Avoiding Electrical Overstress for Automotive Semiconductors by New Connecting Concepts

Event
SAE World Congress & Exhibition
Authors Abstract
Content
Bosch Automotive Semiconductor Unit investigated destroyed semiconductor devices (ASIC) from electronic control unit complaints, which failed due to electrical overstress. It turned out that failure fingerprints could only be reproduced by semiconductor operation far beyond spec limits. One main failure mechanism is caused by hot plugging and bad or late ground connection. In today’s cars some applications are still active for minutes after ignition switch off. So, currents of several amps are delivered and in a typical production or garage environment, hot plugging cannot be avoided completely. Bosch suggests introducing extended ground pins to get an enforced switch on/off sequence during plugging. This poka yoke protection principle is successfully used in other industries for a long time and should now come into cars.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2009-01-0294
Pages
2
Citation
Thienel, C., "Avoiding Electrical Overstress for Automotive Semiconductors by New Connecting Concepts," SAE Int. J. Passeng. Cars – Electron. Electr. Syst. 2(1):101-102, 2009, https://doi.org/10.4271/2009-01-0294.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Apr 20, 2009
Product Code
2009-01-0294
Content Type
Journal Article
Language
English