TY - CPAPER KW - Cooling KW - Computational fluid dynamics KW - Temperature KW - Heat transfer KW - Thermal conductivity KW - Silicon KW - Elemental semiconductors KW - Si KW - Thermal management KW - Convection KW - Thermal resistance KW - Microchannel KW - Heat sinks KW - Channel flow KW - Convective heat transfer coefficient KW - Electronics packaging KW - Flexible control KW - Flow passage direction KW - Flow simulation KW - Heat load KW - High end electronics cooling KW - Logic KW - Silicon temperature KW - Stacked microchannel heat sink KW - Temperature nonuniformity KW - Thermal factors KW - Thermal management (packaging) AU - M K Patterson AU - Xiaojin Wei AU - Y Joshi AU - Ravi S Prasher AB -
Microchannel heat sinks feature a high convective heat transfer coefficient, which is particularly beneficial to high-end electronics cooling. There are some issues to be addressed before these can be commercially implemented, among which pressure drop penalty and temperature non-uniformity are critical. Recently, a stacked microchannel heat sink has been proposed to address these two issues. Stacked microchannels provide larger flow passage, so that for a fixed heat load the required pressure drop is significantly reduced. One unique feature of the stacked microchannel heat sink is that individual layers populated with parallel microchannels can be stacked independently. As a beneficial result, flexible control over the flow direction and flow rate can be harnessed to achieve better temperature uniformity and the lowest silicon temperature. The present study conducts numerical study of heat transfer inside stacked microchannels with different flow arrangements including parallel, counter-flow, and serial. For the serial arrangement both top feeding and bottom feeding are considered. The predicted heat removal performance is compared with single layer microchannels that have the same effective flow area. It has been identified that counter-flow arrangement has the best overall performance for temperature uniformity, while parallel flow has the best performance in reducing the peak temperature. This can be explained by the detailed heat transfer information obtained through the conjugate numerical study.
BT - The Ninth Intersociety Conference on Thermal and Thermomechanical Phenomena In Electronic Systems (IEEE Cat. No.04CH37543) DA - 06/2004 DO - 10.1109/ITHERM.2004.1319199 LA - eng N2 -Microchannel heat sinks feature a high convective heat transfer coefficient, which is particularly beneficial to high-end electronics cooling. There are some issues to be addressed before these can be commercially implemented, among which pressure drop penalty and temperature non-uniformity are critical. Recently, a stacked microchannel heat sink has been proposed to address these two issues. Stacked microchannels provide larger flow passage, so that for a fixed heat load the required pressure drop is significantly reduced. One unique feature of the stacked microchannel heat sink is that individual layers populated with parallel microchannels can be stacked independently. As a beneficial result, flexible control over the flow direction and flow rate can be harnessed to achieve better temperature uniformity and the lowest silicon temperature. The present study conducts numerical study of heat transfer inside stacked microchannels with different flow arrangements including parallel, counter-flow, and serial. For the serial arrangement both top feeding and bottom feeding are considered. The predicted heat removal performance is compared with single layer microchannels that have the same effective flow area. It has been identified that counter-flow arrangement has the best overall performance for temperature uniformity, while parallel flow has the best performance in reducing the peak temperature. This can be explained by the detailed heat transfer information obtained through the conjugate numerical study.
PY - 2004 EP - 372–380 Vol.1 T2 - The Ninth Intersociety Conference on Thermal and Thermomechanical Phenomena In Electronic Systems (IEEE Cat. No.04CH37543) T3 - The Ninth Intersociety Conference on Thermal and Thermomechanical Phenomena In Electronic Systems (IEEE Cat. No.04CH37543) TI - Numerical study of conjugate heat transfer in stacked microchannels VL - 1 ER -