Title: Chapter 1 Introduction
1 Chapter 1 Introduction
- In this introductory chapter, we will
discuss - (1) The importance of thermal management
- (2) The principle of conservation of energy
- (3) A brief review of the heat transfer
mechanism
21. The importance of thermal management in
electronics
1-1 The trend of heat dissipation in electronics
The heat generation rate by a microprocessor
is proportional to clock frequency f, chip size
A, number of metal layers L, the density of
transistors per unit area, n, and the square
operating voltage V. It can be expressed as
Power (P) ? f x A ? n x L ? V2 It is
reported by International Technology Roadmap for
Semiconductor (ITRS) the on-chip clock frequency
and the transistor density will increases
exponentially over the next decade. The power
supply voltage will decrease continually, its
decrease is not sufficient enough to compensate
for the increase in power generation due to the
increase in transistor density and the on-chip
clock frequency. As predicted by ITRS, chip
power generation will continue to increase over
the next decade, as shown in figure 1.
3Figure 1 the trend of chip power dissipation rate
41-2 The difficulties in handling thermal
management in electronic
- High power dissipation rate in a small area
- Small temperature difference between heat sink
and the operation temperature of the device. The
maximum operation temperature of the devices is
limited, usually between 80 to 120oC - The heat dissipation rate is described
by - A surface area of the device
- h heat transfer coefficient
- ?T The difference between
junction and ambient temperatures - For the problem of heat dissipation in
electronics, both ?T and A are small. If the heat
dissipation rate is large, it requires a very
large heat transfer coefficient. Its value has
already exceeded the maximum limits of some of
the convectional cooling techniques. -
5- 1-3 The importance of thermal design in
electronics - If the heat generated by semiconductor is not
removed, its - temperature will go up
- If the temperature is too high, the device
may fail. The failure - rate will increase with the increasing of
operation temperature. - There are several types of failures due to
high operation - temperature, such as crosstalk noise
between the cells and - interconnects and mechanical failures.
- The mechanical failure is due the difference
of thermal expansion - coefficients between the bonded materials,
such as the die and - substrate bond failure and cracking, etc.
- Therefore, thermal design is an integral part
of the whole - electrical system design.
6 2 The principle of conservation
of energy
- 2-1 Heat and unit of heat
- Heat is a form of energy. In SI units, the
unit of heat is joule, J (J Nm). In - some cases, other units, specifically, the
calorie (cal) and the British - thermal units (Btu) are still in use today.
They are related to Joule by - 1 cal 4.186J heat required to raise 1
gram of water by 1C at 14.5C - 1 Btu 1,055.056J 1.055056kJ heat
required to raise 1lbm of water By - 1oF at 60oF
- 2-2 Heat transfer rate and heat flux
- Q The amount of heat transfer to an
object during a period of time, (J) - q The amount of heat transfer of unit
mass of the substance, (J/kg) - The heat transfer rate or the amount
of heat transfer per unit time - (J/s W). It relates to total heat
transfer by -
(W J/s) -
- Heat flux or heat transfer rate per unit
surface area (W/m2 or W/cm2), -
-
7- 2.3 Similarity of heat flow rate and other forms
of flow rate equations - Heat flow from a hot object (say, a electronic
component) to its environment, must exist a
temperature difference between them. There exists
an analogue relationship among the flow of heat,
the flow of electrical current and the flow of
fluids. - The flow rate of heat, electrical current, and
fluid from one point to another is equal to the
ratio of potential difference between the two
points in the system to the flow resistance
between the two points. If there exists no
potential difference, there is no flow. The
general flow rate equations of heat, electrical
current and fluid are - Rate of heat flow (W)
-
- Rate of electric current flow (Amp)
-
- Rate of fluid flow ( )
- where Rh, Ri, Rf are the flow resistance of
heat, electric current and flow of fluid,
respectively.
82.4 Specific heat and internal energy
- The heat required to change the temperature of
unit mass of the substance by - one degree is called specific heat. Its value
depends on the substance and the - process of the temperature change
- Constant volume specific heat (cv, J/kg.K)
- cv is defined as the amount of heat required
to change the temperature of unit mass (1 kg) of
a substance by one degree as the volume of the
substance is held constant. For a temperature
change of ?T degree, the heat required is - q ?u cv ?T,
(J/kg) - Under such condition, the total heat
supplied is used to change the internal energy of
the substance, ?u. The internal energy is the
total microscopic mode of energies of all the
molecules of the substance, which is proportional
to the temperature. The total change of internal
energy of mass m kilogram is, - Q ?U mcv ?T, (J)
- Constant pressure specific heat (cp , J/kg.K)
- cp is defined as the heat required to change
the temperature of unit mass of the substance by
one degree as the pressure is held constant. In
this case, part of the heat supplied is used to
change the temperature or the internal energy of
the substance and the rest is used to perform
some works. The combination of the two parts is
also called the change in enthalpy ?h. - q ?h cp ?T
cv ?T p ?v, (J/kg)
9- q ?h cp ?T cv ?T p ?v,
(J/kg) w -
A
L -
- W is the weight on top of the piston and A
is the piston area. - The total change in enthalpy of a substance
with a mass of m (kg) is ?H. - Q ?H mcp ?T
(J) - For solid or liquid, cp cv
-
- For ideal gas, p v RT ?p?v R?T
- cp ?T cv ?T p
?v cv ?T R ?T - cp cv R
- where R is gas constant. For air, R
287J/kgK -
102.4 General equations of conservation of
energy
- The principle of conservation of energy is
- In any process, the rate of total energy
entering a system, less the - rate of total energy leaving the system, is
equal to the rate of change of energy within the
system. Mathematically -
(J/s W )
- An alternative form can be obtained by
integrating the above equation over a time
interval ?t. - In any process during a time interval ?T,
the total energy entering a system, less the
total energy leaving the system, is equal to the
change of energy within the system -
- Ei Eo ?Esys
(J)
11 2.5 Energy
balance for a closed system
- A closed system consists of a fixed mass there
is no mass flow across the boundary of the
system. Electrical components, such as resistor,
can be considered as closed system. - The only inflow and outflow of energies are due
to heat transfer process across the boundary of
the system and it may have energy generation
within the system, for example, resistance
heating, - Neglecting the change in other types of energies,
such as the kinetic and potential energies, the
thermal energy balance equation, in the rate from
- the net rate of heat input to the system is
equal to the rate of change of internal energy of
the system. - Over a time interval (?t), the thermal energy
balance equation is -
- Under steady-state condition,
-
12Example 1-1 Heating of a circular resistor
- To turn on a circular resistor of diameter 1cm
and length 2cm from temperature 10oC to 70oC in
30 sec. The density and specific heat of the
resistor are 1000kg/m3 and 500J/kg.K,
respectively. Assume there is no heat loss form
the external surface of the resistor. - Find a. the total heat supplied, J
- b. the heating rate, J/s W
- Solutions
-
13 Energy balance for an open
system
- In open system, both mass and heat may flow in
and out from the boundary of the system. In
steady state condition, the rate of mass flow or
the rate of energy flow to the system must be
equal to these flow out from the system. -
- The over-head projector and computers with
air cooling are typical examples of open systems,
because there are cooling fluids that flows
through these devices - The term steady, means that there is no
physical quantity that changes with time at any
position in the system. However, physical
quantities, such as pressure, temperature, and
flow velocity may change from one point to
another. The opposite of steady is unsteady or
transient. - The mass flow rate, in a duct of cross-sectional
area, A, can be calculated - by
kg/s
14- The volume flow rate
-
- The flow of fluids involves pressure
loss. But, relatively, the change of the absolute
pressure between inlet and outlet ports is very
small in the applications of cooling electronic
systems.Therefore it may considered as a constant
pressure process. - In a steady state, the energy balance equation,
on the rate basis - It indicates that the net heat input to
a steady flow system is converted to the rate of
increase in enthalpy of the fluid. - Note
- 1. mass flow rate in a steady flow
system is constant - 2. volumetric flow rate may change from
one point to another.
15Example 2- Cooling a electrical system
- An electronic system contains 10 printed circuit
boards each dissipates 30W. A 20W - fan is installed at the inlet port to draw air
into the system to cool the boards. The total - heat loss through the casing of the system is
40W. The air pressure at both ports is - approximately 1bar ?105Pa. The constant specific
heat of air is 1000J/kgoC. If the - inlet and outlet air temperatures are,
respectively, 30oC and 40oC, what is the air flow
- rate in kg/s? The diameter of the inlet port is
equal to 10cm, what is the inlet air - velocity? The diameter outlet port is also equal
to 10cm, what is the outlet air velocity? - Assumption Steady state operation and air
behaves as ideal gas. - To calculate outlet air velocity
16 3. Heat transfer mechanism
- Heat transfer is energy in transit due to there
exists a temperature gradient. If there exists no
temperature gradient, there is no heat flow. - Three modes of heat transfer, conduction,
convection, and radiation. - 3-1 Conduction
- For a one-dimensional heat conduction
through a plane wall, the rate of heat flow is
proportional to the surface area, A, the
temperature difference across the plane wall, and
inversely proportional to the thickness of the
wall -
- The proportional constant ,k, is called thermal
conductivity of the material of - the wall. Physically, it means that the heat
transfer rate across a plate of area - 1m2 and thickness 1m and under 1 degree
temperature difference across the - two sides of the wall. It is a material
property.
17 3-1 Conduction
- The thermal conductivity of the substance has the
unit of W/moC, or W/mK. - It depends on the material and the temperature.
The minus sign is a - consequence of the fact that heat flow is in the
direction of decreasing - Temperature, or in the direction of negative
temperature gradient. - The thermal conductivity of some common
substances at room temperature are -
- Substance Thermal conductivity,
W/mK (25oC) - Diamond 2300
- Copper 401
- Gold
317 - Aluminum 237
- Silicon 148
- Epoxy-glass 0.26
- Water 0.613
- Helium 0.152
- Air
0.026
18 3-2 Convection Heat
Transfer
- It is comprised of two mechanisms
- Conduction heat transfer due to random molecular
motion of the fluid. - Bulk or macroscopic motion of the fluid.
- It can be represented by the convection heat
transfer coefficient, h (W/m2K), the difference
between the the surface temperature and the bulk
fluid temperature, ?T (K or oC), and the wetted
surface area, A (m2), or - Physically, the convection heat
transfer coefficient means that the heat transfer
rate of wetted surface area 1m2 and under 1
degree temperature difference between the the
surface temperature that at the ambient, T8. - Natural forced convections
- (1) Natural or free convection the
current of the bulk motion is induced - by buoyancy force, which arises
from the density gradient of the fluid - in the presence of gravitational
field. - (2) Forced convection the current is
caused by external means, such as - by fan, pump, and others, such as
the natural wind
193-2 Convection
- Typical values of convection heat transfer
coefficient are listed in below - Type of Convection
h( W/m2K ) - Free convection of gases
225 - Free convection of liquids
101000 - Forced convection of gases
25250 - Forced convection of liquids
5020,000 - Boiling and condensation
2500100,000
20 3-3 Radiation
- The energy of radiation is transported by
electromagnetic wave. - Radiation does not require the presence of
material medium in between the two surfaces - The rate of radiation energy released per unit
area (W/m2) is termed as the surface emissive
power, E. - There is an upper limit of the surface emissive
power from ideal radiator or blackbody. It is
prescribed by Stefan-Boltzmann law - Ts is the absolute temperature (K) of the surface
and s is called as the Stefan-Boltzmann constant.
It is equal to - s 5.67x10-8 (W/m2K4)
21 3-3 Radiation
- The heat flux emitted by a real surface is less
than that of a blackbody at the same temperature
is given by - is termed emissivity of the surface. It
provides a measure of how efficiently a
surface emits energy relative to a blackbody. It
is a positive value less than unity. - A special case that occurs frequently involves
radiation exchange between a small object at
temperature Ts and a large surroundings at
temperature Tsurr. The radiation heat exchange
between the two is - where A and are the surface area and
emissivity of the small object. - For two black parallel plates with very small gap
between them. The radiation heat transfer rate
from the higher temperature plate to the lower
temperature plate is
22Example 1-11 Heat transfer between two isothermal
boards
- Two parallel boards of dimension 50cm x 50cm and
temperatures of T1200K - and T2300K,respectively. The distance between
them is 2mm. The two surfaces - are black surfaces (e 1.0). What are the rate
of heat transfer between the two - boards assuming the gap between the two board is
(a) filled with air at pressure 1 - atmosphere and (b) vacuum.
- Solution (a) the average temperature is 250K,
the air thermal - conductivity is 0.0219W/mK
- Conduction heat transfer rate through the air
layer is - Radiation heat transfer between the two boards
with small - distance apart is
- The total heat transfer rate is 273.7592265.75W
- (b) In vacuum there is not conduction heat
transfer. The total heat transfer rate is 92W
23- The following pages will not be taught
24Example 1-2 heat loss from heating duct in
basement
- Given L 5m, Ac 20cm x 25cm, Pi 100kPa, Ti
60oC, Vi 5m/s, To54oC - Find rate of heat loss from the surface of the
duct - Assumptions
- - Steady state operation
- - Air behaves as ideal gas
- The solution
- - The average air temperature
- - The properties of air, form Table
- Cp 1007J/kgK
- - The mass flow rate
- Radiation heat transfer across the air
layer - The total rate of heat transfer is 588W
-
25 A long circular resistor has a diameter 2mm
generates 2W per meter long. The ambient fluid
temperature is 20oC the convection heat
transfer coefficient is 100W/m2K. What is the
surface temperature of the resistor?
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