• DocumentCode
    227937
  • Title

    Enhancing thermal performance in embedded computing for ruggedized military and avionics applications

  • Author

    Campo, Darren ; Weyant, Jens ; Muzyka, Bryan

  • Author_Institution
    Adv. Cooling Technol., Inc., Lancaster, PA, USA
  • fYear
    2014
  • fDate
    27-30 May 2014
  • Firstpage
    840
  • Lastpage
    845
  • Abstract
    Embedded computing systems used in many military and avionics applications are trending toward higher heat fluxes, and as a result performance is being hindered by thermal limitations. This is intensified by the high ambient conditions experience by today´s modern warfighter. In many applications liquid cooling is replacing air flow through chassis for both thermal and environmental benefits. Although liquid cooled solutions prevent contaminates from being introduced into the electronics cage, it does introduce leak risks, particularl y with line replaceable units that are consistently swapped in and out of the card cage. For this reason it´s preferred to attach the liquid cooling loop externally to the card cage and often at the base. As a result, there are several components in the thermal path that contribute to the overall thermal resistance including the thermal interface material, conduction card, wedge lock interface, and card cage wall. This paper outlines a series of passive thermal improvements which are easily integrated into legacy, or existing, systems and can provide a 3-4x increase in dissipated power. The first area for improvement is the conduction card. Heat pipes may be incorporated into conventional conduction cards to significantly reduce thermal gradients as heat is transferred from the electronics to the wedge lock connection at the card cage wall. Likewise, heat pipes may also be used to enhance the thermal performance of the card cage wall by embedding them directly into the chassis itself, or by bolting on heat pipe embedded heat spreaders. Both solutions are particularly amenable to retrofitting and new designs. Embedding heat pipes within the conduction cards and cage provides significantly higher effective thermal conductivity with minimal size, weight, and cost consequences, especially when compared to copper and annealed pyrolytic graphite alternatives.
  • Keywords
    avionics; embedded systems; heat pipes; military computing; thermal resistance; air flow; annealed pyrolytic graphite alternatives; avionics applications; card cage wall; chassis; conduction card; electronics cage; embedded computing systems; embedded heat spreaders; heat fluxes; heat pipes; liquid cooling loop; passive thermal improvements; retrofitting; ruggedized military; thermal conductivity; thermal gradients; thermal interface material; thermal limitations; thermal path; thermal performance; thermal resistance; warfighter; wedge lock interface; Aluminum; Heat sinks; Heat transfer; Heating; Rails; electronics cooling; embedded computing; heat pipe; high thermal conductivity; thermal;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Thermal and Thermomechanical Phenomena in Electronic Systems (ITherm), 2014 IEEE Intersociety Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Orlando, FL
  • ISSN
    1087-9870
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ITHERM.2014.6892368
  • Filename
    6892368