Navitas Semiconductor to Showcase GaN Power ICs and Silicon Carbide Innovations at CES 2024

Navitas Semiconductor to Showcase GaN Power ICs and Silicon Carbide Innovations at CES 2024

Navitas Semiconductor, a pure-play, next-generation power Semiconductor company and industry leader in gallium nitride (GaN) power ICs and silicon carbide (SiC) technology, has announced its participation in CES 2024 (Las Vegas, NV, January 9th-12th, 2024). Navitas was recently awarded Forbes’ Top 50 America’s most successful small companies.

Navitas’ GaNFast™ power ICs integrate GaN power, sensing, control and advanced safety features in a single device. Robust, high-voltage, high-efficiency GeneSiC™ SiC semiconductors are optimized for reliable operation in harsh-environment, high-power designs.

With a mission to “Electrify our World™”, Navitas invites visitors to discover how next-gen GaN and SiC technology improve the performance, efficiency and adoption of mobile fast charging, EVs, solar, energy storage, home appliance/industrial, and AI data center power. Navitas senior executives and technology experts will highlight complete new system platform designs for EV, solar, data center, mobile and motor drive that feature new product technology platforms including GaNSafe, GeneSiC Gen-3 Fast, and Gen-4 GaNFast Half-Bridge.

Further end-user benefits include increased portability, longer range, faster charging, and grid-independence, plus a focus on how low-carbon-footprint GaN and SiC technology can save over 6 Gtons/yr CO2 by 2050.

“Since our first CES in 2018, Navitas has grown and diversified in technology, applications, markets and geographies, to match CES’ own growth and diversity in customer attendees,” said Gene Sheridan, Navitas’ Co-Founder, and CEO. “GaN and SiC accelerate us away from fossil fuels to ‘Electrify Our World™’ with renewable sources and efficient uses of electricity. They’re disruptive, displacement technology upgrades from legacy silicon chips, enabling smaller, lighter, more-efficient, faster-charging and longer-range power solutions, with lower system costs.”