DocumentCode
1845686
Title
Nonlinear programming applied to thermal and fluid design optimization
Author
Cullimore, Brent
Author_Institution
C&R Technol., Littleton, CO, USA
fYear
2002
fDate
2002
Firstpage
54
Lastpage
60
Abstract
Thermal engineers are now commonly responsible for sizing and selecting active cooling components such as fans and heat sinks, and increasingly single and two-phase coolant loops.. Meanwhile, heat transfer and fluid flow design analysis software has matured, growing both in ease of use and in phenomenological modeling prowess. Unfortunately, most software retains a focus on point-design simulations and needs to do a better job of helping thermal engineers not only evaluate designs, but also investigate alternatives and even automate the search for optimal designs. This paper shows how readily available nonlinear programming (NLP) techniques can be successfully applied to automating design synthesis activities, allowing the thermal engineer to approach the problem from a higher level of automation. This paper briefly introduces NLP concepts, and then demonstrates their application both to a simplified fin (extended surface) as well as a more realistic case: a finned heat sink.
Keywords
cooling; electronic design automation; heat sinks; nonlinear programming; packaging; thermal analysis; NLP; active cooling components; fans; finned heat sink; fluid design optimization; fluid flow design; heat transfer design; nonlinear programming; optimal designs; phenomenological modeling; single-phase coolant loops; thermal design optimization; two-phase coolant loops; Coolants; Cooling; Design engineering; Design optimization; Fans; Heat engines; Heat sinks; Heat transfer; Job design; Thermal engineering;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Thermal and Thermomechanical Phenomena in Electronic Systems, 2002. ITHERM 2002. The Eighth Intersociety Conference on
ISSN
1089-9870
Print_ISBN
0-7803-7152-6
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ITHERM.2002.1012438
Filename
1012438
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