The present invention relates to an apparatus and method of preventing cracking of a liquid system, such as may be useful for transferring heat from electronic devices and components thereof. In particular, the invention protects against expansion of fluid during freezing by including a variety of means and objects to protect against expansion of water-based solutions when frozen and by initiating the expansion of frozen fluid in the direction of zones having generally decreasing surface area to volume ratios.
When water or many other liquid mixtures are cooled below their freezing points, the material changes from a liquid state to a solid state, and undergoes a significant expansion in volume. Water that has frozen in pipes or other confined spaces does more than simply clog the pipes and block flow. When freezing occurs in a confined space like a steel pipe, the ice will expand and exert extreme pressure which is often enough to crack the pipe and cause serious damage. This phenomenon is a common failure mode in hot-water heating systems and automotive cooling systems.
Ice forming in a pipe does not always cause cracking where ice blockage occurs. Rather, following a complete ice blockage in a pipe, continued freezing and expansion inside the pipe can cause water pressure to increase downstream. The increase in water pressure leads to pipe failure and/or cracking. Upstream from the ice blockage the water can retreat back towards its inlet source, and there is little pressure buildup to cause cracking.
Liquid cooling systems for electronic devices are occasionally subjected to sub-freezing environments during shipping, storage, or in use. Since these systems are going to be frozen on occasion, they must be designed to tolerate the expansion of water when frozen. Additives, such as antifreeze, are potentially poisonous and flammable and can damage mechanical components, sensitive sensors, and electronics, which is why pure or substantially pure water is typically the coolant of choice.
What is needed is an apparatus for and method of preventing cracking in a liquid cooling system that can tolerate a predetermined level of freezing and expansion inside confined spaces without damaging electronic components or affecting system performance.
The present invention protects components and pipes of a liquid cooling system from cracking related to an expansion of volume due to freezing of the fluid within the system. In particular, one aspect of the present invention provides an apparatus for and method of controlling freezing nucleation and propagation in a liquid system having one or more components coupled and characterized by a plurality of surface area to volume ratios so that when freezing occurs, the fluid expands from an initial zone having a highest surface area to volume ratio in the direction of one or more zones having progressively decreasing surface area to volume ratios. Thus, one aspect of the present invention manages and designs surface area to volume ratios of one or more components as well as regions within the components, including heat exchangers, inlet and outlet ports and tubular members, so that when freezing occurs, the volume expands in the direction that can accept the expanded volume. Additionally, another aspect of the present invention provides an apparatus and method for forming a liquid cooling system that utilizes size and volume reducing means, air pockets, compressible objects, and flexible objects to protect against expansion of water-based solutions when frozen. In such a system, pipes, pumps, and heat exchangers are designed to prevent cracking of their enclosures and chambers.
In one aspect, an apparatus for preventing cracking of a liquid system is disclosed. The apparatus includes an enclosure and a compressible object. The enclosure is configured to have multiple zones of different freeze susceptibilities and to cause freezing to begin in a high freeze susceptibility zone and for a freeze front to advance from the high freeze susceptibility zone toward a low freeze susceptibility zone through one or more zones of progressively decreasing freeze susceptibility. The compressible object is immersed in a zone of lower freeze susceptibility than the high freeze susceptibility zone.
In another aspect, another apparatus for preventing cracking of a liquid system is disclosed. The apparatus includes an enclosure and a pressure relief area. The enclosure is configured to have multiple zones of different surface area to volume ratios and to cause freezing to begin in a high surface area to volume ratio zone and for a freeze front to advance from the high surface area to volume ratio zone toward a low surface area to volume ratio zone. The pressure relief area is positioned within the enclosure and in a zone other than the high surface area to volume ratio zone. The pressure relief area can be a compressible object.
In yet another aspect, a freeze-tolerant heat exchanger is disclosed. The heat exchanger includes a micro-structured heat exchange region having a first freeze susceptibility, a manifold region configured to have a second freeze susceptibility so that fluid within the manifold region freezes later than fluid within the micro-structured heat exchange region, and a fluid input region including a compressible object and configured to have a third freeze susceptibility so that fluid within the fluid input region freezes later than fluid within the manifold region, wherein the heat exchanger is configured so that a freeze front advances from the micro-structured heat exchange region towards the compressible object. The micro-structured region can include one or more of microchannels, microporous foam, and pseudo-foam.
In another aspect, a method of preventing cracking of a liquid system is disclosed. The system includes a pump and a heat exchanger. The method includes configuring the system to have multiple zones of different surface area to volume ratios and to cause freezing to begin in a high surface area to volume ratio zone and to advance towards a low surface area to volume ratio zone. The method also includes providing an enclosure fluidly coupled to the system at a zone other than the high surface area to volume ratio zone, and placing a compressible object in the enclosure.
Reference will now be made in detail to the preferred and alternative embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. While the invention will be described in conjunction with the preferred embodiments, it will be understood that they are not intended to limit the invention to these embodiments. On the contrary, the invention is intended to cover alternatives, modifications and equivalents, which may be included within the spirit and scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims. Furthermore, in the following detailed description of the present invention, numerous specific details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the present invention. However, it should be noted that the present invention may be practiced without these specific details. In other instances, well known methods, procedures and components have not been described in detail as not to unnecessarily obscure aspects of the present invention.
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As fluid temperature drops below freezing, ice forms into a blockage. The rate at which ice forms depends on the rate at which the fluid cools, which depends at least in part on a surface area to volume ratio. Continued growth of ice in areas of the system 100 can lead to excessive fluid pressure. The resulting pressure can rupture or damage individual elements, such as the lengths 110, 112, 114 of tubing, channels in the heat exchangers 20 and 40, and/or chambers inside the pump 30. As will be explained and understood in further detail below, the individual elements must be designed in a way that tolerates expansion of the fluid or water when frozen.
During freezing, the fluid expands from a zone having the highest surface area to volume ratio in the direction of one or more zones having progressively decreasing surface area to volume ratios. It will be appreciated that the heat exchanger 200, including the tubular members 210 and 260, can include many zones each with a different surface area to volume ratio. The zone surface area to volume ratio of adjacent zones progressively decreases from the heat exchanger 200 in the direction of the tubular members 210 and 260; the zone surface area to volume ratio decreases in the following order of zones: 1>2>3B>4B and 1>2>3A>4A. In this embodiment, the tubular members 210 and 260 are designed to accommodate the necessary volume expansion.
The tubular members 210 and 260 preferably include compliant materials to accommodate an expanded volume equivalent to at least the cumulative change in volume of the freezing liquid in the system. Preferably, the tubular members 210 and 260 have elasticity sufficient to expand outwardly to accommodate the volume expansion caused by the freezing of the fluid. Alternatively, the one or more compressible objects (not shown) can be coupled to the tubular member 210 and 260 wherein pressure exerted on the compressible object by the freezing fluid increases a volume of the tubular members 210 and 260. Preferably, the compressible objects (not shown) are confined within the tubular member and can be made of closed cell sponge, closed cell foam, air-filled bubbles, sealed tubes, balloons and/or encapsulated in a hermetically sealed package. The package can be made of metallic material, metallized plastic sheet material, or plastic material. The plastic materials can be selected from teflon, mylar, nylon, a laminate of CTFE and PE, PET, PVC, PEN or any other suitable package. Other types of compressible objects can be used. The sponge and foam can be hydrophobic.
In another embodiment, at least one air pocket (not shown) can be disposed in the tubular members 210 and 260 wherein the air pocket (not shown) accommodates the expansion by the freezing fluid. Alternatively, at least one flexible object (not shown) is coupled to the tubular members 210 and 260 wherein pressure exerted on the flexible object (not shown) by the freezing fluid increases a volume of the tubular members 210 and 260. The flexible object (not shown) is preferably secured within the tubular member and made of one of the following: rubber, plastic, and foam. It will be appreciated that additional compliant materials may also be employed to withstand the expansion of freezing fluid.
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As mentioned before, ice forming in a confined space does not typically cause a break where initial ice blockage occurs. Rather, following a complete ice blockage in a confined space, continued freezing and expansion inside the confined space cause fluid pressure to increase downstream. The fluid pressure will reach a maximum at a last location to freeze in a hermetically sealed system. The pressure can be very large, unless there is a trapped air pocket in that region. Thermal design of the chambers 82 and 84 can be altered to select a location where the fluid begins to freeze, and to arrange for freezing to start from one location and advance continuously towards an air pocket at another location. For example, if there is an air pocket at the top surface of a chamber, the fluid should be nucleated at the bottom surface of the chamber. As the fluid begins to freeze at the bottom surface of the chamber, ice expansion displaces water and compresses the air pocket. Since air is easily compressible, the chamber can freeze completely without generating large forces at any location in the chamber.
To arrange a location of initial freezing in the chamber, it may be necessary to provide a thermal path from the location of initial freezing to its surroundings. As the fluid or chamber is cooled from above a freezing point, the thermal path serves to efficiently reject thermal energy stored in the location. For example, an optional metallic insert 288 is mounted from the location of initial freezing in the chamber to the top surface of the chamber would serve. Preferably, the metallic insert 288 is formed of a material that will not contaminate the fluid, such as copper. Alternatively, locally increasing the surface to volume ratio of the chamber or reducing package insulation in the chamber could also work as a replacement for the metallic insert 288. A critical factor is use of any material or structure that assists a particular location become cold fastest, and so that progression of freezing is continuous from that location to the air pockets 85 and 87 of
In some cases, it may be difficult to control the positioning and location of the air pockets 85 and 87 in the chambers 82 and 84. Further, it may be difficult to dispose an air pocket in each chamber of the system 100 (
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The objects 95 and 97 can be comprised of a compressible material, such as an open-cell or closed-cell foam, rubber, sponge, air-filled bubbles, elastomer, or any related material, and a protective layer covering all surfaces of the compressible material. A purpose of having the protective layer is to prevent contact between the compressible material and a surrounding fluid. The protective layer can be formed by many means, including wrapping and sealing, dip-coating, spray-coating, or other similar means. The protective layer can be a vacuum laminated cover, such as a spray-on layer, a deposited layer, or a layer formed by reacting or heating surfaces of the compressible material. In addition, it is possible to form a protective layer on the surface of the compressible material by thermally fusing, melting, or chemically modifying the surface. The protective layer can be flexible enough so that a volume of the compressible material can be reduced by pressure. In order to achieve this degree of flexibility, the protective layer can be much thinner than the compressible material. Further, the protective layer can be formed from a material that is not chemically attacked by the fluid used in the cooling system, or degraded by temperature cycles above and below freezing. The protective layer can be hermetically sealed so that gas cannot enter or leave the volume within the protective layer. The protective layer can be formed from a variety of materials, including teflon, mylar, polyethylene, nylon, PET, PVC, PEN or any other suitable plastic, and can additionally include metal films on interior or exterior surfaces to improve hermeticity. In addition, the protective layer can be a metallized plastic sheet material, as used in potato chip packaging, and can serve as an impervious layer, blocking all gas and liquid diffusion. Furthermore, in cases where occasional bubbles are moving through the cooling system, as when an electroosmotic pump is generating hydrogen and oxygen gas bubbles, the protective layer can be hydrophilic to help reduce the possibility that the bubbles will attach to the surfaces.
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In addition to the use of size and volume reducing means, air pockets, compressible objects, and flexible objects discussed above, other techniques can be used to prevent cracking in a liquid cooling system, as would be recognized by one of ordinary skill in the art. For example, as shown in
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The predetermined level of fluid expansion can be between five to twenty-five percent. The flexible objects are preferably spaced apart a predetermined distance. Additionally, the flexible objects are preferably capable of contracting and expanding between a minimum volume condition and a maximum volume condition. The pump can be electro-osmotic. The housing can include rigid plates. Furthermore, the flexible objects can be fastened to the rigid plates. The flexible objects can be made of rubber, plastic or foam.
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As the fluid or chamber is cooled from above a freezing point, the thermal path serves to efficiently reject heat stored in the location. For example, an optional metallic insert 430 is mounted from the location of initial freezing in the chamber to the top surface of the chamber would serve. Preferably, the metallic insert 430 is formed of a material that will not contaminate the fluid such as copper. A critical factor is use of any material or structure that assists a particular location become cold fastest, and so that progression of freezing is continuous from that location to the expanded end portions 407 of the chambers. The combination of having hourglass-shaped chambers and the metallic insert 430 allows for freezing to initiate at the narrowed middle or central portion 405 of the hourglass-shaped chambers and expand outward to the expanded end portions 407, where liquid can be further displaced at the inlet, outlet, or both, or a volume accommodating structure can be implemented at the expanded end portions 407 as described above.
In the above-described embodiments, the present invention is applied to a pump or a housing having an inlet chamber and an outlet chamber. Alternatively, the present invention may be applied to any enclosure in a liquid cooling system. The liquid cooling system preferably includes an electro-osmotic pump and a heat exchanger. As such, the size and volume reducing means, the air pockets, the compressible objects, and the compressible objects can be applied to any or each enclosure in the system, including tubing, of the liquid cooling system.
The present invention has been described in terms of specific embodiments incorporating details to facilitate the understanding of the principles of construction and operation of the invention. Such reference herein to specific embodiments and details thereof is not intended to limit the scope of the claims appended hereto. It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that modification s may be made in the embodiment chosen for illustration without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
This patent application is a continuation-in-part of the co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 11/049,202, filed on Feb. 1, 2005, and titled “METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR CONTROLLING FREEZING NUCLEATION AND PROPAGATION,” which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of the U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/577,262, filed on Jun. 4, 2004, and titled “MULTIPLE COOLING TECHNIQUES,” both of which are hereby incorporated by reference. Also, this patent application is a continuation-in-part of the co-pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 10/643,641, filed on Aug. 18, 2003, and titled “REMEDIES TO PREVENT CRACKING IN A LIQUID SYSTEM,” which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. § 119(e) of the U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/444,269, filed on Jan. 31, 2003, and titled “REMEDIES FOR FREEZING IN CLOSED-LOOP LIQUID COOLING FOR ELECTRONIC DEVICES,” both of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60577262 | Jun 2004 | US | |
60444269 | Jan 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 11049202 | Feb 2005 | US |
Child | 11977797 | US | |
Parent | 10643641 | Aug 2003 | US |
Child | 11049202 | US |