Heat-dissipation performance of cylindrical heat sink with perforated fins

2021 ◽  
Vol 170 ◽  
pp. 107132
Author(s):  
Gihyun Song ◽  
Dong-Hwa Kim ◽  
Dong-Hyung Song ◽  
Ju-Bin Sung ◽  
Se-Jin Yook
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Nico Setiawan Effendi ◽  
Kyoung Joon Kim

A computational study is conducted to explore thermal performances of natural convection hybrid fin heat sinks (HF HSs). The proposed HF HSs are a hollow hybrid fin heat sink (HHF HS) and a solid hybrid fin heat sink (SHF HS). Parametric effects such as a fin spacing, an internal channel diameter, a heat dissipation on the performance of HF HSs are investigated by CFD analysis. Study results show that the thermal resistance of the HS increases while the mass-multiplied thermal resistance of the HS decreases associated with the increase of the channel diameter. The results also shows the thermal resistance of the SHF HS is 13% smaller, and the mass-multiplied thermal resistance of the HHF HS is 32% smaller compared with the pin fin heat sink (PF HS). These interesting results are mainly due to integrated effects of the mass-reduction, the surface area enhancement, and the heat pumping via the internal channel. Such better performances of HF HSs show the feasibility of alternatives to the conventional PF HS especially for passive cooling of LED lighting modules.


Author(s):  
Zhuo Cui

This paper presents the effects of heat dissipation performance of pin fins with different heat sink structures. The heat dissipation performance of two types of pin fin arrays heat sink are compared through measuring their heat resistance and the average Nusselt number in different cooling water flow. The temperature of cpu chip is monitored to determine the temperature is in the normal range of working temperature. The cooling water flow is in the range of 0.02L/s to 0.15L/s. It’s found that the increase of pin fins in the corner region effectively reduce the temperature of heat sink and cpu chip. The new type of pin fin arrays increase convection heat transfer coefficient and reduce heat resistance of heat sink.


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.


2020 ◽  
Vol 24 (3 Part A) ◽  
pp. 1877-1884 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diego Alarcón ◽  
Eduardo. Balvís ◽  
Ricardo Bendaña ◽  
Alberto Conejero ◽  
de Fernández ◽  
...  

We present a detailed study of heating and cooling processes in LED luminaires with passive heat sinks. Our analysis is supported by numerical simulations as well as experimental measurements, carried on commercial systems used for outdoor lighting. We have focused our analysis on the common case of a single LED source in thermal contact with an aluminum passive heat sink, obtaining an excellent agreement with experimental measurements and the numerical simulations performed. Our results can be easily expanded, without loss of generality, to similar systems.


2021 ◽  
pp. 2140015
Author(s):  
Min Miao ◽  
Hao Zhang ◽  
Hejie Yu ◽  
Lili Cao

With the increasing flourishing of miniaturized, multifunctional, and heterogeneously integrated system in package (SiP), heating problem is becoming more and more serious. In this paper, to meet the heat dissipation needs of the chips thus assembled and to achieve effective thermal management, linear, serpent and spiral shaped microchannel heat sinks were designed and fabricated into copper substrate by electrical discharge machining (EDM) and precision machining technology, acting both as the cooler and mounting base for passive and active SiP interposers. A test platform was set up to characterize the heat dissipation performance of the copper-based microchannel heat sink. The experimental and simulation results show that heat dissipation rate increases with the increasing heat flux density in the range 5–30 W/cm2 for the three microchannel designs, and the peak temperature can all be kept below 340 K (67[Formula: see text]C) even for the highest heat flux. The three designs are compared from the perspective of peak temperature, temperature distribution uniformity and pressure drop. In all, the solution proposed hereby provides a new and optimal option for in-situ cooling for densely integrated electronic hardware.


2011 ◽  
Vol 32 (11) ◽  
pp. 1171-1175 ◽  
Author(s):  
柴伟伟 CHAI Wei-wei ◽  
陈清华 CHEN Qing-hua ◽  
李琳红 LI Ling-hong ◽  
唐文勇 TANG Wen-yong ◽  
张学清 ZHANG Xue-qing ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Jin Yao Ho ◽  
Kai Choong Leong

Abstract A thermal energy storage unit filled with phase change material (PCM) can serve as a heat sink for the cooling of electronics with intermittent or periodic heat dissipation rates. The use of thermal conductive structures (TCS) is an effective method of improving the thermal performance of a PCM-based heat sink. In this paper, topology optimization is explored to develop a new class of TCS with a tree-like structure to enhance the thermal performance of a trapezoidal heat sink. The topology-optimized heat sink was then fabricated by Selective Laser Melting (SLM) using an aluminum alloy, AlSi10Mg, as the base powder. Experiments were performed to evaluate the thermal performance of the topology-optimized heat sink with the tree-like structure. In addition, a conventional longitudinal-fin heat sink of the same solid volume fraction (φ = 16.2%) and a heat sink without enhanced structure were also fabricated and experimentally investigated for comparison. Rubitherm RT-35HC paraffin wax was used as the PCM. Three different heat fluxes of 4.00 kW/m2, 5.08 kW/m2 and 7.24 kW/m2 were applied at the base of each specimen by a silicone rubber heater. The structure wall and the PCM temperatures were measured over time. Our results show that, for all heat rates tested, the topology-optimized heat sink was able to maintain a lower base temperature as compared to the fin-structure and the plain heat sinks. A thermal enhancement ratio (ε) is defined to evaluate the performance of the heat sinks with and without the use of PCM. From the experimental results, the highest ε value of 8.6 was achieved by the topology-optimized heat sink. These results indicate the better performance of the topology-optimized heat sink in dissipating heat as compared to the other specimens.


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