Experimental Validation of a Detailed Phase Change Model on a Hardware Testbed

Author(s):  
Charlie De Vivero ◽  
Fulya Kaplan ◽  
Ayse K. Coskun

Continued CMOS scaling accompanied with a stall in the voltage scaling has led to high on-chip power densities. High on-chip power densities elevate the temperatures, substantially limiting the performance and reliability of computing systems. The use of Phase Change Materials (PCMs)1 has been explored as a passive cooling method to manage excessive chip temperatures. The thermal properties of PCMs allow a large amount of heat to be stored at near-constant temperature during the phase transition. This heat storage capability of PCM can be leveraged during periods of intense computation. For systems with PCM, development of new management strategies is essential to maximize the benefits of PCM. In order to design and evaluate these management strategies, it is necessary to have an accurate PCM thermal model. In our recent work, we proposed a detailed phase change thermal model, which we integrated into a compact thermal simulation tool, HotSpot. In this paper, we build a hardware testbed incorporating a PCM unit on top of the chip package. We then validate the accuracy of our previously proposed thermal model by comparing the HotSpot simulation results against the measurements on the testbed. We observe that the error between the measured and simulated temperatures is less than 4°C with 0.65 probability. Finally, we implement a soft PCM capacity sensor that monitors the remaining PCM latent heat capacity to be used for development of thermal management policies. We evaluate a set of thermal management policies on the testbed. We compare policies that adjust the sprinting frequency based on current temperature against the policies that take action based on the remaining PCM capacity.

Author(s):  
Jonathan Young ◽  
Jingru Benner ◽  
Anthony D. Santamaria

Electrochemical energy conversion and storage devices are becoming a large part of the renewable energy market. For these systems to operate optimally over a wide range of operating and environmental conditions, advanced strategies for thermal management must be developed. Incorporating microencapsulated phase change materials (MEPCM), which utilize latent heat storage, into coolant fluids has been shown to increase the fluid’s thermal capacity. This mitigates the temperature gradient between the coolant loop inlet and outlet which is important in systems such as fuel cells and batteries where sensitivity to temperature directly impacts the electrochemical reaction, transport processes, and component lifetimes. The use of MEPCMs may allow for lower coolant flow rates which may reduce parasitic pumping power, further increasing overall system efficiency. In this work MEPCM material is added to liquid water at several mass concentration ratios, and an analytical study was conducted to determine pressure drop and channel power requirements. The viscosity of the slurry is measured along with its density, conductivity, and heat capacity as a function of temperature. Inlet and outlet channel slurry temperatures are monitored, flow rate is controlled, and the heat flux can be varied to simulate waste heat outputs of various devices. From this data the optimal conditions for the slurry flow can be assessed and thermal management strategies can be designed for specific devices.


Author(s):  
Giulia Righetti ◽  
Claudio Zilio ◽  
Luca Doretti ◽  
Giovanni A. Longo ◽  
Simone Mancin

Heliyon ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. e07773
Author(s):  
Danial Karimi ◽  
Md Sazzad Hosen ◽  
Hamidreza Behi ◽  
Sahar Khaleghi ◽  
Mohsen Akbarzadeh ◽  
...  

RSC Advances ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (68) ◽  
pp. 42909-42918 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ziyuan Wang ◽  
Xinxi Li ◽  
Guoqing Zhang ◽  
Youfu Lv ◽  
Cong Wang ◽  
...  

In battery thermal cycle tests PCM 3 prolonged the service life of PCM because the epoxy can effectively prevent leakage of paraffin during phasing change.


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