neomoses
Mechanical
- Dec 30, 2002
- 9
I'm working on an interesting problem which involves cooling very small areas, specifically electronics components. The current method involves using water circulating through copper heat exchangers (waterblocks). The constraints I must work in demand:
1. small size. Everything must fit within 1 ft^3
2. quiet. cooling equipment will be near people for prolonged periods, so it must be relatively quiet.
3. High heat transfer rates at the waterblock. Currently heat loads can reach above 100 W/cm^2.
4. Low temperature. The temperature of the cooled area should never exceed 50C.
5. Low cost. This limits pump price to around $50-$75 max.
6. low vibration. the pump cannot cause excessive noise or vibrations.
Right now I have been using aquarium pumps to drive the flow. These have all been centrifugal pumps with very simple, straight vane impellers. These are typically high flow, low pressure pumps(around 2500 LPH max flow, 3m max head). To increase the cooling at the waterblock, more pressure is desired. 5-7m head at 700-1200 LPH flow would be a huge improvement. I'm looking at 2 possible avenues.
1. Choose a different style pump.
2. Modify existing pump to deliver higher pressure.
I have been unsuccessful in finding a different style pump that is within this project's price range, so I am looking more into option 2.
is it possible to re-design the impeller of these pumps to deliver more head, possibly at the expense of some flow? I would like to stick with a single impeller if possible, but multiple stages may be necessary.
I know only basics in this area, so if you could help me out with some good textbooks or online references, I would be very thankful.
1. small size. Everything must fit within 1 ft^3
2. quiet. cooling equipment will be near people for prolonged periods, so it must be relatively quiet.
3. High heat transfer rates at the waterblock. Currently heat loads can reach above 100 W/cm^2.
4. Low temperature. The temperature of the cooled area should never exceed 50C.
5. Low cost. This limits pump price to around $50-$75 max.
6. low vibration. the pump cannot cause excessive noise or vibrations.
Right now I have been using aquarium pumps to drive the flow. These have all been centrifugal pumps with very simple, straight vane impellers. These are typically high flow, low pressure pumps(around 2500 LPH max flow, 3m max head). To increase the cooling at the waterblock, more pressure is desired. 5-7m head at 700-1200 LPH flow would be a huge improvement. I'm looking at 2 possible avenues.
1. Choose a different style pump.
2. Modify existing pump to deliver higher pressure.
I have been unsuccessful in finding a different style pump that is within this project's price range, so I am looking more into option 2.
is it possible to re-design the impeller of these pumps to deliver more head, possibly at the expense of some flow? I would like to stick with a single impeller if possible, but multiple stages may be necessary.
I know only basics in this area, so if you could help me out with some good textbooks or online references, I would be very thankful.