Thermal Resistance Model and Calculation

Power module thermal resistance model includes: (1) Junction-to-case thermal resistance Rth(j-c): IGBT chip to module baseplate thermal resistance, BYD IGBT approximately 0.12-0.35K/W, SiC approximately 0.08-0.15K/W. (2) Case-to-heatsink thermal resistance Rth(c-s): Module baseplate to heatsink thermal resistance, depends on thermal grease/phase change material, approximately 0.05-0.2K/W. (3) Heatsink-to-ambient thermal resistance Rth(s-a): Heatsink thermal resistance, depends on heatsink design and cooling method. Total thermal resistance Rth(j-a) = Rth(j-c) + Rth(c-s) + Rth(s-a). Junction temperature Tj = Ta + P_loss × Rth(j-a).

Heatsink Selection Method

Heatsink selection steps: (1) Calculate total loss P_loss (conduction loss + switching loss). (2) Determine allowable maximum junction temperature Tj_max (IGBT typically 150°C, SiC 175°C). (3) Determine ambient temperature Ta_max. (4) Calculate allowable total thermal resistance Rth(j-a) = (Tj_max - Ta_max) / P_loss. (5) Subtract Rth(j-c) and Rth(c-s) to get heatsink thermal resistance Rth(s-a) requirement. (6) Select heatsink based on Rth(s-a). Example: P_loss=500W, Tj_max=150°C, Ta_max=50°C, then Rth(j-a)<0.2K/W. If Rth(j-c)=0.18K/W, Rth(c-s)=0.1K/W, then Rth(s-a)<0.12K/W, requires liquid cooling heatsink.

Thermal Interface Material Selection

Thermal Interface Material (TIM) types and selection: (1) Thermal grease: Thermal conductivity 3-8W/mK, low cost, requires uniform application, may dry out over long term. (2) Phase change material: Solid at room temperature, softens at operating temperature to fill gaps, thermal conductivity 3-5W/mK, good long-term stability, recommended for automotive applications. (3) Thermal pad: Easy to install, thermal conductivity 1-10W/mK, suitable for frequent maintenance. (4) Metal matrix composite: Thermal conductivity >10W/mK, high cost, for high-performance applications. BYD recommends phase change materials for automotive applications.

Cooling Method Comparison

Different cooling method characteristics: (1) Natural cooling: No fan, no noise, high thermal resistance (>1K/W), suitable for low power (<1kW). (2) Forced air cooling: Uses fan, thermal resistance 0.2-0.5K/W, suitable for medium power (1-10kW), low cost, noisy. (3) Liquid cooling: Uses coolant, thermal resistance <0.1K/W, suitable for high power (>10kW), no noise, high cost. (4) Phase change cooling: Uses phase change material for heat storage, suitable for pulse power applications. EV electric drives typically use liquid cooling, charging stations choose air or liquid cooling based on power.

Thermal Simulation and Verification

Thermal simulation methods: (1) Use thermal simulation software: FloTHERM, Icepak, SolidWorks Flow Simulation, etc. (2) Establish thermal model: Including module, heatsink, TIM, cooling medium. (3) Set boundary conditions: Ambient temperature, cooling conditions, power loss. (4) Run simulation to obtain temperature distribution. (5) Optimize design: Adjust heatsink structure, add heat pipes, optimize airflow, etc. Verification methods: (1) Use thermocouples or infrared thermal imager to measure case temperature. (2) Estimate junction temperature through thermally sensitive parameters (such as VCE(sat)). (3) Conduct temperature rise tests to verify thermal design.