Densified foam for thermal insulation in electronic devices
10842046 ยท 2020-11-17
Assignee
Inventors
- Richard M. Hartman (Dallas, TX, US)
- Paul J. Macioce (Milwaukee, WI, US)
- Robert W. Tait (Plano, TX, US)
- George H. Ransford (Magnolia, AR, US)
Cpc classification
F28F21/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F13/003
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B32B2457/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2255/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B2266/0214
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B27/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F28F21/067
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H05K7/20509
ELECTRICITY
B32B9/007
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F28F2270/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B32B5/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B7/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/245
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F28F2275/025
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B32B7/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B15/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B15/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
F28F13/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F21/06
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B32B5/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B15/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B7/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B5/18
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B7/12
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B9/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F28F21/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H05K7/20
ELECTRICITY
B32B15/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B27/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B27/06
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B15/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B9/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A heat spreading and insulating material using densified foam is provided that has a heat spreading layer that is adhered to an insulating layer. The material is designed to be used with mobile devices that generate heat adjacent to heat sensitive components. The insulating layer is formed from a compressed layer of polyimide foam to increase its density. The polyimide foam retains a significant amount of insulating properties through the densification process. In some embodiments, an EMI shielding layer is added to improve electrical properties of the device. The heat spreading layer may be a graphite material with heat conducting properties that preferentially conduct heat in-plane but can also be metal foil or other isotropic heat conducting material. The material may also include pressure sensitive layers to permanently apply the material to the mobile device.
Claims
1. A heat spreading and insulating material for use with a mobile device having heat generating components and heat sensitive components, said material comprising: a unitary thermal insulating layer formed from a densified sheet of polyimide open cell foam, said densified sheet having a first density between 25-60 kg/m.sup.3, said densified sheet having an outwardly facing surface and an oppositely located inwardly facing surface, said outwardly facing surface being spaced from said inwardly facing surface to define a first thickness; said unitary thermal insulating layer having further densified areas where said insulating layer is further densified to have a density greater than said first density, said outwardly facing surface is spaced from said inwardly facing surface to define a second thickness in said further densified areas, said second thickness in said further densified areas being smaller than said first thickness; a first adhesive layer having a first adhesive surface and an oppositely located second adhesive surface, said inwardly facing surface of said insulating layer adheredly contacting said first adhesive surface, said first adhesive layer conforming to said inwardly facing surface; a heat spreading layer formed from a material that conducts heat and having an adhesive facing surface and an oppositely located component facing surface, said adhesive facing surface separated from said component facing surface to define a thickness, said adhesive facing surface adheredly contacting said second adhesive surface of said first adhesive layer, said heat spreading layer conforming to said second adhesive surface; and an electrically insulating layer adhered to said component facing surface of said heat spreading layer.
2. The heat spreading material of claim 1, when said heat spreading layer is adjacent said heat generating components, heat from said heat generating components preferentially transfers along said thickness of said heat spreading layer.
3. The heat spreading material of claim 1, wherein said electrically insulating layer has an exposed adhesive surface to form a second pressure sensitive adhesive layer, said second pressure sensitive adhesive layer in contact with said heat generating components.
4. The heat spreading material of claim 3, wherein said second pressure sensitive adhesive layer has gaps in said exposed adhesive surface.
5. The heat spreading material of claim 1, when said heat spreading layer contacts said heat generating components, heat from said heat generating components preferentially transfers along said thickness of said heat spreading layer.
6. A heat spreading and insulating material for use with a mobile device having heat generating components and heat sensitive components, said material comprising: a unitary thermal insulating layer formed from a densified sheet of polyimide open cell foam, said densified sheet having a first density between 25-60 kg/m.sup.3, said densified sheet having an outwardly facing surface and an oppositely located inwardly facing surface, said outwardly facing surface being spaced from said inwardly facing surface to define a first thickness; said unitary thermal insulating layer having further densified areas where said insulating layer is further densified to have a density greater than said first density, said outwardly facing surface is spaced from said inwardly facing surface to define a second thickness in said further densified areas, said second thickness in said further densified areas being smaller than said first thickness; a first adhesive layer having a first adhesive surface and an oppositely located second adhesive surface, said inwardly facing surface of said insulating layer adheredly contacting said first adhesive surface, said first adhesive layer conforming to said inwardly facing surface; and a heat spreading layer formed from a material that conducts heat and having an adhesive facing surface and an oppositely located component facing surface, said adhesive facing surface separated from said component facing surface to define a thickness, said adhesive facing surface adheredly contacting said second adhesive surface of said first adhesive layer, said heat spreading layer conforming to said second adhesive surface.
7. The heat spreading material of claim 6, further comprising an electrically insulating layer adhered to said component facing surface of said heat spreading layer.
8. The heat spreading material of claim 7, wherein said second pressure sensitive adhesive layer is in contact with said heat generating components.
9. The heat spreading material of claim 7, when said heat spreading layer is adjacent said heat generating components, heat from said heat generating components preferentially transfers along said thickness of said heat spreading layer.
10. The heat spreading material of claim 7, wherein said electrically insulating layer has an exposed adhesive surface to form a second pressure sensitive adhesive layer.
11. The heat spreading material of claim 10, wherein said electrically insulating layer has gaps in said exposed adhesive surface.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) A preferred embodiment of this invention has been chosen wherein:
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DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
(14) The treatment 10, shown in all FIGS, both insulates and spreads heat. It is created by combining a thin layer of thermal insulating material 12 to a traditional heat spreader treatment 14. The heat spreader 14 is commonly graphite based or other thermally conductive material like metal foil. The heat shielding and spreading performance will be improved, better protecting sensitive components 16 of typical consumer electronic products (such as OLED displays). The insulating material 12 is a unique and novel version of densified polyimide foam. The treatment 10 consists of the lamination of a thin, foamed polyimide-based layer of insulating material 12 to typical heat spreader treatments 14, either to highly conductive graphite based spreader materials, or more common metal foil spreaders like copper or aluminum.
(15) The treatment 10 is intended for applications where small gaps (i.e. 0.25 to 5 mm) exist between a heat source such as a heat source 18 or battery 19 and heat sensitive components such as screen 16 that is typical of small form factor devices. As shown in
(16) The insulating layer 12 offers the benefit of improved thermal stability and resistance at elevated service temperatures without degradation over time, and low thermal conductivity compared to other plastic based films or foam layers. A foamed version of the polyimide material offers improved thermal resistance due to its unique foaming process that produces pockets that further reduce thermal conductivity by as much as 4 when compared to traditional polyimide (cast, blown or extruded) film material (typically from 0.12 W/mK to 0.043-0.049 W/mK). These cells can be either open or closed, depending on the process used to create them. The insulating layer 12 can be very thin (<0.05 mm) or very thick (>10 mm) depending on the requirements of the application.
(17) Solimide polyimide based cellular foam is well established as an excellent thermal insulating material 12 with thermal conductivity values in the order of 0.039-0.046 W/mK. The material can further be densified through the process of applying heat and pressure collapsing the foam into a much thinner layer of increased density and improving the insulating properties by as much as . Densification can be applied to the foam to compress from a typical foamed density of 0.4 lbs./cu.ft. to a range from 1 to 10 lbs./cu.ft. while maintaining or reducing the thermal conductivity (i.e. as much as 30% when compressed to 2 to 3 lbs./cu.ft. range). Densification produces a thinner insulating layer (0.25 to 2 mm) that would otherwise be difficult to skive using traditional slitting equipment (>2 mm). The thinner, denser foam retains much of its same cellular properties while being better suited to fit within the smaller form factor of typical consumer electronic devices. Depending on the final thickness of the insulating material desired, the material may be skived before or after densification. The thinnest final thickness commonly requires skiving before densification.
(18) Exploded side views of several variants of treatment 10 are shown in
(19) The heat spreader 14 can be either a foil or graphite based material. Metal foil (typically aluminum or copper) has isotropic heat transfer properties, meaning that the heat transferred travels in all directions equally as it is applied at a specific point. Graphite is typically flexible but can be rigid, depending on the manufacturing processing used. Natural graphite, which is made of graphite flake, which has been exfoliated through a chemical and thermal reaction, then consolidated and compressed to rolls of spreader media. Synthetic or Pyrolytic graphite is commonly made from taking rolls of polyimide film which has been carbonized in an oven at temperatures approaching 2000 degrees C. then calendared down to thickness. Graphite, as a heat spreader 14, is commonly formulated to have anisotropic heat transfer properties. The typical heat transfer property in graphite heat spreaders 14 is highly conductive in-plane and is resistant to heat transfer through-plane. As described, it is a relatively thin sheet of material with two surfaces. Isotropic and anisotropic heat transfer properties are well known in the art. A component facing surface 34 and an adhesive facing surface 36 define the thickness of the heat spreader 14. A thin layer that effectively spreads heat is the most desirable property for the heat spreader 14. For a heat spreader 14 with anisotropic properties, there is a primary direction where heat travels along the plane of the material, but it is only a preferential heat transfer direction and some heat transfers through the thickness of the material.
(20) As shown in
(21) Several embodiments include a second pressure sensitive adhesive layer 46 that can be added when the treatment 10 is affixed to a device 20. The second pressure sensitive adhesive layer as described is shown in
(22) The embodiment of the treatment 10 may include an electrical shield 15, typically for blocking electromagnetic radiation or interference (EMI). This embodiment is shown in
(23) As shown in
(24) The individual layers that make up the treatment 10 each have a defined thickness that is consistent. One exception is where the insulating layer 12 has further densified areas 38. The insulating layer 12 and heat spreader 14 make up a majority of the thickness of the treatment 10. The pressure sensitive adhesive layers 40, 46 and dielectric layer 39, 43 are typically very thin comparatively.
(25) The following examples and test setups are merely illustrative and do not limit this disclosure in any way. A summary of testing and thermal performance of the treatment 10 is described hereinafter in which a representative thermal case study was created. The study used a test setup which involved a circuit board with embedded heat sources and a simulated display layer where temperature is measured using an array of thermocouples. Temperature of the heat sources and display layer were monitored for a transient thermal event in which 2.56 W of thermal power was applied to heat sources through (3)1876 Ohm resistors at 40 VDC for 15 m14inute cycle. A temperature vs. time test was performed with various combinations of heat spreader 14 and insulating layer 12 combinations. Details of the tests performed and the results are below.
(26) The test setup was devised to help demonstrate the benefits of the above concept in a generic, non-product specific manner, but intended to replicate the typical environment of a consumer electronic product 20 like a laptop, tablet or smart phone. A F4 prototype PC board 102 (80 mm110 mm1.5 mm thick.) was used as the base structure, and three (3) 1.8 k resistors were bonded to the underside of the board at arbitrary locations to simulate concentrated heat sources. The air cavity under the board was filled with a 1 thick layer of insulating foam to prevent external environmental factors from influencing test results.
(27) The resistors were powered in parallel by a regulated DC power source capable of 0-50 Vdc output. The current draw to all three resistors was monitored. Thermocouples were embedded at each resistor location to monitor point source temperatures. Individual potentiometers were used to fine adjust the voltage to each resistor to achieve a desired temperature. For the test results presented below, a target temperature of 75 C for each heat source was selected. An input voltage of 40 Vdc was set on the power supply then each potentiometer was adjusted to achieve the target temperature. After a minimum dwell time of 15 minutes, the temperatures of the resistors reached a steady-state condition of 75 C with the PC board.
(28) To simulate the heat sensitive component 16 being protected by the treatment 10 (i.e. OLED display), a 0.010 thick aluminum plate (100 mm120 mm) was mounted parallel to the board at fixed distance above the PCB (either 0.5 or 1.0 mm). A grid of twelve (12) flush mounted thermocouples were mounted to the top surface of the aluminum plate as shown in
(29) The basic test event was intended to record the transient temperature rise from powering the heat sources from an ambient condition (22 C) for 1000 sec. duration. Minimum 15 minute dwell time between measurements was used to ensure the test device returned to ambient temperature. Once resistors were set to achieve desired temperature, no changes to the individual potentiometers or input voltage were made for the balance of the testing. Several repeat experiments were conducted to establish consistency of the test setup and results.
(30) The test specimen consisted of a 65 mm98 mm sample placed and centered on the top side of the PC board. The basic samples consisted of a 0.025 mm thick synthetic graphite heat spreader material 14 (i.e. 1500 W/mK) bonded to either a 0.5 mm or 1.0 mm thick insulating foam layer 12. The base foam used was Solimide HT-340 polyimide foam at 0.4 pcf (or pounds per cubic foot) starting density that was then compressed to either 0.5 mm or 1.0 mm thick from a specified starting thickness to achieve the desired final density. Various foam density values were investigated (from 2 to 10 pcf). The layup consisted of a thin PET backing film+thin bonding PSA layer 46+graphite heat layer 14+thin bonding PSA layer 40+insulating foam 12. The graphite layer was placed against the heat source (PCB) while the insulating foam layer was against the bottom side of the 10 mil aluminum display plate 106.
(31) Two control experiments were also performed: 1) replacing the densified polyimide foam with a more thermally conductive (2) polyurethane foam; 2) removing the insulating layer using only the graphite heat spreader 14 with a 1 mm air gap between the display plate and heat spreader 14. In all three cases (invention concept vs. control cases), only a slight reduction in the surface temperature of the display plate was observed (<1 C). The chief difference was the impact the treatment had on the reference temperatures of the heat sources 18. Using the case of the 1 mm air gap as the untreated, baseline, the graphite+air gap control sample increased the average resistor temperature by +2.4 C, while the graphite+PU foam case showed a 0.9 C drop. However, for the case of the graphite+Solimide foam, an 8.5 C temperature drop was observed. These tests were repeated and the findings were consistent.
(32) Typical results demonstrate the change in average resistor temperature vs. time for the different configurations as an indication of the heat spreading performance. Though only a small reduction in temperature was observed, the more interesting result is the larger reduction of heat source temperature when using the polyimide insulating layer 12 vs. heat spreader 14 only w/ an air gap. The additional 8.5 C. drop in temperature comes with no change in the electrical input voltage or current to the heat sources, implying that the heat spreader 14 performs better when backed with the polyimide insulating layer 12.
(33) It is understood that while certain aspects of the disclosed subject matter have been shown and described, the disclosed subject matter is not limited thereto and encompasses various other embodiments and aspects. No specific limitation with respect to the specific embodiments disclosed herein is intended or should be inferred. Modifications may be made to the disclosed subject matter as set forth in the following claims.