The present disclosure relates generally to liquid cooling systems for heat generating electronic devices, and more particularly, liquid cooling systems that report coolant temperature and/or temperature conditions via a tachometer signal.
Coolant temperature can be an important operating parameter of liquid cooling systems for computer systems or other systems having heat generating electronic devices. If the coolant becomes too hot it will first reduce the useful life of the liquid cooling system, second damage the liquid cooler preventing it from cooling, and third cause damage which results in coolant loss that may damage the host computer. These consequences can occur sequentially as the coolant temperature increases above the safe operating temperature range. Coolant temperature is not an operating parameter that is currently monitored by most computers and therefore current computer systems are not compatible (e.g., physical electrical connections do not exist) with a liquid cooling system that measures and outputs coolant temperature. The disclosed systems and methods are directed to overcoming one or more of the problems set forth above.
In accordance with the present disclosure, one aspect of the present disclosure is directed to a liquid cooling system for a heat generating electronic device. The liquid cooling system may include a cold plate configured to be positioned on the heat generating electronic device, the cold plate configured to pass a coolant therethrough. The liquid cooling system may also include a temperature sensor configured to generate a coolant temperature signal indicative of a temperature of the coolant. The liquid cooling system may also include a pump in fluid communication with the cold plate, the pump configured to circulate the coolant through the cold plate and send a pump signal to a control system associated with the heat generating electronic device. The pump signal may represent a tachometer signal for the pump and the coolant temperature signal of the coolant.
Another aspect of the present disclosure is directed to a method of controlling a liquid cooling system for a heating generating electronic device. The method may include circulating a coolant through a cold plate configured to be positioned on the heat generating electronic device. The method may also include measuring a temperature of the coolant via a temperature sensor configured to generate a coolant temperature signal indicative of the temperature of the coolant. The method may further include pumping the coolant through the cold plate via a pump configured to send a pump signal to a control system associated with the heating generating electronic device. The pump signal may represent a tachometer signal for the pump and the coolant temperature signal of the coolant.
Another aspect of the present disclosure is directed to a liquid cooling system for a heat generating electronic device. The system may include a cold plate configured to be positioned on the heat generating electronic device, the cold plate configured to pass a coolant therethrough. The system may also include a temperature sensor configured to generate a coolant temperature signal indicative of a temperature of the coolant. The system may further include a pump in fluid communication with the cold plate, the pump configured to circulate the coolant through the cold plate and send a pump signal to a control system associated with the heat generating electronic device. The pump signal may represent a tachometer signal for the pump and when the coolant temperature goes out-of-bounds the pump signal is held at a specific state indicating and out-of-bounds temperature to the control system.
Another aspect of the present disclosure is directed to a method of controlling a liquid cooling system for a heat generating electronic device. The method may include circulating a coolant through a cold plate configured to be positioned on the heat generating electronic device. The method may also include measuring a temperature of the coolant via a temperature sensor configured to generate a coolant temperature signal indicative of the temperature of the coolant. The method may further include pumping the coolant through the cold plate via a pump configured to send a pump signal to a control system associated with the heat generating electronic device. The pump signal may represent a tachometer signal for the pump and when the coolant temperature goes out-of-bounds the pump signal is held at a specific state indicating and out-of-bounds temperature to the control system.
Another aspect of the present disclosure is directed to a liquid cooling system for a heat generating electronic device. The system may include a pump configured to circulate a coolant through the system and send a pump signal to a control system associated with heat generating electronic device, wherein circulating the coolant removes heat from the heat generating electronic device. The system may also include a temperature sensor configured to generate a coolant temperature signal indicative of a temperature of the coolant. The pump signal may represent a tachometer signal for the pump and the coolant temperature signal of the coolant.
Another aspect of the present disclosure is directed to a liquid cooling system for a heat generating electronic device. The system may include a pump configured to circulate a coolant through the system and send a pump signal to a control system associated with heat generating electronic device, wherein circulating the coolant removes heat from the heat generating electronic device. The system may also include a temperature sensor configured to generate a coolant temperature signal indicative of a temperature of the coolant. The pump signal represents a tachometer signal for the pump and when the coolant temperature goes out-of-bounds the pump signal is held at a specific state indicating an out-of-bounds temperature to the control system.
Another aspect of the present disclosure is directed to a liquid cooling system for a heat generating electronic device. The system may include a cold plate configured to be positioned on the heat generating electronic device, the cold plate configured to pass a coolant therethrough. The system may also include a temperature sensor configured to generate a coolant temperature signal indicative of a temperature of the coolant. The system may further include a flow sensor operatively connected to the temperature sensor and in fluid communication with the cold plate, the flow sensor is configured to receive the coolant temperature signal and send a device signal to a control system associated with the heat generating electronic device. The device signal may indicate to the control system when the coolant temperature goes out-of-bounds by holding the device signal at a specific state indicative of out-of-bounds temperature.
Another aspect of the present disclosure may be directed to a liquid cooling system for a heat generating electronic device. The system may include a cold plate configured to be positioned on the heat generating electronic device, the cold plate configured to pass a coolant therethrough. The system may also include a temperature sensor configured to generate a coolant temperature signal indicative of a temperature of the coolant. The system may further include a pump in fluid communication with the cold plate, the pump configured to circulate the coolant through the cold plate and send a pump signal to a control system associated with the heat generating electronic device. The pump may be programmed to substitute the pump signal so it represents the coolant temperature signal of the coolant rather than the tachometer signal for the pump.
Another aspect of the present disclosure may be directed to a liquid cooling system for a heat generating electronic device. The system may include a cold plate configured to be positioned on the heat generating electronic device, the cold plate configured to pass a coolant therethrough. The system may also include a temperature sensor configured to generate a coolant temperature signal indicative of a temperature of the coolant. The system may further include a device operatively coupled to the temperature sensor and configured to send a device signal representative of a running pump to a control system associated with the heat generating electronic device. The device is programmed to send the device signal, whether or not the device signal is representative of an actual pump, while the coolant temperature is in-bounds and when the coolant temperature goes out-of-bounds the device signal is held at a specific state indicating an out-of-bounds temperature to the control system associated with the heat generating device.
In some embodiments, as shown in
In some embodiments, liquid cooling system 10 may be configured to circulate coolant through a plurality of cold plates 16 in order to cool a plurality of heat generating electronic components 14 of computer 12. For example,
As explained above, coolant temperature is not an operating parameter that is currently monitored by most computers and therefore current computer systems are not compatible with a liquid cooling system that measures and outputs coolant temperature because physical electrical connections do not exist to receive the coolant temperature signal. The disclosed liquid cooling systems 10, 100 solves this problem by programming pump signal 22 to include information about pump 20 as well as the coolant temperature.
Most current computers have a tachometer (tach) signal port available that is intended to be used to monitor the speed of a pump or fan and also detect irregular operation of the pump or fan. System 10 as described herein, may be configured to utilize the existing tach signal port of control system 24 of computer 12 to send pump signal 22, which may provide information about pump 20 as well as the coolant temperature. For example, pump signal 22 may include a tachometer signal portion and a temperature signal portion. In some embodiments, pump 20 may be programmed so pump signal 22 just represents the coolant temperature signal of the coolant rather than the tachometer signal for the pump.
The tachometer signal portion of pump signal 22 may be used to monitor the speed of pump 20 and also detect irregular operation of pump 20. Such detection may be simple or more complex. For example, detection of irregular operation may include monitoring for a tach signal indicating zero speed, it may detect irregular operation by monitoring whether pump 20 is within normal operating speed bands, or it may monitor how quickly pump 20 responds to changes in power or duty cycle signals to predict when pump 20 may be at risk of failing.
In some embodiments, the temperature signal portion of pump signal 22 may be configured to signal control system 24 when the coolant temperature reaches one or more out-of-bounds conditions (e.g., greater than about 70° C.). In other words, the temperature signal portion of pump signal may simply indicate a high temperature state. In some embodiments, the temperature signal portion of pump signal 22 may signal when the temperature is out-of-bounds (e.g., too high) and control system 24 of computer 12 must take corrective action (e.g., forcing pump 20 to run at full speed). In some embodiments, rather than a simple binary state (e.g., high/not high) the temperature signal portion of pump signal 22 may transmit the coolant temperature to control system 24 enabling control system 24 to be programmed to determine when to take action. In some embodiments, system 10 may be configured to identify when coolant temperature is out-of-bounds and determine a corrective action based on how far the coolant temperature is out-of-bounds.
Pump signals traditionally report pump speed via a tach signal that is a square wave signal that shifts from high to low as the pump revolves. The number of shifts per revolution is dependent on the number of motor poles and is typically either 2, 4, or 8 shifts per revolution. For example,
In some embodiments, pump 20 may include hardware and software logic programmed to receive the coolant temperature signal from temperature sensor 26 and determine whether the coolant temperature is out-of-bounds (e.g., too high) and when an excessive temperature is detected locking pump signal 22 of pump 20 in a specified state (e.g., high or low state). A non-spinning pump 20 may also lock pump signal 22 in either its high or low state. Upon receiving the locked state pump signal 22, control system 24 may respond by taking one or more actions to address the situation. For example, in some embodiments control system 24 may respond as it would to a failed pump motor. For some embodiments, pump signal 22 may be locked low for an out-of-bounds temperature and locked high for a pump failure (e.g., non-spinning pump) enabling control system 24 to identify and differentiate between an out-of-bounds temperature vs. a pump failure enabling control system 24 to take appropriate action specific to the identified condition.
Pump signal 22 may be configured to represent a tachometer signal for pump 20 and the coolant temperature signal of the coolant measured by temperature sensor 26 by time slicing temperature measurements with pump speed measurements into pump signal 22. According to some embodiments, pump signal 22 may report speed and coolant temperature by alternating between the two signals on a fixed time basis. For example, speed may be reported normally via a set number of pulses per revolution (e.g., 2, 4, or 8 pulses per revolution) for a fixed window of time—the speed-reporting window. This report may range from 45 to 600 pulses per second during the speed-reporting window. During a second fixed window of time, coolant temperature may be reported in degrees Celsius plus 1000 resulting in 1000 to 1150 pulses per second. For some embodiments these two fixed windows may be equal spans of time and in other embodiments they may be different spans of time. For some embodiments, the windows may be separated by either a short period of time where the signal is locked high or low.
According to some embodiments, pump signal 22 may report the tach signal pump speed in RPM and coolant temperature in Celsius using a serial communication protocol and communicating these values one following the other via binary encoding. For example, a two-byte value may be used to communicate RPM and a one-byte value may be used to communicate coolant temperature.
According to some embodiments, pump signal 22 may report the tach signal pump speed normally via a set number of pulses per rotation, as long as the coolant temperature is within a safe range. If the pump is stopped, the signal will be constantly high. For example, plot (C) of
According to some embodiments, pump signal 22 may report the tach signal for the pump normally via 4 pulses per rotation while the frequency of this signal represents the speed of the pump, and the duty cycle of the signal represent the coolant temperature. If pump 20 is stopped, the frequency will be set to a low value, and the duty cycle may continue representing the coolant temperature. If pump 20 has an internal failure, the signal may be set constantly high. The constantly high condition representing an internal failure may have priority over the other signals.
Device 34 may be configured to receive the coolant temperature signal and send a device signal 36 to control system 24 associated with computer 12 or heat generating electronic device 14. As described herein, most current computers have a tachometer (tach) signal port available that is intended to be used to monitor the speed of a pump or fan and also detect irregular operation of the pump or fan. System 100 as described herein, may be configured to utilize the existing tach signal port of control system 24 of computer 12 to receive device signal 36, which may provide information about device 34 as well as the coolant temperature. Device signal 36 may function similar to pump signal 22 described herein, such that device signal 36 may be programmed to include information about device 34 as well as the coolant temperature. For example, device signal 36 may represent a measurement signal (e.g., pressure or flow) for device 34 and the coolant temperature signal of the coolant measured by temperature sensor 26. In some embodiments, out-of-bound conditions measured by device 34 (e.g., pressure or flow) may also be determined and the device signal 36 may be used to indicate the out-of-bound condition to a control system by holding the signal high or low. In some embodiments, the measured pressure and/or flow may be utilized to estimate the temperature of the coolant enabling temperature measurement without a temperature sensor.
In some embodiments, device 34 may be programmed to send a device signal 36 representative of a running pump to control system 24. Device 34 may be programmed to send the device signal 36, whether or not the signal is representative of an actual pump, while the coolant temperature is in-bounds and when the coolant temperature goes out-of-bounds the device signal 36 is held at a specific state indicating an out-of-bounds temperature to control system 24.
Other embodiments of the present disclosure will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the present disclosure disclosed herein. It is intended that the specification and examples be exemplary only, with a true scope and spirit of the present disclosure being indicated by the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/451,978, filed Jan. 30, 2017, which is incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
62451978 | Jan 2017 | US |