This study proposes a 300 W class Gallium Nitride (GaN) Solid-State Power Amplifier (SSPA)-based microwave plasma generator system for implementing next-generation light sources with high brightness and color rendering at 2.45 GHz. To overcome the lifetime limitations and control constraints of conventional magnetron systems, the proposed system introduces custom packaging technology utilizing GaN-on-SiC Bare-dies fabricated via the Win-semiconductor’s NP25 process. This approach minimizes parasitic components and significantly reduces thermal resistance compared to standard packages, ensuring reliability during high-power operation. A stable RF output of 300 W was achieved through two-stage power combining. For the plasma source, an Ar-InBr-Hg gas mixture was employed to optimize optical characteristics. This gas mixture is commonly used in electrodeless plasma lamps due to its high luminous efficacy and stable discharge characteristics. To analyze the rapid impedance discontinuity during gas ignition, numerical analysis based on the Drude model was performed, theoretically identifying the complex permittivity transition of the medium and the resulting resonant frequency up-shift mechanism. To mitigate system instability during this transition, an adaptive frequency tracking and feedback control loop based on real-time VSWR monitoring was implemented. Experimental results demonstrate precise tracking within a 100 MHz frequency variable range, achieving a system efficiency of over 53% and maintaining a VSWR below 1.15:1. These results validate the practical feasibility of GaN SSPA technology in electrodeless lighting and industrial plasma applications utilizing high-power RF energy.
Sanghun Lee (Mon,) studied this question.