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Flomerics Optimizes Cool Design Thermal optimization using Flotherm demonstrates air can cool 2kW integrated circuits. | Published April 1, 2008
As integrated circuits (ICs) are continually being introduced that offer more cores and higher clock speeds, they are being asked to dissipate increasing amounts of power. Add microprocessors running at multiples of the intended clock speed to gain a performance edge and products being developed for a wide range of markets, and the thermal management challenge increases further as systems have different cooling requirements. As a result, doubts have arisen as to whether the most powerful among them can be cooled with air. The primary alternative, liquid cooling, can handle higher heat loads, but is considerably more expensive and has higher maintenance challenges than cooling with air. Engineers at Amulaire Thermal Technology of San Diego, CA, which custom designs and offers catalog heat dissipation products, recently evaluated alternate methods of cooling a 100-kilowatt (kW) insulated gate bipolar transistor (IGBT) module dissipating 2kW of heat.
Cooling a 2kW IC In any of these applications, one power dissipation component is generated, which heats up the semiconductor and adds to the total power dissipation of the switch. The maximum junction temperature is typically 150 degrees C for these devices, but lower temperatures are desirable to improve reliability. Air-cooled heat sinks have been the conventional choice, but as some military and commercial applications have reached multimegawatt requirements, aluminum has given way to copper heat sinks, which were then replaced by liquid cooling due to the perceived limits of air cooled heat sinks.
At Amulaire, we used Flotherm computational fluid dynamics (CFD) software from Flomerics to optimize heat sink design for the IGBT under a number of different assumptions. The main reason we chose this software package is that it offers the ability to automatically optimize the design of a heat sink or any other aspect of thermal management. The user simply defines design goals in the form of a cost function and the range over which key design parameters can be varied. The software automatically creates and runs the required number of simulations to explore the entire design space in the most cost-effective way. Flotherm then generates a response surface showing the value of the design goals for all the combinations of variables that were run.
Optimizing Heat Sink Design Starting with 10 fins, a fin thickness of 0.40 mm, and a base thickness of 4.0 mm, the optimization process was allowed to adjust the variables within a +/- 30 percent range. If the optimum for the variables was at the minimum or maximum of the range, another 10 solver runs were used starting from the previous optimum. If the optimized value was not at the minimum or maximum, another 10 runs were performed within a range of +/- 10 percent. If the optimums did not change after a second run using the same starting point, 20 solver runs were initiated with a range of +/- 5 percent. If the optimum still did not change, the solution was considered to be complete.
Air Cooling Proves Sufficient This simulation shows that regardless of size, an aluminum heat sink is unable to cool this chip because of the spreading resistance: The bigger you make an aluminum heat sink, the less efficient it becomes due to spreading resistance.
Copper offers substantially higher thermal conductivity (390 Wpm K) than aluminum (180 Wpm K), so its performance in this application is naturally higher. The optimization showed that a copper heat sink 40cm x 40cm x 10cm would meet the temperature requirements. The problem was its weight was too high for the vast majority of applications. Recognizing that spreading resistance was the challenge to overcome in this application, Amulaire engineers tried a vapor chamber heat sink with copper fins. Vapor chambers are plate-shaped heat pipes that can be used as the base of the heat sink. They transfer heat more efficiently over a plane, minimizing spreading resistance of the heat source. Vapor chambers are also less expensive, less complex, and more reliable than liquid cooling systems. The optimization showed that by reducing spreading resistance and using the outer area of the heat sink more efficiently, the vapor chamber reduced the required size of the heat sink to 20cm x 20cm x 10cm. This, in turn, reduced the weight of the heat sink to 9kg or about 20 pounds, which was deemed acceptable for most applications and is about the same as a liquid cooling system. Thermal simulation and automatic optimization techniques were the keys in our ability to demonstrate that many of the cooling issues in high-powered chips with aluminum heat sinks might be due to the material’s high spreading resistance. They also showed that while copper provides a substantial improvement, its weight might be an obstacle in demanding applications. Vapor chambers provide much lower spreading resistance and, therefore, can more efficiently use the full area of the heat sink. More Info: Ralph Remsburg is the chief engineer at Amulaire Thermal Technology. Send an e-mail about this article to DE-Editors@deskeng.com.
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