This invention is related to enclosures for electronic circuits and particularly to enclosures for providing thermal and kinetic (shock and vibration resilience) management as well as protection of the circuits from contamination and electromagnetic interference.
There are a number of problems inherent in housing electronic circuits. One major problem is that of kinetic management, i.e. protecting the electronic circuits against destructive forces, such as shock. One conventional approach to providing kinetic management, sometimes referred to as “cocooning,” places a smaller, isolated equipment rack within a larger, hard mounted enclosure. With this approach, shock, vibration and other environmental extremes are attenuated by the isolation system to a level that is not harmful to the electronic circuits. Another approach, sometimes called Rugged, Off the Shelf (ROTS) seeks to “harden” the equipment in which the electronic circuits are enclosed, in a manner such as to make the electronic circuits immune to the rigors of the extended environmental conditions to which they are is exposed. This later approach strengthens the equipment's enclosure and provides added support for internal components, such as the electronic circuits. Both approaches suffer from added complexity, size, weight and cost.
A second major problem is that of providing adequate thermal management for the electronic circuits. Electronic circuits generate heat during use and must be properly cooled in order to continue to function properly. Various conventional systems addressing the need for cooling exist, including inducing an air flow (forced convection), natural convection and radiation. Other alternatives include circulating liquid, to carry thermal energy from heat exchangers coupled to the heat source to external radiators or coolers.
Conventional systems that operate by inducing an air flow typically utilize fans or blowers to move air directly over the circuitry requiring cooling. In a system having multiple electronics enclosures, such as a rack-shelf system, there may be multiple fans/blowers, e.g., one or more per enclosure, which induce air flow across their own associated circuit boards. Alternatively, there might be one large fan for the entire rack-shelf system, inducing air flow across all circuit boards simultaneously.
However, such conventional cooling systems suffer from a number of problems. First, high-density packaging usually compromises cooling airflow. In conventional “blade” shelf enclosure systems, blade assemblies and their circuit boards are built differently and each enclosure/circuit board combination tends to have a different amount of internal vacant space (air channels), and thus presents different pressure drops to an induced airflow. As a consequence, system designers and integrators are obliged to add dampers and air ducts to adjust the flow of air as needed for each individual circuit board, thus significantly complicating system design and maintenance. Second, the cooling methods of some systems introduce the problem of contamination of the circuitry. While this problem can be mitigated with air filters, these filters are subject to clogging and are themselves a significant maintenance problem. Contaminants that are not removed by filtration are a problem for conventional systems that blow air directly over the circuitry, since such a technique introduces contaminants as the cooling air comes in contact with the circuitry. Third, some systems have inadequate shielding, leading to the problem of electromagnetic interference, in which electromagnetic waves from other sources penetrate the enclosure, potentially disrupting the operations of the enclosed circuitry and leading to data corruption. Fourth, some systems lack proper stiffening and rigidity, as needed to protect against shock and vibration that can damage the enclosed circuitry. Fifth, some systems are incapable of being readily adapted to standard commercial, off-the-shelf (COTS) electronics assemblies, such as motherboards. Thus, the benefits of such systems cannot be easily extended to circuitry other than that for which they were originally designed. Sixth, some systems provide thermal management through equipment, such as air movers, external to the enclosure, not as an integral part of the enclosure itself. Thus, cooling airflow is dependent on the pressure drop for a specific field-replaceable unit (FRU).
What is needed is an electronics enclosure providing thermal management. Such an enclosure will preferably have the additional beneficial properties of: (1) providing optimized air flow; (2) protecting the contained electronic circuits from contamination; (3) shielding the enclosed electronic circuits against emissions and electromagnetic waves; (4) providing mechanical strengthening and stiffening to protect against shock and vibration; (5) providing ready adaptability to COTS electronics assemblies; and (6) constituting a single field-replaceable unit.
The present invention overcomes the limitations and disadvantages of conventional electronics enclosures that provide thermal and kinetic management.
In one embodiment, the clamshell electronics enclosure comprises a clamshell casing enclosing electronic circuitry, sealed so as to substantially prevent external air (or other gases) from entering the clamshell casing and coming into contact with the enclosed circuitry, thus substantially reducing the problem of contaminants. Additionally, the clamshell enclosure comprises a cover, which is attached to the clamshell casing and which, in conjunction with the clamshell casing, forms a duct external to the clamshell casing. In one embodiment, the duct contains, at one end, an impeller device and, at a second end, at least one opening. The impeller induces a flow of air (or other thermally conductive gaseous substance) through the duct by creating a pressure differential. In one embodiment the air enters the duct through the impeller and travels through the channels formed by the duct and exits through the opening at the second end of the duct; in another embodiment, the flow may be in the opposite direction.
In order to provide cooling, a heat exchanger is thermally coupled to the circuitry contained within the sealed clamshell casing. The heat exchanger conducts heat away from the circuitry by conducting the heat energy to an interface element and in turn, to the ducted air stream. More specifically, the heat exchanger further comprises interface elements, which extend through a wall of the clamshell casing into the duct such that the clamshell casing remains sealed. The heat exchanger's interface elements are within the path of the cooling air flowing through the duct, which serves to transfer the heat conducted by the heat exchanger to the air channel, thus cooling the electronic circuits contained within, while simultaneously allowing the clamshell casing to remain sealed against the external environment.
Such a clamshell enclosure beneficially provides an effective cooling mechanism, only causing the air stream to travel to locations corresponding to circuitry in need of cooling, rather than forcing the air across the entire surface of the circuit board or boards housing the circuitry. Second, as noted, the sealed nature of the clamshell casing with respect to the duct substantially prevents contaminants, such as dust and moisture, from coming into contact with the internal circuitry. Third, in one embodiment the impeller, duct, heat exchanger, and other elements of the thermal management system are a part of the clamshell enclosure, rather than external to it, and thus the clamshell enclosure can operate as a closed system. Hence, the clamshell enclosure's cooling characteristics are independent of other such assemblies that may be combined in a rack shelf. In particular, there is no need to connect heat pipes or any other heat transfer mechanism to external cooling components.
In one embodiment, the clamshell casing is composed of a material, such as aluminum, having conductive properties or a conductive surface. This conductivity has the benefit of providing shielding against emissions and substantially reducing the intrusion of electromagnetic waves.
In one embodiment, the clamshell casing and cover of the clamshell enclosure are designed to capture the internal circuits and arrange their accompanying heat exchangers in a cellular topology. Such a topology is inherently strong and so beneficially provides additional stiffness, further strengthening the clamshell enclosure and providing protection against vibration and shock to the enclosed circuitry.
In one embodiment, the combination of the clamshell casing and the cover forms a clamshell enclosure that is essentially a rectangular solid in shape. This beneficially allows the user to easily and compactly store individual clamshell enclosures within larger units, such as a rack-shelf system.
The features and advantages described in the specification are not all inclusive, and particularly, many additional features and advantages will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art in view of the drawings, specification and claims herein. Moreover, it should be noted that the language used in the specification has been principally selected for readability and instructional purposes, and may not have been selected to delineate or circumscribe the inventive subject matter, resort to the claims being necessary to determine such inventive subject matter.
A preferred embodiment of the present invention is now described with reference to the figures where like reference numbers indicate identical or functionally similar elements. Also in the figures, the left most digit of each reference number corresponds to the figure in which the reference number is first used.
The present invention relates to a clamshell electronics enclosure for providing thermal and kinetic management for electronic circuits while simultaneously providing additional beneficial properties, such as protection for the circuits against contaminants and electromagnetic interference.
Within the interior of the clamshell casing 102 is a plurality of electronic circuits in need of cooling. Each of these circuits is thermally coupled with a heat exchanger which conducts heat away from the circuit. Each heat exchanger comprises a thermal connector located within the interior of the sealed clamshell casing 102 that provides thermal coupling with a circuit, and each extends through the wall of the clamshell casing 102 adjacent to the duct 105, entering the duct 105 and forming a thermal interface element 106 but leaving no gap in the clamshell casing 102 through which contaminants may enter the interior of the clamshell casing 102. Thus, there is a thermal path from the circuits on the interior of the clamshell casing 102, through the thermal connectors, to the thermal interface elements 106 within the duct 105 on the exterior of the clamshell casing 102, yet the clamshell casing 102 remains sealed.
The thermal interface elements 106 are designed to maximize heat transfer away from the internal circuitry to which they are thermally coupled, and may be formed in a variety of ways. In the embodiment of
Thermal management is achieved by inducing a flow of a thermally conductive gaseous substance through the duct 105. In the embodiment of
Note that by locating the impeller 110 within the duct 105, the clamshell enclosure 100 becomes a single field-replaceable unit (FRU), with no dependency on external cooling equipment.
Optionally, the surface of the duct 105 may additionally include surface area enhancing features, such as fins, connected to heat sources internal to the clamshell casing 102, using thermal shunts or heat pipes, thus providing cooling for any additional circuitry not cooled by the thermal interface element 106.
In some embodiments, the individual clamshell enclosures 100 may be aggregated into a larger enclosure such as a rack-shelf system.
Note that the duct system provides more efficient airflow than conventional systems, in which the air must be forced across the entire surface of the system in question. Using the duct system, the air stream is directed over the regions corresponding to circuitry in need of cooling. As a beneficial consequence, less power is required for the impellers 110.
Conventional thermal management systems that cause a cooling air stream to come into direct contact with circuitry suffer from the problem of the introduction of external contaminants, such as moisture and dust. The clamshell enclosure addresses and eliminates this problem by preventing the air stream from coming into contact with the circuitry. Rather, the duct 105 formed by the clamshell casing 102 and the cover 104 is external to the clamshell casing 102 itself, with the cooling mechanism being provided by an air stream contacting only the external thermal interface elements, and not their internal circuits, which are safely sealed within the clamshell casing 102.
The embodiment of
In one embodiment, clamshell casing 102 is formed of a conductive material, such as aluminum. Alternatively, the clamshell casing 102 may merely have a conductive surface. The conductive nature of the clamshell casing 102 has the desirable property of providing shielding against emissions and substantially reducing the intrusion of electromagnetic waves. This allows a clamshell enclosure 100 to be located in close proximity to another electromagnetic device without the internal circuitry of either one being adversely affected. This is particularly useful in, for example, the rack-shelf configuration discussed below, in which individual enclosures are aggregated in close proximity to one another.
It is appreciated that the particular embodiment of the enclosure depicted in
Also illustrated in
While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to a preferred embodiment and various alternate embodiments, it will be understood by persons skilled in the relevant art that various changes in form and details can be made therein without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/886,057, filed Jan. 22, 2007, and is related to patent application Ser. No. 11/203,005, filed on Aug. 11, 2005, both of which are herein incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60886057 | Jan 2007 | US |