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Power_electronics Features

BEV advancements are driving sales, but vehicle safety and reliability will ensure long-term viability
Innovative power architectures using power modules provide power redundancy and improve overall safety and system performance By Patrick Kowalyk, Automotive FAE,Vicor
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AC/DC power factor correction module offers up to 1,512W
A full brick package developed by TDK-Lambda, the PF1500B-360, is for high voltage distributed power architectures
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Power Electronics Europe News
 
Integrated SoCs comply with AEC-Q100

The SoCs comply with Automotive Electronics Council (AEC-Q100) qualification standard temperature grade 2, a stress test qualification for automotive ICs.

The nine include step-down PowerSoCs from the EP53xx and EN63xx families, supporting load currents up to 12A. Unlike discrete power products, they are simulated, characterised and production-qualified, to streamline and accelerate the design-in process. They can be used with the company’s automotive-grade Cyclone FPGAs and SoCs and MAX FPGAs and CPLDs.

Fewer components and a tightly controlled IC manufacturing processes are claimed to provide 45,000-year MTBF (mean time between failures). In ADAS (advanced driver assistance system) FPGAs can run algorithms at high frame rates and process multiple algorithms simultaneously. According to the company, integrating the inductors, high-frequency filter capacitors, controller, and MOSFETs, the SoCs typically have a 25 to 50% smaller footprint compared to alternative discrete switching regulators and modules. They offer up to 96% peak efficiency can be used in infotainment and driver information; ADAS and electric vehicle and powertrain systems.






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