Flexible metallic heat connector
09658000 ยท 2017-05-23
Assignee
Inventors
- Graham Charles Kirk (Towcester, GB)
- Stuart CONNOLLY (Towcester, GB)
- Tao Deng (Niskayuna, NY, US)
- Zeshan Jabar Hussain (Towcester, GB)
- Binoy Milan Shah (Niskayuna, NY, US)
Cpc classification
F28F27/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H01L2924/0002
ELECTRICITY
F28F2013/008
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y10T29/4935
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
H01L2924/0002
ELECTRICITY
H01L2924/00
ELECTRICITY
H01L23/40
ELECTRICITY
F28F2255/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H01L2924/00
ELECTRICITY
F28D20/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F28F7/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F28F7/00
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
A thermal connector configured to be placed within a recess of a heat sink between the heat sink and a heat generating component and transfer heat from the component to the heat sink, including a heat spreader configured to fit within the recess of the heat sink, a spring configured to sit between the heat spreader and with the heat sink and bias the heat spreader towards and away from the heat sink, a flexible membrane attached to the heat sink and the heat spreader and seal off the recess, and a phase change material that fills the recess, wherein the flexible membrane contains the phase change material and allows it to contract or expand in response to the movement of the heat spreader towards or away from the heat sink.
Claims
1. A thermal connector comprising; a heat sink having a recess; a heat spreader that fits into the recess of the heat sink; a spring, comprising a body portion that is connected flush with the heat spreader and a plurality of legs angled away from the heat spreader and towards the heat sink so that the plurality of legs contact the heat sink when the heat spreader is fit into the recess of the heat sink; a flexible membrane attached to the heat sink and to the heat spreader, so that the membrane seals off the recess; and a phase change material that fills the void defined by the heat sink, flexible membrane, and heat spreader, wherein the phase change material holds the spring compressed to its smallest height so that when the thermal connector is heated and the phase change material is melted, the heat spreader is pushed by the spring away from the heat sink and into contact with a heat generating component positioned adjacent to the heat sink; wherein the flexible membrane allows the phase change material to expand in response to the movement of the heat spreader away from the heat sink.
2. The thermal connector of claim 1, wherein the thermal connector makes a thermal connection between the heat spreader and the heat generating component.
3. The thermal connector of claim 1 wherein the flexible membrane is a silicone or urethane polymer.
4. The thermal connector of claim 1 wherein the phase change material is a low melting alloy.
5. The thermal connector of claim 1, wherein the phase change material has a melting point between about 40 C. to 250 C. and a thermal conductivity between about 20 W/mK and 400 W/mK.
6. The thermal connector of claim 1, wherein the phase change material has a melting point between about 60 C. to 160 C. and a thermal conductivity between about 30 W/mK and 100 W/mK.
7. The thermal connector of claim 4 wherein the low melting alloy has a melting point of about 118 C. and a thermal conductivity of about 3 5 W/mK.
8. The thermal connector of claim 4 wherein the heat generating component is an electrical device component.
9. The thermal connector of claim 1, wherein the spring biases the heat spreader within a range of 0.1 mm to 3 mm.
10. A method to thermally connect a heat generating component and a heat sink having a gap there between comprising the steps: providing a thermal connector comprising: a heat spreader and a spring, the spring comprising a body portion that is connected flush with the heat spreader and a plurality of legs angled away from the heat spreader; a low melting point alloy surrounding the spring, wherein (i) when the alloy is in a melted state, the spring may move the heat spreader, and (ii) when the alloy is in a hardened state, the spring may not move the heat spreader; a flexible membrane that contains the low melting point alloy within the gap and allows the alloy to contract and expand in response to the movement of the heat spreader towards and away from the heat sink; melting the alloy to a melted state; compressing the spring to its smallest height; cooling the alloy to a hardened state to hold the spring in compression; placing the thermal connector in the gap between the heat sink and the heat generating component; and heating the alloy above a melting temperature so that the alloy melts allowing the spring to move the heat spreader away from the heat sink and into thermal contact with the heat generating component.
Description
V BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
VI. DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
(5) The following detailed description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the applications and uses disclosed herein. Further, there is no intention to be bound by any theory presented in the preceding background or summary or the following detailed description. While embodiments of the present technology are described herein primarily in connection with dissipation of heat from an electrical circuit board to a heat sink, the concepts are also applicable to other types of systems where it is desirable to transfer thermal energy from a heat generating component to a heat dissipation device.
(6) In at least one aspect, the present disclosure provides a device and method for the transfer of thermal energy from components on an electrical circuit board to a heat sink.
(7) Thermal conductor 10 as applied in an electrical device is shown in
(8) Heat sink 18 is displaced away from the PCB 12 and component 14 and there is a tolerance or gap (not numbered) there between that is filled here with the thermal conductor 10.
(9) The thermal conductor 10 includes heat spreader 22 and spring 26. Desirably spring 26 includes body portion 27 and legs 28 extending away from the body portion 27 (shown more clearly in
(10) Heat sink 18 has a recess (not numbered) into which the assembly of the spring 26 and heat spreader 22 fits. A flexible membrane 32 is fixed to the edges of heat spreader 22 and heat sink 18 and seals off the void 29 between the heat sink 18 and heat spreader 22. The flexible membrane 32 can extend across the heat spreader 22 or simply to the edges thereof in order to adequately retain the phase change material.
(11) Void 29 is filled by phase change material 30. Phase change material 30 is a material, most preferably a low melting point alloy, which melts at a particular temperature.
(12) To assemble the thermal connector, the heat spreader 22 and spring 26 assembly is placed in the heat sink recess. The spring 26 is compressed to its smallest height while the phase change material 30 is in a melted state, and then the phase change material 30 is hardened by lowering the temperature.
(13) The thermal connector is deployed by raising the temperature to the melting point of the phase change material 30. The melting of the phase change material 30 allows the spring 26 to expand and the spring 26 will push heat spreader 22 into thermal contact with component 14 (via TIM 24).
(14) The tolerance between a heat sink and heat generating component in an electrical device ranges from about 0.1 mm to about 3 mm, more specifically about 0.3 to 1 mm, and is typically about 0.8 mm. Accordingly, the thermal conductor should be able to expand to fit this range.
(15)
(16) Phase change material 30 is desirably a material that is solid at near room temperature and melts at a temperature to deploy the spring. As one example, for many electronic devices, a phase change material having a melting point between about 40 C. to 250 C. is appropriate, more preferably from about 60 C. to 160 C. One preferred metal alloy is 52In 48Sn which has a melting point of 118 C. and a thermal conductivity of 35 W/mK. This alloy is available from Indium Corporation under the trademark Indalloy 1E. Eutectic alloys are preferred but are not required. Mixtures or pastes could also be used.
(17) Other metals and metal alloys that might be useful for certain applications include In, InBi, variations of InSn, BiSn, PbSn, SnAg, InPbAg, InAg, InSnBi, InGa, SnBiZn, SnInAg, SnAgCu, SnAgBi, and InPb.
(18) In general, phase change materials having a thermal conductivity between about 20 W/mK and 400 W/mK are preferred, most desirably about 30 W/mK to 100 W/mK.
(19) The flexible membrane 32 functions to retain the phase change material 30 within the void defined by the heat spreader 22 and the heat sink 18. Flexible membrane 32 is preferably a plastic film that can withstand the highest temperature reached by the operating device. For many electronic devices, a flexible membrane stable up to at least between about 150 to 200 C. is desirable, preferably up to at least 160 C. Options for the flexible membrane include polymers, silicon, urethane, rubbers, and metal foil. One specific example is Dureflex U073 125 m which is a polyether-based thermoplastic polyurethane film. Flexible membrane 32 can be attached to heat sink 18 and heat spreader 22 with an appropriate adhesive.
(20) Heat sink 18 can be a typical heat sink as used in the art, such as an aluminum alloy plate. As discussed above, other heat dissipating devices such as heat pipe modules and thermal around planes can be used with the thermal conductors as described herein. As an example, the recess in the heat sink 18 can be about 2.25 mm.
(21) Heat spreader 22 can be a typical heat spreader as used in the art, such as a copper plate. Other materials can be used as well, such as aluminum nitride (AlN) plates. Copper offers a higher thermal conductivity but aluminum nitride offers electrical isolation of the heat generating component from the heat sink. The heat spreader can be of a variety of sizes, such as those presently used in the art.
(22) Thermal interface material 24 can also be a material typically used in the art, such as a paste or thermal grease.
(23) The metal parts that are in contact with the phase change material (heat sink, heat spreader, spring) may be treated to increase their wettability by the phase change material 30. One treatment is a nickel plating with gold flash which increases the wettability of the parts with the metal alloy 52In 48Sn. This treatment is known in the art.
(24)
(25) A frame 42 circumferentially surrounds the heat spreader 44/spring 46 assembly and a flexible membrane 52 extends from the frame to the heat spreader. Phase change material 56 fills the void created by frame 42, flexible membrane 52, and heat spreader 44. The cartridge 40 is open on the top, so that the phase change material 56 is exposed.
(26) In one embodiment of assembling the heat connector cartridge 40, the spring 46 is attached to heat spreader 44 and flexible membrane 52 is attached to the frame 42 and heat spreader 44. The phase change material 56 is melted and placed in the void created by frame 42, flexible membrane 52, and heat spreader 44. The spring 46 is flattened to its lowest height and the temperature lowered to harden the phase change material 56. The cartridge 40 can then be attached to the heat sink 58 using a sealant or adhesive.
(27) As shown in exploded form in
(28) In use, the thermal connector cartridge 40 is placed between the heat sink 58 and the device component 62 (or multiple components). Desirably the cartridge is attached to the heat sink 58 such as by adhesive or other mechanical means such as fasteners. The assembly is deployed by heating to the melting point of the phase change material 56, which allows the spring 46 to expand or contract and engage the heat spreader 44 with the TIM 68 or component 62 on the other side. The flexible membrane 52 will expand or contract as needed to accommodate this expansion or contraction of the phase change material 56.
(29) As discussed above, the tolerance between a heat sink and heat generating component in an electrical device ranges from about 0.1 mm to about 3 mm and is typically about 0.8 mm. Accordingly, the cartridge should be an appropriate thickness to fit within the gap and the spring should be able to expand to fill the gap.
(30) The elements in this embodiment can have essentially the same properties as in the embodiment discussed above. Frame 42 can be made out of a number of materials. One option is aluminum and another option is a high melting point plastic. The frame can be a variety of sizes and is at least partially dependent on the size of the heat spreader. For an example, a frame that is about 35 mm square and having 3 mm thick walls works well with a heat spreader that is 20 mm square.
(31)
(32) Alternative embodiments, examples, and modifications which would still be encompassed by the disclosure may be made by those skilled in the art, particularly in light of the foregoing teachings. Further, it should be understood that the terminology used to describe the disclosure is intended to be in the nature of words of description rather than of limitation.
(33) Those skilled in the art will also appreciate that various adaptations and modifications of the preferred and alternative embodiments described above can be configured without departing from the scope and spirit of the disclosure. Therefore, it is to be understood that, within the scope of the appended claims, the disclosure may be practiced other than as specifically described herein.