What to ExpectAs an integral part of our Power Electronics team, you'll be working on next-gen power converters for an array of cutting-edge applications such as vehicle on-board chargers, PV inverters, Powerwall, Supercharger, Megapack, and more.
What You’ll Do- Collaborate with multifaceted cross-functional teams, including electrical and mechanical design engineers, magnetics design engineers, controls engineers, and EMC test engineers throughout the entire product development cycle, including concept and architecture definition, design, prototyping, testing, supplier collaboration, and manufacturing introduction
- Carryout EMI filter design, provide direction for schematic and circuit board layout, product integration, packaging, assembly, cable interface design, shielding, and grounding to ensure EMC compliance at the product level
- Leverage your strong technical background and problem-solving abilities to debug issues and implement fixes during EMC testing, ensuring our products are fully compliant with required standards
What You’ll Bring- Degree in Electrical Engineering or equivalent experience
- Fundamental knowledge of power electronics topologies (AC/DC, DC/DC & DC/AC) and switching waveforms
- Familiarity with schematic capture, power converter and electro-magnetic circuit simulation tools
- 4 or more years of hands-on experience with EMI filter designs for power converters and compliance testing
- Strong understanding of conducted and radiated noise sources and their mitigation techniques in power electronic systems
- Experience with design of common mode and differential mode chokes for noise filtering
- Experience in supervision of PCB layout for minimal stray parameters, power/signal plane definition for EMC optimization
- Thorough knowledge of EMC test standards such as FCC and EN
- Experience with the test methods and use of measuring equipment including spectrum analyzers, signal generators, amplifier, antennas, line filters etc
- Awareness of UL and CE electrical safety requirements and EMC requirements relevant to power converters