ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLIES HAVING EMBEDDED PASSIVE HEAT PIPES AND ASSOCIATED METHOD
20230239994 · 2023-07-27
Inventors
Cpc classification
H05K7/20672
ELECTRICITY
H05K2201/066
ELECTRICITY
H05K1/0209
ELECTRICITY
International classification
Abstract
An electronic assembly may include a chassis, and electronic modules mounted within the chassis. Each electronic module may include a printed circuit substrate, heat-generating electronic components mounted on the printed circuit substrate, and a heat sink body mounted to the printed circuit substrate and having a plurality of heat pipe receiving passageways extending between opposing side edges and overlying corresponding heat-generating components. A respective elongate, passive, heat pipe may extend within each heat pipe receiving passageway and be removably fastened to at least one end to the heat sink body for enhanced conductive heat transport.
Claims
1-24. (canceled)
25. A method for making an electronic module to be mounted within a chassis, the method comprising: 3D printing a heat sink body; coupling the 3D printed heat sink body to a plurality of heat-generating electronic components on a circuit substrate, the 3D printed heat sink body having opposing ends and opposing side edges extending between the opposing ends, the 3D printed heat sink body having a plurality of heat pipe receiving passageways extending therethrough between opposing side edges and overlying corresponding ones of the heat-generating components; 3D printing a plurality of heat pipes; and fastening a respective 3D printed heat pipe extending within each heat pipe receiving passageway.
26. The method according to claim 25, wherein each heat pipe receiving passageway is continuous so that each corresponding 3D printed heat pipe is concealed within the 3D printed heat sink body.
27. The method according to claim 25, wherein 3D printing the heat sink body comprises forming at least one weight relief recess adjacent at least one heat pipe receiving passageway.
28. The method according to claim 25, wherein 3D printing the heat sink body comprises forming a plurality of weight relief recesses adjacent the heat pipe receiving passageways.
29. The method according to claim 25, wherein each heat pipe receiving passageway includes a threaded end portion; and wherein fastening comprises fastening each 3D printed heat pipe with a mating threaded end to the threaded end portion of a corresponding heat pipe receiving passageway.
30. The method according to claim 25, comprising applying a thermal interface material between each 3D printed heat pipe and the respective heat pipe receiving passageway.
31. The method according to claim 25, wherein fastening the respective 3D printed heat pipe includes attaching a fastener to an end of each 3D printed heat pipe.
32. The method according to claim 25, wherein each 3D printed heat pipe comprises a passive 3D printed heat pipe.
33. The method according to claim 25, wherein 3D printing the heat sink body comprises at least one of Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM), laser sintering, electron beam melting, and stereo lithography.
34. The method according to claim 25, wherein 3D printing the heat plurality of heat pipes comprises at least one of Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM), laser sintering, electron beam melting, and stereo lithography.
35. The method according to claim 25, wherein the plurality of 3D printed heat pipes comprise a material to impart stiffness to the 3D printed heat sink.
36. A method for making an electronic module to be mounted within a chassis, the method comprising: 3D printing a heat sink body by Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM); coupling the 3D printed heat sink body to a plurality of heat-generating electronic components on a circuit substrate, the 3D printed heat sink body having opposing ends and opposing side edges extending between the opposing ends, the 3D printed heat sink body having a plurality of heat pipe receiving passageways extending therethrough between opposing side edges and overlying corresponding ones of the heat-generating components; 3D printing a plurality of heat pipes by FDM; and fastening a respective 3D printed heat pipe extending within each heat pipe receiving passageway.
37. The method according to claim 36, wherein each heat pipe receiving passageway is continuous so that each corresponding 3D printed heat pipe is concealed within the 3D printed heat sink body.
38. The method according to claim 36, wherein 3D printing the heat sink body comprises forming at least one weight relief recess adjacent at least one heat pipe receiving passageway.
39. The method according to claim 36, wherein each heat pipe receiving passageway includes a threaded end portion; and wherein fastening comprises fastening each 3D printed heat pipe with a mating threaded end to the threaded end portion of a corresponding heat pipe receiving passageway.
40. The method according to claim 36, comprising applying a thermal interface material between each 3D printed heat pipe and the respective heat pipe receiving passageway.
41. The method according to claim 36, wherein fastening the respective 3D printed heat pipe includes attaching a fastener to an end of each 3D printed heat pipe.
42. The method according to claim 36, wherein each 3D printed heat pipe comprises a passive 3D printed heat pipe.
43. A method for making an electronic module to be mounted within a chassis, the method comprising: 3D printing a heat sink body with at least one weight reducing recess therein; coupling the 3D printed heat sink body to a plurality of heat-generating electronic components on a circuit substrate, the 3D printed heat sink body having opposing ends and opposing side edges extending between the opposing ends, the 3D printed heat sink body having a plurality of heat pipe receiving continuous passageways extending therethrough between opposing side edges and overlying corresponding ones of the heat-generating components; 3D printing a plurality of heat pipes; and fastening a respective 3D printed heat pipe extending within each heat pipe receiving passageway.
44. The method according to claim 43, wherein each heat pipe receiving continuous passageway includes a threaded end portion; and wherein fastening comprises fastening each 3D printed heat pipe with a mating threaded end to the threaded end portion of a corresponding heat pipe receiving continuous passageway.
45. The method according to claim 43, comprising applying a thermal interface material between each 3D printed heat pipe and the respective heat pipe receiving passageway.
46. The method according to claim 43, wherein fastening the respective 3D printed heat pipe includes attaching a fastener to an end of each 3D printed heat pipe.
47. The method according to claim 43, wherein each 3D printed heat pipe comprises a passive 3D printed heat pipe.
48. The method according to claim 43, wherein 3D printing the heat sink body comprises at least one of Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM), laser sintering, electron beam melting, and stereo lithography; and wherein 3D printing the heat plurality of heat pipes comprises at least one of Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM), laser sintering, electron beam melting, and stereo lithography.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011] Other objects, features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from the detailed description of the invention which follows, when considered in light of the accompanying drawings in which:
[0012]
[0013]
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[0018]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0019] The present description is made with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which exemplary embodiments are shown. However, many different embodiments may be used, and thus, the description should not be construed as limited to the particular embodiments set forth herein. Rather, these embodiments are provided so that this disclosure will be thorough and complete. Like numbers refer to like elements throughout, and prime notation is used to indicate similar elements in different embodiments.
[0020] Referring initially to
[0021] Referring now to
[0022] A heat sink body 60 is mounted to the printed circuit substrate 50 and has opposing ends 62 and opposing side edges 64 extending between the opposing ends. The heat sink body 60 can be formed from different heat conductive materials, such as aluminum, but can also be formed as a 3D printed heat sink body using additive manufacturing techniques as will be explained in greater detail below. The heat sink body 60 includes a plurality of heat pipe receiving passageways 70 extending therethrough between opposing side edges 64 and overlying corresponding heat-generating electronic components 52. The passageways 70 may be formed by standard manufacturing processes known to those skilled in the art, including boring or other techniques. A respective elongate, passive heat pipe 72 extends within each heat pipe receiving passageway 70 and is removably fastened to at least one end as the side edge 64 of the heat sink body 60, such as by a heat pipe fastener or close-out attached to an end of a respective heat pipe described below. The heat pipes 72 extend transverse through the heat sink body 60 and overlie the corresponding heat-generating components 52. Each heat-receiving passageway 70 is continuous so that each elongate, passive, heat pipe 72 is concealed within the heat sink body 60. Each heat pipe receiving passageway 70 may include a threaded end portion 74 (
[0023] Although the illustrated embodiment uses a mating threaded end or compression plug, it is possible that helicoils could be installed to hold the heat pipes 72 or self-tapping fasteners used. It is also possible to press-fit each heat pipe 72 into a passageway 70.
[0024] A plurality of interstitial materials, commonly referred to as reworkable thermal interface materials, may be used between the heat pipe and receiving passageway. The use of a material at this interface will reduce the thermal resistance between the heat-generating components and the transport medium, in this case the heat pipe and integral vapor space. Typical materials that can be used are cured and non-curing silicone suspensions, thermal epoxies and greases, solder, and others. Use of an interstitial material does not influence the fastening approach outlined herein and is used as an optional enhancement to the overall thermal management solution.
[0025] Each heat pipe may act as a stiffening member in the receiving structure. This provides dual-use mechanical and thermal benefits with extensibility to metal and ceramic matrix composites (MMC and CMCs) where strength to weight ratio must be optimized with thermal transport capability.
[0026] In a non-limiting example, each electronic module 34 may include a respective removable fastener 80 as a close-out, for example, such as best shown in
[0027] Each elongate, passive heat pipe 72 may be formed as a hollow or solid rod and constructed from a conductive material, such as, but not limited to, copper or brass. The fasteners 80 may be formed from the same or different material as the heat pipe 72, and in an example, is a separate stainless steel fastener secured onto the end of the passive heat pipe.
[0028] The heat sink body 60 preferably includes a plurality of weight relief recesses 86 formed therein between adjacent heat pipe receiving passageways 70 (
[0029] Referring now to
[0030] It has been found that the heat pipes 90 received in the passageways 92 of the side wall 32c of the chassis 32 can reduce temperatures by as much as 10° to 15° C. and may outperform APG composite designs by a factor of five in a 3U form factor as a non-limiting example. This is based on a weight-neutral basis for the material that integrates the heat pipes 90 and which material can be subsequently removed in other areas since the heat transport is handled by the embedded heat pipes and is not dependent upon the material thickness, which would otherwise be required to reduce the lateral thermal resistance.
[0031] The heat pipes 72 concealed within the heat sink body 60 and heat pipes 90 concealed within the side wall 32c have no impact on the module form or fit. It has been found that this design as described facilitates fabrication of the electronic modules 34 and permits assembly in under four weeks in a typical design fabrication cycle, versus a 12-16 week lead time for APG and other complicated active heat pipe approaches that require pumps and associated devices for fluid flow.
[0032] This design as described provides robustness because the heat pipes 72 are completely concealed in the heat sink body 60, or as in the case of the heat pipes 90, they are concealed in the side wall 32a of the chassis 32. This design provides reworkability since the heat pipes 72,90 may be removed if necessary. The heat pipes 72,90 improve thermal transport capability with additional surface area for heat uptake and transport making the heat pipes easier to integrate into a system instead of a state-of-the-art APG or fluid flow via active heat pipe designs.
[0033] Referring now to
[0034] The heat sink body 60 is mounted to the printed circuit substrate 50, which includes its opposing ends 62 and opposing side edges 64 extending between the opposing ends (Block 104). This heat sink body 60 has a plurality of heat pipe receiving passageways 70 extending therethrough between opposing side edges 64 and overlying corresponding heat-generating electronic components 52. The respective elongate, passive heat pipes 72 extending within each heat pipe receiving passageway 70 may be removably fastened to the heat sink body 60 (Block 106) such as using set screws or other threaded fasteners as an example. The process ends (Block 108).
[0035] As noted before, it is possible to form the heat sink body 60 and heat pipes 72 using 3D printing, i.e., using additive manufacturing techniques. Different additive manufacturing techniques may be used to form the 3D printed heat sink body and the associated 3D printed heat pipes. It is possible to use Fused Deposition Modeling (FDM), including a process that feeds filaments of metal wire or other material through an extrusion nozzle head to build various layers. Laser sintering techniques, including selective laser sintering with metals and polymers and direct metal laser sintering, may be employed. It is also possible to use electron beam melting and melt metal powder, layer by layer, using the electron beam while employed in a high vacuum. It is also possible to use stereo lithography techniques with photo polymerization.
[0036] Many modifications and other embodiments of the invention will come to the mind of one skilled in the art having the benefit of the teachings presented in the foregoing descriptions and the associated drawings. Therefore, it is understood that the invention is not to be limited to the specific embodiments disclosed, and that modifications and embodiments are intended to be included within the scope of the appended claims.