Heat pipes are passive devices used to draw heat from one location and dissipate the heat at a different location, and can take a number of different shapes and forms, including thermosyphons. Heat pipes may be used in a variety of applications, including, for example, drawing heat from electronics components. Heat pipes contain a working fluid and typically a wick on the inside wall of the pipe. In some applications, however, excess fluid may build up in certain areas of the heat pipe and form pools that are not absorbed by the wick. If the heat pipe is subjected to extreme conditions such as subfreezing temperatures, this excess working fluid (e.g. water) may undergo cycles of freezing and thawing that can damage the wick and/or the heat pipe itself.
Current heat pipes typically operate with an oversupply of working fluid, leaving them with pooled liquid when idle, and thus are susceptible to freeze/thaw damage. Heat pipes that not oversupplied with working fluid typically have a uniform layer of wick, resulting in a uniformly thicker wick throughout the heat pipe with a higher ΔTwick. Some heat pipes have distinct wick regions for reservoirs and heat input zones. However, in many cases, the condensate does not inherently flow over the heat input zone. Instead, replenishment of the wick in the heat input zone depends on capillary action to draw liquid from a reservoir, leaving it more susceptible to dry-out, which is generally an undesirable condition in such cases. In cases where there is a very large ratio of condenser area to heat input area (as in a space radiator), or where gravity is less strong to pull condensate back to the evaporator (e.g., in space or on the moon), addressing the simultaneous challenges of freeze/thaw and low ΔTwick is particularly difficult. The hybrid wick according to various embodiments of the present invention is particularly advantageous for such applications.
Accordingly, some embodiments of the invention provide a heat pipe with a hybrid wick which is thicker at one end of the heat pipe (in a reservoir region) so as to hold all or substantially all of the fluid in the condensed state when the pipe is idle. The hybrid wick can also include a thin portion adjacent to the thick portion, wherein the thin portion corresponds to an evaporator region of the heat pipe to which a first heat source is applied. The opposing end of the heat pipe, corresponding to a condenser portion in which fluid condenses to dissipate heat absorbed in the evaporator region, does not have any wick material. In some embodiments, the reservoir region has a second heat source applied to it to promote drying of the thicker portion of the wick in operation of the heat pipe.
In some embodiments, the present invention provides a heat pipe system for conducting thermal energy. The heat pipe system includes a sealed tube having along its length a reservoir region, an evaporator region, and a condenser region, the tube having a first end and a second end and an inside wall. The system also includes a wick disposed adjacent the inside wall of the tube, the wick including a first portion at the first end of the tube and a second portion adjacent the first portion, wherein the first portion of the wick is thicker than the second portion of the wick, and wherein the second portion of the wick does not extend to the second end of the tube. The system also includes a working fluid contained within the tube.
Some embodiments of the present invention provide a heat pipe system for conducting thermal energy. The heat pipe system includes a sealed tube having along its length a reservoir region, an evaporator region, and a condenser region, the tube having a first end, a second end, and an inside wall extending between the first and second ends. The heat pipe system also includes a wick disposed adjacent the inside wall of the tube, the wick including a first portion at the first end of the tube and a second portion adjacent the first portion and thinner than the first portion; and a quantity of working fluid contained within the tube. The heat pipe system has a first state in which the wick holds substantially the entire quantity of working fluid, and a second state in which heat is supplied to the evaporator region, in which the wick holds a portion of the quantity of working fluid, and in which a first part of a remainder of the working fluid has been heated to a vapor form, and in which a second part of the remainder of the working fluid is in condensed form on the inside wall of the tube in the condenser region of the tube.
In some embodiments, a method of cooling using a heat pipe is provided. The method includes steps of heating a sealed tube at an evaporator region of the sealed tube located along the sealed tube between a condenser region and a reservoir region; evaporating a working fluid in a first wick lining the evaporator portion of the sealed tube; condensing the evaporated working fluid in the condenser region of the sealed tube; moving the condensed working fluid back toward the evaporator portion of the sealed tube; repeating the heating, evaporating, condensing, and moving steps with the condensed working fluid; and maintaining a second wick lining the reservoir region of the sealed tube in a substantially dry condition during the heating, evaporating, condensing, and moving steps, wherein the second wick lining the reservoir region is thicker than the first wick lining the evaporator region.
Other aspects of the invention will become apparent by consideration of the detailed description and accompanying drawings.
Before any embodiments of the invention are explained in detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in the following description or illustrated in the following drawings. The invention is capable of other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways.
In various embodiments, the invention provides a heat pipe 10 with a hybrid wick 20 disposed therein. The heat pipe 10 is generally a sealed tube having along its length a reservoir region 12, an evaporator region 14, and a condenser region 16 (
The hybrid wick 20 can be made of various materials, and in some embodiments is made of sintered copper powder. In certain embodiments, the condenser region 16 has a heat sink attached thereto, for example one or more conductive fins attached to the condenser region 16 in a thermally conductive manner.
The hybrid wick 20 of the illustrated embodiment is disposed adjacent to and in thermal contact with the inside wall of the heat pipe 10 (
The heat pipe 10 contains a working fluid 30 which is selected so that its evaporation and condensation temperatures are appropriate for the operating temperature range of the particular application. Possible working fluids 30 include water, ammonia, acetone, or methanol. Generally only a small volume of working fluid 30 is added to the heat pipe 10 (e.g. a fraction of a percent of the total volume of the interior of the heat pipe 10), and the remaining volume of the heat pipe 10 may be filled with a gas or, more typically, is evacuated so that the interior of the heat pipe 10 contains only the working fluid 30 in either a liquid or vapor form. The interior pressure of the heat pipe 10 may be adjusted when evacuating or adding gas to further adjust the working temperature range of the heat pipe 10.
The volume of working fluid 30 in the heat pipe 10 is adjusted so that when the heat pipe 10 is idle, i.e. when no heat source is applied to the evaporator region 14 under normal or intended operating conditions of the heat pipe, all of the working fluid 30 is absorbed to the hybrid wick 20, and there is no excess fluid pooled in the heat pipe 10 (
In some applications, the heat pipe 10 with hybrid wick 20 generally is operated in a vertical orientation relative to gravity, i.e. with the condenser region 16 at the top and the reservoir region 12 at the bottom (
When the heat pipe 10 is used in an environment with low or zero gravity (e.g. in a spacecraft), the flow of working fluid 30 would be similar to what is described above, although the rate of flow of working fluid 30 from the wickless condenser region 16 to the thin portion 14 of the hybrid wick 10 might be slower in the absence of gravity or with reduced gravitational force compared to the rate of flow in the presence of Earth's gravity. For example, the working fluid 30 which condenses on the inside wall of the heat pipe 10 in the condenser region 16 would still form a film 32 in a low- or zero-gravity environment, and the film 32 would spread more or less evenly along the surface of the inside wall of the condenser region 16 of the heat pipe 10. Thus, the film 32 as it spreads would eventually come into contact with the thin portion 24 of the hybrid wick 20, at which point the working fluid 30 would be drawn by capillary action into the thin portion 24 of the hybrid wick 20.
The thin portion 24 of the hybrid wick 20 is designed to be thin enough such that, in the presence of a high heat flux, there will be a low ΔTwick. In various embodiments, the thin portion 24 of the hybrid wick 20 is sufficiently thin to permit the working fluid 30 to evaporate more rapidly without building up a steep heat gradient, thereby permitting rapid dissipation of the incoming heat flux.
In use, the evaporator region 14 of the heat pipe 10 is placed in thermal contact with a first heat source 40, for example an electronics component 50 such as a microprocessor (
The embodiments described above and illustrated in the figures are presented by way of example only and are not intended as a limitation upon the concepts and principles of the present invention. As such, it will be appreciated by one having ordinary skill in the art that various changes in the elements and their configuration and arrangement are possible without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention as set forth in the appended claims.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/654,852, filed Oct. 18, 2012, which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/548,262 filed Oct. 18, 2011, the contents of each of which is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61548262 | Oct 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13654852 | Oct 2012 | US |
Child | 15688240 | US |