ED&C FloTHERM 12 Key Considerations in Enclosure Thermal Design A High-Level How To Guide
ED&C FloTHERM 12 Key Considerations in Enclosure Thermal Design A High-Level How To Guide
ED&C FloTHERM 12 Key Considerations in Enclosure Thermal Design A High-Level How To Guide
W h i t e P a p e r
12 Key Considerations in
Enclosure Thermal Design
A High-Level How To Guide
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Chassis design to house third party circuit card assemblies is a specialized topic.
See references to the ThermaNator in Hot Air Rises and Heatsinks [Ref. 2]
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Figure 2: Normalized Pressure vs. Volume Flowrate for Different Fan Types [Ref. 3]
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To achieve the same airflow, albeit with different flow rate and pressure rise characteristics, and if space permits,
there may be a choice to be made between using larger fans, operated at lower speed or smaller fans operated at
higher speed.
There are benefits of using a larger fan operating at lower speed as it will generate less acoustic noise and will have
a longer field life. It also allows scope for intelligence to be built into the cooling solution as discussed below. There
is clearly a cost implication as the larger fan is likely to be more expensive, and electromagnetic emissions (EMC)
may be harder to contain, depending on how the equipment is shielded.
3: Use A Plenum
In push-type arrangements the incoming air naturally forms a jet, with recirculation regions forming at the sides of
the jet. However, we want the incoming air to flow uniformly over the downstream electronics, especially when
forced air cooling a rack of PCBs where equally apportioned airflow through the gaps between the cards is desired.
A pressure plate can be introduced downstream of the fan to make flow more uniform. The downside is that this
adds to the overall system pressure drop that the fan has to overcome. The higher the flow resistance, the more
uniform the flow rate through it. Hence the flow uniformity needs to be balanced with the cost, in terms of
increased pressure drop, required to achieve it. Both FloTHERM and FloTHERM XT have general Flow Resistance and
Perforated Plate SmartParts to assist with this task.
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Another factor to consider is that even axial fans generate non-axial flow. At high volume flowrate and low pressure
rise, axial fans predominantly exhaust air axially. At lower flowrates the radial and tangential components of the air
leaving the fan increase. Unless a plenum arrangement is used, this can change the near field flow pattern
downstream of the fan and hence the local cooling.
Figure 4: FloTHERM model of an identical fan operating at three different operating points and showing different spreads.
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Figure 6: Flow distribution in FloTHERM XT showing the optimized vent arrangement for
a naturally ventilated, wall mounted electronics system
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Figure 7: Case temperatures and buoyancy-driven airflow for a FloTHERM XT model of a SmartPhone
Thought needs to be given to how heat is to be removed from the casing. Often only natural convection to the
ambient or conduction to a human hand are the only ways in which heat can ultimately leave the system. In both
cases it is highly desirable to spread the heat as much as possible to make the best possible use of the surface area
of the casing. As such, the casing should be as thermally conductive as possible, so that it extends the hot area in
the same way that a heatsink does. If not heat loss from the casing will be reduced, and at the same time a hot
spot will arise which may lead to problems due to the safe limit for touch temperature.
As a system-level cooling solution, we should also mention that conducting rails can be used to carry heat to
wedgelocks that clamp a PCB to an externally cooled cold wall e.g. as part of a ruggedized enclosure also providing
mechanical stability for the board mounting. This approach only applies to a certain type of system, e.g. a sealed
avionics box, but it is sometimes possible to apply the same principle in other systems where the casing itself can
be used as part of the cooling solution. Gap pads can for example be inserted between the top of board-mounted
components and a metal enclosure to provide additional heatsinking.
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Concluding Remarks
This whitepaper provides an overview of the key considerations in Enclosure Thermal Design. It is by no means
exhaustive, with many details not covered. If you are responsible for enclosure-level thermal design and want to
know how Mentor Graphics thermal design software can help, and what is the right product for your application,
then please contact us through the Mentor Graphics Mechanical Analysis web page
www.mentor.com/mechanical
Acknowledgements
Dr John Parry, CEng, CITP, MBCS, MIEEE
Dr Ian Clark
References
1. John Parry, Robin Bornoff & Byron Blackmore (2009) Move Your Thermal Strategy For Air-Cooled Electronics Up
In The Design Flow, Engineering Essentials Series, ED Online 21417, www.electronicdesign.com
2. Tony Kordyban (1998), Hot Air Rises and Heat Sinks, ASME Press
3. Dr. Ing. Walter Angelis (2001), General aspects on fan selection and layout,
http://www.electronics-cooling.com/2001/05/general-aspects-on-fan-selection-and-layout/
4. Thermal Design Power https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermal_design_power
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