This invention relates in general to cooling techniques and, more particularly, to a method and apparatus for cooling a system which generates a substantial amount of heat.
Some types of electronic circuits use relatively little power, and produce little heat. Circuits of this type can usually be cooled satisfactorily through a passive approach, such as convection cooling. In contrast, there are other circuits which consume large amounts of power, and produce large amounts of heat. One example is the circuitry used in a phased array antenna system.
More specifically, a modern phased array antenna system can easily produce 25 to 30 kilowatts of heat, or even more. One known approach for cooling this circuitry is to incorporate a refrigeration unit into the antenna system. However, suitable refrigeration units are large, heavy, and consume many kilowatts of power in order to provide adequate cooling. For example, a typical refrigeration unit may weigh about 200 pounds, and may consume about 25 to 30 kilowatts of power in order to provide about 25 to 30 kilowatts of cooling. Although refrigeration units of this type have been generally adequate for their intended purposes, they have not been satisfactory in all respects.
In this regard, the size, weight and power consumption characteristics of these known refrigeration systems are all significantly larger than desirable for an apparatus such as a phased array antenna system. And given that there is an industry trend toward even greater power consumption and heat dissipation in phased array antenna systems, continued use of refrigeration-based cooling systems would involve refrigeration systems with even greater size, weight and power consumption, which is undesirable.
From the foregoing, it may be appreciated that a need has arisen for a method and apparatus for efficiently cooling arrangements that generate substantial heat. According to the present invention, a method and apparatus are provided to address this need, and involve cooling of heat-generating structure disposed in an environment having an ambient pressure by: providing a fluid coolant; reducing a pressure of the coolant to a subambient pressure at which the coolant has a boiling temperature less than a temperature of the heat-generating structure; and bringing the coolant at the subambient pressure into thermal communication with the heat-generating structure, so that the coolant boils and vaporizes to thereby absorb heat from the heat-generating structure.
A better understanding of the present invention will be realized from the detailed description which follows, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
The electronic circuitry within the antenna system 12 has a known configuration, and is therefore not illustrated and described here in detail. Instead, the circuitry is described only briefly here, to an extent which facilitates an understanding of the present invention. In particular, the antenna system 12 includes a two-dimensional array of not-illustrated antenna elements, each column of the antenna elements being provided on a respective one of the slats, including the slats 16 and 17. Each slat includes separate and not-illustrated transmit/receive circuitry for each antenna element. It is the transmit/receive circuitry which generates most of the heat that needs to be withdrawn from the slats. The heat generated by the transmit/receive circuitry is shown diagrammatically in
Each of the slats is configured so that the heat it generates is transferred to a tube 23 or 24 extending through that slat. Alternatively, the tube 23 or 24 could be a channel or passageway extending through the slat, instead of a physically separate tube. A fluid coolant flows through each of the tubes 23 and 24. As discussed later, this fluid coolant is a two-phase coolant, which enters the slat in liquid form. Absorption of heat from the slat causes part or all of the liquid coolant to boil and vaporize, such that some or all of the coolant leaving the slats 16 and 17 is in its vapor phase. This departing coolant then flows successively through a heat exchanger 41, an expansion reservoir 42, an air trap 43, a pump 46, and a respective one of two orifices 47 and 48, in order to again to reach the inlet ends of the tubes 23 and 24. The pump 46 causes the coolant to circulate around the endless loop shown in
The orifices 47 and 48 facilitate proper partitioning of the coolant among the respective slats, and also help to create a large pressure drop between the output of the pump 46 and the tubes 23 and 24 in which the coolant vaporizes. It is possible for the orifices 47 and 48 to have the same size, or to have different sizes in order to partition the coolant in a proportional manner which facilitates a desired cooling profile.
Ambient air 56 is caused to flow through the heat exchanger 41, for example by a not-illustrated fan of a known type. Alternatively, if the apparatus 10 was on a ship, the flow 56 could be ambient seawater. The heat exchanger 41 transfers heat from the coolant to the air flow 56. The heat exchanger 41 thus cools the coolant, thereby causing any portion of the coolant which is in the vapor phase to condense back into its liquid phase.
The liquid coolant exiting the heat exchanger 41 is supplied to the expansion reservoir 42. Since fluids typically take up more volume in their vapor phase than in their liquid phase, the expansion reservoir 42 is provided in order to take up the volume of liquid coolant that is displaced when some or all of the coolant in the system changes from its liquid phase to its vapor phase. The amount of the coolant which is in its vapor phase can vary over time, due in part to the fact that the amount of heat being produced by the antenna system 12 will vary over time, as the antenna system operates in various operational modes. From the expansion reservoir 42, liquid coolant flows to the air trap 43.
Theoretically, the cooling loop shown in
The air trap 43 is operationally coupled to a pressure controller 51, which is effectively a vacuum pump. In the portion of the cooling loop downstream of the orifices 47-48 and upstream of the pump 46, the pressure controller 51 maintains the coolant at a subambient pressure, or in other words a pressure less than the ambient air pressure. Typically, the ambient air pressure will be that of atmospheric air, which at sea level is 14.7 pounds per square inch area (psia). In the event that the air trap 43 happens to collect some air from the cooling loop, the pressure controller 51 can remove this air from the air trap in association with its task of maintaining the coolant at a subambient pressure.
Turning now in more detail to the coolant, one highly efficient technique for removing heat from a surface is to boil and vaporize a liquid which is in contact with the surface. As the liquid vaporizes, it inherently absorbs heat. The amount of heat that can be absorbed per unit volume of a liquid is commonly known as the latent heat of vaporization of the liquid. The higher the latent heat of vaporization, the larger the amount of heat that can be absorbed per unit volume of liquid being vaporized.
The coolant used in the disclosed embodiment of
Water flowing from the pump 46 to the orifices 47 and 48 has a temperature of approximately 65° C. to 70° C., and a pressure in the range of approximately 15 psia to 100 psia. After passing through the orifices 47 and 48, the water will still have a temperature of approximately 65° C. to 70° C., but will have a much lower pressure, in the range about 2 psia to 8 psia. Due to this reduced pressure, some or all of the water will boil as it passes through and absorbs heat from the tubes 23 and 24, and some or all of the water will thus vaporize. After exiting the slats, the water vapor (and any remaining liquid water) will still have the reduced pressure of about 2 psia to 8 psia, but will have an increased temperature in the range of approximately 70° C. to 75° C.
When this subambient coolant water reaches the heat exchanger 41, heat will be transferred from the water to the forced air flow 56. The air flow 56 has a temperature less than a specified maximum of 55° C., and typically has an ambient temperature below 40° C. As heat is removed from the water coolant, any portion of the water which is in its vapor phase will condense, such that all of the coolant water will be in liquid form when it exits the heat exchanger 41. This liquid will have a temperature of approximately 65° C. to 70° C., and will still be at the subambient pressure of approximately 2 psia to 8 psia. This liquid coolant will then flow through the expansion reservoir 42 and the air trap 43 to the pump 46. The pump will have the effect of increasing the pressure of the coolant water, to a value in the range of approximately 15 psia to 100 psia, as mentioned earlier.
It will be noted that the embodiment of
The system of
As mentioned above, the coolant used in the embodiment of
Despite the fact that these alternative coolants have a lower latent heat of vaporization than water, there are some applications where use of one of these other coolants can be advantageous, depending on various factors, including the amount of heat which needs to be dissipated. As one example, in an application where a pure water coolant may be subjected to low temperatures that might cause it to freeze when not in use, a mixture of water and ethylene glycol could be a more suitable coolant than pure water, even though the mixture has a latent heat of vaporization lower than that of pure water.
The apparatus 110 of
The apparatus 210 of
More specifically, each of the slats in the antenna system 212 has a spray chamber, for example as shown diagrammatically at 218 and 219 for the slats 216 and 217. One side of each spray chamber is defined by a surface 221 or 222, and heat 21-22 generated by the circuitry within the slats is supplied to the surface 221 or 222 of each slat for dissipation. Incoming coolant enters tubes 223 and 224, which each have therealong a plurality of orifices that are oriented to spray coolant onto the associated surface 221 or 222. The spray is shown diagrammatically in
When the coolant spray 226 and 227 contacts the associated surface 221 or 222, it absorbs heat and then boils, and some or all the coolant vaporizes. The resulting vapor, along with any remaining liquid coolant, then exits the spray chamber 218 or 219 through a respective outlet conduit 228 or 229. The pressure controller 51 ensures that coolant in the spray chambers 218 and 219 is at a subambient pressure which reduces the boiling point of the coolant, in the same manner as described above for the embodiment of
Although the present invention has been disclosed in the context of a phased array antenna system, it will be recognized that it can be utilized in a variety of other contexts, including but not limited to a power converter assembly, or certain types of directed energy weapon (DEW) systems.
The present invention provides a number of technical advantages. One such technical advantage is that, through the use of a two-phase coolant at a subambient pressure, heat-generating structure such as a phased array antenna system can be efficiently cooled. A related advantage is that it is possible to effect cooling in this manner without any refrigeration system, thereby substantially reducing the weight, size and power consumption of the structure which effects cooling. In the context of a state-of-the-art phased array antenna system, the absence of a refrigeration system can reduce the system weight by approximately 200 pounds, and can reduce the system power consumption by 25 to 30 kilowatts, or more. In the absence of a refrigeration system, power consumption for cooling is basically limited to the power which is supplied to the pump in order to circulate the coolant, and the pump consumes only about 0.5 kilowatts to 2.0 kilowatts.
The cooling techniques according to the invention are particularly advantageous in a phased array antenna system, due in part to the use of a two-phase coolant. In particular, it is desirable that all of the circuitry in a phased array antenna system operate at substantially the same temperature, because temperature variations or gradients across the array can introduce unwanted phase shifts into signal components that are being transmitted or received, which in turn degrades the accuracy of the antenna system. The maximum permissible size for such temperature gradients decreases progressively as the antenna is operated at progressively higher frequencies.
In pre-existing systems, which use a single-phase coolant, temperature gradients are common, due in part to the fact that the coolant becomes progressively warmer as it moves across the array and absorbs progressively more heat. In contrast, since the invention uses a two-phase coolant that effects cooling primarily by virtue of the heat absorption which occurs as a result of coolant vaporization, and since vaporization occurs at a very precise and specific temperature for a given coolant pressure, the cooling effect is extremely uniform throughout the phased array antenna system, and is thus highly effective in minimizing temperature gradients.
Although selected embodiments have been illustrated and described in detail, it will be understood that various substitutions and alterations are possible without departing from spirit and scope of the present invention, as defined by the following claims.
This application is a divisional of U.S. application Ser. No. 10/192,891, filed Jul. 11, 2002, entitled “Method and Apparatus for Cooling With Coolant at a Subambient Pressure,” now U.S. Pat. No. 7,000,691 which issued on Feb. 21, 2006.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Child | 11339241 | US |