SLUAAS4 January 2024 LM5155-Q1 , LM51551-Q1 , LM5156-Q1 , LM51561-Q1 , LM51561H-Q1 , LM5156H-Q1 , LM5157-Q1 , LM51571-Q1 , LM5158-Q1 , LM51581-Q1 , UCC28700-Q1 , UCC28730-Q1 , UCC28740-Q1 , UCC28781-Q1 , UCC28C50-Q1 , UCC28C51-Q1 , UCC28C52-Q1 , UCC28C53-Q1 , UCC28C54-Q1 , UCC28C55-Q1 , UCC28C56H-Q1 , UCC28C56L-Q1 , UCC28C57H-Q1 , UCC28C57L-Q1 , UCC28C58-Q1 , UCC28C59-Q1
In centralized architecture, all high-side and low-side gate drivers are supplied using a single isolated bias power supply device. This can be the most cost-effective design. On the other side, a failure in this device results into a single point failure and all gate drivers lose the power supply at the same time. Another challenge with this type of architecture is to design a transformer with 6 secondary windings (Pri:Sec = 1:6) and complex PCB layout due to long PCB traces. Therefore, it is difficult to achieve tight voltage regulation in this architecture. Centralized architecture is not commonly used in traction inverters.