zdunolPOL
Chemical
- Dec 24, 2012
- 7
Hello,
we're facing a problem at work regarding thermal contact resistance. We use water heat exchanger to take away heat generated by TEC (Peltier module), about 100W. So the question is basically how should we contact TEC with heatsink so Tec's hotside temperature is the lowest. We tries pure indium sheet (200 um thick) but several problems arise. Firstly Thermal contact resistance (Rc) depends on pressure, second thing is the oxidation of indium with oxygen from air, next thing is Indium's cold welding capabilities, wettability, boiling ponit.
So we did some measurements, we put TEC, indium and heatsink together, pressed it and heated up up to 80degC and left compressed ( about 100kg/36 cm^2 = 140 PSI) and left for a night (heating up was conducted in vacuum). I runned the thermal tests and the results were terrible, I deattached everything from each other and indium was covered with a lot of white residue - it was indium's oxide. So right now we will do the same thing but with no oxygen - in enclosure filled with nitrogen and see what happens.
From thermal point of view i dont think that layer of indium's oxygen would matter in heat transfer due to its low thickness (100 Angstroms max?), but I am more concerned (and more ignorant) about all the mechanical phenomena like contact with surfaces, cold welding (heatsink is made from copper).
so my question is - did anybody tried (and was succesfull) with using indium as thermal interface material? Do you have any other materials which you would recommend (the requirements are pretty stiff - applicable in vacuum, operational temperature about -50degC, absolutely no pumping out or drying out, very resilitent to thermal cycling)? What do you think about this issue with indium's oxide? Do you think we should go above indium boiling point during the assembly?
There is a company - indium dot com which uses indium and its alloys for thermal interface materials, have any of you used their product maybe?
Kind regards,
PZ
we're facing a problem at work regarding thermal contact resistance. We use water heat exchanger to take away heat generated by TEC (Peltier module), about 100W. So the question is basically how should we contact TEC with heatsink so Tec's hotside temperature is the lowest. We tries pure indium sheet (200 um thick) but several problems arise. Firstly Thermal contact resistance (Rc) depends on pressure, second thing is the oxidation of indium with oxygen from air, next thing is Indium's cold welding capabilities, wettability, boiling ponit.
So we did some measurements, we put TEC, indium and heatsink together, pressed it and heated up up to 80degC and left compressed ( about 100kg/36 cm^2 = 140 PSI) and left for a night (heating up was conducted in vacuum). I runned the thermal tests and the results were terrible, I deattached everything from each other and indium was covered with a lot of white residue - it was indium's oxide. So right now we will do the same thing but with no oxygen - in enclosure filled with nitrogen and see what happens.
From thermal point of view i dont think that layer of indium's oxygen would matter in heat transfer due to its low thickness (100 Angstroms max?), but I am more concerned (and more ignorant) about all the mechanical phenomena like contact with surfaces, cold welding (heatsink is made from copper).
so my question is - did anybody tried (and was succesfull) with using indium as thermal interface material? Do you have any other materials which you would recommend (the requirements are pretty stiff - applicable in vacuum, operational temperature about -50degC, absolutely no pumping out or drying out, very resilitent to thermal cycling)? What do you think about this issue with indium's oxide? Do you think we should go above indium boiling point during the assembly?
There is a company - indium dot com which uses indium and its alloys for thermal interface materials, have any of you used their product maybe?
Kind regards,
PZ