The Influence of Material Properties and Spreading Resistance in the Thermal Design of Plate Fin Heat Sinks

2006 ◽  
Vol 129 (1) ◽  
pp. 76-81 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Richard Culham ◽  
Waqar A. Khan ◽  
M. Michael Yovanovich ◽  
Yuri S. Muzychka

The thermal design of plate fin heat sinks can benefit from optimization procedures where all design variables are simultaneously prescribed, ensuring the best thermodynamic and air flow characteristic possible. While a cursory review of the thermal network established between heat sources and sinks in typical plate fin heat sinks would indicate that the film resistance at the fluid-solid boundary dominates, it is shown that the effects of other resistance elements, such as the spreading resistance and the material resistance, although of lesser magnitude, play an important role in the optimization and selection of heat sink design conditions. An analytical model is presented for calculating the best possible design parameters for plate fin heat sinks using an entropy generation minimization procedure with constrained variable optimization. The method characterizes the contribution to entropy production of all relevant thermal resistances in the path between source and sink as well as the contribution to viscous dissipation associated with fluid flow at the boundaries of the heat sink. The minimization procedure provides a fast, convenient method for establishing the “best case” design characteristics of plate fin heat sinks given a set of prescribed boundary conditions. It is shown that heat sinks made of composite materials containing nonmetallic constituents, with a thermal conductivity as much as an order of magnitude less that typical metallic heat sinks, can provide an effective alternative where performance, cost, and manufacturability are of importance. It is also shown that the spreading resistance encountered when heat flows from a heat source to the base plate of a heat sink, while significant, can be compensated for by making appropriate design modifications to the heat sink.

2011 ◽  
Vol 301-303 ◽  
pp. 165-169
Author(s):  
Da Yong Gao ◽  
Jian Xin Zhang ◽  
Ping Juan Niu

The spreading resistance is a very important parameter in the applications of heat sink. The design of electronic devices will fail without considering the influence of the spreading resistance. In this paper, a simple thermal model was simulated by Computational Fluid Dynamics software. Some factors, which have great influence on the spreading resistance, have been analyzed. The spreading resistance decreases significantly with the increasing of the area ratio between the heat source and the base-plate. While the ratio being 1, the spreading resistance reaches the mix value. The greater the thermal conductivity of heat sink, the lower the spreading resistance. With the increasing of the thickness of base-plate, the spreading resistance reduces. However, if the thickness exceeds the critical value, the spreading resistance will increase. And the spreading resistance reaches the mix value while the centers of heat source and the base-plate are overlapped.


2003 ◽  
Vol 125 (2) ◽  
pp. 208-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Avram Bar-Cohen ◽  
Madhusudan Iyengar ◽  
Allan D. Kraus

The effort described herein extends the use of least-material single rectangular plate-fin analysis to multiple fin arrays, using a composite Nusselt number correlation. The optimally spaced least-material array was also found to be the globally best thermal design. Comparisons of the thermal capability of these optimum arrays, on the basis of total heat dissipation, heat dissipation per unit mass, and space claim specific heat dissipation, are provided for several potential heat sink materials. The impact of manufacturability constraints on the design and performance of these heat sinks is briefly discussed.


2004 ◽  
Vol 126 (2) ◽  
pp. 247-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
Duckjong Kim ◽  
Sung Jin Kim

In the present work, a compact modeling method based on a volume-averaging technique is presented. Its application to an analysis of fluid flow and heat transfer in straight fin heat sinks is then analyzed. In this study, the straight fin heat sink is modeled as a porous medium through which fluid flows. The volume-averaged momentum and energy equations for developing flow in these heat sinks are obtained using the local volume-averaging method. The permeability and the interstitial heat transfer coefficient required to solve these equations are determined analytically from forced convective flow between infinite parallel plates. To validate the compact model proposed in this paper, three aluminum straight fin heat sinks having a base size of 101.43mm×101.43mm are tested with an inlet velocity ranging from 0.5 m/s to 2 m/s. In the experimental investigation, the heat sink is heated uniformly at the bottom. The resulting pressure drop across the heat sink and the temperature distribution at its bottom are then measured and are compared with those obtained through the porous medium approach. Upon comparison, the porous medium approach is shown to accurately predict the pressure drop and heat transfer characteristics of straight fin heat sinks. In addition, evidence indicates that the entrance effect should be considered in the thermal design of heat sinks when Re Dh/L>∼O10.


2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
A. F. M. Arif ◽  
Syed M. Zubair ◽  
S. Pashah

Thermally conductive composites as compared to metals have reduced density, decreased oxidation, and improved chemical resistance, as well as adjustable properties to fit a given application. However, there are several challenges that need to be addressed before they can be successfully implemented in heat sink design. The interface between the device and heat sink is an important factor in the thermal design of microelectronics cooling. Depending on the thermal interface conditions and material properties, the contact pressure and thermal stress level can attain undesirable values. In this paper, we investigate the effect of thermal interface between the fin and base plate on thermal-structural behavior of heat sinks. A coupled-field (thermal-structural) analysis using finite element method is performed to predict temperature as well as stress fields in the interface region. In addition temperature and heat flow rate predictions are supported through analytical results. effect of various interface geometrical (such as slot-depth, axial-gap, and radial-gap) and contact properties (such as air gap with surface roughness and gaps filled with interface material) on the resulting thermal-structural response is investigated with respect to four interface materials combinations, and it is found that the thermal performance is most sensitive to the slot-depth compared to any other parameter.


2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. K. Sikka ◽  
C. George

Abstract Longitudinal-plate fin heat sinks are optimized under natural convection conditions for the horizontal orientation of the heat sink base plate. The thermal performance of the heat sinks is numerically modeled. The fin height, thickness and spacing and heat sink width are systematically varied. The numerical results are validated by experimentation. Results show that the thermal resistance of a heat sink minimizes for a certain number of fins on the base plate. The fin spacing-to-length ratio at which the minimum occurs is weakly dependent on the fin height and thickness and heat sink width. The flow fields reveal that the minimum occurs for the heat sink geometry in which the number of fins are maximized such that the flow velocity as the air exits the fins is fully developed. A correlation of the heat transfer with the heat sink geometrical parameters is also developed.


2004 ◽  
Vol 1 (3) ◽  
pp. 187-193 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Van Heerden ◽  
T.R. Rude ◽  
J. Newson ◽  
J. He ◽  
E. Besnoin ◽  
...  

Reactive NanoTechnologies (RNT) has developed a new platform joining technology that can form a metallic bond between a chip package and a heat sink and thereby offer a thermal interface resistance that is up to ten times lower than current thermal interface materials (TIM). The joining process is based on the use of reactive multilayer foils as local heat sources. The foils are a new class of nano-engineered materials, in which self-propagating exothermic reactions can be initiated at room temperature with a hot filament or laser. By inserting a multilayer foil between two solder layers and a chip package and heat sink, energy generated by a chemical reaction in the foil heats the solder to melting and consequently bonds the components. The joining process can be completed in air, argon or vacuum in approximately one second. The resulting metallic joints exhibit thermal resistances up to an order of magnitude lower, than current commercial TIMs. We also demonstrate, using numerical modeling, that the thermal exposure of microelectronic packages during joining is very limited. Finally we show numerically that reactive joining can be used to solder Si dies directly to heat sinks without thermally damaging the chip.


Author(s):  
Devdatta P. Kulkarni ◽  
Priyanka Tunuguntla ◽  
Guixiang Tan ◽  
Casey Carte

Abstract In recent years, rapid growth is seen in computer and server processors in terms of thermal design power (TDP) envelope. This is mainly due to increase in processor core count, increase in package thermal resistance, challenges in multi-chip integration and maintaining generational performance CAGR. At the same time, several other platform level components such as PCIe cards, graphics cards, SSDs and high power DIMMs are being added in the same chassis which increases the server level power density. To mitigate cooling challenges of high TDP processors, mainly two cooling technologies are deployed: Liquid cooling and advanced air cooling. To deploy liquid cooling technology for servers in data centers, huge initial capital investment is needed. Hence advanced air-cooling thermal solutions are being sought that can be used to cool higher TDP processors as well as high power non-CPU components using same server level airflow boundary conditions. Current air-cooling solutions like heat pipe heat sinks, vapor chamber heat sinks are limited by the heat transfer area, heat carrying capacity and would need significantly more area to cool higher TDP than they could handle. Passive two-phase thermosiphon (gravity dependent) heat sinks may provide intermediate level cooling between traditional air-cooled heat pipe heat sinks and liquid cooling with higher reliability, lower weight and lower cost of maintenance. This paper illustrates the experimental results of a 2U thermosiphon heat sink used in Intel reference 2U, 2 node system and compare thermal performance using traditional heat sinks solutions. The objective of this study was to showcase the increased cooling capability of the CPU by at least 20% over traditional heat sinks while maintaining cooling capability of high-power non-CPU components such as Intel’s DIMMs. This paper will also describe the methodology that will be used for DIMMs serviceability without removing CPU thermal solution, which is critical requirement from data center use perspective.


Author(s):  
Dylan Farnam ◽  
Bahgat Sammakia ◽  
Kanad Ghose

Increasing power dissipation in microprocessors and other devices is leading to the consideration of more capable thermal solutions than the traditional air-cooled fin heat sinks. Microchannel heat sinks (MHSs) are promising candidates for long-term thermal solution given their simplicity, performance, and the development of MHS-compatible 3D device architecture. As the traditional methods of cooling generally have uniform heat removal on the contact area with the device, thermal consequences of design have traditionally been considered only after the layout of components on a device is finalized in accordance with connection and other criteria. Unlike traditional cooling solutions, however, microchannel heat sinks provide highly nonuniform heat removal on the contact area with the device. This feature is of utmost importance and can actually be used quite advantageously, if considered during the design phase of a device. In this study, simple thermal design criteria governing the general placement of components on devices to be cooled by microchannel heat sink are developed and presented. These thermal criteria are not meant to supersede connection and other important design criteria but are intended as a necessary and valuable supplement. Full-scale numerical simulations of a device with a realistic power map cooled by microchannel heat sink prove the effectiveness of the criteria, showing large reduction in maximum operating temperature and harmful temperature gradients. The simulations further show that the device and microchannel heat sink can dissipate a comparatively high amount of power, with little thermal danger, when design considers the criteria developed herein.


Author(s):  
Sulaman Pashah ◽  
Abul Fazal M. Arif

Heat sinks are used in modern electronic packaging system to enhance and sustain system thermal performance by dissipating heat away from IC components. Pin fins are commonly used in heat sink applications. Conventional metallic pins fins are efficient in low Biot number range whereas high thermal performance can be achieved in high Biot number regions with orthotropic composite pin fins due to their adjustable thermal properties. However, several challenges related to performance as well as manufacturing need to be addressed before they can be successfully implemented in a heat sink design. A heat sink assembly with metallic base plate and polymer composite pin fins is a solution to address manufacturing constraints. During the service life of an electronic packaging, the heat sink assembly is subjected to power cycles. Cyclic thermal stresses will be important at the pin-fin and base-plate interface due to thermal mismatch. The cyclic nature of stresses can lead to fatigue failure that will affect the reliability of the heat sink and electronic packaging. A finite element model of the heat sink is used to investigate the thermal stress cyclic effect on thermo-mechanical reliability performance. The aim is to assess the reliability performance of the epoxy bond at the polymer composite pin fins and metallic base plate interface in a heat-sink assembly.


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (21) ◽  
pp. 5616
Author(s):  
Safi Ahmed Memon ◽  
Taqi Ahmad Cheema ◽  
Gyu Man Kim ◽  
Cheol Woo Park

Thermal performance enhancement in microchannel heat sinks has recently become a challenge due to advancements in modern microelectronics, which demand compatibility with heat sinks able to dissipate ever-increasing amounts of heat. Recent advancements in manufacturing techniques, such as additive manufacturing, have made the modification of the microchannel heat sink geometry possible well beyond the conventional rectangular model to improve the cooling capacity of these devices. One such modification in microchannel geometry includes the introduction of secondary flow channels in the walls between adjacent mainstream microchannels. The present study computationally models secondary flow channels in regular trapezoidal and parallel orientations for fluid circulation through the microchannel walls in a heat sink design. The heat sink is made of silicon wafer, and water is used as the circulating fluid in this study. Continuity, momentum, and energy equations are solved for the fluid flow through the regular trapezoidal secondary flow and parallel secondary flow designs in the heat sink with I-type, C-type, and Z-type inlet–outlet configurations. Plots of velocity contours show that I-type geometry creates optimal flow disruption in the heat sink. Therefore, for this design, the pressure drop and base plate temperatures are plotted for a volumetric flow rate range, and corresponding contour plots are obtained. The results are compared with corresponding trends for the conventional rectangular microchannel design, and associated trends are explained. The study suggests that the flow phenomena such as flow impingement onto the microchannel walls and formation of vortices inside the secondary flow passages coupled with an increase in heat transfer area due to secondary flow passages may significantly improve the heat sink performance.


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