학술논문

Design, microfabrication and thermal characterization of a hotspot cooler testbed for convective boiling experiments in extreme-microgap with integrated micropin-fins
Document Type
Conference
Source
2016 15th IEEE Intersociety Conference on Thermal and Thermomechanical Phenomena in Electronic Systems (ITherm) Thermal and Thermomechanical Phenomena in Electronic Systems (ITherm), 2016 15th IEEE Intersociety Conference on. :85-90 May, 2016
Subject
Aerospace
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Thermal resistance
Resistance heating
Cooling
Surface resistance
Fluids
microfluidic cooling
high heat flux
two phase
heat sink
thermal testing
reliability
Language
ISSN
1087-9870
Abstract
In this work, we designed, fabricated and characterized a novel hotspot testbed to dissipate ultra-high power density by two-phase convective boiling of refrigerant in a microgap with integrated micropin-fins and isolation air trenches around resistance heaters. The 300 µm long, 200 µm wide, and 10 µm tall microgap with 4 µm diameter micropin-fins was batch micro-fabricated in silicon. The 40 µm wide and 180 µm deep isolation air trenches around the heater and a SiO2 passivation layer were used to provide thermal isolation. The testbed dissipates a power density of up to 4.75 kW/cm2 using R134a refrigerant as the coolant. Thermal resistance and pumping power were compared between the micropin-fin device of interest and a reference ‘empty microgap’ device to assess tradeoffs in performance. Micropin-fins were found to slightly reduce thermal resistance at the cost of a large increase in pumping power. In addition to experimental work, thermomechanical simulations were implemented to analyze the reliability of the device for high pressure conditions.