HMT Report Brucelee 1
HMT Report Brucelee 1
HMT Report Brucelee 1
A heat sink is a passive heat exchanger that transfers the heat generated by an electronic or a
mechanical device to a fluid medium often air or a liquid coolant ,where it is dissipated away
from the device ,thereby allowing regulation of the device’s temperature at optimal levels.In
computer’s heat sinks are used to cool CPU’S GPU’S and some chipsets and RAM
modules.Heat sinks are used with high power semiconductor devices such as power
transistors,and optoelectronics such as lasers and light emitting diodes (LED’S) where the heat
dissipation ability of the comnponent itself is insufficient to moderate its temperature. A heat
sink is designed to maximize its surface area in contact with the cooling medium surrounding it ,
such as the air.Air velocity,choice of material, protrusion design,and surface treatement are the
factors that affect the performance of a heat sink .Heat sink attachment methods and thermal
interface materials also affect the die temperature of the integerated circuit.Thermal adhesive or
thermal grease improve the heat sink’s performance by filling air gaps between the heat sinks
and the heat spreader on the device.A heat sink transfers thermal energy from a higher
temperature device to a lower temperature fluid medium.The fluid medium is frequently air but
can also be water ,refrigerants or oil.If the fluid medium is water,the heat sink is frequently
called a cold plate.In thermodynamics,a heat sink is a heat reservoir that can absorb an arbitrary
amount of heat without significantly changing temperature.
Practical heat sinks for electronic devices must have a temperature higher than the surroundings
to transfer heat by convection,radiation and condution.Passive heat sinks donot have a fan and
instead rely on increased surface area and passive air movement to cool the component.As they
donot use a fan ,passive heat sinks are 100 % reliable.In natural convection a blck or dark
colored heat sink will perform 3 % to 8% better than an aluminium heat sink in its natural
silverfish color.A Heat sink with a fan is called an active heat sink .Heat sinks are generally
made of an aluminium alloy and often have fins.Bonded heat sinks are often built –up
extrusions,typically manufactured by assembling extruded plates into slots on an extruded or
machined heat sink base ,and held in place by an interface , usually a two part thermosetting
thermally conductive epoxy or a solder.
A heat sink works by taking some of the heat being supplied by the soldering iron and this helps
to prevent the component’s temperature increasing too much.Heat sinks not only provide heat
dissipation,but are also used for thermal energy management done by dissipating heat when heat
is more .In case of low temperatures ,heat sinks are intended to provide heat by releasing thermal
energy for proper operation of the circuit.Nearly all computers have heat sinks which help keep
the CPU cool and prevent it from overheating.If the temperature becomes too hot ,the fans near
the CPU may speed up to help cool the processor and heat sink.
Heat Sink Construction:
There are many designs for heat sinks but typically comprise a base and number of protrusions
attached to this base. The base is the feature that interfaces with the device to be cooled. Heat is
conducted through base into the protrusions.The protrusions can take several forms including :
Plate fin
Copper round fin
Elliptical fin
Heat sinks are usually constructed from copper or aluminium .Copper has a very high
thermal conductivitywhich means that the rate of heat transfer through copper heatsinks is
also very high.Aluminium’s thermal conductivity is also high and it has the added benefits of
lower cost and lower density making it useful for applications where weight is a major
concern.
Heat sink performance:
The performance of a heat sink depends on different parameters which are as follows:-
Geometry
Material
Surface treatement
Air velocity
Interface with device
Heat sink manufacturing methods:
Machining-where a CNC machine is used to cut the metal
Extrusion-where metal is heated and pushed through a mold
Forging-where metal is heated and shaped by pressurization
Stamping-where the metal fin is cut and then soldered onto the base
Skiving-where a blade is used to slice and push up the single block of metal
Heat sink working principle:
Transmission of heat from a heat source via heatsink into the surrounding medium takes place
in four successive steps:-
Transfer from the heat source to the heat sink
Conduction from within the heat sink to its surface
Transfer from the surface into the surrounding medium by either free or forced
convection
Radition depending on the nature of the heatsink’s surfaces
Design Factors
Thermal resistance:-
For semiconductor devices used in a variety of consumer and industrial electronics, the idea
of thermal resistance simplifies the selection of heat sinks. The heat flow between the
semiconductor die and ambient air is modeled as a series of resistances to heat flow; there is a
resistance from the die to the device case, from the case to the heat sink, and from the heat sink
to the ambient air. The sum of these resistances is the total thermal resistance from the die to the
ambient air. Thermal resistance is defined as temperature rise per unit of power, analogous to
electrical resistance, and is expressed in units of degrees Celsius per watt (°C/W). If the device
dissipation in watts is known, and the total thermal resistance is calculated, the temperature rise
of the die over the ambient air can be calculated.
The idea of thermal resistance of a semiconductor heat sink is an approximation. It does not take
into account non-uniform distribution of heat over a device or heat sink. It only models a system
in thermal equilibrium, and does not take into account the change in temperatures with time. Nor
does it reflect the non-linearity of radiation and convection with respect to temperature rise.
However, manufacturers tabulate typical values of thermal resistance for heat sinks and
semiconductor devices, which allows selection of commercially manufactured heat sinks to be
simplified. Commercial extruded aluminum heat sinks have a thermal resistance (heat sink to
ambient air) ranging from 0.4 °C/W for a large sink meant for TO-3 devices, up to as high as 85
°C/W for a clip-on heat sink for a TO-92 small plastic case. The popular 2N3055 power
transistor in a TO3 case has an internal thermal resistance from junction to case of 1.52
°C/W. The contact between the device case and heat sink may have a thermal resistance of
between 0.5 up to 1.7 °C/W, depending on the case size, and use of grease or insulating mica
washer.
Material:
The most common heat sink materials are aluminium alloys.[7] Aluminium alloy 1050 has one of
the higher thermal conductivity values at 229 W/m•K [8] but is mechanically soft. Aluminium
alloys 6060 (low stress), 6061, and 6063 are commonly used, with thermal conductivity values
of 166 and 201 W/m•K, respectively. The values depend on the temper of the alloy. One-piece
aluminium heat sinks can be made by extrusion, casting, or milling.
Copper has excellent heat sink properties in terms of its thermal conductivity, corrosion
resistance, biofouling resistance, and antimicrobial resistance (See also Copper in heat
exchangers). Copper has around twice the thermal conductivity of aluminium, around 400
W/m•K for pure copper. Its main applications are in industrial facilities, power plants, solar
thermal water systems, HVAC systems, gas water heaters, forced air heating and cooling
systems, geothermal heating and cooling, and electronic systems.
Copper is three times as dense[7] and more expensive than aluminium.[7] One-piece copper heat
sinks can be made by skiving or milled. Sheet-metal fins can be soldered onto a rectangular
copper body. Copper is less ductile than aluminium, so it cannot be extruded into heat sinks.[9][10]
Fin efficiency:
Fin efficiency is one of the parameters which makes a higher thermal conductivity material
important. A fin of a heat sink may be considered to be a flat plate with heat flowing in one end
and being dissipated into the surrounding fluid as it travels to the other.[11] As heat flows through
the fin, the combination of the thermal resistance of the heat sink impeding the flow and the heat
lost due to convection, the temperature of the fin and, therefore, the heat transfer to the fluid, will
decrease from the base to the end of the fin. Fin efficiency is defined as the actual heat
transferred by the fin, divided by the heat transfer were the fin to be isothermal (hypothetically
the fin having infinite thermal conductivity)
Spreading resistance:
Another parameter that concerns the thermal conductivity of the heat sink material is spreading
resistance. Spreading resistance occurs when thermal energy is transferred from a small area to a
larger area in a substance with finite thermal conductivity. In a heat sink, this means that heat
does not distribute uniformly through the heat sink base. The spreading resistance phenomenon
is shown by how the heat travels from the heat source location and causes a large temperature
gradient between the heat source and the edges of the heat sink. This means that some fins are at
a lower temperature than if the heat source were uniform across the base of the heat sink. This
nonuniformity increases the heat sink's effective thermal resistance.
To decrease the spreading resistance in the base of a heat sink:
Copper has about between 50% and double the thermal conductivity of aluminum depending on
alloy, so for a given performance a copper heatsink can be 'half' the size of an aluminum one.
However, copper is much more expensive than aluminum, and somewhat more difficult to
fabricate, so it is more costly to produce