Solid-state transformers (SSTs) have spent the better part of a decade as a promising but niche technology. That’s changing fast. The combination of AI data center power demand, grid-scale renewable integration, and EV ultra-fast charging has pushed SST adoption from pilot projects toward genuine commercial deployment — and with that shift comes a more interesting question for anyone supplying into this market: where does the value, the cost, and the risk actually concentrate across the SST supply chain?

Mapping the SST Value Chain
Like most power electronics products, the SST market splits cleanly into three tiers.
Upstream sits the materials and component layer — power semiconductor devices and drivers, high-frequency magnetics, DC bus capacitors, thermal management hardware, control boards, and the raw materials behind them, including silicon carbide substrates, ferrite, amorphous, and nanocrystalline magnetic alloys. This is where the engineering differentiation lives, and where most of the unit cost of a finished SST originates.
Midstream is system integration — taking those components and turning them into a certified, deployable SST unit. Global power equipment majors such as Eaton, Delta, ABB, Hitachi Energy, Siemens, and Schneider Electric have a head start here, with established project track records in traction and grid applications. Chinese integrators including Huawei, Sungrow, and several specialized power electronics manufacturers are investing heavily to close that gap, particularly in data center-oriented SST designs.
Downstream, the application layer is broader than many assume. AI data centers are currently the fastest-growing demand driver — reinforced by industry standards efforts like the Open Compute Project’s Mount Diablo specification — but smart grid infrastructure, EV charging stations, and rail traction systems all represent established and expanding markets for SST technology.
| Tier | Core Focus | Representative Players | Key Challenge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Upstream | Power semiconductors, magnetics, capacitors, control hardware | Infineon, STMicroelectronics, onsemi, HIITIO, and other SiC/IGBT module suppliers | Balancing performance, cost, and lead time as demand scales |
| Midstream | System integration, certification, full SST unit design | Eaton, Delta, ABB, Hitachi Energy, Siemens, Schneider Electric; Huawei and Sungrow among Chinese integrators | Closing the experience gap with first-generation SST deployments |
| Downstream | AI data centers, smart grid, EV charging, rail traction | Hyperscale operators, utilities, EPC contractors | Validating reliability and total cost of ownership against incumbent technology |
Where the Cost Actually Sits
For an IGBT-based SST design, the cost structure is heavily concentrated in just a few component categories. Power semiconductor devices and their drivers typically account for roughly a third of total system cost — by far the single largest line item. High-frequency transformers and DC bus capacitors each represent a meaningful secondary share, generally in the mid-teens as a percentage of cost, with thermal management, control electronics, and supporting components making up most of the remainder.
This concentration matters for sourcing strategy. A 20 kVA-class SST currently costs somewhat more to manufacture than an equivalent conventional single-phase transformer, and most of that premium traces back to the semiconductor and magnetics bill of materials — not to assembly or enclosure costs. As semiconductor and magnetics supply chains scale and localize, that cost gap is expected to narrow meaningfully over the next several years.
| Component Category | Approx. Share of System Cost |
|---|---|
| Power semiconductors and drivers (IGBT/SiC) | ~30–35% |
| High-frequency transformer | ~15–17% |
| DC bus capacitors | ~15–17% |
| Thermal management (heatsinks, fans) | ~8–10% |
| Control board and logic | ~7–9% |
| Filter inductors and sensors | ~8–10% |
| Auxiliary power and other components | ~3–5% |
The Semiconductor Layer Is Where the Real Race Is Happening
If there’s one component category defining the next phase of SST development, it’s the shift from traditional IGBT modules toward silicon carbide (SiC) and gallium nitride (GaN) devices.
- SiC offers higher breakdown voltage and better thermal performance, making it well suited to the medium- and high-voltage stages of SST architectures.
- GaN offers higher switching frequency in a smaller footprint, making it attractive for compact, high-frequency converter stages where size and switching loss matter more than absolute voltage handling.
| Parameter | Traditional IGBT (Si) | Silicon Carbide (SiC) | Gallium Nitride (GaN) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical voltage range | Up to ~6.5 kV | Up to ~10 kV+ | Generally below 900 V |
| Switching frequency | Lower (kHz range) | Medium–high | Highest |
| Conduction loss | Higher | Lower | Lowest |
| Thermal tolerance | Moderate | High | Moderate–high |
| Best fit in SST design | Cost-sensitive, lower-frequency stages | Medium/high-voltage conversion stages | Compact, high-frequency DC/DC stages |
Globally, SiC substrate and device production remains concentrated among established players such as Infineon, STMicroelectronics, and onsemi, while Chinese manufacturers are scaling capacity across the substrate-to-device chain. HIITIO’s own power semiconductor line — spanning SiC modules, IGBT modules, and SiC/Si hybrid modules — sits squarely in this layer of the supply chain, supplying the switching devices that SST integrators and EV/ESS system builders depend on.
The Protection Layer the Supply Chain Conversations Often Skip
Most discussions of the SST value chain focus on the three categories above — semiconductors, magnetics, and integration — because that’s where the headline cost and the headline innovation sit. What gets less attention is the protection layer that has to surround all of it for an SST to be safely commissioned, certified, and operated in the field.

A few realities make this layer non-negotiable rather than optional:
- DC faults don’t self-extinguish. Unlike AC, there’s no natural current zero-crossing to help interrupt a fault, so every DC bus segment inside an SST needs a contactor, breaker, or fuse engineered specifically for DC interruption.
- Power semiconductors are expensive and fragile under fault conditions. A SiC or IGBT module that fails open is an inconvenience; one that fails short during a fault event can cascade into a much larger and more expensive failure. Fast, correctly coordinated semiconductor fuses are what keep an overcurrent event from destroying the very devices the rest of the supply chain spent the most money building.
- Pre-charge and isolation sequencing is a system-level requirement. Before an SST’s DC bus capacitors can be safely energized, a pre-charge contactor and current-limiting path are required to avoid damaging inrush current — a function that has to be engineered into the system, not bolted on afterward.
| Protection Function | Typical Component | Why It’s Needed |
|---|---|---|
| DC bus isolation / segmentation | HVDC contactor | Allows maintenance or fault isolation without shutting down the full system |
| Pre-charge sequencing | Pre-charge contactor + resistor | Prevents destructive inrush current when energizing DC bus capacitors |
| Overcurrent / short-circuit protection | Semiconductor fuse | Clears fault current fast enough to protect IGBT/SiC modules from thermal or electrical failure |
| Surge protection | Surge protection device (SPD) | Limits transient overvoltage from switching events or external surges |
This is the layer where HIITIO’s broader product range fits — HVDC contactors for DC bus isolation and pre-charge control, semiconductor fuses sized and coordinated to protect IGBT and SiC power modules under fault conditions, and surge protection devices for transient overvoltage events. It’s a less glamorous part of the SST story than the semiconductor race, but it’s the part that determines whether a system passes certification and survives its first real fault event in the field.
What This Means for Buyers and System Integrators
For procurement teams and engineers sourcing into the SST and 800V HVDC ecosystem, a few practical takeaways follow from this supply chain structure:
- Don’t evaluate semiconductor modules and protection components separately. Fuse and contactor selection has to be matched to the specific power module’s let-through current and thermal characteristics, not chosen generically.
- Certification breadth matters as much as technical specification. UL, CE, CB, and CCC coverage across your component suppliers determines how many markets you can deploy into without a redesign.
- Supply chain diversification is increasingly a design requirement, not just a cost question. With SiC and GaN device supply still concentrated among a handful of global manufacturers, qualifying a second source for both semiconductors and protection components reduces project risk.
- Ask suppliers for system-level application support, not just datasheets. The fuse coordination and pre-charge design work that prevents field failures is exactly the kind of engineering support that separates a component vendor from a true supply chain partner.
Source Your Power Semiconductors and DC Protection from One Partner
HIITIO supplies two of the layers that matter most across the SST and 800V HVDC supply chain: power semiconductor modules (SiC, IGBT, and SiC/Si hybrid) for the conversion stage, and semiconductor fuses plus HVDC contactors for DC bus protection and pre-charge control. With 20+ years of manufacturing experience, in-house testing and qualification capability, and UL/CE/CB/CCC certification across our product lines, we help SST integrators, EPC contractors, and EV/ESS system builders source coordinated components instead of stitching together suppliers one part at a time. Contact our engineering team to discuss your project’s semiconductor and protection requirements.