Performance Assessment of Single and Multiple Jet Impingement Configurations in a Refrigeration-Based Compact Heat Sink for Electronics Cooling

2017 ◽  
Vol 139 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Pablo A. de Oliveira ◽  
Jader R. Barbosa

The performance of a novel impinging two-phase jet heat sink operating with single and multiple jets is presented and the influence of the following parameters is quantified: (i) thermal load applied on the heat sink and (ii) geometrical arrangement of the orifices (jets). The heat sink is part of a vapor compression cooling system equipped with an R-134a small-scale oil-free linear motor compressor. The evaporator and the expansion device are integrated into a single cooling unit. The expansion device can be a single orifice or an array of orifices responsible for the generation of two-phase jet(s) impinging on a surface where a concentrated heat load is applied. The analysis is based on the thermodynamic performance and steady-state heat transfer parameters associated with the impinging jet(s) for single and multiple orifice tests. The two-phase jet heat sink was capable of dissipating cooling loads of up to 160 W and 200 W from a 6.36 cm2 surface for single and multiple orifice configurations, respectively. For these cases, the temperature of the impingement surface was kept below 40 °C and the average heat transfer coefficient reached values between 14,000 and 16,000 W/(m2 K).

2017 ◽  
Vol 21 (1 Part A) ◽  
pp. 279-288 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shuxia Qiu ◽  
Peng Xu ◽  
Liping Geng ◽  
Arun Mujumdar ◽  
Zhouting Jiang ◽  
...  

Air jet impingement is one of the effective cooling techniques employed in micro-electronic industry. To enhance the heat transfer performance, a cooling system with air jet impingement on a finned heat sink is evaluated via the computational fluid dynamics method. A two-dimensional confined slot air impinging on a finned flat plate is modeled. The numerical model is validated by comparison of the computed Nusselt number distribution on the impingement target with published experimental results. The flow characteristics and heat transfer performance of jet impingement on both of smooth and finned heat sinks are compared. It is observed that jet impingement over finned target plate improves the cooling performance significantly. A dimensionless heat transfer enhancement factor is introduced to quantify the effect of jet flow Reynolds number on the finned surface. The effect of rectangular fin dimensions on impingement heat transfer rate is discussed in order to optimize the cooling system. Also, the computed flow and thermal fields of the air impingement system are examined to explore the physical mechanisms for heat transfer enhancement.


Author(s):  
Donald C. Price ◽  
W. Gerald Wyatt ◽  
Pete Townsend ◽  
Mark C. Woods ◽  
Brad W. Fennell

The design of a thermal management system for an airborne, infrared, optical telescope system is described. This system provides transient thermal management for the optical elements of the system beginning at a high-temperature soak condition of 71°C (159.8°F) on the ground to a low-temperature operating condition of −30°C (−22°F) to −40°C (−40° F) within 45 min after aircraft takeoff. An active cooling system is employed to enable this rapid cooldown. In addition to the low-temperature requirement, the mirrors and lenses must be cooled so that temperature gradients across the optical elements are on the order of 1°C (33.8 °F) to 2°C (35.6 °F). The ambient air available for ground cooling is specified by the military environment to be 55°C (131.0 °F). As the aircraft takes off and climbs to an altitude of 11,582.4 m (38 kft), the ambient air temperature decreases to a low-temperature of −22°C (−7.6 °F) for steady, level flight at at Mach 0.9, this ambient air temperature results in a ram air inlet temperature on the order of 13.5°C (56.3 °F), after the air is captured and diffused to Mach 0.2 prior to entry into a ram air heat exchanger. This ram air heat sink is used to provide a chilled liquid for cooling of optical elements and the turret housing the system. The low temperatures required for this system, which are on the order of −30°C (−22 °F) to −40°C (−40 °F), make the use of forced-convection, liquid-cooling problematic because of the tendancy of liquids to become quite viscous as they approach these low temperature levels. Furthermore, the use of a single-phase heat transfer process will result in temperature gradients within the system. For these reasons, cooling concepts employing single-phase cooling using chilled-liquids have been eliminated from consideration. A low-temperature, low-pressure refrigerant, R-404a, is used as the working fluid. The themal management system uses the optical elements as the evaporator of a two-phase cooling system. The liquid refrigerant is introduced into the optical elements at the saturation temperature and saturation pressure of the liquid. The flow rate of the refrigerant will be controlled in such a manner that all of the heat transfer takes place in the liquid-vapor mixture region of the thermodynamic diagram for R-404a with the refrigerant exiting the elements at an arbitraily determned quality of approximately 0.8. This will assure that all of the heat transfer will be by boiling heat transfer and will take place at a constant temperature and essentially a constant pressure. Since the heat transfer coefficients are large and the process takes place at essentially a constant temperature, the optical elements will be controlled at the saturation temperature of the refrigerant and will be essentially a constant temperature across the expanse of the optical surface. The thermal management system is comprised of an array of TECs configured as a condenser HX. This TEC HX uses ram air as the eventual heat sink and will provide chilled-liquid produced by a liquid-to-ram air HX as the heat sink for the hot side of the TEC array. This system utilizes the system mass as the evaporator and a TEC HX as the condenser in a two-phase heat transfer process to provide rapid cooldown of the system mass to low temperatures in a short period of time and maintain that mass at proper operating temperatures with essentially zero temperature gradients throughout the system.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-53
Author(s):  
Abbas Jassem Jubear ◽  
Ali Hameed Abd

The heat sink with vertically rectangular interrupted fins was investigated numerically in a natural convection field, with steady-state heat transfer. A numerical study has been conducted using ANSYS Fluent software (R16.1) in order to develop a 3-D numerical model.  The dimensions of the fins are (305 mm length, 100 mm width, 17 mm height, and 9.5 mm space between fins. The number of fins used on the surface is eight. In this study, the heat input was used as follows: 20, 40, 60, 80, 100, and 120 watts. This study focused on interrupted rectangular fins with a different arrangement and angle of the fins. Results show that the addition of interruption in fins in various arrangements will improve the thermal performance of the heat sink, and through the results, a better interruption rate as an equation can be obtained.


Author(s):  
Ashutosh Kumar Yadav ◽  
Parantak Sharma ◽  
Avadhesh Kumar Sharma ◽  
Mayank Modak ◽  
Vishal Nirgude ◽  
...  

Impinging jet cooling technique has been widely used extensively in various industrial processes, namely, cooling and drying of films and papers, processing of metals and glasses, cooling of gas turbine blades and most recently cooling of various components of electronic devices. Due to high heat removal rate the jet impingement cooling of the hot surfaces is being used in nuclear industries. During the loss of coolant accidents (LOCA) in nuclear power plant, an emergency core cooling system (ECCS) cool the cluster of clad tubes using consisting of fuel rods. Controlled cooling, as an important procedure of thermal-mechanical control processing technology, is helpful to improve the microstructure and mechanical properties of steel. In industries for heat transfer efficiency and homogeneous cooling performance which usually requires a jet impingement with improved heat transfer capacity and controllability. It provides better cooling in comparison to air. Rapid quenching by water jet, sometimes, may lead to formation of cracks and poor ductility to the quenched surface. Spray and mist jet impingement offers an alternative method to uncontrolled rapid cooling, particularly in steel and electronics industries. Mist jet impingement cooling of downward facing hot surface has not been extensively studied in the literature. The present experimental study analyzes the heat transfer characteristics a 0.15mm thick hot horizontal stainless steel (SS-304) foil using Internal mixing full cone (spray angle 20 deg) mist nozzle from the bottom side. Experiments have been performed for the varied range of water pressure (0.7–4.0 bar) and air pressure (0.4–5.8 bar). The effect of water and air inlet pressures, on the surface heat flux has been examined in this study. The maximum surface heat flux is achieved at stagnation point and is not affected by the change in nozzle to plate distance, Air and Water flow rates.


2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Hetsroni ◽  
A. Mosyak ◽  
Z. Segal

Abstract Experimental investigation of a heat sink for electronics cooling is performed. The objective is to keep the operating temperature at a relatively low level of about 323–333K, while reducing the undesired temperature variation in both the streamwise and transverse directions. The experimental study is based on systematic temperature, flow and pressure measurements, infrared radiometry and high-speed digital video imaging. The heat sink has parallel triangular microchannels with a base of 250μm. According to the objectives of the present study, Vertrel XF is chosen as the working fluid. Experiments on flow boiling of Vertrel XF in the microchannel heat sink are performed to study the effect of mass velocity and vapor quality on the heat transfer, as well as to compare the two-phase results to a single-phase water flow.


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