학술논문

Performances of Two-Phase Cooling Technologies that Uses Water as Working Fluid under Sub-Ambient Pressures
Document Type
Conference
Source
2021 20th IEEE Intersociety Conference on Thermal and Thermomechanical Phenomena in Electronic Systems (iTherm) Thermal and Thermomechanical Phenomena in Electronic Systems (iTherm), 2021 20th IEEE Intersociety Conference on. :86-92 Jun, 2021
Subject
Aerospace
Communication, Networking and Broadcast Technologies
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Computing and Processing
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Photonics and Electrooptics
Robotics and Control Systems
Transportation
Water
Thermal management of electronics
Performance evaluation
Integrated circuits
Fluids
Temperature
Cooling
Closed loop cooling
Jet impingement
Two-phase cooling
Electronics thermal management
sub-ambient pressure
vacuum
power following
high-density silicon devices
Language
ISSN
2694-2135
Abstract
Two-phase liquid vapor cooling is a promising technology option to achieve enhanced heat removal from integrated circuit components, which can drastically outpace its single-phase counterparts by leveraging the latent heat of the fluid. However, its application has been limited due to its inherent system complexity and relative system instability. The two-phase cooling control loop that provides the ability to sustainably utilize much less expensive working fluids such as water with far superior heat-transfer coefficients compared to traditional single-phase approaches has been revisited as a solution option for addressing the ever-increasing thermal demand placed on electronic components. Also, since typical integrated circuit components require the die temperature to remain below junction temperature, usually at or below 100°C, the system pressure should be maintained below atmosphere such that the saturation temperature of water can be reduced well below 100°C.The current study evaluates the pressure drops and heat transfer characteristics of water coolant flow at sub-atmospheric pressures for two different cooling configurations: 1) bare-die under jet impingement flow showcasing effective heat transfer coefficient well over 10 W/cm 2 -°C and 2) microchannel cold plate with thermal resistances less than half that of single-phase cooling with similar flow conditions. It has been demonstrated under variable flowrate and heat-flux conditions leveraging a sub-ambient pressure environment coupled with specific fluid preheating and pressurizing differential conditions, very capable and sustainable thermal cooling performance can be achieved for both configurations.