Boiling water in small channels that are formed along turbine blades has been examined since the 1970s as a means to dissipating large amounts of heat. Later, similar geometries could be found in cooling systems for computers, fusion reactors, rocket nozzles, avionics, hybrid vehicle power electronics, and space systems. This paper addresses (a) the implementation of two-phase microchannel heat sinks in these applications, (b) the fluid physics and limitations of boiling in small passages, and effective tools for predicting the thermal performance of heat sinks, and (c) means to enhance this performance. It is shown that despite many hundreds of publications attempting to predict the performance of two-phase microchannel heat sinks, there are only a handful of predictive tools that can tackle broad ranges of geometrical and operating parameters or different fluids. Development of these tools is complicated by a lack of reliable databases and the drastic differences in boiling behavior of different fluids in small passages. For example, flow boiling of certain fluids in very small diameter channels may be no different than in macrochannels. Conversely, other fluids may exhibit considerable “confinement” even in seemingly large diameter channels. It is shown that cutting-edge heat transfer enhancement techniques, such as the use of nanofluids and carbon nanotube coatings, with proven merits to single-phase macrosystems, may not offer similar advantages to microchannel heat sinks. Better performance may be achieved by careful optimization of the heat sink’s geometrical parameters and by adapting a new class of hybrid cooling schemes that combine the benefits of microchannel flow with those of jet impingement.
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December 2011
Research Papers
Two-Phase Microchannel Heat Sinks: Theory, Applications, and Limitations
Issam Mudawar
Issam Mudawar
Boiling and Two-Phase Flow Laboratory (BTPFL),
Purdue University International Electronic Cooling Alliance (PUIECA)
, Mechanical Engineering Building, 585 Purdue Mall, West Lafayette, IN 47907
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Issam Mudawar
Boiling and Two-Phase Flow Laboratory (BTPFL),
Purdue University International Electronic Cooling Alliance (PUIECA)
, Mechanical Engineering Building, 585 Purdue Mall, West Lafayette, IN 47907J. Electron. Packag. Dec 2011, 133(4): 041002 (31 pages)
Published Online: December 8, 2011
Article history
Received:
July 11, 2011
Revised:
September 30, 2011
Online:
December 8, 2011
Published:
December 8, 2011
Citation
Mudawar, I. (December 8, 2011). "Two-Phase Microchannel Heat Sinks: Theory, Applications, and Limitations." ASME. J. Electron. Packag. December 2011; 133(4): 041002. https://doi.org/10.1115/1.4005300
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