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Enhancing Overload Capability of Electric Truck Inverters via Active Thermal Control.pdf (1.272Mb)
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Title
Enhancing Overload Capability of Electric Truck Inverters via Active Thermal Control
Author
Agirrezabala, EnekoORCID
Pascal, Yoann
Debbadi, Karthik
Liserre, Marco
Aizpuru, IosuORCID
Garrido, David
Research Group
Sistemas electrónicos de potencia aplicados al control de la energía eléctrica
Other institutions
https://ror.org/00wvqgd19
https://ror.org/024p6aq98
Version
Postprint
Document type
Conference Object
Language
English
Rights
© 2026 IEEE
Access
Open access
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11984/14053
Publisher’s version
https://doi.org/10.1109/VPPC66000.2025.11392945
Published at
IEEE Vehicle Power and Propulsion Conference (VPPC)  Hangzhou (China), 22-25 October 2025
Publisher
IEEE
Subject (UNESCO Thesaurus)
Semiconductor
Abstract
Electric trucks are subject to demanding overload events during operations such as kerbstone climbing, where the inverter operates at low output frequency and high current, leading to significant ther ... [+]
Electric trucks are subject to demanding overload events during operations such as kerbstone climbing, where the inverter operates at low output frequency and high current, leading to significant thermal stress on power semiconductors. To prevent exceeding the junction temperature limits, standard practice often involves limiting torque output or oversizing the power stage, resulting in reduced acceleration performance or increased system cost. This study investigates the use of Active Thermal Control (ATC) to improve inverter operation during such overload conditions, enhancing performance without exceeding thermal limits. Three ATC strategies are evaluated: increase of gate voltage, reduction of switching frequency, and the application of Discontinuous PWM, as well as selected combinations of these strategies. The study quantifies the thermal, lifetime, and waveform quality impact when applying these ATC strategies. Results demonstrate that the junction-to-ambient temperature difference can be reduced by up to 26%, and the number of safe mission repetitions can increase by a factor of five. Alternatively, for a fixed thermal limit, the deliverable output current can be raised by approximately 20%, enhancing acceleration capability without requiring converter oversizing. These findings confirm the potential of individual ATC strategies to enhance inverter robustness and dynamic performance, while showing that their combination enables even greater improvements in demanding electric drive applications. [-]
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