Practical Design of the Power Chain for Cross-City eVTOL Cargo+Passenger Aircraft: Balancing Power Density, Reliability, and Weight

May 20, 2026
MOSFET application solutions
Practical Design of the Power Chain for Cross-City eVTOL Cargo+Passenger Aircraft: Balancing Power Density, Reliability, and Weight

 As eVTOL aircraft evolve towards higher payload capacity, longer range, and greater operational safety, their electric propulsion and power distribution systems are no longer merely functional units but are the core determinants of flight performance, mission efficiency, and overall airworthiness. A meticulously designed power chain is the physical foundation for these aircraft to achieve vertical take-off/landing power, efficient cruise, and failsafe operation under stringent aviation conditions. However, building such a chain presents extreme multi-dimensional challenges: How to maximize power density and efficiency while minimizing weight? How to ensure absolute long-term reliability of power devices under combined stresses of vibration, thermal cycling, and high altitude? How to seamlessly integrate stringent functional safety, thermal management, and intelligent health monitoring? The answers lie within every engineering detail, from the selection of key components to system-level integration optimized for aerospace.

I. Three Dimensions for Core Power Component Selection: Coordinated Consideration of Voltage, Current, and Topology

1. Propulsion Motor Inverter MOSFET: The Heart of Thrust and Efficiency

The key device selected is the VBE165R15SE (650V/15A/TO-252, SJ_Deep-Trench). Its selection is critical for the multi-rotor propulsion system.

 


 

1: 跨城 eVTOL 货运 + 载人一体机方案与适用功率器件型号分析推荐VBE1206VBE18R06SVBE165R15SEVBC6P3033产品应用拓扑图_en_01_total

 

Voltage Stress & Weight Optimization: eVTOL high-voltage DC bus typically operates at 600-800VDC. A 650V-rated device, when used with careful DC-link and snubber design to manage voltage spikes, offers an optimal balance between voltage margin and semiconductor performance/weight. The lightweight TO-252 package contributes directly to the critical weight-saving goal. Its high-ruggedness planar construction is essential for reliability under flight vibration profiles.

Dynamic Characteristics and Loss Optimization: The ultra-low RDS(on) (220mΩ @10V) of the Deep-Trench Super Junction technology is paramount. It minimizes conduction loss during high-current phases like take-off and climb. The fast switching capability of SJ technology reduces switching loss at elevated frequencies, crucial for high-speed motor control and compact filter design, directly impacting the power-to-weight ratio of the entire Electric Power System (EPS).

Thermal Design Relevance: The high efficiency translates to lower heat generation. Combined with a low thermal resistance package mounted on a forced-air or liquid-cooled heatsink, it enables effective heat dissipation. Junction temperature must be rigorously controlled: Tj = Tc + (I_D² × RDS(on) + P_sw) × Rθjc, ensuring headroom for peak thrust demands.

2. High-Current, Low-Voltage Distribution MOSFET: The Backbone of Avionics and Servo Power

The key device is the VBE1206 (20V/100A/TO-252, Trench), a powerhouse for secondary power distribution.

Efficiency and Power Density for Non-Propulsive Loads: This device is ideal for intelligent Power Distribution Units (PDUs) managing high-current avionics, servo actuators, lighting, and environmental control systems derived from the essential 28VDC bus. Its exceptionally low RDS(on) (4.5mΩ @4.5V) ensures minimal voltage drop and conduction loss even at currents upwards of tens of Amperes. The high current rating (100A) in a compact TO-252 package achieves remarkable power density, reducing the size and weight of cabling and busbars.

Aviation Environment Suitability: The robust package withstands vibration. The low gate threshold voltage (Vth) ensures robust turn-on with standard logic-level drive signals from flight control computers. This facilitates efficient PWM control for servo motors and thermal management fans, enabling precise power modulation.

Drive and Protection Design: Requires a dedicated low-side driver. Attention must be paid to gate drive loop inductance to prevent parasitic oscillation. Integrated current sensing or external shunts are necessary for precise load monitoring and protection.

3. Flight-Critical Load & Redundant System MOSFET: The Execution Unit for High-Integrity Control

The key device is the VBC6P3033 (Dual -30V/-5.2A/TSSOP8, P+P), enabling highly integrated and redundant control for safety-critical systems.

Typical Flight-Critical Load Management: Manages redundant power paths to flight control computers, navigation systems, and communication gear. Implements graceful degradation strategies—in case of a primary power path failure, the secondary path is enabled seamlessly. Used for PWM control of backup actuators or precision control of bleed-air valves in thermal management systems.

PCB Layout and Reliability for Avionics: The dual P-channel common-source configuration in a tiny TSSOP8 package is perfect for high-side load switching in space-constrained avionic control modules. The low RDS(on) (36mΩ @10V) minimizes heat generation. Its integration reduces component count, enhancing overall system reliability (higher MTBF). Thermal management relies on strategic PCB copper pours and connection to the module's chassis.

II. System Integration Engineering Implementation

1. Multi-Domain Thermal Management Architecture

A weight-optimized, multi-level cooling strategy is essential.

Level 1: Liquid Cooling targets the high-power propulsion inverters (using devices like VBE165R15SE), employing lightweight aluminum or composite liquid-cooled cold plates to maintain semiconductor junction temperatures within strict limits.

Level 2: Forced Air Cooling targets the PDU assemblies (with devices like VBE1206) and other medium-power avionics, utilizing the aircraft's aerodynamic flow or dedicated blowers in pressurized compartments.

Level 3: Conduction Cooling is used for highly integrated control chips (like VBC6P3033), where heat is transferred via the PCB's internal planes to the module housing, which acts as a heat sink.

Implementation Methods: Use aerospace-grade thermal interface materials for all power device mounting. Design cooling ducts to be integral to the airframe structure for weight savings. Implement thermal isolation between high-heat and sensitive avionic zones.

2. Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) and High-Voltage Safety Design

Conducted & Radiated EMI Suppression: Critical for non-interference with sensitive flight radios and sensors. Use input filters with common-mode chokes and X-capacitors on inverter inputs. Employ twisted-pair or shielded cabling for motor phases with proper termination. Enclose all high-power electronics in conductive, grounded enclosures. Implement spread-spectrum clocking for switching regulators.

High-Voltage Safety and Functional Safety: Must adhere to rigorous aerospace standards (e.g., DO-254, DO-160) and functional safety goals (potentially derived from DAL levels). Implement galvanic isolation in gate drives and current sensing. Deploy redundant insulation monitoring for the high-voltage bus. All protection circuits (overcurrent, short-circuit, overtemperature) must have hardware-based triggers with failsafe logic.

 


 

2: 跨城 eVTOL 货运 + 载人一体机方案与适用功率器件型号分析推荐VBE1206VBE18R06SVBE165R15SEVBC6P3033产品应用拓扑图_en_02_propulsion

 

3. Reliability and Weight-Optimized Design

Electrical Stress Protection: Snubber networks (RC or RCD) are mandatory across all switching nodes in propulsion inverters and DC-DC converters to clamp voltage spikes. All inductive loads (relays, solenoids) require freewheeling diodes or TVS protection.

Fault Diagnosis and Predictive Health Management (PHM): Implement multi-channel current and voltage sensing. Use temperature sensors on all major heatsinks and within critical modules. Advanced PHM can trend the increase in MOSFET RDS(on) over time, predicting end-of-life and enabling condition-based maintenance, which is vital for aircraft availability and safety.

Lightweighting: Every design choice must consider weight. This includes selecting packages like TO-252 and TSSOP8 over heavier alternatives, using laminated busbars instead of cable harnesses where possible, and integrating functions to reduce connectors and enclosures.

III. Performance Verification and Testing Protocol

1. Key Test Items and Standards

Testing must be more severe than automotive standards to ensure airworthiness.

System Efficiency & Power Density Test: Measure Wh/kg/km efficiency across simulated mission profiles (hover, transition, cruise). Verify peak thrust capability and continuous power ratings.

Environmental Stress Screening: Perform temperature cycling from -55°C to +85°C or beyond, combined with humidity and altitude (low-pressure) testing per DO-160.

Vibration and Shock Test: Subject systems to sinusoidal and random vibration profiles simulating rotor-induced vibrations and hard landing shocks.

Electromagnetic Compatibility Test: Must meet DO-160 Section 21 for conducted and radiated emissions and susceptibility, ensuring no interference with flight-critical systems.

Endurance and Lifing Test: Conduct accelerated life testing equivalent to thousands of flight hours to validate reliability predictions and identify wear-out mechanisms.

2. Design Verification Example

 


 

3: 跨城 eVTOL 货运 + 载人一体机方案与适用功率器件型号分析推荐VBE1206VBE18R06SVBE165R15SEVBC6P3033产品应用拓扑图_en_03_avionics

 

Test data from a 200kW-rated eVTOL propulsion & power management system (Bus voltage: 650VDC, Ambient: 25°C) shows:

Propulsion inverter efficiency exceeded 99% at cruise power, maintaining >98.5% during peak take-off thrust.

High-current PDU (28V/2kW segment) efficiency reached 97.5%.

Key Point Temperature Rise: After a back-to-back mission simulation, the estimated SJ MOSFET (VBE165R15SE) junction temperature was 110°C; the PDU MOSFET (VBE1206) case temperature was 65°C.

All systems passed stringent vibration and HIRF (High-Intensity Radiated Field) testing without performance deviation.

IV. Solution Scalability and Technology Roadmap

1. Adjustments for Different eVTOL Configurations

Light Cargo/Personnel Carrier (4-6 seat): Can utilize distributed inverters each using parallel devices like VBE165R15SE. PDU can be centralized using multiple VBE1206.

Heavy-Lift Cargo Variant: Requires higher current modules or extensive paralleling. May employ higher voltage buses (e.g., 1000V+) where 800V-rated devices like VBE18R06S become relevant. Redundancy architecture becomes more complex.

Air Taxi (High-Density Passenger): Focus on ultra-quiet operation influences switching frequency and filter design. Thermal management for passenger cabin systems adds load to the secondary power distribution.

2. Integration of Cutting-Edge Aerospace Technologies

Advanced PHM and Digital Twin: Integration of real-time device health data (RDS(on), Tj) into aircraft-level digital twins for real-time performance optimization and predictive maintenance scheduling.

Wide Bandgap (SiC/GaN) Technology Adoption: The path is clear and urgent for eVTOL.

Phase 1 (Current): High-performance SJ MOSFETs (as selected) provide the best balance of performance and maturity.

Phase 2 (Near-term): Adoption of SiC MOSFETs in the main propulsion inverter to gain 2-4% efficiency, dramatically reduce cooling system weight, and enable higher switching frequencies for lighter magnetics.

Phase 3 (Future): Transition to all-SiC/GaN power chains, enabling unprecedented power densities, higher operating temperatures, and potentially revolutionary aircraft designs.

Integrated Modular Avionics (IMA) for Power: Moving towards centralized computing resources managing power distribution and propulsion control as "virtualized" functions, reducing weight and complexity while enhancing reliability through software-defined redundancy.

 


 

4: 跨城 eVTOL 货运 + 载人一体机方案与适用功率器件型号分析推荐VBE1206VBE18R06SVBE165R15SEVBC6P3033产品应用拓扑图_en_04_thermal

 

Conclusion

The power chain design for cross-city eVTOL aircraft is a pinnacle of multi-disciplinary systems engineering, demanding an optimal balance among extreme power density, uncompromising reliability, minimal weight, and functional safety. The tiered optimization scheme proposed—prioritizing high-efficiency and ruggedness at the propulsion level, maximizing current density in power distribution, and achieving high integration with redundancy at the flight-critical control level—provides a foundational implementation path for eVTOL development.

As airframe integration and certification requirements deepen, future aircraft power management will trend towards greater modularity, intelligence, and adherence to aerospace-specific standards. It is imperative that engineers adopt this framework while rigorously applying aerospace-grade design, verification, and validation processes, preparing diligently for the imminent integration of Wide Bandgap semiconductors.

Ultimately, an excellent eVTOL power design is one that is utterly reliable and invisibly efficient. It does not present itself to the pilot or passenger, yet it creates the fundamental trust and economic viability for urban air mobility through silent, powerful, and safe flight. This is the true value of engineering excellence in enabling the third dimension of green transportation.

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