When it comes to an electronically controlled switch, you want a material that has a high breakdown electric field (e.g. – blocking voltage) when off and very low-resistance conduction channels when on, which is why
WBG materials make excellent semiconductor devices. Some other WBG semiconductors you may have heard of are
silicon carbide (SiC), gallium arsenide (GaAs), and aluminum nitride (AlN).
Fig. 1: Radar Chart Benchmarking Figures of Merit for WBG Materials vs. Si, courtesy of PowerRox [1]
GaN also has other interesting properties that make it attractive for several applications. Its electron mobility and melting point enable high-current channels and higher operating temperatures (or increased reliability at the same or lower temperatures), respectively. When fabricated into transistors, the resulting devices can have lower gate charge and equivalent on-state channel resistance (RDS_ON) than Si-based metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistors (MOSFETs). Though there are many types of GaN-based switches, let’s focus on the GaN high-electron-mobility transistor (HEMT) as one example, with its structure shown in Figure 2. With the gate activated, current flows very quickly through the shallow GaN layer in what is sometimes called a two-dimensional electron “gas” (2DEG) [2], as represented by the dotted line in the figure.
When GaN Switching Speeds Become a Design Challenge
WBG switches can be fast, really fast. In fact, they come about as close as possible to the kind of ideal (e.g. – zero transition time) switches we first learn about in textbooks. These rapid transitions are due to the very low gate charge and very high electron mobility of materials like GaN. Turn-on and turn-off transitions can occur in <1ns (1ns = 10-9s) even in some fairly high-power applications.
These transitions are so fast that most engineers trying to measure them on their boards are likely not even using an oscilloscope with the appropriate bandwidth (BW) to capture them sufficiently (e.g. – see Nyquist–Shannon Sampling Theorem [4]). If you need to properly measure and characterize a signal with nanosecond transitions, then scope BW needs to be in the GHz range. These kinds of scopes are generally very expensive and usually designed for high-speed data applications rather than power stage analysis.
Gate Drive Challenges in GaN DC/DC Converters
WBG gate thresholds (V
th) tend to be lower than those of their Si counterparts and have lower absolute maximum voltage levels, so the gate drive requirements needed to take advantage of GaN’s potential also come with a fairly steep learning curve when designing and implementing these solutions robustly. There are a variety of solutions on the market to address these challenges, from integrated gate drives (or even full power stages) to fully qualified power modules.
This means more care must be taken in the gate drive circuit because there is a risk of shoot-through (or false turn-on) due to high transition rates (dV/dt) acting on the switch’s gate-to-source capacitance (a.k.a. – Miller capacitance or C
GS), which can apply a potential across the gate-to-drain capacitance (C
GD) and trigger unwanted turn-on. If this occurs when a synchronous device is also on, then a shoot-through (a.k.a. – cross-conduction) event may occur. At best, this will decrease overall efficiency, and at worst, it will lead to failure of the
DC/DC converter.
Different types of GaN can have different gate drive requirements, and this can be one of the most challenging aspects of designing with gallium nitride components. Some can be driven directly and are normally off devices, while some use what is known as a cascode arrangement in which an enhancement-mode (i.e. – normally off) MOSFET is used to drive the depletion-mode (i.e. – normally on) gate of the GaN device. Some can require negative or offset gate drive voltages. For this reason, it can be highly advantageous to acquire a qualified GaN driver, even if you are designing your own DC/DC converter solution.
GaN Design Resources and Best Practices
There are plenty of great resources available for learning about, acquiring, and implementing GaN solutions. Some of these have already been identified above. Take advantage of them and really do your homework if you are new to WBG and GaN solutions. You will need to go through many build and test iterations to achieve a truly robust, high efficiency, GaN-based design, particularly if you are newer to the space.
As a reminder, GaN is not a drop-in replacement for Si and therefore should not be approached as such. The early days of investigating the use of GaN in power supplies involved many people learning this lesson the hard way and even being dissuaded about WBG’s viability because of early failures that did not embrace the importance of carefully managed layout practices and robust gate drive design.
References
[1] E. Shelton, P. Palmer, A. Mantooth, B. Zahnstecher, G. Haynes, “WBG Devices, Circuits and Applications,” APEC 2018 Short Course, San Antonio, TX, March 4, 2018.
[2] Wikipedia contributors, "Two-dimensional electron gas," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Two-dimensional_electron_gas&oldid=955419012 (accessed May 27, 2022).
[3] “eGaN® Technology," EPC FAQs. [Online]. Available: https://epc-co.com/epc/FAQ/eGaNTechnology.aspx.
[4] Wikipedia contributors, "Nyquist–Shannon sampling theorem," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Nyquist%E2%80%93Shannon_sampling_theorem&oldid=1086141927 (accessed May 27, 2022).
[5] “GaN Integration for Higher DC/DC Efficiency and Power Density," EPC Application Note AN018. [Online]. Available: https://epc-co.com/epc/DesignSupport/ApplicationNotes.aspx.