kelvins (Celsius degrees) junction temperature rise (over ambient) for each Watt dissipated in the FET junction. A reasonable maximum for usable junction temperature might be 150 C, and ambient temperature on the FRC field might be 30 C, so the rise would be 120 Kelvins and the maximum dissipation would be 120/62 = 1.94 Watt. At 150 C junction temperature the FET's on-state resistance is Rds(on) = 0.02 Ohm [this was obtained by multiplying the nominal value 0.012 Ohm by 1.7, taken from Fig. 4 on the data sheet] so the maximum current in the FET is sqrt(1.94/0.02) = 9.7 Amperes. There are three FETs per leg, so the maximum leg current is about 29 Amperes. We can improve on this by running the cooling fan, which will reduce the thermal resistance from junction to ambient by a considerable factor, probably at least two. Using 31 Kelvins per Watt of dissipation and repeating the calculations above gives 3.87 Watts maximum dissipation for each FET and therefore 13.9 Amperes per FET and 41.7 Amperes per leg.
Of course this analysis predicts far less than the maximum 120 Amperes arrived at in the earlier posts; to get there, we would need to improve the thermal resistance from junction to ambient still further. A practical lower limit might be about three times the thermal resistance from junction to case (given as 1.6 degrees K/W by the data sheet) or 4.8 Kelvins per Watt. Using this figure, the maximum dissipation per FET is 25 Watts, the maximum FET current is 35 Amperes, and the maximum leg current is 105 Amperes. Based on the Victor's 40 Ampere rating, I'd guess that this level of FET cooling is probably beyond the capability of the Victor design. For reason's I gave earlier, it is probably not a good idea to try to retrofit the Victor with home-made heatsinks in an attempt to improve its thermal performance.
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Richard Wallace
Mentor since 2011 for FRC 3620 Average Joes (St. Joseph, Michigan)
Mentor 2002-10 for FRC 931 Perpetual Chaos (St. Louis, Missouri)
since 2003
I believe in intuition and inspiration. Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited, whereas imagination embraces the entire world, stimulating progress, giving birth to evolution. It is, strictly speaking, a real factor in scientific research.
(Cosmic Religion : With Other Opinions and Aphorisms (1931) by Albert Einstein, p. 97)