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John Larkin said:Cree and some other people are working on SiC mesfets, but I haven't
got my paws on any yet. They should behave like high-voltage gaasfets;
the data I've seen shows outrageous pinchoff voltages (like -12),
which makes them behave more like toobs than transistors!
which makes them behave more like toobs than transistors!
We've used some SiC high-voltage schottky diodes, and they work fine.
http://www.infineon.com/cmc_upload/documents/098/950/SDP_D_T04S60_2.1.pdf
Microsemi claims to have some, too, but Microsemi must be some sort of
front organization... they never seem to answer emails or actually
ship parts.
Do they have any SRD like properties?
No manufacturer can presently ship parts with rated operating
temperatures anywhere near the SiC process limits, simply due to
conventional packaging constraints.
John Larkin said:We've used some SiC high-voltage schottky diodes, and they work fine.
http://www.infineon.com/cmc_upload/documents/098/950/SDP_D_T04S60_2.1.pdf [..]
Microsemi claims to have some, too, but Microsemi must be some sort of
front organization... they never seem to answer emails or actually
ship parts.
I don't follow that. Researchers have been growing 1400 v SiC diodes
for years, and you can certainly buy plastic-packaged 1400 volt fets
and bipolar tansistors, but you can't buy a 1400 volt SiC schottky. I
thought it was a materials defect/yield problem. As far as temperature
goes, there are ceramic TO-220 packages around, but still no 1KV SiC
parts.
John Larkin said:We've used some SiC high-voltage schottky diodes, and they work fine.
http://www.infineon.com/cmc_upload/documents/098/950/SDP_D_T04S60_2.1.pdf [..]
Microsemi claims to have some, too, but Microsemi must be some sort of
front organization... they never seem to answer emails or actually
ship parts.
I got some Microsemi SiC schottky diodes. They seemed to work up to about
150V. I'm about to get back to that part of the project. It will be a
lot of fun to see if they really meet the 600V breakdown spec.
Mike Page said:
If silicon carbide is one of the hardest abrasives how will they slice the
wafers up ?
If silicon carbide is one of the hardest abrasives how will they slice the
wafers up ?