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Michael P. Beck B.S. Chemical Engineering 1999 University of Wisconsin at MadisonB.S. Biochemistry 1999 University of Wisconsin at MadisonMichael.Beck@chbe.gatech.edu
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Advances in microelectronics
require improved heat transfer strategies.
It has been suggested that only forced convection of liquids and/or
phase change will provide adequate heat transfer for high performance electronic
devices. However, heat transfer
characteristics are not the only factors that must be considered for direct
immersion cooling. The primary concern is the chemical compatibility of the
liquid with the chip and packaging materials.
Typical heat transfer liquids such as water may have favorable heat
transfer characteristics, but have unsuitable chemical characteristics. Fluorocarbons are generally considered to be
the most suitable for microelectronics devices, but they have a low thermal
conductivity as well as surface tension.
These thermal and wetting characteristics lead to temperature overshoot,
a common problem in pool boiling.
Adding nanoparticles to fluorocarbons will increase the thermal
conductivity and possibly provide nucleation sites for pool boiling.
A fluid containing dispersed
nanoparticles is referred to as a nanofluid.
In general, solid-liquid mixtures have a higher thermal conductivity
than the liquid alone. Moreover, when the solid consists of nanoparticles, the
increase in thermal conductivity is much higher than a mixture containing
larger particles (greater than 1 mm). An important aspect of nanofluids is the
stability of the dispersion. Brownian
motion keeps the nanoparticles suspended due to their small size. However, flocculation will occur in an
unstable nanofluid which will effectively create larger particles that will
settle from the solution. This would
cause accumulation of solid in a heat exchanger or plugging of
microchannels. Flocculation will also
cause a decreased thermal conductivity since it effectively creates larger
particles.
My work involves mixing the
nanoparticles with a fluid containing a surfactant to ensure stability. These nanofluids are then characterized with
the transient hot wire method to determine the thermal conductivity as well as
TEM to observe the size of the particles.
My focus is on nanofluids that can be used for microelectronic cooling
such as fluorocarbons containing non-polar nanoparticles. I am also attempting to create a model to
predict the increase the thermal conductivity as a function of the particle
size, volume fraction, and thermal conductivities of the individual solid and
liquid.