The invention is directed, in general, to a thermoelectric module.
Thermoelectric modules (TEMs) are a class of semiconductor-based devices that may be used to, e.g., heat or cool an object, or may be used to generate power when placed in contact with a hot object. Generally, semiconductor pellets of alternating doping type are arranged in series electrically and in parallel thermally. As current flows through the pellets, one side of the TEM becomes colder, and the other warmer. Conversely, when placed in a thermal gradient, the TEM may drive a current through a load. TEMs have been used to cool a device, or to maintain an operating temperature with the aid of a feedback control loop.
The invention provides an apparatus including a body containing a vapor chamber and having first and opposing second major surfaces, and a thermoelectric module having first and opposing second major surfaces. The second major surface of the body is in thermal contact with the first major surface of the thermoelectric module. A heat sink has a first major surface in thermal contact with the second major surface of the thermoelectric module. The thermoelectric module is configured to control a flow of heat between the body and the heat sink.
Another embodiment is a method that includes providing a body containing a vapor chamber and having first and opposing second major surfaces, a thermoelectric module having first and opposing second major surfaces and a heat sink having a first major surface. The first major surface of the thermoelectric module is placed in thermal contact with the second major surface of the body. The first major surface of the heat sink is placed in thermal contact with the second major surface of the thermoelectric module. The method includes configuring the thermoelectric module to control a flow of heat between the body and the heat sink.
Another embodiment is a system including a body containing a vapor chamber and having first and opposing second major surfaces. A thermoelectric module has first and opposing second major surfaces. The second major surface of the body is in thermal contact with the first major surface of the thermoelectric module. A heat sink has a first major surface in thermal contact with the second major surface of the thermoelectric module. A device configured to produce heat is in thermal contact with the first major surface of the body. The thermoelectric module is configured to control a flow of heat between the device and the heat sink.
For a more complete understanding of the invention, reference is now made to the following descriptions taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
In the past, designers have placed a heat sink and a body containing a vapor chamber in direct thermal contact. As used herein, thermal contact refers to significant conduction of heat between two bodies or between one body and a cooling medium. Incidental or trivial heat transfer to air, e.g., is explicitly excluded from the usage of the term. Moreover, the term includes thermal coupling between two bodies that are separated by a thermally conducting layer, such as a thermal coupling aid (e.g., thermal grease) or a sufficiently thin insulator. In such designs priority is typically given to minimizing the thermal resistance between the vapor chamber and the heat sink, as evidenced by the common use of a thermally conductive pad or grease between them. But the thermal resistance between the heat sink and the vapor chamber in this configuration is invariant.
In other work, a solid copper heat spreader was attached to a heat-producing device. One heat sink was attached directly to the heat spreader, and another heat sink was attached to a TEM that was in turn attached to the heat spreader. See, e.g., G. L. Solbrekken, et al., “Heat Driven Cooling of Portable Electronics Using Thermoelectric Technology, IEEE Trans. Advanced Packaging, Vol. 31 No, 2, May 2008. Thus, in Solbrekken, cooling of the device included a low thermal-resistance heat transfer path from the device through the solid heat spreader and heat sink to the air. Moreover, the fraction of heat produced by the heat-producing device converted to power was small.
However, the effective size of a solid heat spreader is limited by spreading resistance due to finite lateral thermal conductivity.
The pumping efficiency of a TEM typically is greater when the rate of heat flux (e.g., W/m2) therethrough is lower. Pumping efficiency typically, and as used herein, refers to a rate of heat transfer to or from the device divided by the power supplied to the TEM. Similarly, efficiency of power generation by the TEM refers to the ratio of power produced by the TEM to the heat supplied to it. The limited lateral extent of the effective portion of a solid spreader limits the ability of a designer to achieve a sufficiently low heat flux associated with a desired efficiency.
We have recognized that use of a vapor chamber as a heat spreader, instead of a simple metal slab, between a device and a large TEM or bank of TEMs overcomes the limitations of past practice. In some embodiments, described below, the vapor chamber heat spreader is in thermal contact only with a device and a TEM. This novel configuration provides a significant and unexpected increase in efficiency of the TEM in temperature control and power generation applications.
Use of a vapor chamber instead of a solid heat spreader provides the means to effectively extend the heat flow to include the extremities of a large TEM or bank of TEMs, (e.g., 10× the size of the device or more), and a heat sink attached to the TEM or TEMs. The ability to extend the lateral flow of heat in turn provides a means to reduce heat flow density through the TEM(s) so that the TEM(s) may be operated in a more efficient operating regime. Thus, e.g., generation of waste heat by the TEM may be advantageously reduced in heating or cooling mode, or a greater fraction of power from waste heat in a system may be recovered to produce useful work in the system.
Turning to
As mentioned previously, the efficiency of heat transfer by the TEM 300 decreases with increasing heat flux across the pellets 310, 320. The greater uniformity and lateral extent of heat transfer by the heat spreader 220 provides the ability to scale up the size of the heat spreader to limit the heat flux through the pellets 310, 320 to a value associated with increased efficiency. Because the heat spreader 220 provides much lower spreading resistance, the heat spreader can be made much larger to achieve the desired flux than can be done using the solid heat spreader 120.
Turning to
The major surfaces 422, 424 of the body 420 are the surfaces that collectively include the majority of the outer surface area of the body 420. The major surfaces 432, 434 of the TEM 430 are defined similarly. The first major surface 442 of the heat sink 440 is a substantially smooth surface thereof configurable to place the heat sink 440 in thermal contact with the TEM 430. In some cases the major surfaces are substantially planar to facilitate placing one element, e.g., the body 420, in thermal contact with a neighboring element, e.g., the TEM 430. The major surfaces need not be planar, but could instead be, e.g., curved to conform to the shape of the device 410.
The device 410 may be any device configured to dissipate heat, such as, e.g., an electronic component configured to dissipate power when operating. Without limitation, examples of such devices include power amplifiers, microprocessors, optical amplifiers, and some lasers. Some of such devices may dissipate 100 W or more, and may reach a temperature of 300-400 C.
The wall 510 is lined at least partially with the wick 520. The wick 520 may be, e.g., a porous metal such as sintered copper, metal foam or screen, or an organic fibrous material. When the TEM 430 is configured to cool the device 410, the working fluid evaporates from the wick 520 to a vapor in the vapor chamber 530 and carries energy from the vicinity of the device 410 by virtue of the heat of vaporization associated with the phase change. The vapor diffuses through the vapor chamber 530 and condenses at a liquid-vapor interface on the wick 520 proximate the second major surface 424, thereby transferring the heat of condensation of the working fluid to the larger area of the second major surface 424. The condensed working fluid then cycles in the wick 520 to the region proximate the device 410 by capillary action.
The direction of current flow through the TEM 430 determines which side of the TEM 430 is cooler. Referring to
The difference area 720 can be expressed as Δ2+2ΔL2, where Δ=L1−L2. Above Δ=2L2, the difference area 720 increases about as the square of Δ. Thus, the spreading of the heat from the device 410 rapidly increases as Δ increases above 2L2. A spreading factor is defined as the ratio of the difference area 720 divided by the area 710. In one embodiment, L1 is about seven times L2 or greater, resulting in a spreading factor of at least about 50. In another embodiment, L1 is about 10 times L2 or greater, resulting in a spreading factor of at least about 100. Similar results are obtained for a circular device 410 and body 420.
In another embodiment, heat is transferred between the heat sink 440 and the device 410 while the device is unpowered. For example, the device 410 may be cool prior to being powered, or may be warm after operation. It may be desirable, e.g., to pre-warm an optical device so that it will operate in a calibrated temperature range at startup. The TEM 430 may also operate cooperatively with the body 420 to limit the rate of temperature change when desired. In cases in which the device 410 is warm, e.g., the TEM 430 may be used to thermally insulate the device 410 from the heat sink 440 and/or controlled to remove heat at a slower rate than would occur if the device 410 and the heat sink 440 were thermally coupled by a low resistance path. In cases in which the TEM 430 is configured to transport heat to the device 410, the total power available to heat the device 410 is greater than the power that would be available if the TEM 430 and the device 410 had the same area.
In one embodiment, the external heat flux imposed on individual pellets of the TEM is limited to a value below which the TEM may operate efficiently. For example, the heat flux may be limited to a value below which Joule heating contributes significantly to the heat flux through the TEM. The heat flux may be limited by selecting the area of the first major surface 422 of the body 420 relative to area of the device 410 so that a rate of heat flow through individual pellets 310, 320 does not exceed a maximum value. Efficiency of heat transport is limited in part by dissipation of power in the pellets due to the control current flow. The current causes Joule (I2R) heating in the pellets that adds to the heat that must be extracted from the system and decreases the effectiveness of the pellets 310, 320 at transporting heat.
These competing factors are illustrated in
In some embodiments, the TEM 430 is configured such that qmax is selected to be about equal to a maximum design power dissipation of the device 410. The maximum design power dissipation is the power dissipation expected from the device 410, such as the specified power dissipation of an electronic component at a maximum design voltage. In general, a lower control current through a TEM pellet is associated with greater efficiency of operation of the pellet, and of a TEM assembled from multiple pellets. In some embodiments, the TEM is operated with a current about 50% of Imax or less. In other embodiments, the TEM is operated with a current about 10% of Imax or less. In still other embodiments, the TEM is operated with a current about 5% of Imax or less. In some cases, the TEM is operated with a current about 1% of Imax or less. In general, Imax, ΔTmax and qmax of a particular TEM will depend on the specific design parameters of that TEM.
The performance characteristics of the TEM 430 configured to generate power are similar to those illustrated in
Turning to
A TEM generally experiences bowing due to differential expansion of the hot and cold sides. This effect typically limits the TEM to a maximum footprint of about 2 inches×2 inches, above which the bowing would result in mechanical failure. In an embodiment, multiple TEMs are used to obviate the risk of such mechanical failure. Nine individual TEMs 1010 are shown in the illustrated embodiment, but greater or fewer TEMs could be used as required by a particular design. It should be noted that a solid heat spreader would not in general provide low enough spreading resistance to provide about the same heat flow to the second subset 1010b as the first subset 1010a.
In some embodiments having multiple TEMs in thermal contact with the body 420, each TEM 1010a, 1010b is configured to be in thermal contact with a portion of a heat sink, e.g., the heat sink 440, having localized heat transfer characteristics. For example, the heat sink 440 may have a first portion configured to have a first rate of heat transfer to a cooling medium and a second portion configured to have a second rate of heat transfer to the cooling medium that is greater than the first rate. Such may be the case, e.g., where a peripheral portion of the heat sink 440 has a greater rate of heat transfer to the ambient than does an interior portion. In an embodiment, the TEM 1010a is configured to have a first rate, q, of heat transport over a unit area, and the TEMs 1010b are configured to have a second rate, q+δq, of heat transport over a unit area that is greater than the first rate. Thus, e.g., heat from a heat producing device may be directed to those portions of the heat sink 440 configured to transfer heat to the ambient at a greater rate to increase overall heat flow.
In some cases, TEMs in thermal contact with peripheral portions of a heat sink, e.g., TEMS 1010b, may be configured to operate with a different efficiency than TEMs in thermal contact with the interior portions of the heat sink, e.g., TEMs 1010a. Such may be the case when operation of the TEMS 1010a, 1010b at different heat transfer rates places the operation thereof at different points on the Peltier heat transport characteristic 910. In some cases, the TEMs 1010a, 1010b may be individually controlled electrically in heating and/or cooling modes, to produce different heat transport rates therethrough. Thus, the TEMs 1010a, 1010b may be configured to control a distribution of heat over the first major surface 442 of the heat sink. When configured for power generation, each TEM 1010a, 1010b may be configured, e.g., in series or parallel as desired to result in a desired power/voltage relationship.
Turning to
As discussed earlier, the TEM 430 may be configured to produce electrical power from the waste heat dissipated by the device 410. In the past, the package temperature of electronic devices has generally not exceeded about 100 C. The efficiency of power generation by a TEM is generally relatively low, e.g., less than about 10%. If the temperature of the device 410 is less than 100 C, the efficiency of power conversion using a TEM is typically too low to recover useful amounts of power. However, the efficiency is typically greater when the temperature of the junction at the pellet-electrode interface is higher. Also, the efficiency is expected to be greater when the temperature difference between the warm and cold sides of the TEM is greater.
Some electronic devices, e.g., some emerging power amplifiers based on silicon carbide, are expected to be configured to have an operating temperature ranging from about 350 C to about 400 C. The maximum conversion efficiency of the TEM 430 is expected to be about 5% to 7.5% in the range of 350 C to 400 C assuming, without limitation, a 20 C cold side for current thermoelectric materials with a figure of merit ZT=2αT/(4*k*ρ) of about 0.5, where α is the difference in Seebeck coefficient of p-type and n-type pellets, k is thermal conductivity of the pellets, ρ is electrical resistivity of the pellets and T is temperature in Kelvins. For emerging thermoelectric materials, such as superlattices, e.g., the maximum conversion efficiency is expected to be about 20% in this temperature range. Actual TEMs will in general have different efficiency characteristics. This fraction of recoverable power is considered to be large enough to justify the expense of recovery. Current from the TEM 430 operated in power generating mode may be converted by conventional means to a desired voltage and used in the system where needed.
Turning to
The variable resistance heat transfer device 1230 operates on the principle of changing the volume of a mixture of a noncondensable gas (NCG) such as argon and the vapor of a working fluid in a reservoir 1270 to vary the volume of the pure vapor phase 1280 of the working fluid. Thus the coupling of the TEM 1210 to the heat sink 1220 may be controllably varied.
The variable resistance heat transfer device 1230 provides a means to decrease the thermal resistance between the TEM 1210 and the heat sink 1220 when, e.g., the heat dissipation of the device decreases. In addition, the controlled variability of the thermal contact between the TEM 1210 and the heat sink 1220 may be exploited advantageously. In an embodiment, the variable resistance heat transfer device 1230 is used to coordinate the thermal coupling between the TEM 1210 and the heat sink 1220 with the operational mode of the TEM 1210. Thus, in an embodiment, the coupling is increased when the TEM 1210 is configured to cool the device 1250, and decreased when the TEM 1210 is configured to heat the device 1250.
Those skilled in the art to which the invention relates will appreciate that other and further additions, deletions, substitutions and modifications may be made to the described embodiments without departing from the scope of the invention.