Expanded heat sink for electronic displays
09797588 · 2017-10-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
F21V29/503
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/673
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/83
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
G02F2201/36
PHYSICS
F21V29/74
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/502
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F21V29/503
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/67
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/502
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F21V29/74
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Abstract
Exemplary embodiments provide an electronic display assembly. One or more heat-generating components are preferably placed in thermal communication with a plate. One or more fans are placed to draw cooling air along the plate to remove the heat removed from the component. Some embodiments may place the plate behind the electronic image assembly, so that cooling air can remove heat from the plate as well as the electronic image assembly. Exemplary embodiments have power modules in thermal communication with optional conductive ribs. Conductive thermal communication is established between the optional ribs and the components in the exemplary embodiments.
Claims
1. An electronic display assembly comprising: a liquid crystal display having a direct LED backlight with a rear surface; a plate having a front side facing the direct LED backlight and a rear side opposing the front side, where the plate is spaced apart from the rear surface of the LED backlight to define a channel therebetween; an electronic component located along the rear side of the plate; and a fan positioned to draw cooling air through the channel; wherein the cooling air is prohibited from contacting the electronic component.
2. The electronic display assembly of claim 1 further comprising: a plurality of thermally conductive ribs extending from the front side of the plate so as to reside within the channel between the LED backlight and the plate.
3. The electronic display assembly of claim 2 wherein: the ribs are in conductive thermal communication with the plate and the direct LED backlight.
4. The electronic display assembly of claim 2 wherein: the ribs are elongate metallic members having lengths parallel to the path of the cooling air.
5. The electronic display assembly of claim 2 wherein: the plate provides a gaseous and contaminate barrier between the ribs and the electronic component.
6. The electronic display assembly of claim 2 wherein: the ribs are positioned to absorb heat from the plate.
7. The electronic display assembly of claim 2 wherein: the ribs have a hollow rectangular cross-section.
8. The electronic display assembly of claim 2 wherein: the ribs have an I-beam cross-section.
9. The electronic display assembly of claim 2 wherein: the ribs have a honeycomb cross-section.
10. The electronic display assembly of claim 2 further comprising: an additional component attached to the plate.
11. The electronic display assembly of claim 1 wherein: the electronic component is in conductive thermal communication with the plate.
12. The electronic display assembly of claim 2 wherein: the plate and ribs are metallic.
13. The electronic display assembly of claim 1 wherein: the electronic component is a power module.
14. The electronic display assembly of claim 2 further comprising: an additional plate in thermal communication with the ribs.
15. A electronic display assembly comprising: a liquid crystal display having a front viewing surface and a direct LED backlight placed behind the liquid crystal display; a plate positioned behind the direct LED backlight; an electronic component located along the plate and in conductive thermal communication with the plate; and a fan positioned to draw cooling air between the direct LED backlight and the plate; wherein the cooling air is prohibited from contacting the front viewing surface of the liquid crystal display or the electronic component.
16. The electronic display assembly of claim 15 wherein: the cooling air is ambient air and the path provided for the cooling air surrounds the electronic display assembly.
17. The electronic display assembly of claim 15 wherein: the path provided for the cooling air will allow the cooling air to remove heat from the direct LED backlight as well as the plate.
18. The electronic display assembly of claim 15 wherein: the electronic component is electrically connected to the liquid crystal display.
19. A electronic display assembly comprising: an electronic display having a front viewing surface and a rear surface; a plate positioned behind the rear surface of the electronic display to define a channel therebetween; an electronic component located along the plate but positioned outside of the channel, the electronic component in conductive thermal communication with the plate; and a fan positioned to cause ambient air to flow through the channel; wherein the flow of ambient air is restricted to the channel and prohibited from contact with the front viewing surface of the electronic display or the electronic component.
20. The electronic display assembly of claim 19 wherein: the electronic component is a power module.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) A better understanding of an exemplary embodiment will be obtained from a reading of the following detailed description and the accompanying drawings wherein identical reference characters refer to identical parts and in which:
(2)
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(8) As used herein, the term ‘thermally conductive’ means any material having a thermal conductivity (κ) greater than 2 Watts per Kelvin per meter (W/Km). Preferably, elements described herein as being ‘thermally conductive’ are comprised of metal, but this is not required. Even more preferably, elements described herein as being ‘thermally conductive’ are aluminum or some alloy of aluminum, but this also is not required. Further, as used herein ‘thermal communication’ may be conductive, convective, radiative, or any combination thereof.
(9)
(10) Many types of power modules may be used with the embodiments described herein. A preferable power module would be any type which uses heat dissipating assemblies. An exemplary power module is commercially available from TDK-Lambda of San Diego, Calif. www.lambdapower.com. Specifically, the PFE series of power modules could be used with exemplary embodiments.
(11)
(12) A plurality of mounting posts 11 may be used to mount other heat-producing components such as PCBs, hard drives, timing and control boards, inductors, and even the power modules if desired. The mounting posts 11 may also be thermally conductive so that the heat which is generated by these components can also be transferred to the plate 10 and the ribs 15 and removed by the cooling air 20. The heat-producing components may also be placed directly on the thermally conductive plate 10 without using the posts 11.
(13) In an exemplary embodiment, the plate 10 would provide a gaseous and contaminate barrier between the side containing the ribs 15 and the side containing the mounting posts 11, power modules, and any other electronic assemblies. If the plate 10 provides an adequate barrier, ambient air may be ingested as cooling air 20 and the risk of contaminates entering the side of the plate 10 containing the sensitive electronic components may be reduced or eliminated.
(14) The ribs 15 shown in this embodiment contain a hollow rectangular cross-section, but this is not required. Other embodiments may contain ribs with I-beam cross-sections, hollow square cross-sections, solid rectangular or solid square cross-sections, ‘T’ cross-sections, ‘Z’ cross-sections, a honeycomb cross-section, or any combination or mixture of these. With any of the embodiments shown herein, the ribs may be fixed to the surrounding surfaces in a number of ways including but not limited to: adhesives, double-sided tape, mechanical fasteners, and welding. An exemplary embodiment may use a thermally-conductive silicone or adhesive. Other exemplary embodiments may use a thermally conductive very high bond (VHB) tape. In some embodiments, the ribs may not be separate elements but may be cast along with one of the surrounding surfaces or plates.
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(17) Of course, the mounting substrate 30 and illumination devices 32 can be any other type of device which illuminates, including but not limited to OLED, plasma display assembly, light emitting polymer (LEP) assembly, organic electro luminescence (OEL) assembly. Simply providing the rear surface 35 in thermal communication with any of these devices can allow the ribs to cool a variety of different types of electronic displays.
(18) As noted above, many illumination devices may have optical performance properties which vary depending on temperature. When ‘hot spots’ are present within an illumination device, these hot spots can result in irregularities in the resulting image which might be visible to the end user. Thus, with the embodiments described herein, the heat which may be generated by the illumination device can be distributed throughout the various ribs and thermally conductive surfaces to remove hot spots and cool the illumination device. As is well known in the art, LEDs are typically used as a backlight for a liquid crystal assembly while OLEDs provide both the illumination and the color sub-elements (ex. pixels) necessary to produce an image. The embodiments shown can be used with LCD or OLED displays.
(19) In an exemplary embodiment, the ribs 15 may be used to cool both the backlight assembly and the power modules. In a further exemplary embodiment, the ribs 15 can also be used to cool additional electronic assemblies by placing them in thermal communication with the thermally conductive plate 10. Thus, with the ribs 15 in a central location, the ‘front’ would be towards an intended observer of the display while the ‘back’ would be on the opposite side of an intended observer. Therefore, the front side of the ribs 15 would be in thermal communication with a backlight assembly, illumination device, or electronic image assembly and the rear side of the ribs would be in thermal communication with a rear plate (i.e. thermally conductive plate 10). A single path of cooling air can then be used to cool the interior of the display while the various hot spots can distribute heat throughout the ribs and other thermally conductive surfaces to provide the most efficient cooling.
(20)
(21) In this embodiment, the front plate 55 is in thermal communication with an electronic image assembly 56. Alternatively, the front plate 55 may be the rear surface of the electronic image assembly 56. A front transparent panel 70 may be used to protect the electronic image assembly 56 from damage. Solar loading (radiative heat transfer from the sun through the front transparent panel 70) may result in a heat buildup on the electronic image assembly 56. Thermal communication between the electronic image assembly 56 and the front plate 55 can provide a means for transferring the solar loading (and any other heat buildup) on the electronic image assembly 56 to the ribs 15, cooling air 20, and out of the display through the exhaust aperture 65.
(22) One or more fans 50 may be used to draw the air 20 into the inlet aperture 60 and through the ribs 15. While in this embodiment the fans 50 are placed adjacent to the exhaust aperture 65, in alternative embodiments the fans 50 may be placed adjacent to the inlet aperture 60, or adjacent to both the inlet 60 and exhaust 65 apertures. In some embodiments, the air 20 may be air conditioned (or otherwise cooled) before it is directed along the ribs 15. In some embodiments, the inlet aperture 60 contains a filter in order to remove particulate. The electronic image assembly 56 can be any one of the following: LCD, OLED assembly, plasma display assembly, light emitting polymer (LEP) assembly, organic electro luminescence (OEL) assembly, or LED display assembly.
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(24) Air inlet aperture 350 accepts open loop cooling air 310 and 300. While open loop cooling air 310 is directed through the heat exchanger 200, open loop cooling air 300 is directed along the ribs 15. In a similar arrangement as the ones described above, the ribs 15 are preferably in thermal communication with a thermally conductive plate 10 (which may be in thermal communication with one or more power modules 7 as well as any other heat-producing component 17). Optionally, the ribs 15 may also be in thermal communication with the rear surface 500 of an electronic image assembly 100. In an exemplary embodiment, the rear surface 500 would be the rear surface of a LED backlight for a LCD. In an alternative embodiment, the rear surface 500 would be the rear surface of an OLED assembly.
(25) In a preferred embodiment, the heat exchanger 200 would be a cross-flow heat exchanger. However, many types of heat exchangers are known and can be used with any of the embodiments herein. The heat exchanger 200 may be a cross-flow, parallel flow, or counter-flow heat exchanger. In an exemplary embodiment, the heat exchanger 200 would be comprised of a plurality of stacked layers of thin plates. The plates may have a corrugated, honeycomb, or tubular design, where a plurality of channels/pathways/tubes travel down the plate length-wise. The plates may be stacked such that the directions of the pathways are alternated with each adjacent plate, so that each plate's pathways are substantially perpendicular to the pathways of the adjacent plates. Thus, gas may enter the heat exchanger only through plates whose channels or pathways travel parallel to the path of the gas. Because the plates are alternated, the closed loop and ambient gases may travel in plates which are adjacent to one another and heat may be transferred between the two gases without mixing the gases themselves (if the heat exchanger is adequately sealed, which is preferable but not required).
(26) In an alternative design, an open channel may be placed in between a pair of corrugated, honeycomb, or tubular plates. The open channel may travel in a direction which is perpendicular to the pathways of the adjacent plates. This open channel may be created by running two strips of material or tape (esp. very high bond (VHB) tape) between two opposite edges of the plates in a direction that is perpendicular to the direction of the pathways in the adjacent plates. Thus, gas entering the heat exchanger in a first direction may travel through the open channel (parallel to the strips or tape). Gas which is entering in a second direction (substantially perpendicular to the first direction) would travel through the pathways of the adjacent plates).
(27) Other types of cross-flow heat exchangers could include a plurality of tubes which contain the first gas and travel perpendicular to the path of the second gas. As the second gas flows over the tubes containing the first gas, heat is exchanged between the two gases. Obviously, there are many types of cross-flow heat exchangers and any type would work with the embodiments herein.
(28) An exemplary heat exchanger may have plates where the sidewalls have a relatively low thermal resistance so that heat can easily be exchanged between the two paths of gas. A number of materials can be used to create the heat exchanger. Preferably, the material used should be corrosion resistant, rot resistant, light weight, and inexpensive. Metals are typically used for heat exchangers because of their high thermal conductivity and would work with these embodiments. However, it has been discovered that plastics and composites can also satisfy the thermal conditions for electronic displays. An exemplary embodiment would utilize polypropylene as the material for constructing the plates for the heat exchanger. It has been found that although polypropylene may seem like a poor thermal conductor, the large amount of surface area relative to the small material thickness, results in an overall thermal resistance that is very low. Thus, an exemplary heat exchanger would be made of plastic and would thus produce a display assembly that is thin and lightweight. Specifically, corrugated plastic may be used for each plate layer.
(29) The cooling system may run continuously. However, if desired, temperature sensing devices may be incorporated within the electronic display to detect when temperatures have reached a predetermined threshold value. In such a case, the various cooling fans may be selectively engaged when the temperature in the display reaches a predetermined value. Predetermined thresholds may be selected and the system may be configured to advantageously keep the display within an acceptable temperature range. Typical thermostat assemblies can be used to accomplish this task. Thermocouples may be used as the temperature sensing devices.
(30) It is to be understood that the spirit and scope of the disclosed embodiments provides for the cooling of many types of displays. By way of example and not by way of limitation, embodiments may be used in conjunction with any of the following: LCD (all types), light emitting diode (LED), organic light emitting diode (OLED), field emitting display (FED), light emitting polymer (LEP), organic electro luminescence (OEL), and plasma displays. Furthermore, embodiments may be used with displays of other types including those not yet discovered. In particular, it is contemplated that the system may be well suited for use with full color, flat panel OLED displays. Exemplary embodiments may also utilize large (55 inches or more) LED backlit, high definition (1080i or 1080p or greater) liquid crystal displays (LCD). While the embodiments described herein are well suited for outdoor environments, they may also be appropriate for indoor applications (e.g., factory/industrial environments, spas, locker rooms) where thermal stability of the display may be at risk.
(31) Having shown and described preferred embodiments, those skilled in the art will realize that many variations and modifications may be made to affect the described embodiments and still be within the scope of the claimed invention. Additionally, many of the elements indicated above may be altered or replaced by different elements which will provide the same result and fall within the spirit of the claimed invention. It is the intention, therefore, to limit the invention only as indicated by the scope of the claims.