Has any one tried simulating IGBT with PSpice for accurate power loss and switching characteristics under HARD switching conditions?
How accurate the simulation results are?
Hey Dude!
Hi
What do you mean by accurate power loss?! approximately all of Pspice simulations are true if you know right way for simulation! What kind of circuit would you like to do simulation with pspice?
Best Regards
Goldsmith
Thanks. By "Accurate power Loss" I mean getting correct switching loss, mainly to include Tail current effect etc for IGBT in hard switching mode. My question is more on how good the IGBT models are?
Looking at the PSPICE IGBT equations and model parameters, I don't see, how tail current should be represented. Models can be verified in a test bench. Did you try?
Presuming that the standard IGBT models don't implement tail current, there would be of course an option to add it by analog behavioral modelling.
I did try that, and I could see the current tail. However my question is has any one tried co-relating this with real life testbench before. I get the following waveform:
Green: Collector current
blue: gate voltage
yellow: VcE
Green color clearly show the tail.
This is under inductive clamp load condition, this is very first switching cycle, hence current is starting from zero.
Also I could not see mention of tail current in IGBT datasheet, so How can I get cross check accuracy of my simulation, without actually building a circuit. i want to do good first cut design from power loss perspective, before I start building the circuit.
---------- Post added at 13:05 ---------- Previous post was at 13:02 ----------
Unless you're using the IGBT in some strange configuration (like not a half or full bridge, or a DC chopping circuit), it's probably better if you just look at the energy loss data given in the datasheet. They specifically characterize these losses so you don't have to. All the sources of switching loss should be accounted for there. The only exception should be if you use an external catch diode different from that specified in their tests. The reverse recovery charge from that diode will add to your losses, but that shouldn't be hard to calculate either.