Multi-sectional heat sinks provide up to 30% higher performance than liquid cooling
20-01-2016 |
ATS
|
Subs & Systems
Advanced Thermal Solutions (ATS) has introduced the QuadFLOW fansink, which
uses directed airflow in multiple fin fields to cool electronic components
up to 30% more effectively than the liquid cooling methods currently
deployed in 1 and 2U commercial servers.
Conventional heat sinks provide large amounts of cooling surface relative to
their volumes. They work well in many applications where space is not an
issue, including multi-U servers and workstations. But where space is highly
constrained, cooling methods that rely on increased surface areas and
airflow rate do not adequately dissipate heat from high power electronic
components. Examples are clouds, virtual routers, SDN and NFV distributed
computing. To cool components at this level, engineers have used
liquid-based systems that perform well, but are costly, bulky, heavy, and
present many points of potential failure while exposing electronics to
liquid.
The new, patented QuadFLOW fansinks are engineered for cooling high power
electronic devices, such as CPUs and GPUs, using air as the coolant. They
are designed to maximize extraction of heat from their integral heat sink
fins. ATS uses its own Multiple Flow Entrance TechnologyT to engineer
several fin fields on the same heat sink base area. These fin fields are not
parallel to each other, but instead are designed to allow airflow to enter
from multiple directions. These airflows reach a central core, where they
are extracted by a blower through the multiple fin fields. Fins can be
straight, curved or shaped with features depending on thermal performance
requirements. The patented QuadFLOW internal wall design prevents any
coupling of airflows between adjacent fin fields.
Cooling performance from QuadFLOW fansinks is near or equal to 0.1oC/W
depending on the configuration deployed. This level of thermal performance
is attributed to the unique design of the fansink's fin field and the plenum
design that houses the blower while providing maximum airflow in each fin
field chamber. Tests show that QuadFLOW fansinks provide a 25-30%
improvement in heat transfer over the liquid cooling systems currently used
on high performance CPUs in 1 and 2U servers, says the company.