GaN has many performance advantages, including much higher electron mobility than silicon (3.4eV vs. 1.1eV), which gives it the potential for electron conduction efficiency 1000 times higher than silicon. It is worth noting that the gate charge (QG) of GaN is low, and because it must be replenished in each switching cycle, GaN can work at frequencies up to 1 MHz without loss of efficiency, while silicon is difficult. Achieve above 100 kHz. In addition, unlike silicon, GaN does not have a body diode, and its 2DEG on the AlGaN/GaN boundary surface can conduct current in the opposite direction (referred to as “third quadrant” operation).Therefore, GaN has no reverse recovery charge (QRR), which makes

GaN has many performance advantages, including much higher electron mobility than silicon (3.4eV vs. 1.1eV), which gives it the potential for electron conduction efficiency 1000 times higher than silicon. It is worth noting that the gate charge (QG) of GaN is low, and because it must be replenished in each switching cycle, GaN can work at frequencies up to 1 MHz without loss of efficiency, while silicon is difficult. Achieve above 100 kHz. In addition, unlike silicon, GaN does not have a body diode, and its 2DEG on the AlGaN/GaN boundary surface can conduct current in the opposite direction (referred to as “third quadrant” operation). Therefore, GaN has no reverse recovery charge (QRR), making it ideal for hard-switching applications.

GaN is the first choice for high-efficiency, high-frequency power supply design

GaN does have a limited avalanche capability and is more susceptible to overvoltage than silicon, so it is extremely suitable for a half-bridge topology where the drain-source voltage (VDS) is clamped to the rail voltage. No body diode makes GaN a good choice for hard switching totem pole power factor correction (PFC), and GaN is also very suitable for zero voltage switching (ZVS) applications, including resonant LLC and active clamp flyback.

Fast charging adapters with power levels of 45 W to 65 W will benefit from GaN-based active clamp flyback, while LLC-based GaN is used in high-end laptop power adapters ranging from 150 W to 300 W, such as those used in gaming laptop. In these applications, the use of GaN technology can double the power density, thereby making the adapter smaller and lighter. In particular, related magnetic components can be reduced in size. For example, the size of the power transformer core can be reduced from RM10 to a thin or flat design of RM8. Therefore, in many applications, the power density has doubled or even tripled to 30 W/in3.

In higher power applications, such as power supplies for servers, clouds, and telecommunications systems, especially power supplies based on totem pole PFC, the use of GaN can make energy efficiency more than 99%. This enables these systems to meet the most important (and stringent) energy efficiency standards, such as 80+ titanium.

The method of driving GaN devices is critical to protecting the relatively sensitive gate oxide. It is particularly important to provide an accurately adjusted gate drive amplitude during the on-time of the device. One way to achieve this is to add a low-dropout regulator (LDO) to the existing silicon MOSFET gate driver. But this will damage the gate drive performance, so it is best to use a dedicated half-bridge driver that drives GaN.

More specifically, the typical propagation delay time of a silicon MOSFET driver is about 100 ns, which is not suitable for driving GaN devices with speeds between 500 kHz and 1 MHz. For such speeds, ideally, the transmission delay should not exceed 50 ns.

Due to the low capacitance, there is a high voltage conversion rate between the drain and source of the GaN device. This can lead to premature device failure or even catastrophic failure, especially in high-power applications. To avoid this situation, there must be a high dv / dt immunity (within the range of 100 V / ns).

PCB will have a substantial impact on the performance of GaN designs, so techniques commonly used in RF-type layouts are often used. We also recommend using a low-inductance package (such as PQFN) for the gate driver.

ON semiconductor’s NCP51820 is the industry’s first half-bridge gate driver, specifically designed for GaN technology. It has a regulated 5.2 V gate drive with a typical propagation delay of only 25 ns. It has a dv/dt immunity of up to 200 V/ns, and is packaged in a low-inductance PQFN package.

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