• DocumentCode
    2357986
  • Title

    Spray cooling at low system pressure

  • Author

    Marcos, Anabel ; Chow, Louis C. ; Du, Jian-Hua ; Lei, Shuye ; Rini, Dan P. ; Lindauer, Jennifer J.

  • Author_Institution
    Motorola Inc., USA
  • fYear
    2002
  • fDate
    12-14 March 2002
  • Firstpage
    169
  • Lastpage
    175
  • Abstract
    Spray cooling has been shown to be the best cooling technique for applications that require efficient high heat flux removal. This research presents a study of spray cooling at low system pressure that allows control of the surface temperature by controlling the boiling point of the fluid. Such cooling provides an attractive, low-temperature thermal control to industries such as electronics, avionics, lasers, and electro-optics. Experiments were conducted with a 1 cm/sup 2/-heated surface cooled by a spray nozzle at reduced system pressures. System pressures range from 0.015 to 1 bar. The heat transfer coefficient was determined by measuring the surface temperatures at increasing heat fluxes. The present study has shown that spray cooling with water at reduced system pressure can significantly decrease the surface temperature as compared to ambient pressure spray cooling. This study shows that at a pressure of 0.015 bar, the surface temperature can be cooled to 54/spl deg/C with 11/spl deg/C liquid at a heat flux of 380 W/cm/sup 2/, while the surface temperature at 380 W/cm/sup 2/ is about 120/spl deg/C with same liquid temperature at ambient pressure. The heat transfer coefficients measured here were on the order of 100,000 W/m/sup 2//spl middot/K. This study is limited by the heating source, which cannot exceed 400 W/cm/sup 2/. The maximum heat flux that can be removed by spray cooling at low pressure has yet to be determined.
  • Keywords
    cooling; heat conduction; nozzles; sprays; temperature measurement; thermal conductivity; thermal management (packaging); 0.015 to 1 bar; 11 C; 120 C; 54 C; H/sub 2/O; ambient pressure spray cooling; avionics; cooling technique; efficient heat flux removal; electro-optics; electronics; fluid boiling point control; heat transfer coefficient; heating source; lasers; liquid temperature; low-temperature thermal control; maximum heat flux; spray cooling; spray nozzle; surface heat fluxes; surface temperature control; surface temperature measurement; system pressure; thermal conductivity; Control systems; Electrical equipment industry; Electronics cooling; Electronics industry; Heat transfer; Industrial control; Optical control; Pressure control; Spraying; Temperature control;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Semiconductor Thermal Measurement and Management, 2002. Eighteenth Annual IEEE Symposium
  • Conference_Location
    San Jose, CA, USA
  • ISSN
    1065-2221
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-7327-8
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/STHERM.2002.991364
  • Filename
    991364