A Preliminary Investigation of the Cooling of Electronic Components With Flat Plate Heat Sinks

1994 ◽  
Vol 116 (1) ◽  
pp. 60-67 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Ahmed ◽  
R. J. Krane ◽  
J. R. Parsons

Flat rectangular plate heat sinks are often used to cool large electronic components by the combined effects of natural convection and thermal radiation. There is, however, a paucity of rational design techniques for these devices. Thus, a systematic program to investigate the use of flat, rectangular plate heat sinks with surface coatings to enhance the net radiative exchange with the surroundings has been undertaken. The preliminary results of this program are presented in this work. A two-dimensional numerical model of a single electronic component mounted on a vertically oriented, flat rectangular plate heat sink that is located immediately above an upward-facing, horizontal component board was developed for this investigation. This model, which is solved using a control volume method based on the SIMPLER algorithm, accounts for the fully-coupled natural convection, conduction and radiative heat transfer processes that occur in the two-dimensional heat sink configuration described above. The results of a parametric study performed with the numerical model confirm the necessity of employing a heat sink, since for the ranges of values investigated, from 64 to 88 percent of the energy dissipated in the component is transferred to the surroundings from the heat sink. The parametric study examines the effects of component power, heat sink size (height), the thickness and emissivity of the heat sink, the vertical location of the component on the heat sink, and the temperature of the horizontal component board on the temperature of the component mounted on the heat sink.

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.


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.


1994 ◽  
pp. 391-414 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert J. Krane ◽  
Iqballudin Ahmed ◽  
J. Roger Parsons

Author(s):  
Todd Salamon ◽  
Roger Kempers ◽  
Brian Lynch ◽  
Kevin Terrell ◽  
Elina Simon

Abstract The main drivers contributing to the continued growth of network traffic include video, mobile broadband and machine-to-machine communication (Internet of Things, cloud computing, etc.). Two primary technologies that next-generation (5G) networks are using to increase capacity to meet these future demands are massive MIMO (Multi-Input Multi-Output) antenna arrays and new frequency spectrum. The massive MIMO antenna arrays have significant thermal challenges due to the presence of large arrays of active antenna elements coupled with a reliance on natural convection cooling using vertical plate-finned heat sinks. The geometry of vertical plate-finned heat sinks can be optimized (for example, by choosing the fin pitch and thickness that minimize the thermal resistance of the heat sink to ambient air) and enhanced (for example, by embedding heat pipes within the base to improve heat spreading) to improve convective heat transfer. However, heat transfer performance often suffers as the sensible heat rise of the air flowing through the heat sink can be significant, particularly near the top of the heat sink; this issue can be especially problematic for the relatively large or high-aspect-ratio heat sinks associated with massive MIMO arrays. In this study a vertical plate-finned natural convection heat sink was modified by partitioning the heat sink along its length into distinct sections, where each partitioned section ejects heated air and entrains cooler air. This approach increases overall heat sink effectiveness as the net sensible heat rise of the air in any partitioned section is less than that observed in the unpartitioned heat sink. Experiments were performed using a standard heat sink and equivalent heat sinks partitioned into two and three sections for the cases of ducted and un-ducted natural convection with a uniform heat load applied to the rear of the heat sink. Numerical models were developed which compare well to the experimental results and observed trends. The numerical models also provide additional insight regarding the airflow and thermal performance of the partitioned heat sinks. The combined experimental and numerical results show that for relatively tall natural convection cooled heat sinks, the partitioning approach significantly improves convective heat transfer and overall heat sink effectiveness.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 216-228
Author(s):  
Ass. Prof. Dr. Abbas Jassem Jubear ◽  
Ali Hameed Abd

The heat sink with vertically rectangular interrupted fins investigated numerically in a natural convection field, and with steady-state heat transfer. Numerical study has been conducted using ANSYS Fluent software (R16.1) in order to develop a 3-D numerical model.  The dimensions of 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 are eight. In this study, the heat input that is  used as follow (20, 40, 60, 80, 100, and 120 watts). The study is focused on interrupted rectangular fins with different arrangement of fins. The results show that the addition of interruption fins in various arrangements will improve the thermal performance of the heat sink, and through the results, a better interruption rate obtained as an equation.                                                         


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (23) ◽  
pp. 11323
Author(s):  
Sebastian Valeriu Hudișteanu ◽  
Florin Emilian Țurcanu ◽  
Nelu Cristian Cherecheș ◽  
Cătălin George Popovici ◽  
Marina Verdeș ◽  
...  

This paper presents a numerical model regarding the passive cooling of PV panels through perforated and non-perforated heat sinks. A typical PV panel was studied in a fixed position, tilted at 45 degrees from the horizontal with the wind direction towards its backside. A challenging approach was used in order to calibrate the base case of the numerical model according to the NOCT conditions. Further validation of the accuracy of the numerical simulation consisted of a comparison between the results obtained for the base case, or heat sink, with horizontal non-perforated fins and the experiments presented in the literature. Six types of heat sink attached to the backside of the PV panel were numerically studied. The analyzed configurations focused on heat sinks with both perforated and non-perforated fins that were distributed horizontally and vertically. The CFD simulation was also conducted by modeling the air volume around the PV panel in real wind conditions. The main output parameters were the average temperature and the convective heat transfer coefficient on the front and back of the PV panel. The most important effect of cooling was achieved in low wind conditions and high levels of solar radiation. For vair = 1 m/s, G = 1000 W/m2 and ambient temperature tair = 35 °C, the percentage of maximum power production achieved 83.33% for the base case, while in the best cooling scenario it reached 88.74%, assuring a rise in the power production of 6.49%.


Author(s):  
L. T. Yeh ◽  
Joseph Yeh ◽  
B. T. F. Chung

A CFD (computational fluid dynamics) analysis is performed on the finned heat sinks. For convenience, a commercial CFD code, Flotherm, is utilized in the analysis. Though the code can handle the radiation heat transfer, the present analysis is limited to the natural convection with the base of the heat sink at a constant temperature. The continuous fin configuration is first considered due to the importance of its applications. Several experimental data are available for the vertically straight-fin heat sink and a useful correlation is also developed. For given overall fin dimensions of 15″ × 10.341″ × 2.2″, the correlations are first employed to determine the optimal fin spacing. This optimal fin spacing of 0.439 in is then used to develop the baseline CFD model. The dimensions of the baseline CFD model are as follows: Fin width (in): 10.341. Heat sink length (in): 15. Fin spacing (in): 0.439. Fin height (in): 2.0. Fin thickness (in): 0.1. Fin base plate thickness (in): 0.2. Fin numbers: 20. The baseline model with various fin spacing is analyzed and the results (heat loss from the finned heat sink) compare well with those obtained through the correlations. The analysis is extended to the staggered and in-line fin configurations because of their practical applications. Three different fin lengths, including 1″, 3″ and 5″ fin length for the staggered fin array are examined. The results indicate that the effectiveness of heat transfer is increased as the fin length increasing. The continuous fin configuration is the most efficient, and is followed by the staggered fins and then by the in-line fins.


Author(s):  
Mehmet Arik ◽  
Yogen Utturkar ◽  
Murat Ozmusul

In moderate power electronics applications, the most preferred way of thermal management is natural convection to air with or without heat sinks. Though the use of heat sinks is fairly adequate for modest heat dissipation needs, it suffers from some serious performance limitations. Firstly, a large volume of the heat sink is required to keep the junction temperature at an allowable limit. This need arises because of the low convective film coefficients due to close spacing. In the present computational and experimental study, we propose a synthetic jet embedded heat sink to enhance the performance levels beyond two times within the same volume of a regular passive heat sink. Synthetic jets are meso-scale devices producing high velocity periodic jet streams at high velocities. As a result, by carefully positioning of these jets in the thermal real estate, the heat transfer over the surfaces can be dramatically augmented. This increase in the heat transfer rate is able to compensate for the loss of fin area happening due to the embedding of the jet within the heat sink volume, thus causing an overall increase in the heat dissipation. Heat transfer enhancements of 2.2 times over baseline natural convection cooled heat sinks are measured. Thermal resistances are compared for a range of jet operating conditions and found to be less than 0.9 K/W. Local temperatures obtained from experimental and computational agreed within ± 5%.


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