Hopefully this is the right place - I'm not building an EV (well, yet... you know how this goes

Background (how I got to the grease in the first place):
In my case, when MG2 is under specific conditions (~2500-4500rpm, tall gear - ~50rpm per kph... so say from 50 to 90kph) and ambient temperatures are "high" (say, >10c - basically not chilly), the car throttles when given full power - mg2 IGBTs hit >120 and throttle, no DTCs or "bad things happened" logs in the HV ECU, no throttling at any other speeds (temps stay around 60 even in 30deg. ambient). Quick checks - nothing else appears to be overheating, radiators are clean, fresh coolant, no way the cooling fins are blocked (I have a "blown" spare - I've torn it down - the passages are not exactly tiny), water pump works. I then started worrying about either Toyota messing up the shift logic (EU-spec 450h's have a taller final drive) or the solder connecting the IGBTs to the heatsink deteriorating (which doesn't exist - the ls600h apparently uses TIM too, but... you know what happens when you fix your mind on something, I guess).
(VERY LATE EDIT: there are solder layers, read everything that I've written with a grain of salt ^_^)
At any rate, while reading the oak ridge articles again (I was focused on the combined motor-inverter efficiency graphs (l110 transaxle and camry inverter) and wondering whether I can override the shift-down to low gear earlier to move away from that "inefficient" area, or supercool the system during the summer using a water->AC heat exchanger or peltier elements or whatever - condensation worries), I finally noticed that the IGBT baseplates interface with the cold plate via thermal grease.
Quick observations:
-ls600h is the first inverter (to my knowledge) using double-sided cooling and SiC IGBTs (EDIT: nope, not SiC, again - something got in my head... still - double sided) - higher thermal limits, bigger cooling capacity. No reported failures, to my knowledge. No reported failures (again, to my knowledge) on any of the newer inverters using this design, either.
-Prius gen2, rx400h/HiHy, 1st gen gs450h, Prius gen 3 - single-sided cooling. Plenty of reported failures on all models, TSBs for rx400h/HiHy and rius 3.
-Anecdotal observations - inverter failures tend to happen with old and/or high mileage cars, other than the prius 3.
-It's thermal grease/paste... it is susceptible to pump-out/dry-out/ and so on over time.
-Prius 3's IGBTs don't have base plates, or a thermal interface material between them and the coolant loop - the IPM is integrated with the cold plate.
-EDIT: rx450h's inverter appears to be using double-side cooled IGBTs too:
https://www.denso.com/-/media/jp/ja/inn ... v14/08.pdf
Conclusion so far - good idea to attempt replacing the IGBTs' thermal grease on a potentially >10 year old inverter, given that it's possible.7. 結論 両面放熱パワー素子と積層冷却を用いて高密度実装を実現し, 従来モデルより高い出力密度を持つ LS600h用 PCU を開発した.熱抵抗は従来設計の半分以下となり, シリコンチップの使用数を大幅に削減できた.本冷却方式を用いた PCU は, 09 年に RX450h にも搭載された.
Main questions - what thermal compound to use, how to apply it (pattern, thickness).
Sources so far:
Here's the rx400h TSB:
https://static.nhtsa.gov/odi/rcl/2013/R ... 6-9944.pdf - page 24 (pdf page 35)
White grease, shin-etsu g747, silicon based, low volatility, low viscosity, no solvents.
Application - essentially manual screen printing. Thickness - unknown, can extrapolate if I manage to get the masking plate (have queried, awaiting an answer), or by guesstimating based on the base plate sizes, the illustration of the plate in the PDF and the information that 5 tubes (the toyota part number is for 20g tubes, msrp $45 >_<) precisely fill both IGBT "sheets" per base plate.
Here's the 2010-2014 (gen3) Prius TSB:
https://static.nhtsa.gov/odi/tsbs/2019/ ... 6-9999.pdf
The TSB references the workshop repair manual for instructions in IPM (IGBT module) removal. This PDF is useful:
https://f01.justanswer.com/xsvectOR/7fe ... _prius.pdf
Key points:
1) IPM includes the heat sink, you can't "repaste" it here. I wonder why they fail so often as to require a TSB... Maybe the lack of thermal mass (no baseplates & huge heat sink)?
2) Masking seal has a pattern on it - it's "stencil printing".
3) Grease is shin-etsu X23-7884-4 - seems toyota-specific, couldn't find anything on it other than its color (the oak ridge national lab article) and a safety data sheet in Japanese. Doesn't look too interesting.
Further readings so far:
https://www.fujielectric.com/company/te ... 9-2010.pdf
Mostly discusses thermal grease application methods.
Does mention some names:
https://www.semikron.com/service-suppor ... ev-00.htmlThe following types of thermal grease were used : Electrolube’s HTC, Dow Corning’s SH 340, American Oil & Supply’s AOS 340 and Shin-Etsu Silicone’s G747.
Discusses thermal grease application in more detail - selection criteria, application methods (& tools & potentially how to make/get them), consequences, etc.
https://www.mitsubishielectric.com/semi ... note_e.pdf
-General application notes on certain Mitsubishi IGBTs. This caught my attention (page 15):
https://americas.fujielectric.com/produ ... ctor-faqs/Typical value given in datasheet is measured by using thermal grease producted by Shin-Etsu Chemical Co.,Ltd. (G-746, which has not issued in Shin-Etsu's publications, is almost the same as G-747.)
Question 39 lists some "recommended thermal greases" - potential G-746 (supposedly resp. G-747) replacements.
The mentioned chapter: https://www.fujielectric.com/products/s ... 4b_06a.pdf
https://www.infineon.com/dgdl/Infineon- ... 00d9fd2ea2
Nothing in particular, just the first thing that I came across. The "temperature development" graph is a good lesson for starters

https://www.hitachi-power-semiconductor ... method.pdf
Comparison of different shin-etsu greases.
http://pdd.hitachi.eu/documents/product ... ote_r2.pdf
page 26, table 4.2 - another name, also G747 is mentioned yet again.
http://www.files.e-shops.co.il/multisit ... reases.pdf
More names, equivalents.
http://www.ohm.com.tr/doc/Mitsubishi-El ... HVIGBT.pdf
G746 mentioned again, along with Dowsil 340 & G747.
I guess that's it for today, starting to lose my mind somewhat. Plan is to round-up thermal compound options and figure out how to apply- roller, diy laser cut 0.1mm steel masking plate with some pattern emulating the newest developments, etc.
Hope this is of some use to somebody. Would love to hear your thoughts
