Abstract:
A liquid cooling block consisting essentially of carbon for use with electric devices generating heat, comprising in combination; the cooling block contains grain in substantially normal orientation to the heat transfer surface between the cooling block and the electric device; a chamber with a bottom wall having prismatic projections for surface increase; the coolant is injected into the center of the cooling chamber and moves centrifugally towards block outlet channels in heat transfer relation with said projections; and, wherein the cooling block communicates with a cooler receiving coolant from the outlet channels of the liquid cooling block.

Description:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION 
     This application claims priority from provisional application Ser. No. 60/900,111 filed Feb. 8, 2007. 
    
    
     FIELD OF THE INVENTION 
     The evolution of electronic devices to more compact form factors and, specifically, the migration of semiconductor manufacturing to smaller design processes have increased the power densities of modern semiconductors orders of magnitude above that of older designs. Some of the areal power density increase is offset by reduced supply voltages and concurrent reduction in operating current. However, modern semiconductors also operate at much higher frequencies than their predecessors, which counteracts the savings stemming from lower voltages. Power density is equivalent to areal heat dissipation; as a result, the trend towards compact, high speed integrated circuits (ICs) results in higher thermal loads and, by extension, increasing challenges for cooling solutions. 
     An ideal objective for any cooling device is to maintain a uniform temperature distribution across the entire heat transfer surface. Uniform temperature distribution is also known as isothermicity and the preferred way of approaching this is to move heat as quickly and efficiently as possible from the source to any other part of the cooler. Compared to passive heat transfer through any solid material, active transport provides much higher efficacy of heat transport. A well-established example is the liquid cooling systems of combustion engines, where heat is taken up by water, which is pumped away from the engine to a remote radiator where the heat is then released into the environment. In the case of electronic devices, liquid cooling has been used in specialty designs but has not received general acceptance in mainstream consumer devices. Primary reasons for the lack of general acceptance comprise, among other factors, the inherent risk for spills, limited life expectancy of pumps, the cost overhead, the complexity of installation which includes routing of tubing and the configuration of more or less bulky radiators. 
     Any cooling system can only be as efficient as the primary interface responsible for the removal of thermal energy from the source. In the case of electronics, it appears as if the highest efficiency could be achieved by direct immersion of the semiconductor into the coolant. However, for all practical purposes, in the consumer space, this may not be a viable solution because of the reasons mentioned above. A more feasible solution entails a self-contained, sealed system. Sealed systems, on the other hand rely on the efficiency of the thermal interface between the semiconductor die and the coolant. In that particular area, certain solutions that have been proposed, are based on use of waterblocks machined from copper or silver. However, even copper or silver has a relatively low thermal conductivity compared to carbon structures, for example diamonds. Diamonds, on the other hand are not only too expensive for mainstream cooling devices, they are also close to impossible to machine into a suitable form. The recent discovery of carbon nanotubes and the exploration of their structural and thermal properties offer alternative possibilities for relatively inexpensive waterblocks, with high thermal exchange rates. 
     DESCRIPTION OF RELATED ART 
     Microchannels for fluid cooling have been established for several decades since the original work by Tuckerman and Pease as outlined in U.S. Pat. No. 4,450,472. The preferred embodiment featured microchannels integrated into the die of the microchip to be cooled and coolant chambers. U.S. Pat. No. 5,801,442 describes a similar apparatus. Subsequent inventions have concerned phase change designs with microchannels used for condensation, as outlined in U.S. Pat. No. 6,812,563. U.S. Pat. No. 6,934,154 describes a related two phase approach including an enhanced interface between the die and the heat spreader, based on a flip-chip design and the use of thermal interface material. U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,991,024, 6,942,015 and 6,785,134 describe electroosmotic pump mechanisms and vertical channels for increased efficiency of heat transfer. Variations of the microchannel design include vertical stacking of different orientational channel blocks as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,675,875, flexible microchannel designs using patterned polyimide sheets as taught in U.S. Pat. No. 6,904,966 and integrated heating/cooling pads for thermal regulation as devised in U.S. Pat. No. 6,692,700. 
     Related art concerns the manufacturing of microchannels. U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,000,684, 6,793,831, 6,672,502, and 6,989,134, as representative examples, describe formation of microchannels by sawing, stamping, crosscutting, laser drilling, soft lithography, injection molding, electrodeposition, microetching, photoablation chemical micromachining, electrochemical micromachining, through mask electrochemical micromachining, plasma etching, water jet, abrasive water jet, electrodischarge machining (EDM), pressing, folding, twisting, stretching, shrinking, deforming and combinations thereof. An alternative method is taught in U.S. Pat. No. 7,048,723 using interconnected hollow micro-needles to establish a network. U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,793,831 and 6,672,502 describe materials used for the manufacturing of these microchannels as metals with high conductivity such as copper, aluminum, nickel or titanium, or alloys. A different method uses polycrystalline silicon as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,992,382. 
     SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION 
     The present invention concerns provision of a cooling device utilizing the thermal transfer characteristics of carbon for enhanced heat removal from a semiconductor. Carbon is used for the construction of a water-block of a fluid cooling device, which serves as the interface between the semiconductor surface and the actual heat spreader or cooler. In short, the water block comprises a composite assembly with a base plate made from carbon containing vertical grains, with notches machined or formed with substantially acute angularity to the normal direction of the plate for surface increase, an intermediate structure containing fluid channels and a supporting structure that attaches to the heat spreader. In one embodiment, the coolant flows down through the center of the water block and then flows in centrifugal direction along the base plate to return to the heat spreader through peripheral collecting channels. The top surface of the carbon block is plated to allow for its soldering or attachment to a copper-based radiator through which the coolant is pumped and which dissipates the thermal energy to the environment. 
     Another embodiment uses a micro machined, opposite-end system of hierarchical channels, in which the intake branches out into a manifold of several generations of daughter branches, forming a capillary network over the heat source. The network continues into a substantially mirror-symmetric arrangement of channels converging into the outflow. 
     A third embodiment uses the opposite-end design of the water block in combination with a radiator manufactured or formed primarily from carbon rather than copper. Typically, the radiator contains a cavity defined by upper and lower plates running substantially in parallel relation with a mesh confined therebetween of roughly the same thickness as the cavity&#39;s height bonded in a thermally conductive manner to both plates. The interstices between the wires of the mesh, and between the mesh and the plates, form a secondary network of micro channels for fluid movement therein. The presence of the mesh increases the contact surface of the radiator in the fluid and thereby, the heat exchange rate between the radiator walls and the fluid. 
     UTILITY OF THE INVENTION 
     Important advantages of the invention can be summarized as follows: 
     a) optimized heat transfer from the heat source to the coolant; 
     b) notches in acute angle orientation to the ingrain of the carbon orientation increase surface area exposure to coolant, while maintaining largely constant thermal dissipation across the surface area; 
     c) advantageous scalability into large-scale cooling devices; 
     d) cost effectiveness because of inexpensive materials; 
     e) use of inert materials that are not prone to corrosion by coolant under extreme thermal conditions; 
     f) materials are saved, with environmental advantage. 
     These and other objects and advantages of the invention, as well as the details of an illustrative embodiment, will be more fully understood from the following specification and drawings, in which: 
    
    
     
       DRAWING DESCRIPTION 
         FIG. 1  shows a liquid cooler for an integrated circuit made of copper and containing a mesh for heat transfer from the liquid to the cooler walls. The cooler is soldered to a carbon-based water block containing vertically oriented grain. The coolant is injected centrally into the cooling chamber—in this case, using a centrifugal pump with a hollow shaft—and is driven towards the peripherally located outlet channels by the centrifugal rotor. The surface of the coolant chamber is machined to contain prismatic protrusions; 
         FIG. 2   a  shows a hierarchical channel system with opposite end intake and outflow as another embodiment of a carbon based liquid cooling block; 
         FIG. 2   b  shows a different variation of a hierarchical fluid channel system; 
         FIG. 2   c  shows an interleaved channel system in dual planes in which the channel-arrangement of the two planes is significant; 
         FIG. 3  shows the dual-plane carbon block attached to a copper cooler containing meshes for enhanced heat transfer. The carbon-based liquid cooling block comprises three plates, wherein the bottom and middle plates are machined to contain hierarchical channel systems. Alternatively, the top plate can be omitted for direct mounting of a composite channel liquid coolant block on the copper cooler;  FIGS. 3   a  and  3   b  show block plates, superimposed in  FIG. 3   c .    
         FIG. 4  shows a dual-plane, interleaved channel, liquid cooling block integrated into a fully carbon-based cooler containing meshes for enhanced heat transfer. The grain is oriented preferentially in normal direction to the surface of the device to be cooled.  FIGS. 4   a  and  4   b  show carbon block plates superimposed in  FIG. 4   c .    
     
    
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION 
     As shown in  FIG. 1 , a preferred waterblock  10  is used in a sealed liquid cooling device  11 . The waterblock is typically manufactured from carbon with a preferred orientation of the ingrain of the block nanotubes extending substantially normal in direction to the surface  12   a  of the semiconductor  12  to be cooled. Because thermal conductivity closely follows the orientation of the nanotubes, this orientation is advantageous for rapid removal of heat across the material. However, also because of the preferred direction of thermal conductivity in longitudinal alignment with the axial direction of the nanotubes, relatively little lateral spread of the thermal energy occurs. While this may appear disadvantageous for a conventional, passive cooling device, it allows concentration of the thermal release in sharply defined areas, which, in turn allows very effective heat removal through active fluid transport. 
     Typically, the “outer” surface  10   a  of the waterblock bottom plate  10   b  that is in contact with the semiconductor  12  to be cooled is machined or formed to provide as much contact with the semiconductor as possible. Examples encompass mirror-polishing of both the top surface layer of the semiconductor and of the opposing bottom surface  10   a  of the waterblock. 
     In one embodiment, the inner “surface”  10   c  of the waterblock bottom plate  10   b  is machined or formed to expose prism-like projections  14  extending into the fluid chamber  15 . Because of the high conductivity of the carbon material, these prisms typically have surfaces  14   a  that form acute angles with their axial direction with only negligible loss in thermal conductance between the shortest and the longest parts of the prisms laterally. At the same time, however, the surface area exposed to the cooling fluid is greatly increased and, moreover, the projections or extrusions cause coolant micro-turbulences in the fluid flowing generally radially as indicated by arrows  100 . Such micro-turbulences prevent laminar flow of the coolant across the bottom of the chamber that would negatively affect the heat exchange between the block material chamber and the fluid. 
     In this embodiment, a pump indicated by rotor  18  injects coolant to flow at  16  more or less into the center of the chamber from where it takes a centrifugal i.e. radial flow path or paths  100  across the prismatic bottom surface  10   c  towards the periphery  19  and then into outflow axial channels  20  leading into a radiator  21 . The radiator is preferably a micro mesh-based isothermal plate and mesh assembly  22 . The bottom plate  10   b ′ can be a separate part of the assembly or part of the monolithic block  10 . The top surface of the carbon-based waterblock is plated at  24  to allow a soldered connection to copper- or aluminum-based radiator  21 . Coolant return flow is indicated by arrows  50  and  51 , in radiator  21 . A pump motor  26  is located within  10 , and has a hollow shell  27  to pump flow  16 . 
     A second embodiment of the carbon-based waterblock uses opposite-end orientation of the fluid intake and outlet as in  FIG. 2   a . In this case, a primary intake  39 , or inlet channel, supplies fluid to the carbon water block  40 , inside of which it branches out at  40   a  into a hierarchical system  40   b  of several generations of daughter channels. As seen in  FIG. 2   a  the end branches form a dense capillary network  40   c  over the targeted surface opposed to the heat source, i.e. electric device. The capillary network then converges at  40   d  in reverse order to a main outlet  41 , or outlet channel, that feeds into a radiator or heat exchanger as at  21  above, in the form of an isothermal plate. Such a channel system is usable instead of, or supplementing, projections  14 . As in the previous embodiment, the top surface of the carbon-based waterblock is plated to allow for a soldered connection with a copper or aluminum-based radiator. See also  FIGS. 2   b  and  2   c  configurations. 
     A third embodiment of the invention uses a waterblock in combination with an isothermal plate containing micro-channels wherein the entire cooling structure is manufactured from carbon. A pump can be integrated into the design or used as an external pump. 
     A variation as seen in  FIG. 3  of the second and third embodiments uses two parallel planes of hierarchical water channels  50 ′ and  51 ′, in carbon block  54  which takes advantage of the fact that especially with carbon blocks containing primarily unidirectional grain, as indicated by vertical lines, heat conductivity is very little attenuated by increased layer thickness, at least within the range relevant for this invention. Two sets of separated coolant channels are machined out of base plates  55  and  56  in a complementary pattern. That is, the branching coolant channels  57  in one plate overlap with the walls and branching channels  58  in the other plate, and vice versa as at  52 ,  53 ,  52   a  and  53   a.  See also  FIG. 3   c . Through this type of interleaved parallel plane channel system, the area coverage can be greatly increased while maintaining mechanical stability of the components. Mirror-polishing of the contact areas between the two superimposed plates, also warrants high thermal transfer between them. A heat conductive metal (such as copper) cooler  70  fits over the carbon block  54 , as via a top carbon plate  71 , and receives heated fluid in channels  72 and  73 . Flow from block channels  57  and  58  passes at  74  into cooler lower channel  72 , and then to cooler upper channel  73 , and then edgewise through heat transfer mesh  77 , to return at  78  to parallel plane channels  57  and  58 . A highly compact efficient system is thus provided. 
       FIG. 4  shows a similar dual-plane, interleaved channel, liquid cooling block  60  integrated into a fully carbon-based cooler that contains meshes  61  for enhanced heat transfer. Thus, the meshes  61  and channels  50 ′ and  51 ′ are contained in the carbon block  60 . The die to be cooled is indicated at  66 . The grain is oriented preferentially in normal direction to the surface of the device to be cooled. Channels  57 ′ and  58 ′ are like channels  57  and  58 , in block plates  55 ′ and  56 ′, like plates  55  and  56 . 
     Also in  FIGS. 3 and 4 , coolant flow pumps may be provided in series with channels shown; see also channel system details.