Breaking News:
Shipping

The Switch extends ultrafast DC protection with a new capability for direct battery connection

Finnish marine power electronics specialist’s new Electronic Current Limiter (ECL) enables batteries to connect directly to DC systems while preserving ride-through and system stability.

The Switch has expanded its world-leading portfolio of ultrafast DC protection technologies with the ECL to address a growing challenge in modern hybrid and electric vessels: how faults in large battery systems can affect the rest of the ship.

As batteries play a larger role in vessel propulsion, power generation and energy storage, a fault on the battery side is no longer a local issue. Without sufficiently fast protection, sudden fault currents can pull voltage down across the shared DC system, causing healthy equipment to trip or shut down and turning a contained technical issue into a wider operational disruption.

Installed between batteries and the DC-Hub, the ECL limits fault current during abnormal conditions before it can propagate into the DC system. By acting at microsecond speed, it preserves DC-link voltage and ride-through capability, allowing other consumers to continue operating.

“DC systems don’t give you time to react,” says Paul Atherton, Product Line Director, Power Electronics at The Switch. 

“If you want predictable behaviour during a fault, protection has to act immediately. The ECL gives us that level of control on the battery interface.”

Completing the protection architecture

The ECL builds on The Switch’s established suite of semiconductor-based protection devices for DC distribution. Electronic DC Breakers (EDCBs), integrated inside inverter modules, isolate internal faults within microseconds, ensuring failures are contained locally without destabilising the DC-Hub. Electronic Bus Links (EBLs) provide selective protection between DC-Hubs, allowing energy sharing during normal operation while instantly separating sections if a serious fault occurs.

Battery Short-Circuit Limiters (BSCLs) address the growing short-circuit energy associated with large battery installations by preventing that stored energy from being released into the DC system during a fault.

The ECL complements these technologies by focusing specifically on faults on the battery side, particularly in configurations where batteries are connected directly to the DC link.

“Each device has a specific role, but the objective is always the same,” Atherton explains. “Contain the fault at the source and keep the DC link stable.”

Enabling simpler, more robust system designs

By allowing batteries to connect directly to the DC link, the ECL enables simpler system architecture with fewer conversion stages. In most cases, this increases vessel efficiency and reduces footprint, all while ensuring predictable behaviour during faults thanks to its fast, selective protection.

For shipowners, the benefit is not only efficiency but operational resilience. When faults are contained quickly, vessels can continue operating or exit operations safely, rather than experiencing blackouts or cascading system failures.

Like The Switch’s other protection technologies, the ECL is based on semiconductor devices and fast current measurement, operating at microsecond timescales rather than milliseconds. Its introduction reflects a broader shift in marine power system design, where failure behaviour and ride-through capability are treated as core design criteria rather than afterthoughts.

“As vessels become more electric and more complex, protection is no longer just about compliance,” Atherton concludes. “It’s about ensuring the system behaves in a controlled and predictable way under all conditions.”


About The Switch

The Switch is an agile product supplier that provides custom electric machines and power electronics products to system integrators (SIs) and original equipment manufacturers (OEMs). We are on a mission to electrify the world with game-changing green technologies. Our products accelerate the switch toward net zero emissions in marine, renewables and industry applications. We are growing together with customers who find the key to their success in our innovative technology and optimized products. Our products currently deliver tens of gigawatts of electricity throughout the world. The Switch is part of the BEMAC Group whose products are unified under the BEMAC brand.

For more information, visit theswitch.com

Paul Atherton, Product Line Director, Power Electronics at The Switch