Title :
Numerical analysis tool for transient skin effect problems
Author :
Böhm, P. ; Wachutka, G.
Author_Institution :
Inst. for Phys. of Electrotechnol., Munich Univ. of Technol., Germany
Abstract :
A new numerical analysis tool for the investigation of the three-dimensional transient electromagnetic behavior of interconnect structures in high power modules is presented. The simulator uses the finite element method to receive a continuous field description of electric and magnetic fields caused by bus bars under fast operating conditions and allows for a detailed investigation of distributed parasitic effects. Time dependent current crowding, time dependent inductances, overvoltage peaks or current turn-on delays can be determined. The finite element based concept permits to consider both voltage- and current-driven problems and is well suited to analyze complex plate structures, as no a priori decomposition of any conductor into partial elements is needed. The interconnect analysis tool was developed by the help of the object-oriented C++ library Diffpack, a software development framework for the solution of partial differential equations. The mixed finite element method is applied to solve the skin effect problem by a combination of a vector and a scalar potential. Edge finite elements are used to discretize the vector quantity. Re-using well-tested and efficient code of the library allows analyzing complex three-dimensional bus bar arrangements.
Keywords :
C++ language; busbars; computational electromagnetics; electric fields; finite element analysis; magnetic fields; partial differential equations; power engineering computing; skin effect; distributed parasitic effects; electric fields; finite element method; interconnect structures; magnetic fields; object-oriented C++ library Diffpack; overvoltage peaks; partial differential equations; power modules; three-dimensional transient electromagnetic behavior; transient skin effect problems; Bars; Electromagnetic transients; Finite element methods; Multichip modules; Numerical analysis; Object oriented modeling; Proximity effect; Skin effect; Software libraries; Transient analysis;
Conference_Titel :
Power Electronics Specialists Conference, 2004. PESC 04. 2004 IEEE 35th Annual
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8399-0
DOI :
10.1109/PESC.2004.1355534