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Achieving household energy efficiency and cost savings with GaN-based motor system designs

30th August 2024
Harry Fowle
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Charlie Munoz, Marketing Manager for the BLDC Motor Drivers at Texas Instruments, explores how GaN is enabling new gains in household energy efficiency and cost.

Today’s market for major household appliances is strongly intertwined with energy efficiency and associated branding such as Energy Star certification. Consumers expect end equipment in this category – refrigerators or heating, ventilation and air-conditioning (HVAC) systems – to have high levels of power efficiency and product reliability. So in this article, we’ll explore how the intersection of gallium nitride (GaN) and brushless-DC (BLDC) motor systems can help enhance the lives of consumers.

Today’s market for major household appliances is strongly intertwined with energy efficiency and associated branding such as Energy Star certification. Consumers expect end equipment in this category – refrigerators or heating, ventilation and air-conditioning (HVAC) systems – to have high levels of power efficiency and product reliability. So in this article, we’ll explore how the intersection of gallium nitride (GaN) and brushless-DC (BLDC) motor systems can help enhance the lives of consumers.

Figure 1 shows typical home appliances where energy efficiency plays a big role.

Figure 1. Line-powered home appliance and HVAC motor-driver applications

Taking refrigerator compressors and HVAC furnace blowers as typical examples of household appliances that contribute significantly to household electricity usage, these types of end equipment use a motor system to control the flow of air and liquids for heating and cooling applications. When designing these systems, it’s vital to optimize how the motor converts electrical power into mechanical movement. Motor system designers will often modify the physical design of the motor assembly, adjusting properties to achieve a specific rated voltage and speed. The system’s electrical design will also need to have the right printed circuit board (PCB) layout, and electronics components capable of achieving the proper signals for motor commutation and power delivery.

Table 1 lists some appliance motor system requirements, and why they matter.

Having the right components for the task at hand simplifies the development process. For example, TI has integrated its three-layer-metal e-mode GaN technology into a new motor-driver product to meet specialized requirements. Capable of supporting 650V and hosting nearly all of the features necessary to operate a three-phase BLDC motor, the DRV7308 is housed in a small-enough package such that you can design your system to an especially small size. You may not even need a thermal heat sink if you are operating below 250W of power. For more information, download the white paper, “How three-phase integrated GaN technology maximizes motor-drive performance.”

The DRV7308 targets 250W home appliance applications such as HVAC compressors. Figure 2 is a block diagram of this system with our GaN intelligent power module (IPM). These line-powered systems usually include an AC/DC stage, EMI filter, motor-inverter stage and motor.

Figure 2. BLDC motor-driver system block diagram

A high-voltage system such as the one shown in Figure 2 has major cost components, including the PCB, heat sink and its assembly, passive components, and motor. TI’s GaN IPM technology offers cost advantages across all of these major components, and ultimately can enable energy cost savings over a system’s lifetime.

There are currently two options when designing a 250W HVAC compressor motor-inverter stage: using metaloxide semiconductor field-effect transistor (MOSFET) or insulated-gate bipolar transistor (IGBT) IPMs, or choosing a discrete implementation. Both solutions’ maximum motor-inverter stage efficiency is 96% or 97%, with typical power losses of 6W to 7.5W. These low levels of efficiency require cooling components such as heat sinks, larger PCBs to dissipate heat, and more expensive motors to reach a specific system efficiency. The DRV7308 GaN IPM can help reduce power losses 50% or more in a smaller package, which translates to more than 99% motor-inverter efficiency, as shown in Figure 3.

Figure 3. Efficiency comparison between DRV7308 GaN IPM and IGBT IPM in a 250W system

The DRV7308 can enable 2x reduction in power losses given GaN’s intrinsic technological advantages: no reverse-recovery losses, low output capacitance, no tail current, higher slew-rate capability, and a low drain-tosource on-resistance of 205mΩ. The 50% reduction or more in power losses eliminates the need for a heat sink to dissipate heat created from power losses.

The DRV7308 comes in a 12mm-by-12mm package, which is 55% smaller than competing 250W IPMs; see Figure 4 for comparison. Ultimately, these GaN IPM advantages and small package size enable you to shrink PCB size by more than 65%, reducing the cost of the PCB and cooling components. Table 2 lists the savings when using the DRV7308 in a 250W system.

 

Figure 4. The DRV7308 board compared to an 250W IGBT solution

>$2 in system cost savings at 250W

The design of the motor in these applications sometimes plays a major role in overall system costs. The 2023 seasonal energy-efficient rating (SEER) of 14 for HVAC systems requires 85% efficiency, a 5% increase. The >99% efficiency possible with the DRV7308 exceeds the 85% efficiency requirement without increasing motor costs.

In HVAC motor manufacturing, every 1% improvement in motor efficiency saves an estimated $0.35 because of windings and thicker copper gauge wire; therefore, we estimate up to $0.63 in motor copper savings with the DRV7308. See Table 3.

New appliances and HVAC systems continue to hit the market with greater efficiency and reliability. The DRV7308 addresses long-standing challenges in motor inverters for these types of products, helping further push the boundaries for better power density and reliability and less audible noise.

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