Insulated-gate bipolar transistor

An insulated-gate bipolar transistor (IGBT) is a three-terminal power semiconductor device primarily forming an electronic switch. It was developed to combine high efficiency with fast switching. It consists of four alternating layers (P–N–P–N) that are controlled by a metal–oxide–semiconductor (MOS) gate structure.

Insulated-gate bipolar transistor
IGBT module (IGBTs and freewheeling diodes) with a rated current of 1200 A and a maximum voltage of 3300 V
Working principleSemiconductor
Invented1959
Electronic symbol

IGBT schematic symbol

Although the structure of the IGBT is topologically similar to a thyristor with a "MOS" gate (MOS-gate thyristor), the thyristor action is completely suppressed, and only the transistor action is permitted in the entire device operation range. It is used in switching power supplies in high-power applications: variable-frequency drives (VFDs), uninterruptible power supply systems (UPS), electric cars, trains, variable-speed refrigerators, lamp ballasts, arc-welding machines, induction hobs, and air conditioners.

Since it is designed to turn on and off rapidly, the IGBT can synthesize complex waveforms with pulse-width modulation and low-pass filters, thus it is also used in switching amplifiers in sound systems and industrial control systems. In switching applications modern devices feature pulse repetition rates well into the ultrasonic-range frequencies, which are at least ten times higher than audio frequencies handled by the device when used as an analog audio amplifier. As of 2010, the IGBT was the second most widely used power transistor, after the power MOSFET.

IGBT comparison table
Device characteristic Power BJT Power MOSFET IGBT
Voltage rating High <1 kV High <1 kV Very high >1 kV
Current rating High <500 A Low <200 A High >500 A
Input drive Current ratio
hFE ~ 20–200
Voltage
VGS ~ 3–10 V
Voltage
VGE ~ 4–8 V
Input impedance Low High High
Output impedance Low Medium Low
Switching speed Slow (µs) Fast (ns) Medium
Cost Low Medium High
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