ULTRA-COMPACT COOLING SYSTEMS BASED ON PHASE CHANGE MATERIAL HEAT RESERVOIRS
20180306524 ยท 2018-10-25
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02E60/14
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
H01S5/02469
ELECTRICITY
F28F2013/005
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D2021/0028
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28D20/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F28D20/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A cooling system includes a first stage heat reservoir arranged to absorb heat from a heat source. Heat is transferred from the first stage heat reservoir to a second stage heat reservoir. The first stage heat reservoir includes a material with a heat capacity lower than that of the second stage heat reservoir but with a thermal conductivity higher than that of the second stage heat reservoir. Heat transfer structure increases heat transfer rate from the first stage heat reservoir to the second stage heat reservoir.
Claims
1. A cooling system comprising: a first stage heat reservoir arranged to absorb heat from a heat source; a second stage heat reservoir to which heat is transferred from said first stage heat reservoir, said first stage heat reservoir comprising a material with a heat capacity lower than that of said second stage heat reservoir but with a thermal conductivity higher than that of said second stage heat reservoir; and heat transfer structure that increases heat transfer rate from said first stage heat reservoir to said second stage heat reservoir.
2. The cooling system according to claim 1, wherein said first stage heat reservoir comprises a sensible heat reservoir and said second stage heat reservoir comprises a phase change material (PCM) heat reservoir.
3. The cooling system according to claim 1, wherein said heat transfer structure comprises cooling fins.
4. The cooling system according to claim 3, wherein said cooling fins comprise a diamond and copper sandwich structure.
5. The cooling system according to claim 1, wherein said PCM comprises gallium.
6. The cooling system according to claim 1, wherein said PCM comprises hexadecane.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0010] The present invention will be understood and appreciated more fully from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the drawings in which:
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[0012]
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0017] Reference is now made to
[0018] A heat source (such as an electronics or laser component/system) gives off heat, such as a heating pulse. A first stage heat reservoir absorbs the heat from heat source during the heating pulse. The heat is then transferred to a second stage heat reservoir. The dual-stage heat reservoir cooling system is located within a thermally isolated system.
[0019]
[0020] The upper part of the graph shows a burst of N heating pulses. The lower part of the graph shows the temperature increase based on sensible heat reservoirs in which thermal energy results in a temperature increase, or based on a 1st stage sensible heat reservoir and a 2nd stage PCM heat reservoir. (Sensible heat transfer causes change of temperature of the system while the given state [solid, liquid or gas] remains unchanged.) T0 is the initial temperature, T1 is the spike temperature at the end of the heating pulse, T.sub.limit is the maximum allowable temperature, and T.sub.PC is the phase change temperature.
[0021] Before making a judgement on the superiority of PCM based heat reservoirs, simulation results should be compared. Three-dimensional time-dependent simulations were performed using the finite element program ANSYS. Samples are shown in
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[0025] Table 1 summarizes the weights of two-stage heat reservoirs sized to store 7.6 KJ of heat. The AlAl heat reservoir includes a block of aluminum placed after the 27 mm block optimal for use with 15 sec pulses. The weight advantage of using PCMs is clear. Their main draw-back is slow equilibration time.
TABLE-US-00001 Type of two-stage heat reservoir Weight-gm Sensible-heat AlAl 8560 Al-Water 960 PCM Al- 120 hexadecane Al-metal 390 alloy
[0026] The present invention surprisingly can reduce the heat transfer times to the PCM. The problem is the low thermal conductivity of the PCM compared to that of the 1.sup.st stage. Heat transfer can be increased by reducing the distance that the heat must travel through the PCM, and by increasing the surface area of the heat transport structure. One way of achieving this is to increase the number of fins. This was simulated by reducing the fin thickness as the number of fins increased. This kept constant the amount of PCM in the reservoir. In order to insure that longitudinal heat flow does not limit heat transfer to the PCM, the inventors simulated the use of a diamond-copper-diamond sandwich with K=800 W/(m.Math.K) of the type developed at Civan, Israel, for laser-diode sub-mount/heat-spreader applications. Results for hexadecane are shown in
[0027]
[0028] Fins can be produced with an overall fin thickness of approximately 150 m for the 100 surfaces case. The copper foil may be 50 m and the nano-diamond coatings on both sides may be 50 m each.
[0029] In conclusion, extremely light-weight cooling systems can be developed on the basis of multi-stage heat-reservoirs that contain phase change materials as the final storage medium. Breakthrough enhancement in recovery time comes about when applying heat fins (such as diamond-copper-diamond fins) to the PCM based reservoirs.