Title :
Experimental behavior of single-chip IGBT and COOLMOS devices under repetitive short-circuit conditions
Author :
Lefebvre, Stephane ; Khatir, Zoubir ; Saint-Eve, Frederic
Author_Institution :
SATIE Lab., Cachan, France
Abstract :
This work presents the behavior of single-chip insulated gate bipolar transistors (IGBT) devices under repetitive short-circuit operations. The 600 and 1200 V nonpunch through IGBTs as well as 600 V COOLMOS (trademark of Infineon Technologies) have been tested. The repetition of these severe working conditions is responsible for devices ageing, and results unavoidably in the components failure. A series of experimental tests were made in order to determine the number of short-circuit operations the devices can support before failure for different dissipated energies. The temperature influence has been also investigated. Results show two distinct failure modes depending on the dissipated energy during the tests. A critical value of short-circuit energy has been pointed out which separates these failure modes. Experimental and numerical investigations have been carried out in order to analyze these failure modes. A detailed analysis of the physical mechanisms occurring during the short-circuit failures for dissipated energies equal or lightly higher than the critical value is presented.
Keywords :
failure analysis; insulated gate bipolar transistors; power MOSFET; power bipolar transistors; semiconductor device reliability; semiconductor device testing; 1200 V; 600 V; COOLMOS devices; IGBT; Infineon Technologies; device ageing; dissipated energy; power devices; repetitive short-circuit conditions; semiconductor device reliability; short-circuit energy; short-circuit failures; single-chip insulated gate bipolar transistors; thermal modeling; thermal runaway; Aging; Circuits; Employee welfare; Failure analysis; Insulated gate bipolar transistors; Laboratories; Semiconductor devices; Temperature; Testing; Trademarks;
Journal_Title :
Electron Devices, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TED.2004.842714