Low-inductance power loop
Gate and power loops measured in nH against the topology budget — drains, sources, decoupling and shunt-sense paths laid out for GaN/SiC fast edges.
Power-electronics PCBs fail in two ways: thermal and EMI. We design layouts that minimize loop inductance for GaN/SiC, hold the creepage and clearance UL requires, and ship with a TRM thermal report — not a spreadsheet of hopes.
Gate and power loops measured in nH against the topology budget — drains, sources, decoupling and shunt-sense paths laid out for GaN/SiC fast edges.
Reinforced barriers per IEC 60664-1 working voltage and pollution degree, with creepage modeled across the actual layout — not just the schematic.
3 oz / 6 oz / heavy copper, IMS substrates, AlN where it earns its place, and bus-bar landings sized to the actual fault current, not a typical.
Steady-state, transient and fault thermal — heat-sinks, cold plates and forced air modeled in TRM. The report is the deliverable, not a footnote.
A 120 A 12 V → 1 V buck stage for an AI-accelerator board was running ~18 °C hotter than spec at full load and ringing badly at the gate.
Full-load Tmax dropped ~11 °C measured, gate ringing under spec, board signed off against an IR-correlated TRM report.
Heavy copper buys you current capacity; IMS buys you thermal conduction. We model both in TRM and show you the cost / thermal / manufacturability tradeoff in the quote — there’s a clear winner per board.
Yes — that’s most of our power work now. The gate loop IS the design; if it’s much above a few nH you’ve already lost. We measure it, not assume it.
Planar magnetics on the PCB stackup, custom inductor footprints and winding-on-PCB are all in scope — usually as part of the same engagement.
Loop inductance measured, thermal proved, creepage clean. Fixed-fee band in 60 seconds.