Practical Design of the Power Chain for AI-Powered Territorial Survey eVTOLs: Balancing Power Density, Reliability, and Intelligent Management As AI-powered electric Vertical Take-Off and Landing (eVTOL) aircraft for territorial surveying evolve towards longer endurance, higher payload capacity for sensor suites, and extreme operational reliability, their onboard electric propulsion and power distribution systems are the core enablers of mission success. A meticulously designed power chain is the physical foundation for these aircraft to achieve efficient hover, agile transition, resilient operation in varied atmospheric conditions, and the uninterrupted power required by high-compute AI and sensing modules. However, designing for aviation presents unique, stringent challenges: How to achieve maximum power density and efficiency within severe weight and volume constraints? How to ensure absolute functional safety and fault tolerance for airborne systems? How to intelligently manage power between propulsion, avionics, and payload under dynamic flight profiles? The answers are embedded in the selection, integration, and validation of every power component. I. Three Dimensions for Core Power Component Selection: Coordinated Consideration of Voltage, Switching Frequency, and Package 1. Main Propulsion Inverter IGBT: The Heart of Thrust and Efficiency The key device selected is the VBP113MI25B (1350V/25A/TO-247, IGBT). Voltage Stress and Aviation Reliability: eVTOL powertrains are trending towards high-voltage DC buses (e.g., 800V) to reduce current and cable weight for a given power level. The 1350V rating provides a critical safety margin against transients during high-speed switching and fault conditions, adhering to stringent aviation derating principles. The robust TO-247 package, when combined with proper mounting and potting, meets the vibration and shock requirements of aerial vehicles. Loss Profile for High-Frequency Operation: While the VCEsat (2V @15V) influences conduction loss, the device's technology ("BD" - likely a fast-switching or low-loss generation) is crucial for optimizing losses at the elevated switching frequencies (>20kHz) often used in aviation motor drives to reduce motor harmonics and weight. Efficient switching is paramount for maximizing range. Thermal Management Imperative: In the confined, potentially passively cooled spaces of some eVTOL nacelles, thermal design is critical. The junction temperature must be meticulously controlled via liquid or advanced forced-air cooling: Tj = Tc + (P_cond + P_sw) × Rθjc. The low per-device current rating allows for scalable, parallelizable modules to achieve higher total thrust power. 图1: AI国土测绘 eVTOL方案与适用功率器件型号分析推荐VBP113MI25B与VBGQA1153N与VBQA1308产品应用拓扑图_en_01_total 2. High-Density DC-DC Converter MOSFET: Powering Avionics and AI Payloads The key device selected is the VBGQA1153N (150V/45A/DFN8(5x6), SGT MOSFET). Power Density and Efficiency for SWaP-C Optimization: Converting the high-voltage bus (e.g., 800V) to low-voltage rails (28V/12V) for flight computers, sensors, and comms demands extreme power density. This DFN8 packaged SGT MOSFET, with a low RDS(on) of 26mΩ, enables very high switching frequencies (500kHz-1MHz+), dramatically shrinking magnetic component size and weight. The high current rating (45A) in a minuscule footprint is ideal for building compact, multi-kilowatt converter modules. Aviation-Grade Performance: The SGT (Shielded Gate Trench) technology offers excellent switching performance with low gate charge and minimized parasitic capacitance, reducing switching losses crucial for high-frequency operation. The compact, low-inductance package layout minimizes voltage overshoot and EMI generation. Drive and Layout Criticality: Requires a dedicated, high-speed gate driver placed in close proximity. PCB design must use multilayer boards with dedicated power planes and extensive use of thermal vias under the DFN8 pad to dissipate heat to internal layers or the chassis. 3. Intelligent Load & Auxiliary System MOSFET: Precision Power Distribution The key device selected is the VBQA1308 (30V/80A/DFN8(5x6), Trench MOSFET). Mission-Aware Load Management Logic: Dynamically controls power to non-propulsion loads based on flight phase (takeoff, cruise, loiter, landing). This includes managing high-current payloads like LiDAR, hyperspectral imagers, and AI processing units. Enables smart power sequencing, load shedding in contingency scenarios, and PWM control for thermal management fans. Ultra-Low Loss Switching: With an exceptionally low RDS(on) of 7mΩ (at 10V), this device minimizes conduction loss when supplying high-current loads, directly improving overall system efficiency and reducing thermal burden. The 80A continuous current rating in a DFN8 package represents state-of-the-art power density for load switches. Integration and Thermal Handling: Its extremely small size allows for dense integration on a Vehicle Management Unit (VMU) or Power Distribution Unit (PDU) PCB. Effective heat dissipation relies entirely on a sophisticated PCB thermal design—using thick copper pours, multiple thermal vias arrays, and potentially direct attachment to a cold plate—to manage the significant heat generated at high currents. II. System Integration Engineering Implementation 1. Hierarchical and Lightweight Thermal Management A weight-conscious thermal strategy is essential. Level 1: Liquid Cooling / Vapor Chamber: For the main propulsion inverter IGBTs (VBP113MI25B), utilizing integrated liquid cold plates or advanced vapor chambers attached to the TO-247 devices is necessary to handle concentrated heat flux. Level 2: Forced Air Cooling with Ducting: For the high-frequency DC-DC converters (using VBGQA1153N), designed with optimized heatsinks and airflow ducts using the eVTOL's aerodynamic slipstream or dedicated low-power fans. Level 3: Conduction Cooling via Chassis: For the load switch MOSFETs (VBQA1308) on the PDU, the PCB must be designed as a thermal bridge, transferring heat through thermal vias and conductive pads directly to the metal aircraft structure or a dedicated cold wall. 2. Extreme Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) and Functional Safety 图2: AI国土测绘 eVTOL方案与适用功率器件型号分析推荐VBP113MI25B与VBGQA1153N与VBQA1308产品应用拓扑图_en_02_propulsion EMI Suppression for Sensitive Avionics: Use input filters with common-mode chokes and ceramic capacitors. Implement perfect layout practices for high di/dt and dv/dt loops, especially for the DFN8 MOSFETs. Full shielding of all power electronics compartments is mandatory. Motor phase cables must be twisted and shielded. Aviation Functional Safety & Fault Tolerance: Design must aim for compliance with aviation standards like DO-254 and DO-178C, with inherent redundancy. Implement hardware-based, independent over-current and over-temperature protection for all critical paths. Use isolated gate drivers with desaturation detection for IGBTs. The power architecture should support graceful degradation in case of a single-point failure. 3. Reliability and Fault Tolerance Enhancement Electrical Stress Protection: Implement snubber circuits across the IGBTs in the propulsion inverter. Use TVS diodes and RC snubbers on gate drives and switching nodes of the DC-DC converters. All inductive loads must have clamped flyback paths. Advanced Health Monitoring (HM): Integrate current, voltage, and temperature sensing at multiple points. Algorithms can monitor trends in IGBT VCEsat or MOSFET RDS(on) for early signs of degradation. This data feeds into the aircraft's Health and Usage Monitoring System (HUMS). III. Performance Verification and Testing Protocol 1. Key Test Items and Standards Testing must be more rigorous than automotive standards. Power Density & Efficiency Mapping: Measure efficiency across the entire flight envelope (hover, climb, cruise) using precision analyzers. Record power-to-weight ratios for critical subsystems. Environmental Stress Screening: Thermal cycling from -55°C to +125°C, combined with vibration profiles simulating takeoff, turbulence, and landing shocks per RTCA DO-160 standards. High-Altitude and Humidity Testing: Verify performance and corona discharge effects at low-pressure conditions equivalent to maximum operational altitude. EMC/EMI Testing: Must exceed stringent aerospace requirements (e.g., MIL-STD-461) to ensure no interference with navigation and communication systems. Endurance and Mission Profile Testing: Execute repeated cycles simulating a full day of survey missions on a test bench, focusing on thermal fatigue of solder joints and interconnections. 2. Design Verification Example Test data from a 100kW-rated eVTOL propulsion subsystem (Bus voltage: 800VDC, Ambient: 25°C): 图3: AI国土测绘 eVTOL方案与适用功率器件型号分析推荐VBP113MI25B与VBGQA1153N与VBQA1308产品应用拓扑图_en_03_avionics Propulsion inverter efficiency exceeded 98% at cruise condition. Avionics DC-DC converter (28V/2kW) peak efficiency reached 96%. Critical Temperature Rise: During a simulated 30-minute hover, the IGBT junction temperature stabilized at 110°C with liquid cooling; the PDU load switch (VBQA1308) case temperature remained below 65°C with chassis conduction cooling. The system passed all conducted and radiated EMI tests with significant margin. IV. Solution Scalability 1. Adjustments for Different eVTOL Configurations & Payloads Small Multicopter for Light Surveying: May use distributed propulsion with lower-power motor drives. The VBQA1308 could serve as a primary power switch for smaller motors or heavy payloads. Lift + Cruise Configuration for Heavy Payload/Long Range: Requires the core high-voltage IGBT (VBP113MI25B) solution for the lift fans and cruise propellers, with multiple parallel devices or modules. The DC-DC system must be redundant and highly reliable. VTOL Fixed-Wing for Maximum Endurance: Prioritizes ultra-high efficiency in cruise. The power chain design would emphasize minimizing losses in the cruise propulsion inverter and the always-on avionics DC-DC converter. 2. Integration of Cutting-Edge Technologies Wide Bandgap (SiC/GaN) Adoption Path: The natural progression for eVTOL is rapid adoption of Silicon Carbide (SiC) MOSFETs for the main inverter and DC-DC stages due to their superior efficiency, higher temperature capability, and frequency, leading to drastic weight savings. The current IGBT and Si-MOSFET solutions provide a reliable foundation for near-term certification. Integrated Modular Avionics (IMA) & Smart PDUs: Future systems will deeply integrate power distribution with flight control and mission computers, enabling real-time, AI-optimized power allocation based on sensor demand and flight conditions. 图4: AI国土测绘 eVTOL方案与适用功率器件型号分析推荐VBP113MI25B与VBGQA1153N与VBQA1308产品应用拓扑图_en_04_thermal Advanced Thermal Management Systems: Integration of the powertrain thermal system with the aircraft's environmental control system (ECS) for optimal waste heat rejection and cabin/payload temperature management. Conclusion The power chain design for AI territorial survey eVTOLs is a mission-critical engineering discipline balancing the trilemma of power density, unwavering reliability, and intelligent efficiency. The tiered optimization scheme proposed—employing a high-voltage-robust IGBT for primary propulsion, a maximally dense SGT MOSFET for avionics power conversion, and an ultra-low-loss load switch for intelligent distribution—provides a scalable, performance-oriented foundation. As eVTOLs move towards certification and commercial deployment, adhering to aerospace-grade design, verification rigor, and functional safety principles is non-negotiable. This foundational approach, while leveraging proven technology today, is inherently prepared for the inevitable transition to wide-bandgap semiconductors and deeply integrated vehicle energy management, ultimately ensuring that the power chain remains an invisible yet indispensable enabler of persistent, reliable, and intelligent aerial observation.

As AI-powered electric Vertical Take-Off and Landing (eVTOL) aircraft for territorial surveying evolve towards longer endurance, higher payload capacity for sensor suites, and extreme operational reliability, their onboard electric propulsion and power distribution systems are the core enablers of mission success. A meticulously designed power chain is the physical foundation for these aircraft to achieve efficient hover, agile transition, resilient operation in varied atmospheric conditions, and the uninterrupted power required by high-compute AI and sensing modules. However, designing for aviation presents unique, stringent challenges: How to achieve maximum power density and efficiency within severe weight and volume constraints? How to ensure absolute functional safety and fault tolerance for airborne systems? How to intelligently manage power between propulsion, avionics, and payload under dynamic flight profiles? The answers are embedded in the selection, integration, and validation of every power component.

I. Three Dimensions for Core Power Component Selection: Coordinated Consideration of Voltage, Switching Frequency, and Package

1.  Main Propulsion Inverter IGBT: The Heart of Thrust and Efficiency

The key device selected is the VBP113MI25B (1350V/25A/TO-247, IGBT).

Voltage Stress and Aviation Reliability: eVTOL powertrains are trending towards high-voltage DC buses (e.g., 800V) to reduce current and cable weight for a given power level. The 1350V rating provides a critical safety margin against transients during high-speed switching and fault conditions, adhering to stringent aviation derating principles. The robust TO-247 package, when combined with proper mounting and potting, meets the vibration and shock requirements of aerial vehicles.

Loss Profile for High-Frequency Operation: While the VCEsat (2V @15V) influences conduction loss, the device's technology ("BD" - likely a fast-switching or low-loss generation) is crucial for optimizing losses at the elevated switching frequencies (>20kHz) often used in aviation motor drives to reduce motor harmonics and weight. Efficient switching is paramount for maximizing range.

Thermal Management Imperative: In the confined, potentially passively cooled spaces of some eVTOL nacelles, thermal design is critical. The junction temperature must be meticulously controlled via liquid or advanced forced-air cooling: Tj = Tc + (P_cond + P_sw) × Rθjc. The low per-device current rating allows for scalable, parallelizable modules to achieve higher total thrust power.

 


 

1: AI国土测绘 eVTOL方案与适用功率器件型号分析推荐VBP113MI25BVBGQA1153NVBQA1308产品应用拓扑图_en_01_total

 

2.  High-Density DC-DC Converter MOSFET: Powering Avionics and AI Payloads

The key device selected is the VBGQA1153N (150V/45A/DFN8(5x6), SGT MOSFET).

Power Density and Efficiency for SWaP-C Optimization: Converting the high-voltage bus (e.g., 800V) to low-voltage rails (28V/12V) for flight computers, sensors, and comms demands extreme power density. This DFN8 packaged SGT MOSFET, with a low RDS(on) of 26mΩ, enables very high switching frequencies (500kHz-1MHz+), dramatically shrinking magnetic component size and weight. The high current rating (45A) in a minuscule footprint is ideal for building compact, multi-kilowatt converter modules.

Aviation-Grade Performance: The SGT (Shielded Gate Trench) technology offers excellent switching performance with low gate charge and minimized parasitic capacitance, reducing switching losses crucial for high-frequency operation. The compact, low-inductance package layout minimizes voltage overshoot and EMI generation.

Drive and Layout Criticality: Requires a dedicated, high-speed gate driver placed in close proximity. PCB design must use multilayer boards with dedicated power planes and extensive use of thermal vias under the DFN8 pad to dissipate heat to internal layers or the chassis.

3.  Intelligent Load & Auxiliary System MOSFET: Precision Power Distribution

The key device selected is the VBQA1308 (30V/80A/DFN8(5x6), Trench MOSFET).

Mission-Aware Load Management Logic: Dynamically controls power to non-propulsion loads based on flight phase (takeoff, cruise, loiter, landing). This includes managing high-current payloads like LiDAR, hyperspectral imagers, and AI processing units. Enables smart power sequencing, load shedding in contingency scenarios, and PWM control for thermal management fans.

Ultra-Low Loss Switching: With an exceptionally low RDS(on) of 7mΩ (at 10V), this device minimizes conduction loss when supplying high-current loads, directly improving overall system efficiency and reducing thermal burden. The 80A continuous current rating in a DFN8 package represents state-of-the-art power density for load switches.

Integration and Thermal Handling: Its extremely small size allows for dense integration on a Vehicle Management Unit (VMU) or Power Distribution Unit (PDU) PCB. Effective heat dissipation relies entirely on a sophisticated PCB thermal design—using thick copper pours, multiple thermal vias arrays, and potentially direct attachment to a cold plate—to manage the significant heat generated at high currents.

II. System Integration Engineering Implementation

1.  Hierarchical and Lightweight Thermal Management

A weight-conscious thermal strategy is essential.

Level 1: Liquid Cooling / Vapor Chamber: For the main propulsion inverter IGBTs (VBP113MI25B), utilizing integrated liquid cold plates or advanced vapor chambers attached to the TO-247 devices is necessary to handle concentrated heat flux.

Level 2: Forced Air Cooling with Ducting: For the high-frequency DC-DC converters (using VBGQA1153N), designed with optimized heatsinks and airflow ducts using the eVTOL's aerodynamic slipstream or dedicated low-power fans.

Level 3: Conduction Cooling via Chassis: For the load switch MOSFETs (VBQA1308) on the PDU, the PCB must be designed as a thermal bridge, transferring heat through thermal vias and conductive pads directly to the metal aircraft structure or a dedicated cold wall.

2.  Extreme Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) and Functional Safety

 


 

2: AI国土测绘 eVTOL方案与适用功率器件型号分析推荐VBP113MI25BVBGQA1153NVBQA1308产品应用拓扑图_en_02_propulsion

 

EMI Suppression for Sensitive Avionics: Use input filters with common-mode chokes and ceramic capacitors. Implement perfect layout practices for high di/dt and dv/dt loops, especially for the DFN8 MOSFETs. Full shielding of all power electronics compartments is mandatory. Motor phase cables must be twisted and shielded.

Aviation Functional Safety & Fault Tolerance: Design must aim for compliance with aviation standards like DO-254 and DO-178C, with inherent redundancy. Implement hardware-based, independent over-current and over-temperature protection for all critical paths. Use isolated gate drivers with desaturation detection for IGBTs. The power architecture should support graceful degradation in case of a single-point failure.

3.  Reliability and Fault Tolerance Enhancement

Electrical Stress Protection: Implement snubber circuits across the IGBTs in the propulsion inverter. Use TVS diodes and RC snubbers on gate drives and switching nodes of the DC-DC converters. All inductive loads must have clamped flyback paths.

Advanced Health Monitoring (HM): Integrate current, voltage, and temperature sensing at multiple points. Algorithms can monitor trends in IGBT VCEsat or MOSFET RDS(on) for early signs of degradation. This data feeds into the aircraft's Health and Usage Monitoring System (HUMS).

III. Performance Verification and Testing Protocol

1.  Key Test Items and Standards

Testing must be more rigorous than automotive standards.

Power Density & Efficiency Mapping: Measure efficiency across the entire flight envelope (hover, climb, cruise) using precision analyzers. Record power-to-weight ratios for critical subsystems.

Environmental Stress Screening: Thermal cycling from -55°C to +125°C, combined with vibration profiles simulating takeoff, turbulence, and landing shocks per RTCA DO-160 standards.

High-Altitude and Humidity Testing: Verify performance and corona discharge effects at low-pressure conditions equivalent to maximum operational altitude.

EMC/EMI Testing: Must exceed stringent aerospace requirements (e.g., MIL-STD-461) to ensure no interference with navigation and communication systems.

Endurance and Mission Profile Testing: Execute repeated cycles simulating a full day of survey missions on a test bench, focusing on thermal fatigue of solder joints and interconnections.

2.  Design Verification Example

Test data from a 100kW-rated eVTOL propulsion subsystem (Bus voltage: 800VDC, Ambient: 25°C):

 


 

3: AI国土测绘 eVTOL方案与适用功率器件型号分析推荐VBP113MI25BVBGQA1153NVBQA1308产品应用拓扑图_en_03_avionics

 

Propulsion inverter efficiency exceeded 98% at cruise condition.

Avionics DC-DC converter (28V/2kW) peak efficiency reached 96%.

Critical Temperature Rise: During a simulated 30-minute hover, the IGBT junction temperature stabilized at 110°C with liquid cooling; the PDU load switch (VBQA1308) case temperature remained below 65°C with chassis conduction cooling.

The system passed all conducted and radiated EMI tests with significant margin.

IV. Solution Scalability

1.  Adjustments for Different eVTOL Configurations & Payloads

Small Multicopter for Light Surveying: May use distributed propulsion with lower-power motor drives. The VBQA1308 could serve as a primary power switch for smaller motors or heavy payloads.

Lift + Cruise Configuration for Heavy Payload/Long Range: Requires the core high-voltage IGBT (VBP113MI25B) solution for the lift fans and cruise propellers, with multiple parallel devices or modules. The DC-DC system must be redundant and highly reliable.

VTOL Fixed-Wing for Maximum Endurance: Prioritizes ultra-high efficiency in cruise. The power chain design would emphasize minimizing losses in the cruise propulsion inverter and the always-on avionics DC-DC converter.

2.  Integration of Cutting-Edge Technologies

Wide Bandgap (SiC/GaN) Adoption Path: The natural progression for eVTOL is rapid adoption of Silicon Carbide (SiC) MOSFETs for the main inverter and DC-DC stages due to their superior efficiency, higher temperature capability, and frequency, leading to drastic weight savings. The current IGBT and Si-MOSFET solutions provide a reliable foundation for near-term certification.

Integrated Modular Avionics (IMA) & Smart PDUs: Future systems will deeply integrate power distribution with flight control and mission computers, enabling real-time, AI-optimized power allocation based on sensor demand and flight conditions.

 


 

4: AI国土测绘 eVTOL方案与适用功率器件型号分析推荐VBP113MI25BVBGQA1153NVBQA1308产品应用拓扑图_en_04_thermal

 

Advanced Thermal Management Systems: Integration of the powertrain thermal system with the aircraft's environmental control system (ECS) for optimal waste heat rejection and cabin/payload temperature management.

Conclusion

The power chain design for AI territorial survey eVTOLs is a mission-critical engineering discipline balancing the trilemma of power density, unwavering reliability, and intelligent efficiency. The tiered optimization scheme proposed—employing a high-voltage-robust IGBT for primary propulsion, a maximally dense SGT MOSFET for avionics power conversion, and an ultra-low-loss load switch for intelligent distribution—provides a scalable, performance-oriented foundation. As eVTOLs move towards certification and commercial deployment, adhering to aerospace-grade design, verification rigor, and functional safety principles is non-negotiable. This foundational approach, while leveraging proven technology today, is inherently prepared for the inevitable transition to wide-bandgap semiconductors and deeply integrated vehicle energy management, ultimately ensuring that the power chain remains an invisible yet indispensable enabler of persistent, reliable, and intelligent aerial observation.

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