Toyota Unveils Silicon Carbide Semiconductor Trial

Cameron Aubernon
by Cameron Aubernon

Toyota unveiled its plans Wednesday to trial a new hybrid system using silicon carbide power semiconductors that could find its way into hybrids and EVs.

The trial will compare the new silicon carbide semiconductors with silicon units currently found in many a hybrid’s, FCV’s and EV’s power control unit, which are linked to a 20 percent loss in overall electric power. The aim is to increase powertrain efficiency by mitigating said losses through the new semiconductors.

The test subjects will be a Camry hybrid prototype and a fuel-cell bus. The bus trial began in early January, when Toyota started data collection on a setup featuring SiC diodes in the FCV’s voltage step-up converter. Meanwhile, the Camry — whose SiC components are in both the hybrid’s voltage step-up and inverter — will hit the road for a year beginning early next month. Both tests are being carried out in Toyota City, Japan.

Toyota hopes to have the SiC technology — developed in a partnership with Denso Corporation and Toyota Central R&D Labs, Inc. — ready for practical use as soon as possible.



Cameron Aubernon
Cameron Aubernon

Seattle-based writer, blogger, and photographer for many a publication. Born in Louisville. Raised in Kansas. Where I lay my head is home.

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  • Honda_lawn_art Honda_lawn_art on Jan 30, 2015

    Dr. Hibbert: 'Was it carbon based, or silicone based? Homer: 'The second one, xylophone.'

  • Jdash1972 Jdash1972 on Jan 30, 2015

    In an industrial application a "drive" is used to operate a squirrel cage induction motor at different speeds. The same motor connected to normal 60Hz AC power will run at a speed determined by the number of poles the motor was built with. 7200 / number of poles = motor rpm. Most motors are 3600, 1800 and 1200, slower motors with more poles are generally less common. An AC variable frequency drive takes the incoming 60Hz AC power and rectifies and filters it using a capacitor bank, to a single phase DC bus. Transistors are used to reconvert this dC power to AC of any desired frequency. You observe a voltage to frequency ratio when driving the motor so the operational rpm range of the motor is limited. This is exactly what's being done in a Tesla, except they start with DC from a battery. Those power transistors, sometimes called IGBT's or insulated gate bipolar transistors, rapidly switch the power to synthesize a pure sine wave at a frequency to achieve the desire motor rpm. Every step in his conversion has losses, just as the transistors have a voltage drop across their junctions and dissipate this power as heat. So big heat sink and whatever cleaver means to keep he electronics cool. Medium voltage drives have huge losses, the air conditioner is as large as the drive itself in most cases. This is what I do for a living.

  • Fred I had a 2009 S-line mine was chipped but otherwise stock. I still say it was the best "new" car I ever had. I wanted to get the new A3, but it was too expensive, didn't come with a hatch and no manual.
  • 3-On-The-Tree If Your buying a truck like that your not worried about MPG.
  • W Conrad I'd gladly get an EV, but I can't even afford anything close to a new car right now. No doubt if EV's get more affordable more people will be buying them. It is a shame so many are stuck in their old ways with ICE vehicles. I realize EV's still have some use cases that don't work, but for many people they would work just fine with a slightly altered mindset.
  • Master Baiter There are plenty of affordable EVs--in China where they make all the batteries. Tesla is the only auto maker with a reasonably coherent strategy involving manufacturing their own cells in the United States. Tesla's problem now is I think they've run out of customers willing to put up with their goofy ergonomics to have a nice drive train.
  • Cprescott Doesn't any better in red than it did in white. Looks like an even uglier Honduh Civic 2 door with a hideous front end (and that is saying something about a Honduh).
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