The research is led by Garimella and Eckhard Groll, a professor of mechanical engineering.
"We feel we have a very good handle on this technology now, but there still are difficulties in implementing it in practical applications," said Garimella, director of the Cooling Technologies Research Center based at Purdue. "One challenge is that it's difficult to make a compressor really small that runs efficiently and reliably."
Findings will be detailed in two papers being presented during the 12th International Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Conference and the 19th International Compressor Engineering Conference on July 14-17 at Purdue. The papers were written by doctoral students Stefan S. Bertsch and Abhijit A. Sathe, Groll and Garimella.
New types of cooling systems will be needed for future computer chips that will likely generate 10 times more heat than today's microprocessors, especially in small "hot spots," Garimella said.
Miniature refrigeration has a key advantage over other cooling technologies, Groll said.
"The best that all other cooling methods can achieve is to cool the chip down to ambient temperature, whereas refrigeration allows you to cool below surrounding temperatures," he said.
The ability to cool below ambient temperature could result in smaller, more powerful computers and also could improve reliability by reducing long-term damage to chips caused by heating.
One complication is that the technology would require many diaphragms operating in parallel to pump a large enough volume of refrigerant for the cooling system.
"So you have an array of 50 or 100 tiny diaphragm compressors, and you can stack them," Groll said.
The researchers conducted laboratory experiments with the diaphragms in Garimella's Thermal Microsystems Lab, developed a computational model for designing the compressor and validated the model with data from the lab. Findings showed that it is feasible to design a prototype system small enough to fit in a laptop, Garimella said.
The model enables the engineers to optimize the design, determining how many diaphragms to use and how to stack them, either parallel to each other or in series.
"If you stack in one direction, you get more pressure rise, and if you stack in the other direction, you get more volume pumped," Groll said.
Learning how to manufacture the devices at low cost is another major challenge, with industry requiring a cost of about $30 each.
"We can't currently produce them at this price, but maybe in the future," Groll said.
Another portion of the research focuses on learning precisely how refrigerant boils and turns into a vapor as it flows along microchannels thinner than a human hair. Such evaporators would be placed on top of computer chips.
Bertsch, the doctoral student who led work to set up experiments at the university's Ray W. Herrick Laboratories, observed how refrigerant boils inside the channels and measured how much heat is transferred by this boiling refrigerant. He also created mathematical equations needed to properly design the miniature evaporators.
"This overall project represents the first comprehensive research to carefully obtain data showing what happens to heat transfer in arrays of microchannels for miniature refrigeration systems and how to design miniature compressors," Garimella said. "Eventually, we will be able to design both the miniature compressors and evaporators."
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Some of the research was performed at the Birck Nanotechnology Center in Purdue's Discovery Park.
The research is funded by the Purdue-based National Science Foundation Cooling Technologies Research Center, a consortium of corporations, university and government laboratories working to overcome heat-transfer obstacles in developing new, compact cooling technologies. Groll's research is based at Herrick Laboratories.
CONTACTS:
- Note to Journalists: Electronic copies of the research papers are available from Emil Venere, (765) 494-4709, venere@purdue.edu
- Writer: Emil Venere, (765) 494-4709, venere@purdue.edu
- Sources:Eckhard Groll, (765) 496-2201, groll@ecn.purdue.edu
- Suresh Garimella, (765) 494-5621, sureshg@ecn.purdue.edu
- Conference Web site: engineering.purdue.edu/Herrick/
- Suresh Garimella: engineering.purdue.edu/ME/People/
- Eckhard Groll: engineering.purdue.edu/ME/People/
- Cooling Technologies Research Center: engineering.purdue.edu/CTRC/
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