Open manifold microchannel heat sink for high heat flux electronic cooling with a reduced pressure drop

Author(s):  
Nicholas Gilmore ◽  
Victoria Timchenko ◽  
Chris Menictas
Author(s):  
Kevin P. Drummond ◽  
Doosan Back ◽  
Michael D. Sinanis ◽  
David B. Janes ◽  
Dimitrios Peroulis ◽  
...  

2013 ◽  
Vol 455 ◽  
pp. 466-469
Author(s):  
Yun Chuan Wu ◽  
Shang Long Xu ◽  
Chao Wang

With the increase of performance demands, the nonuniformity of on-chip power dissipation becomes greater, causing localized high heat flux hot spots that can degrade the processor performance and reliability. In this paper, a three-dimensional model of the copper microchannel heat sink, with hot spot heating and background heating on the back, was developed and used for numerical simulation to predict the hot spot cooling performance. The hot spot is cooled by localized cross channels. The pressure drop, thermal resistance and effects of hot spot heat flux and fluid flow velocity on the cooling of on-chip hot spots, are investigated in detail.


2006 ◽  
Vol 129 (3) ◽  
pp. 247-255 ◽  
Author(s):  
X. L. Xie ◽  
W. Q. Tao ◽  
Y. L. He

With the rapid development of the Information Technology (IT) industry, the heat flux in integrated circuit (IC) chips cooled by air has almost reached its limit at about 100W∕cm2. Some applications in high technology industries require heat fluxes well beyond such a limitation. Therefore, the search for a more efficient cooling technology becomes one of the bottleneck problems of the further development of the IT industry. The microchannel flow geometry offers a large surface area of heat transfer and a high convective heat transfer coefficient. However, it has been hard to implement because of its very high pressure head required to pump the coolant fluid through the channels. A normal channel size could not give high heat flux, although the pressure drop is very small. A minichannel can be used in a heat sink with quite a high heat flux and a mild pressure loss. A minichannel heat sink with bottom size of 20mm×20mm is analyzed numerically for the single-phase turbulent flow of water as a coolant through small hydraulic diameters. A constant heat flux boundary condition is assumed. The effect of channel dimensions, channel wall thickness, bottom thickness, and inlet velocity on the pressure drop, temperature difference, and maximum allowable heat flux are presented. The results indicate that a narrow and deep channel with thin bottom thickness and relatively thin channel wall thickness results in improved heat transfer performance with a relatively high but acceptable pressure drop. A nearly optimized structure of heat sink is found that can cool a chip with heat flux of 350W∕cm2 at a pumping power of 0.314W.


Author(s):  
J. M. Wu ◽  
J. Y. Zhao

High power electronics are widely used in many different areas such as integrated circuit (IC) boards in nuclear reactor control system. Thermal management of electronic devices has been a topic of great interest among many researchers over the last few decades. Microchannel is one of several high-heat-flux removal techniques. Nanofluids with enhanced thermal conductivity and strong temperature- and size-dependent thermal properties are expected to be utilized in microchannels as coolants, which leads to a promising future for such high-heat-flux systems as cooling systems. The performance of the microchannel heat sink (MCHS) using water and Al2O3/water nanofluids, with consideration of different substrate materials, is numerically investigated and compared in the present paper to identify the combined effects of working fluids and substrate materials on the thermal resistance, pumping power and temperature distribution on the substrate surface of a heat sink.


2020 ◽  
Vol 18 ◽  
pp. 100587
Author(s):  
Essam M. Abo-Zahhad ◽  
Shinichi Ookawara ◽  
Ali Radwan ◽  
M.F. Elkady ◽  
A.H. El-Shazly

2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (5) ◽  
pp. 1333-1344 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qi Yang ◽  
Jianyin Miao ◽  
Jingquan Zhao ◽  
Yanpei Huang ◽  
Weichun Fu ◽  
...  

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