The subject matter disclosed herein relates to the field of inductor assemblies, and to cooling features in immersion-cooled toroid inductor assemblies.
Conventionally, a toroid inductor assembly includes conductive wires wrapped about a toroid inductive core. The conductive wires can be held in place with a potting compound or by retention in a plastic or thermoplastic bobbin. Frequently, the selected magnetic core material has to operate at a temperature of 150 degree Celsius (302 degree Fahrenheit) or lower in the inductor assembly. However, the inductive cores have an operating temperature limit much lower than that of most conventional conductive wires, and therefore, limit the ability for conventional potted inductor assemblies to be used in some hot environments. The toroid cores are typically mounted to a cold plate. Cooling the toroid cores relies on conduction of the heat axially from the core to the coldplate through the wires, the potting and the core. The temperature drop associated with the conduction of heat is large for high power inductor assemblies and, so, there is a need to provide better cooling of the inductor assembly for operation in hotter environments.
According to an aspect of the invention, an inductor assembly includes a substrate that is configured to circulate a coolant; an outer cylindrical housing arranged on the substrate and defining an internal cavity; a wound inductor core arranged in internal cavity; a condenser arranged between the wound inductor core and the substrate; and a working fluid disposed in the internal cavity and in contact with each of the inductor core and the condenser. The condenser is configured to condense vaporized working fluid as it traverses through the condenser.
In addition to one or more of the features described above, or as an alternative, further embodiments could include a plate-fin condenser with an array of radial strip fins that is configured to decrease a flow area of the condenser from an outer circumference to a central downcomer opening.
In addition to one or more of the features described above, or as an alternative, further embodiments could include pin-fin condenser with a plurality of uniform pin fins on a surface of the condenser, the uniform pin fins being configured to decrease a flow area of the condenser from an outer circumference to a central downcomer opening.
In addition to one or more of the features described above, or as an alternative, further embodiments could include a foam condenser with dissimilar pore structures that is configured to decrease a flow area of the condenser from an outer circumference to a central downcomer opening.
In addition to one or more of the features described above, or as an alternative, further embodiments could include a condenser that is configured to condense the vaporized working fluid through heat exchange with the substrate.
In addition to one or more of the features described above, or as an alternative, further embodiments could include a condenser that is configured to provide a higher velocity of the vaporized working fluid as it traverses radially through the condenser.
In addition to one or more of the features described above, or as an alternative, further embodiments could include a condenser that is configured to have a decreased flow area from an outer circumference to a central downcomer opening as a function of vaporized working fluid to condensed working fluid in a flow stream through the condenser.
According to another aspect of the invention, a method for cooling an inductor assembly includes circulating coolant through a substrate; and coupling the inductor assembly to the substrate; circulating working fluid through the inductor assembly; cooling a vaporized working fluid in the inductor assembly to form a condensed working fluid; and circulating the condensed working fluid through the inductor assembly through a thermosiphon effect.
In addition to one or more of the features described above, or as an alternative, further embodiments could include providing the inductor assembly having an outer cylindrical housing arranged on the substrate and defining an internal cavity; a wound inductor core arranged in internal cavity; a condenser arranged between the wound inductor core and the substrate; and a working fluid disposed in the internal cavity and in contact with each of the inductor core and the condenser.
In addition to one or more of the features described above, or as an alternative, further embodiments could include condensing the vaporized working fluid as it traverses through the condenser.
In addition to one or more of the features described above, or as an alternative, further embodiments could include decreasing a flow area of the condenser from an outer circumference to a central downcomer opening with an array of radial strip fins on a surface of the condenser.
In addition to one or more of the features described above, or as an alternative, further embodiments could include decreasing a flow area of the condenser from an outer circumference to a central downcomer opening with an array of radial strip fins on a surface of the condenser.
In addition to one or more of the features described above, or as an alternative, further embodiments could include decreasing a flow area of the condenser from an outer circumference to a central downcomer opening with a foam condenser having dissimilar pore structures.
In addition to one or more of the features described above, or as an alternative, further embodiments could include condensing the vaporized working fluid through heat exchange between the condenser and the substrate.
In addition to one or more of the features described above, or as an alternative, further embodiments could include providing a higher velocity of the vaporized working fluid with the condenser as it traverses radially through the condenser.
Technical function of one or more of the features described above include cooling toroid inductors by immersing the inductor in a dielectric working fluid and removing the heat by a thermosiphon effect using a condenser in thermal communication with a cold plate heat exchanger.
Other aspects, features, and techniques of the invention will become more apparent from the following description taken in conjunction with the drawings.
The subject matter, which is regarded as the invention, is particularly pointed out and distinctly claimed in the claims at the conclusion of the specification. The foregoing and other features and advantages of the invention are apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which like elements are numbered alike in the several FIGURES:
With reference to the figures,
Also, outer cylindrical housing 104 and therefore at least a portion of the inductor assembly 100 may be filled with a working fluid. Thus, inductor core 202 and windings 302 may be exposed to the working fluid. During operation, heat generated at core 202 and windings 302 may introduce a thermal gradient which causes working fluid to flow. With modest heat fluxes, the working fluid will circulate as a single phase liquid, carrying heat away from components that are dissipating heat. At high heat fluxes, the working fluid will flow as a two-phase fluid by boiling. Thus, as flow is introduced between differing temperatures to affect equalization, and overall fluid flow path is created through the inner cylindrical cavity 310, over and through inductor core 202 and windings 204, through path 312, and over and through condenser 206. The heat in fluid flow path is removed by condenser 206. The other side of this condenser is cooled by substrate 102. Flow of working fluid is naturally pumped by a thermosiphon effect wherein fluid flow is upward through flow channels 314 between winding bobbin 302 and windings 204, and path 312 where heat is added (i.e., around windings 204 or inductor core 202) to boil and/or vaporize working fluid and downward as liquid flow in inner cylindrical cavity 310 in a region where the cooled working fluid can descend from condenser 206.
As shown in
Referring back to
In high heat flux operation, as the density of the heated or bubbly working fluid in the channels 402 and 404 is less than the cold or condensed working fluid from condenser 206, the cooler, more dense working fluid in downcomer passage 308 travels downward in inner cylindrical cavity 310 and replaces the heated or bubbly working fluid going into channels 402 and 404 through a thermosiphon effect. Circulating the cooled working fluid through inductor core 202 cools it to a temperature close to the substrate 102 temperature instead of operating near the winding 204 temperature. In low power operation or with low working fluid temperatures, the flow of working fluid in inductor assembly 100 is driven by natural convection. The flow pattern is the same as with boiling, but the velocities are smaller because they are driven by the cold-to-hot fluid density variation. The design of condenser 206 is optimized with a radially inward flow pattern in order to create high velocities of vaporized working fluid as it travels through condenser 206. A shear flow condenser 206 can be achieved by sizing vertical and horizontal features for the condenser 206. In condenser 206, flow area of the heat exchange elements decreases with the flow length and quality (fraction of vapor in the condensing flow) from outer circumference to downcomer opening 208. With this condenser design, the flow velocity is kept high, which provides three benefits: 1) the heat transfer coefficients are high because the condensing film thickness is thinned by the shear force, 2) non-condensable gases are swept along the flow length, reducing the mass diffusion blanket effect which reduces the condensation rate, and 3) the condenser operation is more stable. Additionally, instabilities such as run-back and liquid leg are mitigated by having a positive pressure gradient between input and output of condenser 206.
Embodiments of the invention disclosed herein for application provide benefits over prior art inductors. For example, the immersion cooled toroid inductor assembly of the embodiments described above will operate much cooler than with conventional cooling. The inductor core temperature can be made close to the cold plate temperature instead of operating near the winding temperature through use of a condenser that circulates working fluids through a thermosiphon effect. The immersion cooled inductor can be lighter than the conventional design. Because of this better cooling, the immersion cooled toroid inductor assembly can operate in harsher environments. The effective thermal inertia of the inductor is much larger because the circulating fluid shares heat between the windings, core, housing, and condenser. Wire or core heating therefore does not stay isolated which causes a higher temperature rise. The temperature rise of inductor components is much lower in loss of cooling (LOC) or in overload events. The inductors are contained in a clean and thermally controlled environment which should improve inductor life.
The terminology used herein is for the purpose of describing particular embodiments only and is not intended to be limiting of the invention. While the description of the present invention has been presented for purposes of illustration and description, it is not intended to be exhaustive or limited to the invention in the form disclosed. Many modifications, variations, alterations, substitutions or equivalent arrangements not hereto described will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention. Additionally, while the various embodiments of the invention have been described, it is to be understood that aspects of the invention may include only some of the described embodiments. Accordingly, the invention is not to be seen as limited by the foregoing description, but is only limited by the scope of the appended claims.