A possible solution incorporating a three-phase PFC, full-bridge bidirectional LLC, and active rectifier is shown in Figure 2. This solution requires fourteen power transistors, which for optimal cost vs. performance could be a mix of MOSFETs, SiC, and GaN transistors.
All the power transistors will need individual
gate drivers, with the high-side transistors (Q1, Q3, Q5, Q7, Q9, Q11, and Q13) also needing galvanic isolation. If the gate drivers have separate Out+ and Out- pins, then different gate resistors for the on and off cycles can be used to optimize the switching characteristics.
Also, the isolated V
pos and V
neg voltages can be chosen to fully enhance the transistor during the on-cycle and rapidly discharge the gate capacitance during the off-cycle. A negative “off” voltage also makes the switching more reliable by eliminating false turn-on due to source inductances
1. Therein lies the problem: different switching technologies and transistor generations have different recommended and absolute maximum gate drive levels (Figure 3).