LOW VOLTAGE, HIGH CURRENT POWER CONVERTER FOR HIGH POWER INTEGRATED CIRCUITS (ARTES AT 5C.410)
12, March 2021

ESA Open Invitation to Tender AO10203
Open Date: 11/03/2021
Closing Date: 26/05/2021 13:00:00

Status: ISSUED
Reference Nr.: 20.1TT.23
Prog. Ref.: CC-AT 4.0.1
Budget Ref.: E/0534-01G – CC-AT 4.0.1
Special Prov.: BE+DK+FR+DE+IT+NL+ES+SE+CH+GB+IE+AT+NO+FI+PT+GR+LU+CZ+RO+CA+HU+PL
Tender Type: C
Price Range: > 500 KEURO
Products: Satellites & Probes / RF / Microwave Communication (Platform and Payloads) / “Communication – BB (Antennas excluded)” / Other
Technology Domains: RF Systems, Payloads and Technologies / Telecommunication Systems/Subsystems / Telecom Equipment
Establishment: ESTEC
Directorate: Directorate Telecom & Integrated Applica
Department: Telecom Technologies,Product&Systems Dep
Division: Technologies and Products Division
Contract Officer: Mezzadri, Monica
Industrial Policy Measure: N/A – Not apply
Last Update Date: 11/03/2021
Update Reason: Tender issue

Objective: The objective of the activity is to design, manufacture and test a power converter with low output voltage and high output current capability to fulfil the needs of high power integrated circuits (including ASICs, FPGAs and micro-processors) as needed for on-board payload processors and computers. Targeted Improvements: Enabling a European source of power converters with an outputvoltage lower than 1.2 V and an output current higher than 50 A, with an increase in the end-to-end efficiency of at least 5%. Description: As new generations of high throughput satellites aim at providing more capacity, manufacturers explore methods to improve the performance of the key digital processing modules. A usual way to increase performance of the key components, such as Field Programmable Gate Arrays (FPGA), application-specific integrated circuits (ASICs) and microprocessors, is to increase their clock frequency, leading to exponentially increasing power consumption. To counteract this problem, a typical solution is to reduce the supply voltage. The final result is that the newest devices need very low voltages and high currents (<1V, 50A) on the supply line. This combination is one of the worst possible for DC/DC converters and it is technically challenging to achieve high performance under theseconditions. This issue has been solved in terrestrial applications, where high performance multi-core microprocessors have even more demanding power supply requirements. This provides extensive evidence that multi-phase buck converters can achieve the performanceneeded for space applications when the appropriate technologies and techniques are used. However, today there is no European sourceforthis type of DC/DC converter. This activity will address the design, development and test of a DC/DC converter capable of addressing the needs of modern digital components, by selecting an appropriate topology and suitable components and integrating techniques.

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