Tunalover
Mechanical
- Mar 28, 2002
- 1,179
We have a recurring need to analyze a plate-fin heat sink with forced-air convection but I have not been able to find a manual (or spreadsheet) solution for this seemingly simple problem. The heat sink is basically a constant-cross-section rectangular duct with internal, constant-pitch parallel fins extending from the base to the opposite surface. The heat sink is mounted to a heat source in such a way that it can be assumed that the heat/unit area entering the base is constant. The fins are normal to the base and are of uniform material and thickness. The fins are on the order of .02" thick, the rectangular cross-section on the order of 1" high by 4" wide. The pitch of the fins is on the order of .19". The length is on the order of 6". A fan either pushes air in or pulls it out. I'd be happy to assume that the entrance and exit are hollow ducts with the same cross-section as the heat sink and of sufficient length to provide full-developed flow before and after the heat sink.
We have about 150Watts to reject from the base to the air stream. Am I oversimplifying this or is this harder than it looks? It is surprising that there is no handbook solution available for this exceeding common problem. Thanks in advance for you valuable comments and remarks!
Tunalover
We have about 150Watts to reject from the base to the air stream. Am I oversimplifying this or is this harder than it looks? It is surprising that there is no handbook solution available for this exceeding common problem. Thanks in advance for you valuable comments and remarks!
Tunalover