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High-Frequency Hall Current Sensing Pioneer:A 2 MHz Bandwidth Chip Driving the Next Generation of SiC PV Inverters

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Introduction

The global photovoltaic (PV) industry is undergoing a fundamental shift—from a focus on efficiency alone to system-level performance optimization.

With the rapid adoption of silicon carbide (SiC) power devices in PV inverters—expected to exceed 35% market penetration by 2025 (Yole forecast)—current sensing technologies are facing unprecedented demands.

As one of the few companies with fully in-house developed Hall-effect sensor ICs, we are introducing a 2 MHz bandwidth current sensing chip that redefines monitoring capabilities in high-frequency power electronics systems.


1. SiC Devices Reshaping PV Inverter Architecture

Technology Breakthroughs

  • 3–5× higher switching frequency
    State-of-the-art SiC modules now operate above 100 kHz, compared to ~20 kHz for traditional IGBTs, reducing passive component size by up to 60% 
  • System efficiency exceeding 99%
    In 1500 V PV inverter systems, SiC-based designs achieve >99% efficiency, while IGBTs struggle to meet the 25-year lifetime requirements of PV + energy storage systems due to higher losses
  • Superior thermal performance
    Third-generation SiC devices (e.g., Wolfspeed) can operate reliably at 200°C, enabling more compact thermal designs
  • Cost inflection point approaching
    With mass production of advanced 8-inch wafers, the cost gap between SiC and silicon has narrowed to ~1.3× in 2024 (down from 4× in 2020), delivering lifecycle cost advantages in systems above 150 kW

2. Key Current Sensing Nodes in PV Inverters

High-frequency current sensors play a critical role across multiple stages:

(1) PV String Input (DC Side)

Location: Between PV strings and inverter DC input
Function:

  • Enable Maximum Power Point Tracking (MPPT) 
  • Detect overcurrent and short circuits
  • Protect DC bus capacitors and power devices

(2) DC/DC Boost Stage Output

Location: Boost inductor or DC/DC converter output (DC bus)
Function:

  • Monitor DC bus current
  • Stabilize voltage
  • Support fast dynamic response with high-frequency SiC switching

(3) Inverter Bridge AC Output (AC Side)

Location: Output of H-bridge or three-phase bridge (before filter inductor)
Function:

  • Real-time AC waveform acquisition
  • Enable PWM modulation and closed-loop control
  • Detect overload and harmonic distortion (THD < 3%)

(4) Grid Connection Point

Location: After output filter, at grid interface
Function:

  • Monitor grid current
  • Ensure compliance with grid codes (e.g., LVRT)
  • Detect islanding conditions

(5) Industry Validation

Utility-Scale PV Project (200 MW, Ningxia)

  • SiC-based three-level topology 
  • Switching frequency increased to 75 kHz 
  • High-frequency sensors improved MPPT dynamic response by 40% 
  • Daily energy yield increased by 2.7% 
  • Passed 1500 V full-load operation test for 72 hours (CQC certification) 

Tesla Powerwall 3 Evolution

  • Switching frequency increased to 120 kHz 
  • Requires overcurrent protection within 5 µs 
  • Imposes strict sensor response time requirement: < 1 µs 

3. Challenges in High-Frequency Current Sensing

Industry Pain Points

  • Transient blind spots
    At switching frequencies above 100 kHz, conventional sensors (<200 kHz bandwidth) miss over 30% of critical transient events 
  • Severe electromagnetic interference (EMI)
    High-frequency operation increases common-mode noise by ~20 dB, requiring CMTI ≥ 120 kV/µs 
  • Thermal and space constraints
    Modular designs reduce available sensor space to one-quarter of traditional layouts

4. Magtron Solution

2 MHz Bandwidth – Full Transient Visibility

  • Captures ringing, overshoot, and fast switching dynamics
  • Time resolution up to 200 ns 

A 10 MHz modulation/demodulation architecture enables breakthroughs in both time and frequency domains:

  • High-frequency chopping in the signal path
  • High-bandwidth operational amplifiers
  • Advanced digital filtering

Together, these deliver significantly enhanced system-level bandwidth and signal fidelity.


Performance Comparison

  • Conventional 200 kHz sensorsLeft: Limited transient visibility
  • Magtron 2 MHz sensorRight: Full high-frequency waveform capture

Key Technology Features

  • Integrated magnetic flux focusing structure 
  • Multi-core sensing architecture
    • Improves accuracy and bandwidth
    • Enhances EMI immunity
  • Wide temperature operation: −40°C to +125°C
    • Accuracy maintained within ±0.5% FS 
    • Built-in temperature sensing for real-time compensation
  • Adaptive overcurrent protection
    • Provides fault signaling to downstream systems

5. Conclusion

As PV inverter power density approaches 50 kW/L and SiC switching losses drop to one-fifth of silicon-based solutions, current sensing is evolving from a supporting component to a system enabler.

We invite industry partners to explore the limits of high-frequency power electronics sensing—leveraging million-samples-per-second data insight to ensure every watt of clean energy is converted with maximum precision and reliability.

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