Last week, I compared Tesla design to Apple. Since then, it has become widely known that Elon Musk tried to sell Tesla to Apple in 2013. This has created considerable interest in Apple's autonomous vehicle project and Apple's progress with lithium batteries. However, it has not created considerable interest in Jony Ive's possible work for Ferrari nor in the progress of power transistors. I wrote about gallium LEDs and transistors in Dec 2017 and, specifically, GaNFET (Gallium Nitride Field Effect Transistor). I thought that it would be a good idea to check progress. Well, holy cr*p.
On Mon 9 Nov 2020, a Texas Instruments press release announced power transistors which can switch 4kW (more than 600V, more than 6A) at 2.2MHz and, due to the 30mΩ resistance, do this with 99% efficiency. Indeed, cables may warm more than the 12mm×12mm transistors which require, at most, 40W heatsink. My calculations may be wrong but a homebrew, all wheel drive, six wheel vehicle, with 16 phase electric motors and these 4kW GaNFETs, can do a standing start quarter mile (400m) in less than 10 seconds. By 1980s standards, this is supercar performance. And from 2021 Q1, it is now possible to make this at home or a local makerspace.
The price for these transistors is US$8.34 each for the lowest grade and US$14.68 each for the highest grade if purchased in quantities of 1000 or more. If you don't have US$8340 or so, there is an evaluation module for US$199.
I'm not sure of Moore's law applies to individual transistors but this is now the upper bound for 4kW power transistors. Unfortunately, many of the problems which I previously identified remain. Gate leakage is mitigated with an integrated driver, although (my estimate) leak of 30-50mW is probably not a huge concern when switching 4kW. The major problem is that the technology is in transition and therefore it still uses silicon as a substrate. The mismatched atom size is a hinderance to the efficiency of gallium nitride transistors and LEDs. Expect at least double improvement when this moves to a gallium nitride substrate. Therefore, expect 10kW switching at 5MHz or more.
Switching this amount of energy under software control is extremely dangerous and may cause equipment to not just smoke but spontaneously explode. I strongly recommend safeguards, such as hardware interlocks, watchdog timeouts, disallowing field firmware upgrades and control protocols which fail in a safe manner.
As I've previously noted, in less demanding applications, such as quadcopters, it is desirable to remove a heatsink entirely. This leads to a moderate step change because a subset of designs no longer expend energy to keep a heatsink aloft. This provides an otherwise unmodified design with more range and more flight time. The advantage is also compounding if a design is made smaller.
Anyhow, autonomous supercars, quadcopters and spontaneous explosions. What could possibly go wrong?
(Score: 2) by Azuma Hazuki on Tuesday December 29 2020, @12:48AM (2 children)
Oh goodie, rat viruses. Knock out the front column of their field and their projectiles can't hit you, but try and kill them in one shot as they get faster and meaner the lower their HP goes. On the upside, all three tiers of their chip lead to a nasty Program Advance if you can pull it off.
I am "that girl" your mother warned you about...
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 29 2020, @01:40AM (1 child)
The magic is in the slew rate of the LM308!
(Score: 2) by VLM on Tuesday December 29 2020, @08:30PM
OK fine I'll bite, what's so magical about 0.3 V / uS?
That is an old as hell opamp probably 50 year anniversary. Its so old I remember it was contemporary with the 741, which won in the market. I don't remember why the '741 crushed the '309 in the marketplace.
If you want something designed this century, the 7171 is a year 2000 baby and was the first amp I remember swinging over 4 KV / uS. Yeah, 12000 times faster than an antique 309. Yes I'm sure there's faster out there, both before Y2K and now, but its memorable for me. I was going to do something stupid to a laser diode with very precisely timed pulses for optical communication and I remember wanting to buy some 7171 but digikey was out of stock or it was technically vaporware hardware for the first years of its life or something like that so I never built it.
Those old op amps, holy shit they were so slow, you could have a little human being in the can rotating a dial up and down, they were so slow. And put like 10 pF on the output and somehow they'd run even slower.
When I was a young smart ass, as opposed to the middle aged smart ass I am now, I used to joke about making DSP boards to emulate the shitty performance of greatest-gen vacuum tubes, but now that the boomers are getting gray I can joke about programming DSP microcontrollers to emulate shitty boomer-era 1st gen op amps.
I bet the "sound" of a LM309 is bass-boosted, LOL.