The present disclosure relates to immersion cooling systems and, more specifically, to liquid deflectors for two-phase immersion cooling systems.
Data centers house information technology (IT) equipment for the purposes of storing, processing, and disseminating data and applications. IT equipment may include electronic devices, such as servers, storage systems, power distribution units, routers, switches, and firewalls.
IT equipment consumes electricity and produces waste heat as a byproduct. A data center with many servers may require a dedicated IT cooling system to manage the waste heat. If the waste heat is not removed from the data center, ambient temperature within the data center may rise above an acceptable threshold and temperature-induced performance throttling of electronic devices (e.g., microprocessors) may occur, which is undesirable.
Direct liquid cooling systems can be used to capture waste heat from IT equipment. One form of direct liquid cooling is immersion cooling. In an immersion cooling system, an electronic device is immersed in a dielectric fluid. Waste heat from the electronic device is transferred to the dielectric fluid and then rejected outside the data center through a heat rejection system.
Examples of immersion cooling systems include single-phase immersion cooling systems and two-phase immersion cooling systems. Single-phase immersion cooling systems rely on sensible heat transfer to remove heat from the IT equipment. Two-phase immersion cooling systems leverage both sensible and latent heat transfer to remove heat from the IT equipment.
In one aspect, a two-phase immersion cooling system may include an immersion tank configured to receive a dielectric fluid. The immersion tank may have an interior volume having a lower portion and an upper portion. The interior volume may include an electronic device region configured to receive one or more electronic devices. The system may include a condenser mounted in the upper portion of the immersion tank. The system may include a liquid deflector located in the upper portion of the immersion tank and at least partially between a top side of the electronic device region and a top side of the condenser. The liquid deflector may be mounted to the immersion tank. The liquid deflector may be mounted to the condenser. The liquid deflector may be mounted to a chassis that contains or is configured to receive an electronic device. The liquid deflector may have a deflector surface having a plurality of perforations. The liquid deflector may have a cable management opening. The liquid deflector may have an internal fluid passageway fluidly connected to the condenser. The system may include a coolant supply line fluidly connecting the condenser to an inlet of the internal fluid passageway and a coolant return line fluidly connecting an outlet of the internal fluid passageway to the condenser.
In another aspect, a two-phase immersion cooling system may include an immersion tank configured to receive a dielectric fluid. The immersion tank may have an interior volume. The interior volume may include an electronic device region. The electronic device region may be configured to receive one or more electronic devices. The system may include a condenser mounted in a headspace of the immersion tank. The interior volume may include a gap region between the electronic device region and the condenser. A liquid deflector may be located at least partially in the gap region. 9. The liquid deflector may be mounted to an interior surface of the immersion tank. The liquid deflector may be mounted to the condenser. The liquid deflector may be mounted to a chassis that contains or is configured to receive an electronic device. The liquid deflector may include a deflector surface having a plurality of perforations. The liquid deflector may include a cable management opening. The liquid deflector may include an internal fluid passageway fluidly connected to the condenser. The system may include a coolant supply line fluidly connecting the condenser to an inlet of the internal fluid passageway and a coolant return line fluidly connecting an outlet of the internal fluid passageway to the condenser.
In another aspect, a two-phase immersion cooling system may include an immersion tank having an interior volume and a target liquid level. The system may include a condenser mounted above the target liquid level. The interior volume may include an electronic device region. The electronic device region may extend below the target liquid level and above the target liquid level. The system may include a liquid deflector mounted above the target liquid level. The liquid deflector may intersect a liquid pathway extending from the electronic device region to a top surface of the condenser. The liquid deflector may be mounted to the immersion tank. The liquid deflector may be mounted to the condenser. The liquid deflector may include a deflector surface having a plurality of perforations. The liquid deflector may include a cable management opening. The liquid deflector may have an internal fluid passageway having an inlet and an outlet. The system may include a coolant supply line fluidly connecting the condenser to the inlet of the internal fluid passageway and a coolant return line fluidly connecting the outlet of the internal fluid passageway to the condenser.
This Summary is provided to introduce a selection of concepts in a simplified form that are further described below in the Detailed Description. This Summary is not intended to identify key features or essential features of the claimed subject matter, nor is it intended to be used to determine the scope of the claimed subject matter.
In the drawings, like reference characters generally refer to the same parts throughout the different views. Also, the drawings are not necessarily to scale, emphasis instead being placed upon illustrating principles of the invention. In the following description, various embodiments are described with reference to the following drawings, in which:
As shown in
As shown in
In a conventional two-phase cooling system, an electronic device is fully immersed in a fluid bath to ensure that the entire device is adequately cooled. However, dielectric fluid can be costly, and fully immersing the entire electronic device requires filling the immersion tank so that a liquid level is at or above a top surface of the electronic device. By contrast, the immersion cooling systems 100 described herein are configured to operate with a liquid level 109 that is less than a height of the electronic device, which significantly reduces the quantity and cost of fluid required to operate the system 100. As shown in
A target liquid level may be defined as a dielectric liquid level that is suitable for safe and continuous operation of the immersion cooling system 100. In one example, the immersion tank 106 may have a marking or a range of markings on an interior surface of the tank to identify the target liquid level. Prior to operating the immersion cooling system 100, an operator may verify that the actual liquid level 109 satisfies the target liquid level. If the actual liquid level is below the target liquid level, the operator may add fluid to the system until the target liquid level is achieved.
The upper portion 123 of the tank 106 may be defined as an interior volume of the immersion tank 106 that is located above the target liquid level. The lower portion of the tank 106 may be defined as an interior volume of the immersion tank 106 that is located below the target liquid level. Together, the upper portion 123 and lower portion 124 may define the interior volume of the immersion cooling tank 106.
To operate the system 100 with a relatively low liquid level while still adequately cooling the electronic device 101, the system 100 may include a pump 105 that supplies dielectric liquid 110 to an internal volume of a chassis 102 of the electronic device 101, as shown in
In the example shown in
During operation of the electronic device 101, localized boiling may occur in the interior volume of the chassis 102 as heat from the electronic device 101 vaporizes dielectric liquid 110 adjacent to heat dissipating components of the electronic device. The localized boiling may produce vapor bubbles that, due to buoyancy, ascend through the dielectric liquid column within the chassis 102. When the electronic device 101 is producing a high heat flux, such as in the case of a fully utilized central processing unit (CPU) or graphics processing unit (GPU), vigorous boiling may occur proximate to the device, and a stream of vapor bubbles may form and rise through the fluid column in the chassis 102. Similar to a full pot of boiling water, droplets of liquid may sputter, splash, and/or shoot outward from the top opening 114 of the chassis 102 as dielectric fluid in vapor phase 113 (referred to herein as “dielectric vapor”) aggressively escapes from the chassis 102 into a headspace 112 of the immersion tank. The dielectric vapor 113 may collect in the headspace.
The system 100 may include a condenser 104 located in the headspace 112 of the immersion tank 106. The condenser 104 may be located above the liquid level 109. The condenser may receive a coolant (e.g., a water-glycol mixture from a facility cooling loop) that is at a temperature below a boiling point of the dielectric vapor 113. The condenser 104 may remove heat from the dielectric vapor 113, thereby causing the vapor to condense and form a condensate 132 that returns to the fluid bath 111 by way of gravity (e.g., by dripping from the condenser 104 as shown in
The performance of the condenser 104 (i.e., its ability to convert dielectric vapor to dielectric liquid) may be determined, in part, by its available surface area (e.g., of one or more condenser coils 136). If dielectric liquid is covering all or a portion of the surface area of the condenser 104, its available surface area is reduced and, in turn, the performance of the condenser is reduced. Consequently, it is desirable to prevent the dielectric liquid that projects outwardly from the chassis 102 from landing on the condenser 104 and reducing its available surface area and performance.
The deflector 103 may include a deflector surface 128 configured to block or impede liquid that is projected from the chassis 102 toward the condenser 104. In some examples, the deflector 103 may be a plate or barrier. The deflector 103 may be angled as shown in
The electronic devices 101 may be positioned within an electronic device region 125 in the immersion tank 106, as shown in
The deflector 103 may be mounted at any suitable location in an interior volume of the immersion tank 106. In the example shown in
The deflector 103 may include an internal fluid passageway 140, as shown in
The invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. The foregoing embodiments, therefore, are to be considered in all respects illustrative rather than limiting the invention described herein. Scope of the invention is thus indicated by the appended claims, rather than by the foregoing description, and all changes that come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are intended to be embraced therein.
This application claims priority to U.S. Patent Application No. 63/299,961, filed on Jan. 15, 2022, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63299961 | Jan 2022 | US |