Performance analysis of a micro heat exchanger in electronic Cooling applications
1University of Médéa, LME laboratory, 26000, Médéa, Algeria
2Centre de Développement des Énergies Renouvelables (CDER), Unité de Développement des Équipements Solaires (UDES), 42004, Tipaza, Algérie
3CentreUniversitaire de Relizane, 48000, Algérie
4Universitat Rovira i Virgili, Department of Mechanical Engineering, Av. Països Catalans No. 26, 43007 Tarragona, Spain
J Ther Eng 2021; 7(4): 773-790 DOI: 10.18186/thermal.929458
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Abstract

To operate under normal conditions and depending on the technology used, the electronic components must be at a temperature below 80 to 85°C. Several cooling systems were investigated with the aim of improving the heat transfer process in this kind of applications. Single-phase liquid cooling systems, which mainly consist of a hot watercooled micro-heat exchanger, provide an efficient approach to dissipate heat flows. In the present study, numerical and experimental investigations were carried out to study the characteristics of laminar flow and forced convective heat transfer in micro-channels. The inlet temperature of cooling water ranged from 25 to 65°C, the Reynolds number of water flow varied from 250 to 2000, and the electronic power supply component was set at 50, 80 and 120 W. The
results showed that the micro heat exchanger was able to dissipate around 70 to 78% of the heat released by the electronic component. As regards the numerical results, it was observed that the inlet water temperature of 55ºC kept a heat source up to 80 W for a temperature source below the critical value of 80ºC.