Design and test of shape memory alloy fins for self-adaptive liquid cooling device
Thermal management complexity increases in high-performance chips, where the heat loads vary spatially and temporally, while liquid cooling systems are usually designed for most stringent stationary conditions. Several works developed heat transfer enhancement techniques to increase the cooling capacity of liquid cooled heat sinks, but pumping power is increased in a permanent way due to the addition of elements within the channels. Here, a liquid cooling self-adaptive heat sink that can efficiently adapt the distribution of its heat extraction capacity to time dependent and non-uniform heat load scenarios is proposed. Numerical design of the mesoscale cooling device with bimorph metal/SMA fins, definition of the fabrication and training procedure of the SMA fins to reach the desired behavior and experimental assessment is presented. The capacity of the self-adaptive fins to locally boost the heat transfer is numerically and experimentally demonstrated. Results obtained show that the self-adaptive fins can improve the temperature uniformity by 63% with respect to plain channel. The reduction in thermal resistance using bimorph metal/SMA fins sample allows the surface maximum temperature gradient to remain almost constant although heat flux increases. Energy savings are maximized in applications where partial load intervals contributes significantly to the overall operating period. ; The research leading to these results has been performed within the project Indústria del Coneixement 2018, PROD-00071 "Experimental demonstration and commercial viability of an energy efficient universal cooling scheme". It has been co-financed by the European Union through the European Regional Development Fund (FEDER) and has the support of the Secretaria d'Universitats i Recerca from Departament d'Empresa i Coneixement of the Generalitat de Catalunya.