Engineering Fail-Safe Power for AI Data Servers

Hot-swappable 48V power architectures are crucial for modern AI applications, especially in data centers—where continuous operation and the ability to handle high power loads are critical requirements.

Hot-Swap Circuit

This schematic illustrates a Hot-Swap Circuit, which allows electronic components to be safely inserted or removed from a live system without disrupting power or damaging components. Key elements include:

  • Power Source: A dual-voltage input of +12V/48V, supplying the circuit.
  • Low Ohmic Resistors (PMR Series): These resistors are placed near the power input to help manage inrush current and provide current sensing.
  • Hot-Swap Controller: Central to the circuit, it regulates the power flow during insertion/removal events, ensuring safe operation.
  • N-channel MOSFETs
  • RY7P250BM (100V) and RS7E200BG (30V) are highlighted as new components.
  • These MOSFETs act as switches controlled by the hot-swap controller to manage power delivery.
  • 12V Controller IC (BD12780MUV-LB): Interfaces with the hot-swap controller to regulate voltage and provide system-level control.
  • System Load: The final destination for regulated power, representing the operational electronics.

Source: ROHM Semiconductor

Conventional MOSFETs vs RY7P250BM

SOA Performance Comparison diagram showing current handling improvements of ROHM's DFN8080-8S package over TO-263AB at 48V and 25°C. DFN8080-8S supports 16A vs 1.8A at 10ms, and 50A vs 7.5A at 1ms pulse width.

This diagram compares the Safe Operating Area (SOA) performance of the conventional product TO-263AB to ROHM Semiconductor DFN8080-8S under these conditions:

  • Drain-Source Voltage: VDS = 48V
  • Ambient Temperature: Ta = 25°C

It evaluates performance at two pulse widths:

10ms Pulse Width

  • TO-263AB (Conventional Product): SOA = 1.8A
  • DFN8080-8S (New Product): SOA = 16A
  • Improvement: ~8.8× higher current capacity

1ms Pulse Width

  • TO-263AB: SOA = 7.5A
  • DFN8080-8S: SOA = 50A
  • Improvement: ~6.6× higher current capacity

The diagram visually emphasizes the superior current handling of the DFN8080-8S package, making it ideal for high-performance applications requiring robust thermal and electrical characteristics.

Source: ROHM Semiconductor

RY7P250BM Power MOSFET

Designed for high-reliability 48V applications

What sets it apart

Maximized uptime: Supports safe hot-swapping at full load without interrupting system operation

Ultra-low RDS(on) (1.86mΩ): Reduces conduction losses and improves thermal efficiency

±300A peak current rating: Handles demanding inrush currents and fast switching conditions

100VDSS rating: Suitable for 48V rails, offering ample transient protection headroom

DFN8080-8S package: Saves board space while providing direct thermal path via exposed drain pad

Why SOA matters in hot-swap design

Safe Operating Area (SOA) defines the voltage, current and time range a device can safely handle without damage. More SOA headroom translates to more robust, failure-resistant systems.

  1. Withstands high inrush and fault currents
  2. Minimizes thermal stress in power stages
  3. Enables safe, live module swaps
  4. Essential for hot-swapping in AI servers & data centers
  5. Wider SOA equates to greater reliability