FLEXIBLE MODULAR HIERARCHICAL ADAPTIVELY CONTROLLED ELECTRONIC-SYSTEM COOLING AND ENERGY HARVESTING FOR IC CHIP PACKAGING, PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARDS, SUBSYSTEMS, CAGES, RACKS, IT ROOMS, AND DATA CENTERS USING QUANTUM AND CLASSICAL THERMOELECTRIC MATERIALS
A system for adaptive cooling and energy harvesting comprising at least one thermoelectric device capable of acting as a thermoelectric cooler and as a thermoelectric generator, a hierarchical multiple-level control system, and electronics controlled by the control system and connected to the thermoelectric device. The electronics selectively configure the thermoelectric device in at least in a thermoelectric cooler operating mode and in a thermoelectric generation operating mode. The thermoelectric device can incorporate quantum-process and quantum-well materials for higher heat transfer and thermoelectric generation efficiencies. The invention provides for thermoelectric devices to additionally operate in temperature sensing mode. The hierarchical control system can comprise a plurality of control system, each of which can operate in isolation and can be interconnected with additional subsystems associated with other hierarchical levels. The hierarchical control system can comprise linear (additive) control, bilinear (additive and multiplicative) control, nonlinear control, and hysteresis.
This application is a continuation application of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/458,771, filed Mar. 14, 2017, which is a continuation application of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/669,436, filed Nov. 5, 2012, now U.S. Pat. No. 9,605,881, issued Mar. 28, 2017, which is a continuation application of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/385,411, filed Feb. 16, 2012, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 61/443,701, filed Feb. 16, 2011, the disclosures of all of which are incorporated herein in their entireties by reference.
COPYRIGHT & TRADEMARK NOTICESA portion of the disclosure of this patent document may contain material, which is subject to copyright protection. Certain marks referenced herein may be common law or registered trademarks of the applicant, the assignee or third parties affiliated or unaffiliated with the applicant or the assignee. Use of these marks is for providing an enabling disclosure by way of example and shall not be construed to exclusively limit the scope of the disclosed subject matter to material associated with such marks.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONIn the normal course of operation, the electronic Integrated Circuit (“IC”) chips that are comprised by computer hardware generate heat. In CMOS and related technologies, the heat generation is a function of the rate of state transitions per unit time, so as software tasks are handled there are frequent, rapid increases and decreases of emitted heat from a given chip as computers operate. Additionally, as heat builds up in CMOS and other semiconductor devices, leakage currents typically increase, creating yet more heat.
Data CentersThe amount of heat generated is considerable even when only one computer is involved. In the case of server farms and other data centers the heat generation problem assumes vast proportions. Most of the heat in data centers is removed by costly and relatively inefficient means that also consumes yet more energy and generates yet more heat. Unlike many industrial processes where waste heat is harnessed for site-based energy reuse of power-cogeneration, most of the heat in data centers is simply dissipated into the environment.
Providing a cost-effective, efficient and practical solution to this IC-chip and electronic component generated heat is therefore crucial. As cloud computing, search, download, and other network services radically increase centralized computing demands, creating needs for computation and data centers to becoming larger and larger, the need for massive facilities increases, causing the magnitude of the heat generation problem to become increasingly urgent.
The increasing demand and trend to ever-larger and more robust computer data centers necessitates that the industry practice of utilizing cheap, passive traditional thermal design be replaced with more advanced thermal technologies.
Leveraging Data-Center Turn-Over to Rapidly Introduce Cooling and Energy Harvesting Technologies into Data Centers
Fortuitously, new inventions (such as the present invention) that address these problems all or in part can conveniently take reliance upon Moore's Law (which observes that approximately every 18 months computer power doubles while the cost roughly halves) and ongoing changes in computer server architecture. The resulting combined forces of natural degradation and functional obsolescence force computer hardware (data center hardware in particular) to naturally be replaced or upgraded on a periodic basis. As each hardware replacement cycle brings in new computer hardware, this allows new cooling technologies to be introduced.
Approaches to Reduce Heat Production in Integrated Circuit OperationA large number and wide variety of approaches are currently under research, development, and deployment to reduce heat production in integrated circuit operation. A brief survey of these very active areas can be found in [1], Chapter 1, and the material there is summarized in the list below:
Dynamic Power Consumption
-
- Reducing Capacitance
- Reducing Switching Activity
- Reducing Clock Frequency
- Reducing Supply Voltage
Static Power Consumption
-
- Leakage currents arise from the flow current across a transistor even when the transistor is in an OFF state.
- Gate-oxide leakage is dependent on the thickness of the oxide that is used to insulate the gate from the substrate. As process technologies are decreasing, so is the gate-oxide thickness. Higher k dielectrics will have to be used to offset sub-threshold leakage. Flow of current between the drain and source of a transistor when the voltage is below threshold.
Circuit-Level Power Consumption in Integrated circuits
-
- Transistor Reordering
- Half-Frequency and Half-Swing Clocks
- Low-Power Flip-Flop Design
- Technology mapping automates the process of producing a power-optimized circuit in order to minimize the total power consumption.
- Bus Inversion
- Crosstalk Reduction
- Low-Swing Buses
- Segment the bus into multiple groups that allow the majority of the buses to be powered down while only the active buses are in use.
- Adiabatic circuits are a novel concept that reuses the electrical charge dissipated from one wire and recycles it for use in another wire
- replace the traditional shared-bus approach with a more generic interconnect network.
Low-Power Memory Design
-
- Partitioning Memory
- Specialized Power-Friendly Caches
- Filter cache
- Trace cache
- Adaptive caches
- Drowsy cache
The present invention is not directed in these directions, but rather as to what to be done with the electronic-component heat that must be generated, regardless of its source or cause, The present invention addresses this on several fronts:
-
- Improved heat transport, aggregation, management;
- Component thermal environment improvement;
- Consideration of the full heat transport hierarchy;
- Adaptive opportunistic energy harvesting;
- Leveraging reciprocal (heat transfer, heat to electrical current conversion) properties of both classical semiconducting thermoelectric devices and quantum-process thermoelectric devices;
- Adaptively switching modes and/or multiplexing between cooling mode, energy-harvesting mode, and temperature sensing modes;
- In switching among modes and in general operation, including consideration of and/or compensation for the dynamic behavior of the thermoelectric devices employed;
- Various control systems to manage local and system-wide operation. Computer System Cooling Technologies
A large number and wide variety of approaches are currently under research, development, and deployment to reduce, manage, and handle heat build-up in integrated computer systems and data centers. A survey of the many well-known classical and contemporary techniques for this these at the board and chassis level can be found in [2] and the references therein. A representative treatment of the many well-known and contemporary techniques for this these at the data center level can be found in [3]-[4], these largely involving forced air and chiller technologies. The present invention provides economical practical near-term supplements, enhancements, and alternatives to these approaches, including for example the invention innovations listed in the previous subsection and called out in bold font in
A large number and wide variety of approaches are currently under research, development, and deployment employing thermoelectric devices. A survey of the many well-known classical and contemporary techniques for these employing semiconducting thermoelectric devices can be found in [5] and the references therein. A brief treatment of techniques and properties of quantum-well thermoelectric devices can be found in [6] and the references therein. Treatment of techniques and properties of Avto metal thermoelectric devices can be found in [7]-[10] and the references therein. Additionally, micro-droplet microfluidic cooling is also currently under research and development, some employing some minor interworking with thermoelectric devices. Treatment of such approaches employing planar (two-dimensional) micro-droplet transport can be found in [1] and the references therein, and approaches employing three-dimensional and multiple-layer micro-droplet transport are taught in co-pending U.S. Patent Application 61/599,643.
As background,
As yet further background,
The invention comprises a collection of interworking innovations. These include:
-
- Systems and methods for combining Peltier-effect heat transport and Seebeck-effect energy harvesting for use at thermal interfaces in heat gathering and transfer structures;
- Novel structures for multiple-mode thermoelectric devices providing heat transfer, heat-to-electricity conversion, temperature flux measurements for use in interfacing integrated circuit packages and in creating active heat pipes;
- Arrangements in the above permitting simultaneous mixed-mode operation
- Automatic control for optimizing multiple mode and mixed-mode operation in local or hierarchical contexts;
- Pulse-width modulation and other duty-cycle control to prevent Peltier cooling induced condensation;
- Use of traditional, contemporary, and emerging quantum-process and nanomaterial techniques for radical efficiency improvements in Peltier-effect heat transport and Seebeck-effect thermoelectric energy harvesting;
- Configurable, reconfigurable, or real-time-controlled selective operation of combined Peltier-effect heat transport and Seebeck-effect thermoelectric energy harvesting;
- Systems and methods for a modular-structure heat gathering and heat transfer infrastructure designed, for example, to work with existing familiar board, blade, cage, rack, data center, and building infrastructure, the systems and methods supporting optional advantageous additional features of:
- Closed heat transport systems within each module terminating in a thermal interface which can be coupled to external heat transport stage, air cooling, energy transformation, or other alternatives;
- Each module equally usable in isolation or as part of a hierarchy, allowing wide range of gradual phase-in deployments, trials, and strategies;
- Internal energy harvesting within the module;
- Hierarchical heat-gathering structures with dry thermal-transfer interfaces between pairs of closed level-internal cooling fluid and heat pipe structures within modules at each layer and fan backup for isolated operation or parent-level failure recovery;
- Hierarchical heat-to-electricity energy harvesting structures with provisions for both local use of heat-harvested electricity as well as provisions for exporting power into hierarchical or peer arrangements;
- Hierarchical control structures capability of working in isolation or coordinating with other control systems in hierarchical or peer arrangements.
Features and advantages of the invention will be set forth in the description which follows, and in part will be apparent from the description, or may be learned by practice of the invention. The objectives and other advantages of the invention will be realized and attained by the structure particularly pointed out in the written description and claims hereof as well as the appended drawings.
Aspects of the Invention Involving Heat Gathering at IC-Chip and Board LevelIn an embodiment, the invention provides for the use of microfluidic micro-droplet heat transport at the IC-chip package level.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the use of microfluidic micro-droplet heat transport at the multilayer Printed Circuit Board (“PCB”) level.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the collection of heat from at least one integrated circuit package.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the collection of heat from at least a plurality of computer systems comprised by a data center.
In an embodiment, a thermal interface to at least one chip is used to collect heat and direct it to a heat sink in thermal contact with a circulating cooling fluid.
In an embodiment, the circulating cooling fluid possesses a high heat-carrying capacity.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for thermal interfaces with a circulating cooling fluid to be designed to easily connect mechanically with an associated chip.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the thermal interface to be designed to direct heat to a fan where air convection can be utilized to remove the heat.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the thermal interface to be designed to feed the heat into a heat transfer interface that utilizes a circulating coolant to remove the heat, or to both.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for one or both sides of the thermal interface to be constructed of thermoelectric materials to most efficiently collect the heat on one side and to most efficiently utilize the cooling fan or fluid on the other side.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for one portion of the chip-generated heat to be spatially transferred and another portion of the heat to be energy harvested.
In an embodiment, the invention provides pulse-width modulation and other duty-cycle control to prevent Peltier cooling induced condensation and icing.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the use of high-efficiency thermoelectric devices comprising quantum-well materials.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the use of high-efficiency thermoelectric devices comprising Avto Metals.
Aspects of the Invention Involving Energy HarvestingIn an embodiment, the invention provides for concerted effort to convert as much heat to electricity at the local chip level as possible.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the placement of thermoelectric material inside, on top of, on the bottom of or around a chip package.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for repeated hierarchical steps of heat transfer from thermal sources, conducted through a heat exchange or other thermal interface, and transferred to a thermal sink.
In an embodiment, the hierarchy can comprise use of the heat gathered at a thermal sink at one hierarchy level to serve as the heat of the heat source in an adjacent level in the hierarchy.
In an embodiment, at any one or more places in the hierarchy, energy harvesting operations can be introduced.
In an embodiment, energy harvesting operations convert heat into electricity.
In an embodiment, electricity created by energy harvesting operations is used to provide power for current or future heat transfer operations.
In an embodiment, an energy harvesting operation improves the efficiency of the inventive cooling system.
In an embodiment, each energy harvesting operations improve the effectiveness of the inventive cooling system.
Aspects of the Invention Involving Combining Energy Harvesting and Heat TransportIn an embodiment, the invention provides for the use of reciprocal thermoelectric devices capable of operating in either a thermoelectric cooler or a thermoelectric electric current generator as determined by imposed thermal conditions and electrical connections to the reciprocal thermoelectric device.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for at least one of the thermoelectric devices can serve as a temperature sensor
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the mode of a given thermoelectric device is switched over time. As one example, a given thermoelectric device can be a thermoelectric cooler one moment and a temperature sensor at another moment. As another example, a given thermoelectric device can be a thermoelectric electric current generator one moment and a temperature sensor at another moment. As yet another example, a given thermoelectric device can be a thermoelectric cooler one moment and a thermoelectric electric current generator at another moment. As still another example, a given thermoelectric device can be a thermoelectric cooler one moment, a temperature sensor at another moment, and a thermoelectric electric current generator at yet another moment.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for a control system that selects the mode of operation of at least one reciprocal thermoelectric device, the selection made responsive to the state of the system, time, a measurement condition, or some combination of these.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for a control system to include consideration of the dynamic behavior of at least one type of thermoelectric device.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for a control system to include compensation for the dynamic behavior of at least one type of thermoelectric device.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for a control system that selects the mode of operation of at least one reciprocal thermoelectric device to include consideration of and/or compensation for the dynamic behavior of the reciprocal thermoelectric device.
Aspects of the Invention Involving Heat Migration Out of a SubsystemIn an embodiment, the invention comprises one or more heat-aggregating system and/or one or more heat-aggregating subsystems.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for heat that cannot be efficiently or effectively harvested for energy to be dispersed via fan(s) at one or more suitable location(s) within the system.
Aspects of the Invention Involving Modular Hierarchical StructureIn an embodiment, the invention provides for a modular product hierarchy that can be designed to meet market need and demand.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for heat that cannot be efficiently or effectively harvested for energy to be dispersed via fan(s) at one or more suitable location(s) within the system.
In an embodiment, the invention comprises one or more heat-aggregating system and/or one or more heat-aggregating subsystems.
In an embodiment, the invention comprises a daisy-chain heat transfer arrangement employing closed systems of circulating fluids with dry thermal interfaces among them for use in a hierarchical or peer arrangement.
Aspects of the Invention Involving Interconnection of Heat Transfer Subsystems within a Cooling Hierarchy
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the collection of heat from at least a number of computer chips forming a computing system.
In an embodiment, each module (board, chassis, cage, rack, rack cluster, etc.), comprises at least two separate closed circulating fluid cooling systems that are thermally linked by thermal-transfer coupling elements.
In an embodiment, thermal-transfer coupling elements comprise pressure-contact.
In an embodiment, thermal-transfer coupling elements comprise fastener arrangements.
In an embodiment, thermal-transfer coupling elements comprise a threaded structure.
In an embodiment, thermal-transfer coupling elements comprise a quick-lock structure.
Aspects of the Invention Involving Product Evolution and Phased DeploymentIn an embodiment, the invention provides for a modular product hierarchy that can be designed to meet market need and demand.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for phased replacement as required due to the end of operating life, adequate degradation, or functional obsolescence.
In an embodiment, until such replacement or upgrade is enacted, the invention provides for incremental implementation via incremental retrofit of computers, chip(s) within individual computers, cages, racks, etc.
In an embodiment, modular features used to implement scalability of the innovation can be implemented in such a way that each modular level can operate in a stand-alone mode, for example, relying on backup fans to expel excess heat. This can also provide a failsafe backup for heat dispersion should some part of a hierarchical deployment fail.
In an implementation or a deployment, aspects of the invention can be deployed or implemented at any one or more levels as determined appropriate in a given situation or management decision.
Aspects of the Invention Involving Hierarchical Control StructuresIn a further aspect of the invention, the invention provides a hierarchical multiple-level control system comprises a plurality of subsystems, each with their own associated control system, each of which (1) can operate in isolation and (2) can be interconnected or networked with additional subsystems associated with other hierarchical levels.
In a further aspect of the invention, a hierarchical multiple-level control system comprises a plurality of subsystems, each with their own control system, that can operate in isolation, but when interconnected or networked with additional subsystems associated with other hierarchical levels, each subsystem will assume their respective role in the hierarchy with respect to (those) additional subsystems.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for hierarchical multiple-level control system to include linear control systems, therein permitting the additive control of at least one controller state variables of one subsystem by control signals generated by or associated with at least one other subsystem.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for hierarchical multiple-level control system to include bilinear control systems, therein permitting the multiplicative control of at least one controller state variables of one subsystem by control signals generated by or associated with at least one other subsystem.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for hierarchical multiple-level control system to include bilinear control systems, therein permitting both (1) additive control of at least one controller state variables of one subsystem by control signals generated by or associated with at least one other subsystem and (2) multiplicative control of at least one controller state variables of one subsystem by control signals generated by or associated with at least one other subsystem.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for hierarchical multiple-level control system to include synthetic hysteresis.
The above and other aspects, features and advantages of the present invention will become more apparent upon consideration of the following description of preferred embodiments taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawing figures.
In the following, numerous specific details are set forth to provide a thorough description of various embodiments. Certain embodiments may be practiced without these specific details or with some variations in detail. In some instances, certain features are described in less detail so as not to obscure other aspects. The level of detail associated with each of the elements or features should not be construed to qualify the novelty or importance of one feature over the others.
In the following description, reference is made to the accompanying drawing figures which form a part hereof, and which show by way of illustration specific embodiments of the invention. It is to be understood by those of ordinary skill in this technological field that other embodiments may be utilized, and structural, electrical, as well as procedural changes may be made without departing from the scope of the present invention.
1. Heat Transfer Background
To begin, a brief thermodynamic framework is established.
Regarding heat flow, analogies can readily be made with electrical currents and potentials.
2. Heat Gathering and Transport at the Chip Level
The invention provides for and can use one or more of a number of known and a number of new and novel practical ways for heat gathering and transport at the chip level. Several of these are presented in this section. Other variations, adaptations, and additional approaches are provided throughout the rest of the document.
2.1 Traditional Passive Thermal Handling for Integrated Circuits
2.2 Thermoelectric Devices for Cooling and Heat-to-Electricity Conversion
Thermoelectric devices employ many effects, most of which have a long history. The table below, adapted from [17] lays out the four prominent thermoelectric effects and their dates of established recognition.
Preceding Peltier's work, German physicist Thomas Johann Seebeck (1770-1831) observed that an electrical current is created through the junction of two dissimilar metals when the junctions of the two metals are at different temperatures, and that the effect increases as the difference between the temperature increases. Seebeck researched this effect over combinations of a selection of elemental metal materials available in the 1820's (such as antimony, bismuth, cadmium, cobalt, copper, gold, iron, lead, manganese, mercury, nickel, palladium, platinum, silver, tellurium, tin, and zinc) and arranged their presence in an ordered series. The series is structured so that thermally-induced electromotive force (“emf) generated increases as the difference between the positions of the metals in the series increases. The direction of current flow at the hotter of the two junctions is from a metal occurring earlier in the series to the metal occurring later in the series. The ordering of the series turns out to be dependent upon the temperature and impurities.
The cells in the exemplary physical array of thermoelectric cells such as the example provided in
Such electrical, electrical interconnection, and matrix-layout arrangements of individual thermoelectric devices such as those depicted in
2.3 Optimizing Performance of Traditional Thermoelectric Devices
Many books have been written relating to optimizing performance of traditional thermoelectric devices, for example [6], [13]-[18].
Current-Voltage-Power characteristics of a thermoelectric process can be viewed in terms of a voltage drop varying linearly with respect to electrical current due to the internal resistance of the thermoelectric material discussed in conjunction with
Attention is now returned to further details of the Peltier effect. The heat transfer process though the materials configured to produce the Peltier effect (proportional to the current squared) always works in opposition to Joule heating (proportional to the current squared) caused by the electrical resistance of the arrangement of configured materials. This causes reduced efficiency.
To understand reduced efficiency further, it is noted that the Peltier effect is a surface effect occurring at the junction between two materials. The electrical resistance, which is the source of the heat generation, involves several processes: these include a volume-related component (involving the electrical conductivity, cross-sectional surface area, and length of an article of material through which current flows), a surface-area component and inter-materials component involving the junction of the dissimilar materials, etc. A design approach involves the relative current density u defined as the ratio of the electric current density to the heat flux from thermal conduction.
Returning attention now to the Seebeck effect, one method to improve efficiency involves segmented together materials. These techniques leverage the fact that thermoelectric properties (Seebeck coefficient, electrical resistivity, thermal conductivity, etc.) of materials vary with temperature. From that viewpoint, it is undesirable (and in some situations not possible) to employ a single material spanning a large temperature gradient. In principle, segments of “thermoelectrically compatible” but somewhat different materials can be joined so that a material performing with high-efficiency at high temperatures is segmented with a material performing with high-efficiency at low temperatures, and aligning the segmented material to match the high-temperature and low-temperature regions of the applied temperature difference. In this way optimal materials are matched to places in the temperature gradient through the thermoelectric device so that each material operates in its optimally-performing temperature range. A key attribute of thermoelectric compatibility stems from the fact that the heat and electric charge must flow through the connected materials. A metric of thermoelectric compatibility is the so-called “compatibility factor, often denoted s. If the compatibility factors differ by a factor of two or more, a given value of the relative current density u cannot be suitable for both materials and segmentation will not be efficient.
Alternatively, compatibility and segmented design can be avoided by instead thermally cascading a plurality of thermoelectric generators. In such a thermally cascaded approach, each thermoelectric generator produces an independent electrical current, which in turn allows independent values of relative current density u, in each stage so as to optimize the u for the thermal role of each stage. This, along with a number of electrical and thermal complexities, crop up in such cascades. For example, high temperature thermoelectric generator stages should not be directly connected to an electrical load (due to Wiedeman Franz law and Joule loss considerations). Various circuit and thermal topologies can be designed to optimize performance of a cascade against these concerns.
2.4 High Performance Quantum-Process Material Thermoelectric Devices
A large number and wide variety of approaches are currently under research, development, and deployment of materials with high-performance thermoelectric properties. Two examples of these are quantum-well and Avto metals. A brief treatment of techniques and properties of quantum-well thermoelectric devices can be found in [6] and the references therein. Treatment of techniques and properties of Avto metal thermoelectric devices can be found in [7]-[10] and the references therein.
A major problem with Peltier effect thermoelectric devices, among others, is that while electrons transport heat in one direction, the material itself provides a reverse heat flow (through simple heat conduction) that returns much of the transported heat.
A related situation affects the efficiency of Seebeck effect thermoelectric devices. Once again, as electrons transport energy the material itself provides a heat flow path (through simple heat conduction) through the material. Efficiency is greatly reduced because most of the heat is transported through the materials within the thermoelectric device, leaving far less heat to actually drive the migration of electrons to create a Seebeck effect electric current.
Typical Seebeck effect thermoelectric devices convert approximately 10 percent of thermal energy to electricity. Even with this low energy conversion ratio, available Seebeck effect thermoelectric devices can produce useful ranges of voltages and currents. For example, commercial devices available in development kits from Custom Thermoelectric, Inc., 11941 Industrial Park Road, STE 5, Bishopville, Md. 21813, 443-926-9135 (http://www.customthermoelectric.com/index.htm) provide voltages, currents, and power quantities of value in powering computer technology in acceptable physical sizes and formats:
Returning to the matter of efficiency, in both Peltier and Seebeck modes vastly important efficiency limitations result from heat conduction through the same material that implements the desired thermoelectric process. One way to conquer this is to somehow facilitate electron transfer while blocking heat transfer. In terms of traditional material science, this has not yet been attainable. However, the currency of thermoelectric process is electron transport. Electrons can certainly traverse physical separation gaps (between electrodes) that do not carry heat (as in electron vacuum tubes used in early-to-mid 20th century electronics). Additionally, electrons live in a world dominated by quantum effects, and a variety of quantum effects, including tunneling and standing wave resonance structures, that can be induced by nanofabrication techniques. This suggests there could be improvements made to thermoelectric process using additional techniques, including physical separation gaps and nanofabricated structure that induce quantum effects.
In fact there is at least one practical and commercially viable approach of this sort employing so called “Avto metals” which change electronic properties of a material by etching surface patterns using available nanotechnology methods. Peltier processes employing Avto metals appear to be able to reach heat-transfer efficiencies of greater than 50% of the theoretical Carnot heat-transfer efficiency upper limit, and Seebeck processes employing such materials and techniques appear to be able to reach conversion rates of 20%-23%. These technologies are described in U.S. Pat. Nos. 7,658,772; 7,642,467; 7,589,348; 7,566,897; 7,427,786; 7,419,022; 7,351,996; 7,323,709; 7,253,549; 7,220,984; 7,208,021; 7,169,006; 7,166,786; 7,140,102; 7,124,583; 7,074,498; 7,005,381; 6,971,165; 6,876,123; 6,869,855; 6,774,003; 6,720,704; 6,651,760; 6,531,703; 6,495,843; 6,417,060; 6,281,514; 6,281,139; 6,239,356; 6,229,083; 6,214,651; 6,117,344; 6,089,311; 5,994,638; 5,981,866; 5,981,071; 5,810,980; 5,722,242; 5,699,668; 5,675,972 and the TRN article “Chips turn more heat into Power” available at http://www.tmmag.com/Stories/2001/121901/Chips_turn_more_heat_to_power 1 21901.html (visited Feb. 15, 2011).
2.5 Structured Physical Arrangements for Pluralities of Thermoelectric Devices
In an embodiment, a stacked “sandwich” array can be implemented in an extended-length format which can be used as an active version of a heat pipe.
2.6 Summary of Thermoelectric Device Technology
At this point a few important facts that can be taken away from the preceding discussion:
-
- Thermoelectric devices can be operated in Peltier (heat transfer) mode and in Seebeck (heat-to-power conversion) mode;
- In Peltier mode, traditional thermoelectric devices made with traditional thermoelectric materials have heat-transfer efficiencies of 5%-8% of the theoretical Carnot heat-transfer efficiency upper limit (comparing unfavorably with compressor-based cooling efficiencies of 45%);
- In Seebeck mode, traditional thermoelectric devices made with traditional thermoelectric materials convert approximately 10 percent of thermal energy to electricity;
- Early work leveraging various techniques, including physical separation gaps and nanofabricated structures inducing quantum effects on electrons, shows that Peltier mode heat transfer efficiencies can be improved by a factor as high as 10 and Seebeck mode conversions can be improved by a factor of 2 or more;
- Such material and techniques will continue to favorably evolve and performance metrics will continue to be improved;
- Even with 10 percent conversion rates, commercially available Seeback devices are already available providing voltages, currents, and power quantities of value in powering computer technology in acceptable physical sizes and formats.
The present invention next provides a number of novel innovations for leveraging the above into systems, methods, and evolution strategies for technologies and products that provide a flexible environment for cooling, thermal management, and heat-to-electricity energy harvesting which (in various forms with evolution paths among these forms) will be valuable for near-term and future computer devices and data centers.
To begin, various exemplary structured physical arrangements for pluralities of thermoelectric devices are first considered.
3. Multimode Thermoelectric Devices Combining Energy Harvesting and Heat Transport Functions
In general, thermoelectric devices are reciprocal in that they can operate in either a thermoelectric cooler or a thermoelectric electric current generator as determined by imposed thermal conditions and electrical connections to the reciprocal thermoelectric device. Further, it is noted that when acting as a thermoelectric electric current generator, a voltage is produced, the same voltage that is used in thermocouples (a specialized thermoelectric device) for the measurement of temperature. Thus, thermoelectric devices can additionally serve as a temperature sensor.
In general, thermoelectric devices can be optimized in their design to best serve specific applications (for example, temperature measurement, thermal cooling, electric energy harvesting, etc.) Alternatively, thermoelectric devices can also be optimized in their design to best two or all three of these modalities.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the use of reciprocal thermoelectric devices capable of operating in either a thermoelectric cooler or a thermoelectric electric current generator as determined by imposed thermal conditions and electrical connections to the reciprocal thermoelectric device.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for at least one of the thermoelectric devices can serve as a temperature sensor.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the mode of a given thermoelectric device is switched over time. As one example, a given thermoelectric device can be a thermoelectric cooler one moment and a temperature sensor at another moment. As another example, a given thermoelectric device can be a thermoelectric electric current generator one moment and a temperature sensor at another moment. As yet another example, a given thermoelectric device can be a thermoelectric cooler one moment and a thermoelectric electric current generator at another moment. As still another example, a given thermoelectric device can be a thermoelectric cooler one moment, a temperature sensor at another moment, and a thermoelectric electric current generator at yet another moment.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for a control system that selects the mode of operation of at least one reciprocal thermoelectric device, the selection made responsive to the state of the system, time, a measurement condition, or some combination of these.
When used to generate electricity in an environment that also consumes electricity (such as in the computers of a data center), the resulting situation is akin the well-established industrial plant approaches to on-site electrical energy co-generation. There are various forms of this, notably so called “Topping Cycle” and “Bottoming Cycle” approaches (see for example [11]). Of these, the “Bottoming Cycle” depicted in
Further as to this, the non-idealness, relative efficiencies, material costs, operating energies, etc. all contribute to figures of merit such as lifetime total cost of ownership, environmental offset contributions, and other aspects important to the actual and economically-ascribed value of embodiments of the invention as a green technology. For example, reduction for the need of vast-volume air handlers reduces energy consumption but Joule heating, control processor power consumption, and performance limitations of thermoelectric devices reduce contributions of the technology.
3.1 Electrical Arrangements for Pluralities of Thermoelectric Devices
Each of
Note that idle and measurement modes provide a ‘safe’ intermediate state (for “break before make” action) between the power source mode and the power load mode.
3.2 Control Systems for Multimode Thermoelectric Devices
The afore-described arrangements can be operated by a control system. The control system can be configured to create a wide range of operational capabilities for the adaptive optimized reactions to needs for heat removal, opportunities for energy harvesting, prevention of condensation (endemic to Peltier devices), prevention of thermal runaway, backup safety provisions, and many additional other functions. In some instances or implementations, individual control systems can be provided to arrays of multimode thermoelectric devices. In other instances or implementations, a plurality of arrays of multimode thermoelectric devices can be controlled by a single control system.
In an embodiment, as facilitated further in subsequent sections, a control system can be integrated together with switching transistors and an array of multimode thermoelectric devices to form a physically self-contained system.
In an embodiment, the control system can switch among any two or more of:
-
- Any of the ten periodical mode state configurations depicted in
FIGS. 15a -15j; - Any of the four individual modes such as idle, power source, power load, and measurement.
- Any of the ten periodical mode state configurations depicted in
In an embodiment, the invention provides pulse-width modulation and other duty-cycle control interleave modes of operation.
In an embodiment, the invention provides pulse-width modulation and other duty-cycle control to prevent Peltier cooling induced condensation.
In an embodiment, control systems as described above can interact with control systems in other parts of a heat management and energy harvesting hierarchical chain.
The invention also provides for control systems as described above can interact with peer control systems of a heat management and energy harvesting arrangement.
3.3 Consideration of and Compensation for Dynamic Behavior of Thermoelectric Devices
Thermoelectric devices actually have complex dynamic behavior. For example,
In an embodiment, the invention provides for a control system to include consideration of the dynamic behavior of at least one type of thermoelectric device.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for a control system to include compensation for the dynamic behavior of at least one type of thermoelectric device.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for a control system that selects the mode of operation of at least one reciprocal thermoelectric device to include consideration of and/or compensation for the dynamic behavior of the reciprocal thermoelectric device.
3.4 Interfacing Multimode Thermoelectric Devices with Chip Packaging
In an embodiment, the invention exploits reciprocity properties of thermoelectric materials in contact with a chip package.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for at least one thermal interface to be in thermal contact with a circulating cooling fluid, for example possessing a high heat-carrying capacity. In an embodiment, the invention provides for thermal interfaces with a circulating cooling fluid to be designed to easily connect to integrated circuit packaging.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the placement of thermoelectric material inside, on top of, on the bottom of or around a chip package in order to retrofit existing computer chips in lieu of using chip packages adapted with internal features provided for by the invention.
4. Micro-Droplet (a.k.a. “Digital”) Microfluidic IC Chip Cooling and Heat Transport
Micro-droplet microfluidic cooling is also currently under research and development, some employing some minor interworking with thermoelectric devices. Treatment of such approaches employing planar (two-dimensional) micro-droplet transport can be found in [1] and the references therein, and approaches employing three-dimensional and multiple-layer micro-droplet transport are taught in co-pending U.S. Patent Application 61/599,643.
In [1] the authors describe first other approaches and general aspects of controlled electrowetting micro-droplet transport via microfluidic device structures. For example,
The arrangements described above can also be applied to printed circuit boards as taught, for example, in [1] Chapter 6. Extensions and improvements of these techniques are also possible, for example as taught in co-pending U.S. Patent Application 61/599,643.
In [1] Chapter 6 the authors describe adapting microfluidic electrowetting micro-droplet planar microelectrode array and micro-droplet transport to implementations using Printed Circuit Boards (“PCBs”). Two approaches are considered in some detail, these being the “confined system” represented in
The arrangements for at least Printed Circuit Boards described above have many shortcomings, and many of these are addressed (along with additional advantages) by the three-dimensional micro-droplet routing arrangements taught in co-pending U.S. Patent Application 61/599,643.
However, in the afore-cited text, those authors limit themselves to planar microelectrode arrays and accordingly planar micro-droplet transport paths. For a micro-droplet exposed to heat in central areas of a microelectrode array and which must then be transported to the edges of the microelectrode array to dispense the absorbed heat, the micro-droplets can unfortunate radiate heat back into other portions of the heat-producing integrated circuits. Those authors allude to methods for minimizing the time over which unintended heat-radiation can occur by heated micro-droplets.
Further, the afore-cited text does not provide consideration to avoiding undesired electromagnetic field and electrical field effects that can interfere with adjacent high-performance electronic circuitry.
In addition to these issues and problems, the afore-cited text only considers the cooling of heat-producing integrated circuits. Energy harvesting is not considered.
Accordingly, the reciprocal properties of heat transfer and energy harvesting (via classical Peltier and Seebeck processes) are not considered, nor therefore arrangements to implement adaptive selection between cooling and energy harvesting modalities.
Additionally, the afore-cited text only considers traditional semiconductor thermoelectric elements and does not cite nor anticipate the far higher-efficiency quantum-based thermoelectric materials such as quantum well and Atvo metals. These transform classical Peltier and Seebeck processes to vastly different effects with not only radically improved performance crossing (for the first time) important application-feasibility thresholds but also, in many areas, entirely different engineering and economic tradeoffs.
The present invention addresses each of these, namely:
-
- Implementation of 3D micro-droplet transit structures suitable for thermal cooling and/or energy harvesting applications, and further doing so in a manner suitable for implementation in inexpensive multilayer Printed Circuit Boards (“PCBs”);
- Incorporating electrical-field shielding in the above 3D micro-droplet transit structures and PCB implementations to avoid undesired electromagnetic field and electrical field effects that can interfere with adjacent high-performance electronic circuitry;
- Using the above 3D micro-droplet transit structures and PCB implementations to avoid undesired heat radiation by heated micro-droplets as they are transported in areas with thermal contact to the electronic component or other heat-producing element;
- Using the above 3D micro-droplet transit structures to facilitate arrangements to implement adaptive selection between cooling and energy harvesting modalities.
- Employing higher-efficiency quantum-based thermoelectric materials, such as quantum well and Atvo metals, so as to radically improved performance beyond important application-feasibility thresholds and access entirely different engineering and economic tradeoffs.
The material below is adapted from U.S. Patent Application 61/599,643.
Microelectrodes can be implemented within the conduits through a variety of ways, including insertion of prefabricated cylindrical structures within the conduits. Further, the voltage potential applied to microelectrodes within the conduit in various implementations and transport schemes take on different values over time, for example sometime the electrowetted transport voltage potential and sometimes the ground plane voltage potential. In some implementations and transport schemes, other voltage potentials can also or alternatively be used so as to manipulate the path and shape of the micro-droplet as advantageous. Other approaches differing in various ways from that depicted in this series of figures can also be used and are anticipated by the invention.
While in the upper transport region the micro-droplet absorbs heat generated by the item to be cooled through the thermal conducting layer segment and electrical ground plane, or via other arrangements in alternate implementations. The absorbed heat in the resulting heated micro-droplets can then be transported to other regions where the heat can be processed in various ways (as in the examples to be described as well as other ways applicable to various applications and/or alternate embodiments of the invention).
In various embodiments the thermoelectric structure can be a thermoelectric cooler, a thermoelectric electric current generator, or a reciprocal thermoelectric device capable of operating in either a thermoelectric cooler or a thermoelectric electric current generator as determined by imposed thermal conditions and electrical connections to the reciprocal thermoelectric device. In an embodiment, the role of electrical ground plane (used for micro-droplet transport) can be served by the electrical conditions and physical location of a portion of the thermoelectric device itself (such as electrically conducting material joining two legs of the thermoelectric device). In some embodiments, the role of electrical shielding (from electrical field and electromagnetic generation noise) can also be served by the electrical conditions and physical location of the same portion of the thermoelectric device itself. In other embodiments, the role of electrical shielding can also be served by the electrical conditions and physical location of another portion of the thermoelectric device itself. In yet other embodiments, the role of electrical shielding can also be served by another electrical shielding element.
Additionally, in some embodiments, the thermoelectric device can serve as a temperature sensor.
In some embodiments, the mode of the thermoelectric device is switched over time. As one example, the thermoelectric device can be a thermoelectric cooler one moment and a temperature sensor at another moment. As another example, the thermoelectric device can be a thermoelectric electric current generator one moment and a temperature sensor at another moment. As yet another example, the thermoelectric device can be a thermoelectric cooler one moment and a thermoelectric electric current generator at another moment. As still another example, the thermoelectric device can be a thermoelectric cooler one moment, a temperature sensor at another moment, and a thermoelectric electric current generator at yet another moment.
In an embodiment, the role of electrical ground plane can be served by the electrical conditions and physical location of a portion of the thermoelectric device itself (such as electrically conducting material joining two legs of the thermoelectric device), and the individual portion of each of the plurality of thermoelectric devices collectively serve as an electrical equivalent to an electrical ground plane used for micro-droplet transport. In some embodiments, the role of electrical shielding (from electrical field and electromagnetic generation noise) can also be served by the electrical conditions and physical location of the same portion of the thermoelectric device itself. In other embodiments, the role of electrical shielding can also be served by the electrical conditions and physical location of another portion of the thermoelectric device itself. In yet other embodiments, the role of electrical shielding can also be served by another electrical shielding element. In various embodiments, each of the local thermoelectric structures can be a thermoelectric cooler, a thermoelectric electric current generator, or a reciprocal thermoelectric device capable of operating in either a thermoelectric cooler or a thermoelectric electric current generator as determined by imposed thermal conditions and electrical connections to the reciprocal thermoelectric device.
In some embodiments, all of the local thermoelectric structures are thermoelectric coolers. In other embodiments, all of the local thermoelectric structures are thermoelectric electric current generators.
In yet other embodiments, each of the local thermoelectric structures are reciprocal thermoelectric devices capable of operating in either a thermoelectric cooler or a thermoelectric electric current generator as determined by imposed thermal conditions and electrical connections to the reciprocal thermoelectric device. In some implementations of such (i.e., all reciprocal thermoelectric device) embodiments, all local thermoelectric structures are used in the same mode at the same time. In other implementations of such (i.e., all reciprocal thermoelectric device) embodiments, a first plurality of local thermoelectric structures are used in thermoelectric cooler mode at the same time that a second non-overlapping plurality of local thermoelectric structures are used in thermoelectric electric current generator mode. In yet other implementations of such (i.e., all reciprocal thermoelectric device) embodiments, each of the local thermoelectric structures are reciprocal thermoelectric devices is configured to be independently operable in either a thermoelectric cooler or a thermoelectric electric current generator as determined by imposed thermal conditions and electrical connections to the reciprocal thermoelectric device.
Additionally, in some embodiments, at least one of the thermoelectric devices can serve as a temperature sensor.
In some embodiments, the mode of a given thermoelectric device is switched over time. As one example, a given thermoelectric device can be a thermoelectric cooler one moment and a temperature sensor at another moment. As another example, a given thermoelectric device can be a thermoelectric electric current generator one moment and a temperature sensor at another moment. As yet another example, a given thermoelectric device can be a thermoelectric cooler one moment and a thermoelectric electric current generator at another moment. As still another example, a given thermoelectric device can be a thermoelectric cooler one moment, a temperature sensor at another moment, and a thermoelectric electric current generator at yet another moment.
Arrangements such as those depicted in
5. Modular Hierarchical Structure
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the adaptive collection of heat or conversion of heat to electricity from at least one integrated circuit.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the adaptive collection of heat or conversion of heat to electricity from at least a plurality of integrated circuits forming a central computing system.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the collection of adaptive heat or conversion of heat to electricity at the scale of a data center.
5.1 Heat-Transfer Interconnection
In embodiments of any of these, or other, example thermal interconnection arrangements, heat can be transferred from one system/subsystem to the next via metal or heat-conducting polymers, ceramics, composites, etc.
In embodiments of any of these, or other, example thermal interconnection arrangements, the invention provides for one or both ends of the thermal interface to be constructed from thermoelectric materials.
In embodiments of any of these, or other, example thermal interconnection arrangements, the invention provides for one or both ends of the thermal interface to be constructed from arrays of thermoelectric devices. In an embodiment, the operational modes of these thermoelectric devices are controlled by a control system.
5.2 Modular Hierarchical Heat Transfer, Energy Harvesting, and Control Systems
Various arrangements for modular hierarchical heat transfer, energy harvesting, and control systems are provided for by the invention.
For example,
In an embodiment, the invention provides for the thermal interface to send the heat to a fan where air convection can be utilized to remove the heat, to feed the heat into a heat-transport interface that relies upon a circulating coolant to remove the heat, or to both.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for repeated hierarchical steps of heat transfer from thermal sources, conducted through a heat exchange or other thermal interface, and transferred to a thermal sink. In an embodiment, the hierarchy can comprise use of the heat gathered at a thermal sink at one hierarchy level to serve as the heat of the heat source in an adjacent level in the hierarchy.
In an embodiment, at any one or more places in the hierarchy, energy harvesting operations can be introduced.
In an embodiment, energy harvesting operations convert heat into electricity.
In an embodiment, electricity created by energy harvesting operations is used to provide power for current or future heat transfer operations.
In an embodiment, an energy harvesting operation improves the efficiency of the inventive cooling system.
In an embodiment, each energy harvesting operations improve the effectiveness of the inventive cooling system.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for heat that cannot be efficiently or effectively harvested for energy to be dispersed via fan(s) at one or more suitable location(s) within the system.
In an embodiment, the invention comprises one or more heat-aggregating system and/or one or more heat-aggregating subsystems.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for one portion of the chip-generated heat to be spatially transferred and another portion of the heat to be energy harvested. The greater the amount of energy that can be harvested at the heat exchange level, the better the resultant overall cooling effect and the greater the overall efficiency of the composite system.
6. Modular Adaptive Multi-Level Control for Variable-Hierarchy-Structure Hierarchical Systems
In an embodiment, the invention can comprise various types of modular adaptive multi-level control for variable-hierarchy-structure hierarchical systems. Various types of modular adaptive multi-level control for variable-hierarchy-structure hierarchical systems applicable for use in the present invention are taught in co-pending U.S. Patent Application 61/599,403. Selected material from U.S. Patent Application 61/599,403 is provided below.
In a further aspect of the invention, the hierarchical multiple-level control system comprises a plurality of subsystems, each with their own control system, that can operate in isolation, but when interconnected or networked with additional subsystems associated with other hierarchical levels, each subsystem will assume their respective role in the hierarchy with respect to (those) additional subsystems.
6.1 General Topological, Communications, and Hierarchical Framework
The invention pertains to the area of hierarchical multiple-level control systems, and more specifically to the design of subsystems, each with their own control system, that can operate in isolation but—when interconnected or networked with additional subsystems associated with other hierarchical levels—will assume their respective role in the hierarchy with respect to those other additional subsystems.
The invention provides for inclusion of communications among the subsystems assembled in an aggregate system. In one approach, a common network can be used. Such a network can be an IP network (such as cabled or wireless Ethernet®), a tapped buss (such as I2C, Dallas One-Wire®, etc.), USB, fiber, radio, infrared, power-line carrier (as in X10®), etc. If cables are used, such a network can be implemented in a daisy-chain among subsystems, implemented via connection hubs or switches (Ethernet, USB, etc.)
The invention provides for the communications among the subsystems to include at least one or more of:
-
- Subsystem presence messages or indications,
- Subsystem identification messages or indications,
- Status messages or indications,
- Measurement information to be shared with one or more other subsystems,
- Control information directed to one or more other subsystems,
- Configuration information directed to one or more other subsystems,
- Diagnostics control and measurement information,
- Logging information,
- Timing and/or clock information.
7. Linear Controllers, Bilinear Controllers, and their Variations
In an embodiment, the invention provides for hierarchical multiple-level control system to include linear control systems, therein permitting the additive control of at least one controller state variables of one subsystem by control signals generated by or associated with at least one other subsystem.
Additionally, the representation depicted in
In an embodiment, the invention provides for hierarchical multiple-level control system to include bilinear control systems, therein permitting the multiplicative control of at least one controller state variables of one subsystem by control signals generated by or associated with at least one other subsystem.
In an embodiment, the invention provides for hierarchical multiple-level control system to include bilinear control systems, therein permitting both (1) additive control of at least one controller state variables of one subsystem by control signals generated by or associated with at least one other subsystem and (2) multiplicative control of at least one controller state variables of one subsystem by control signals generated by or associated with at least one other subsystem.
Additionally, the representation depicted in
8. Nonlinear Controllers
Additionally, the representation depicted in
9. Addition of Synthesized Hysteresis to Open-Loop and Closed-Loop Controllers
It is common for many control systems, for example those controlling temperature, motor-controlled position, etc. to incorporate hysteresis. Additionally, many systems (such motor gear chains, mechanical thermostats, etc.) inherently comprise hysteresis processes. Accordingly the invention provides for at least one of:
-
- Introduction of synthesized hysteresis into controllers so as to obtain better performance,
- Introduction of synthesized hysteresis into controllers so as to obtain better stability,
- Introduction of synthesized hysteresis into controllers so as to allow for settling times during parameter or configuration changes,
- Inclusion of synthesized hysteresis in closed loop controller to compensate for inherently comprise hysteresis processes within controlled elements,
- Other uses.
Systems and methods for synthesized hysteresis for use in control and other systems is taught in, for example U.S. Pat. No. 7,309,828 and pending U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/186,459. The synthesized hysteresis can be implemented in software, firmware, digital hardware, analog hardware, or various combinations of these.
10. Product Evolution and Phased Deployment
Recall the hierarchy of environments involved in heat transfer illustrated in
In an embodiment, the invention provides for a modular product hierarchy that can be designed to meet market need and demand.
Rather than necessitate replacement of existing system hardware structures all at once, the innovation will enable phased replacement as required due to the end of operating life, adequate degradation, or functional obsolescence.
Until such replacement or upgrade is enacted, the innovation can readily be incrementally implemented via incremental retrofit of computers, chip(s) within individual computers, cages, racks, etc.
The modular features used to implement scalability of the innovation can be implemented in such a way that each modular level can operate in a stand-alone mode, for example, relying on backup fans to expel excess heat. This can also provide a failsafe backup for heat dispersion should some part of a hierarchical deployment fail.
In an implementation or a deployment, aspects of the invention can be implemented at any one or more levels as determined appropriate in a given situation.
11. Other Forms of Operation
In an embodiment, the invention, the resulting system could be operated in a way that results in higher operating costs but which will provide active, controllable heat removal and heat aggregation for computer systems and data centers.
ClosingThe terms “certain embodiments”, “an embodiment”, “embodiment”, “embodiments”, “the embodiment”, “the embodiments”, “one or more embodiments”, “some embodiments”, and “one embodiment” mean one or more (but not all) embodiments unless expressly specified otherwise. The terms “including”, “comprising”, “having” and variations thereof mean “including but not limited to”, unless expressly specified otherwise. The enumerated listing of items does not imply that any or all of the items are mutually exclusive, unless expressly specified otherwise. The terms “a”, “an” and “the” mean “one or more”, unless expressly specified otherwise.
While the invention has been described in detail with reference to disclosed embodiments, various modifications within the scope of the invention will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in this technological field. It is to be appreciated that features described with respect to one embodiment typically can be applied to other embodiments.
The invention can be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. The present embodiments are therefore to be considered in all respects as illustrative and not restrictive, the scope of the invention being indicated by the appended claims rather than by the foregoing description, and all changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency of the claims are therefore intended to be embraced therein.
Although exemplary embodiments have been provided in detail, various changes, substitutions and alternations could be made thereto without departing from spirit and scope of the disclosed subject matter as defined by the appended claims. Variations described for the embodiments may be realized in any combination desirable for each particular application. Thus particular limitations and embodiment enhancements described herein, which may have particular advantages to a particular application, need not be used for all applications. Also, not all limitations need be implemented in methods, systems, and apparatuses including one or more concepts described with relation to the provided embodiments. Therefore, the invention properly is to be construed with reference to the claims.
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Claims
1. A system for adaptive cooling and heat gathering, the system comprising:
- at least one thermoelectric device from a plurality of thermoelectric devices, each of the plurality of thermoelectric devices capable of acting as a thermoelectric cooler in a first mode of operation and as a thermoelectric generator in a second mode of operation,
- a control system for receiving at least one input signal and providing a control signal output; and
- electronics controlled by the control signal output and connected to the at least one thermoelectric device, the electronics selectively configuring the at least one thermoelectric device to operate in one of the first mode of operation and the second mode of operation,
- wherein the control system controls an operating mode of the at least one thermoelectric device responsive to the at least one input signal.
2. The system of claim 1, the system providing duty-cycle control to the first mode of operation of the at least one thermoelectric device so as to prevent Peltier cooling induced condensation and icing.
3. The system of claim 1, the system providing pulse-width modulated control to the first mode of operation of the at least one thermoelectric device so as to prevent Peltier cooling induced condensation and icing.
4. The system of claim 1, wherein the at least one thermoelectric device comprises quantum-process thermoelectric material.
5. The system of claim 1, wherein the at least one thermoelectric device comprises quantum-well thermoelectric material.
6. The system of claim 1, further comprising a multiplexor to multiplex the at least one thermoelectric device among at least two of a cooling mode, an energy-harvesting mode, and a temperature sensing mode.
7. The system of claim 1, further comprising a switch to adaptively switch modes of operation of the at least one thermoelectric device among at least two of a cooling mode, an energy-harvesting mode, and a temperature sensing mode.
8. The system of claim 1, wherein the system comprises consideration of dynamic behavior of the at least one thermoelectric device.
9. The system of claim 1, wherein the system comprises compensation for dynamic behavior of the at least one thermoelectric device.
10. The system of claim 1, wherein the system further comprises micro-droplet cooling.
11. The system of claim 10, wherein the micro-droplet cooling comprises planar micro-droplet cooling.
12. The system of claim 10, wherein the micro-droplet cooling comprises three-dimensional micro-droplet cooling.
13. The system of claim 1, wherein the at least one thermoelectric device is in thermal contact with an integrated circuit chip.
14. The system of claim 1, wherein the at least one thermoelectric device is positioned between two heat transfer subsystems within a cooling hierarchy, the cooling hierarchy comprising a plurality of heat transfer subsystems.
15. The system of claim 14, wherein the system is configured to perform energy harvesting operations at a plurality of places within the cooling hierarchy.
16. The system of claim 1, wherein the at least one thermoelectric device is located at a thermal interface between two closed loop fluid cooling systems.
17. The system of claim 14, wherein electricity created by energy harvesting operations is used to provide power for heat transfer operations.
18. The system of claim 1, wherein the at least one input signal is responsive to at least one temperature measurement.
19. The system of claim 18, wherein the at least one temperature measurement is obtained from the at least one thermoelectric device operating in a temperature sensing mode as the second mode of operation.
20. The system of claim 19, wherein the at least one thermoelectric device operating in the temperature sensing mode as the second mode of operation is later operated in at least one of a thermoelectric cooler operating mode and a thermoelectric generation operating mode.
Type: Application
Filed: Jul 31, 2017
Publication Date: Nov 30, 2017
Inventor: Lester F. LUDWIG (San Antonio, TX)
Application Number: 15/665,220