Electrohydrodynamic Microfabricated Ionic Wind Pumps for Thermal Management Applications
Author:
Ongkodjojo Ong Andojo1, Abramson Alexis R.2, Tien Norman C.3
Affiliation:
1. Mem. ASME Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106 e-mail: 2. Mem. ASME Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106 e-mail: 3. Department of Electrical Engineering
and Computer Science, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH 44106 e-mail:
Abstract
This work demonstrates an innovative microfabricated air-cooling technology that employs an electrohydrodynamic (EHD) corona discharge (i.e., ionic wind pump) for electronics cooling applications. A single, microfabricated ionic wind pump element consists of two parallel collecting electrodes between which a single emitting tip is positioned. A grid structure on the collector electrodes can enhance the overall heat-transfer coefficient and facilitate an IC compatible batch process. The optimized devices studied exhibit an overall device area of 5.4 mm × 3.6 mm, an emitter-to-collector gap of ∼0.5 mm, and an emitter curvature radius of ∼12.5 μm. The manufacturing process developed for the device uses glass wafers, a single mask-based photolithography process, and a low-cost copper-based electroplating process. Various design configurations were explored and modeled computationally to investigate their influence on the cooling phenomenon. The single devices provide a high heat-transfer coefficient of up to ∼3200 W/m2 K and a coefficient of performance (COP) of up to ∼47. The COP was obtained by dividing the heat removal enhancement, ΔQ by the power consumed by the ionic wind pump device. A maximum applied voltage of 1.9 kV, which is equivalent to approximately 38 mW of power input, is required for operation, which is significantly lower than the power required for the previously reported devices. Furthermore, the microfabricated single device exhibits a flexible and small form factor, no noise generation, high efficiency, large heat removal over a small dimension and at low power, and high reliability (no moving parts); these are characteristics required by the semiconductor industry for next generation thermal management solutions.
Publisher
ASME International
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics,General Materials Science
Reference40 articles.
1. Ongkodjojo, A., Roberts, R. C., Abramson, A. R., and Tien, N. C., 2010, “Highly Efficient Ionic Wind-Based Cooling Microfabricated Device for Microchip Cooling Applications,” Technical Digest of Hilton Head Workshop 2010—A Solid-State Sensors, Actuators, and Microsystems Workshop, Transducer Research Foundation (TRF), Inc., San Diego, CA, pp. 447–450. 2. Ongkodjojo, A., Abramson, A. R., and Tien, N. C., 2010, “Design, Modeling, and Optimization for Highly Efficient Ionic Wind-Based Cooling Microfabricated Devices,” Proceedings of ASME 2010 International Mechanical Engineering Congress & Exposition (IMECE 2010), Vancouver, BC, Canada, Paper No. IMECE2010-40427. 3. Ongkodjojo, A., Abramson, A. R., and Tien, N. C., 2011, “Optimized Ionic Wind-Based Cooling Microfabricated Devices for Improving a Measured Coefficient of Performance,” Proceedings of the ASME/JSME 2011 8th Thermal Engineering Joint Conference (AJTEC 2011), Honolulu, HI. Paper No. AJTEC2011-44208. 4. Ongkodjojo Ong, A., Abramson, A. R., and Tien, N. C., 2012, “Optimized and Microfabricated Ionic Wind Pump Array as a Next Generation Solution for Electronics Cooling Systems,” Proceedings of ITherm 2012 (13th Intersociety Conference on Thermal and Thermomechanical Phenomena in Electronic Systems), San Diego, CA, pp. 1306–1311. 5. More-than-Moore,2010
Cited by
46 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|