Fujitsu Laboratories Ltd. announced the development of the world’s first thin cooling device designed for small, thin electronic devices. Smartphones, tablets, and other similar mobile devices are increasingly multifunctional and fast. These spec improvements, however, have increased heat generated from internal components, and the overheating of localized parts in devices has become problematic. Fujitsu has developed a thin loop heat pipe, less than one millimeter thick, to solve this problem. This new device was developed using technologies for stacking metal sheets. It is capable of transferring approximately five times more heat than current thin heat pipes. This technology will make it possible for CPUs and other heat-generating components to run cooler and to avoid concentrated hot-spots inside devices.
Details of this technology are being presented at the Semiconductor Thermal Measurement, Modeling and Management Symposium 31 (SEMI-THERM 31), opening March 15 in San Jose, California. The thin loop heat pipe that Fujitsu has developed can be installed on a heat-generating component, such as a CPU, in an electronic device so that the heat generated by the component is carried to a relatively cool spot inside the device to diffuse the heat.
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Features of the technology are as follows: (1) Structural design for high-efficiency heat transfer: Heat transfer using a loop heat pipe is based on the same sort of capillary action that absorbs water in fibers, sponges, and plants. The evaporator contains a porous structure, with the numerous holes driving the fluid with capillary action. To achieve this action, Fujitsu stacked together copper sheets to develop a structure containing minuscule pores. The pattern of holes etched into the sheets is such that the holes of each layer are slightly offset from the adjacent layers. When these sheets are stacked, capillary action is created that causes the fluid to circulate. In addition, by separating the vapor phase and liquid phase, there are two flows of the working fluid within the stacked structure, which enables efficient heat transfer. Furthermore, because the liquid line that returns fluid to the evaporator operates on capillary action, enabling it to stably transfer heat regardless of the device’s orientation, this technology can now be applied to mobile devices.
And (2) Thinner loop heat pipe: This loop heat pipe uses copper sheets that are only 0.1 mm thick, with two surface sheets and four inner-layer sheets, for a total of six sheets. The previous, approximately 10 mm thick evaporator of the loop heat pipe can now be reduced to 0.6 mm, enabling a heat-transfer device to be equipped to compact mobile devices. (The evaporator consists of a stack of four copper sheets with a slightly staggered position of holes.)
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Results: Compared to the previous thin heat pipes and material of highly thermal conductive sheets, this new device allows for approximately five times greater heat transfer. This new technology will allow CPUs and other parts to function at low temperatures while preventing heat concentration within localized areas, thus introducing new possibilities for cooling small electronic devices. Because this loop heat pipe uses the heat from the heat source to power thermal transfer, without using an external pump or other energy source, it does not increase the overall energy consumption of the device in order to diffuse heat, allowing for convenient and comfortable usage of electronic devices.
For mobile devices such as smartphones, tablets, and notebook computers, communications and data-processing speeds have accelerated, multi-functionality, such as with cameras, has advanced, and the devices themselves are becoming smaller and slimmer. The increased functions and decreased size of these devices has led to extremely dense packages, where the heat generated by each square unit has increased. Heat generated within the device can also raise surface temperature. In order to provide customers with a more comfortable mobile device, it is necessary to reduce concentrations of heat within devices.
With portable devices that cannot accommodate blower fans or water-cooling pumps, the conventional approach has been to install sheets of metal or graphite with relatively high thermal conductivity to transfer heat away from heat-generating components, thereby avoiding internal hot-spots. With increased amounts of generated heat, however, the thermal conductive properties of these materials alone are no longer sufficient in transferring heat.
source: http://www.powerpulse.net/story.php?storyID=31801
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