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    An Integral Heat Sink for Cooling Microelectronic Components

    Source: Journal of Electronic Packaging:;1993:;volume( 115 ):;issue: 003::page 284
    Author:
    S. H. Bhavnani
    ,
    C.-P. Tsai
    ,
    R. C. Jaeger
    ,
    D. L. Eison
    DOI: 10.1115/1.2909330
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: Liquid immersion cooling is rapidly becoming the mechanism of choice for the newest generation of supercomputers. Miniaturization at both the chip and module level places a severe constraint on the size of the heat sink employed to dissipate the high heat fluxes generated. A study was conducted to develop a surface that could augment boiling heat transfer from silicon surfaces under these constraints. The surface created consists of reversed pyramidal features etched directly on to the silicon surface. Experiments were conducted in a saturated pool of refrigerant-113 at atmospheric pressure. The inexpensive crystallographic etching techniques used to create the enhanced features are described in the paper. The main characteristics of interest in the present study were the incipient boiling superheat and the magnitude of the temperature overshoot at boiling incipience. Results were obtained for test sections with various cavity densities, and compared with data for the smooth untreated surface. It was found that incipient boiling superheat was reduced from a range of 27.0–53.0° C for the untreated silicon surface, to a range of 2.5–15.0° C for the enhanced surfaces. The overshoot also decreased considerably; from about 12.0–18.0° C for two classes of untreated surfaces, to a range of 1.5–5.3° C for the enhanced surfaces. The values of the incipient boiling superheat, and those of the overshoot decreased with a decrease in cavity mouth size. Two ratios of heat source surface area to the area of the enhanced surface were studied. The overshoot values obtained for these surfaces were compared with those observed for some commonly used enhanced surfaces. An elementary numerical study was conducted to estimate the magnitude of heat spreading.
    keyword(s): Cooling , Heat sinks , Boiling , Heat , Silicon , Cavities , Etching , Refrigerants , Temperature , Heat transfer , Atmospheric pressure , Flux (Metallurgy) AND Mechanisms ,
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      An Integral Heat Sink for Cooling Microelectronic Components

    URI
    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/111759
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    • Journal of Electronic Packaging

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    contributor authorS. H. Bhavnani
    contributor authorC.-P. Tsai
    contributor authorR. C. Jaeger
    contributor authorD. L. Eison
    date accessioned2017-05-08T23:41:00Z
    date available2017-05-08T23:41:00Z
    date copyrightSeptember, 1993
    date issued1993
    identifier issn1528-9044
    identifier otherJEPAE4-26139#284_1.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/111759
    description abstractLiquid immersion cooling is rapidly becoming the mechanism of choice for the newest generation of supercomputers. Miniaturization at both the chip and module level places a severe constraint on the size of the heat sink employed to dissipate the high heat fluxes generated. A study was conducted to develop a surface that could augment boiling heat transfer from silicon surfaces under these constraints. The surface created consists of reversed pyramidal features etched directly on to the silicon surface. Experiments were conducted in a saturated pool of refrigerant-113 at atmospheric pressure. The inexpensive crystallographic etching techniques used to create the enhanced features are described in the paper. The main characteristics of interest in the present study were the incipient boiling superheat and the magnitude of the temperature overshoot at boiling incipience. Results were obtained for test sections with various cavity densities, and compared with data for the smooth untreated surface. It was found that incipient boiling superheat was reduced from a range of 27.0–53.0° C for the untreated silicon surface, to a range of 2.5–15.0° C for the enhanced surfaces. The overshoot also decreased considerably; from about 12.0–18.0° C for two classes of untreated surfaces, to a range of 1.5–5.3° C for the enhanced surfaces. The values of the incipient boiling superheat, and those of the overshoot decreased with a decrease in cavity mouth size. Two ratios of heat source surface area to the area of the enhanced surface were studied. The overshoot values obtained for these surfaces were compared with those observed for some commonly used enhanced surfaces. An elementary numerical study was conducted to estimate the magnitude of heat spreading.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleAn Integral Heat Sink for Cooling Microelectronic Components
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume115
    journal issue3
    journal titleJournal of Electronic Packaging
    identifier doi10.1115/1.2909330
    journal fristpage284
    journal lastpage291
    identifier eissn1043-7398
    keywordsCooling
    keywordsHeat sinks
    keywordsBoiling
    keywordsHeat
    keywordsSilicon
    keywordsCavities
    keywordsEtching
    keywordsRefrigerants
    keywordsTemperature
    keywordsHeat transfer
    keywordsAtmospheric pressure
    keywordsFlux (Metallurgy) AND Mechanisms
    treeJournal of Electronic Packaging:;1993:;volume( 115 ):;issue: 003
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
    نرم افزار کتابخانه دیجیتال "دی اسپیس" فارسی شده توسط یابش برای کتابخانه های ایرانی | تماس با یابش
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