ZHCSLM8B August 2020 – February 2024 UCC21759-Q1
PRODUCTION DATA
UCC21759-Q1 has ±10A peak drive strength and is suitable for high power applications. The high drive strength can drive a SiC MOSFET module, IGBT module or paralleled discrete devices directly without extra buffer stage. UCC21759-Q1 can also be used to drive higher power modules or parallel modules with extra buffer stage. Regardless of the values of VDD, the peak sink and source current can be kept at 10A. The driver features an important safety function wherein, when the input pins are in floating condition, the OUTH/OUTL is held in LOW state. The split output of the driver stage is depicted in Figure 7-1. The driver has rail-to-rail output by implementing a hybrid pull-up structure with a P-Channel MOSFET in parallel with an N-Channel MOSFET, and an N-Channel MOSFET to pulldown. The pull-up NMOS is the same as the pull down NMOS, so the on resistance RNMOS is the same as ROL. The hybrid pull-up structure delivers the highest peak-source current when it is most needed, during the Miller plateau region of the power semiconductor turn-on transient. The ROH in represents the on-resistance of the pull-up P-Channel MOSFET. However, the effective pull-up resistance is much smaller than ROH. Since the pull-up N-Channel MOSFET has much smaller on-resistance than the P-Channel MOSFET, the pull-up N-Channel MOSFET dominates most of the turn-on transient, until the voltage on OUTH pin is about 3V below VDD voltage. The effective resistance of the hybrid pull-up structure during this period is about 2 x ROL. Then the P-Channel MOSFET pulls up the OUTH voltage to VDD rail. The low pull-up impedance results in strong drive strength during the turn-on transient, which shortens the charging time of the input capacitance of the power semiconductor and reduces the turn on switching loss.
The pull-down structure of the driver stage is implemented solely by a pull-down N-Channel MOSFET. This MOSFET can ensure the OUTL voltage be pulled down to VEE rail. The low pull-down impedance not only results in high sink current to reduce the turn-off time, but also helps to increase the noise immunity considering the Miller effect.