Title :
A uniform temperature, ultra-high heat flux liquid-cooled, power semiconductor package
Author :
Iversen, Arthur H. ; Whitaker, Stephen
Author_Institution :
Coriolis Corp., Campbell, CA, USA
Abstract :
A heat-exchange process for use in semiconductor heat sinks is described. It involves the use of subcooled nucleate boiling at concave curved surfaces, where radial acceleration can be used to develop significant and beneficial buoyancy forces. This system provides a heat transfer surface with a uniform temperature (the boiling point of the fluid) and requires no vapor-liquid separation process since all vapor bubbles are immediately condensed in the subcooled liquid. Use of low-boiling-point dielectric fluids, e.g. FC72 (BP 56°C), establishes a uniform heat sink temperature that is independent of location or environment and does not require elaborate coolant and/or environmental conditioning. The low junction to fluid specific thermal resistance of ~0.1°C/W-cm2 and high heat flux dissipation capability ~6000 W/cm2 inherent in this system lend themselves to a design with high reliability and low manufacturing costs. Failure rates are reduced, and leakage currents are lowered by virtue of lower device operating temperatures
Keywords :
cooling; heat sinks; packaging; power electronics; buoyancy forces; concave curved surfaces; failure rates; fluid specific thermal resistance; heat-exchange process; leakage currents; liquid-cooled power semiconductor package; low-boiling-point dielectric fluids; manufacturing costs; radial acceleration; reliability; semiconductor heat sinks; subcooled nucleate boiling; ultra-high heat flux power semiconductor package; Acceleration; Coolants; Dielectrics; Heat sinks; Heat transfer; Manufacturing; Resistance heating; Separation processes; Temperature; Thermal resistance;
Journal_Title :
Industry Applications, IEEE Transactions on