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The Heat Sink. Heat Transfer Class Project Tim Bishop Nathan Packard Fall 2006. Introduction. Project was derived from summer internship at Moxtek in Orem, UT Involves basic conduction / convection through fins Wanted to mathematically SHOW what had previously been OBSERVED.
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The Heat Sink Heat Transfer Class Project Tim Bishop Nathan Packard Fall 2006
Introduction • Project was derived from summer internship at Moxtek in Orem, UT • Involves basic conduction/convectionthrough fins • Wanted to mathematically SHOWwhat had previously been OBSERVED
The Original Setup Assumed temperature of lights and base- 150 deg. F (72 deg. C )
Introduction • Luxeons- -Popular type of LED- very bright • Run on about 350 mA and 12 volts • Will produce 35-40 lumens per watt- this is 5 to 20 time brighter then standard LEDs. These LEDs get VERY HOT! As mentioned in the online advertisement- “You must order a Heatsink, otherwise you must fix the LUXEON® to something that will draw the heat from the part.” **We decided on the latter!!**
The Solution Assumed temperature of lights and base- 75 deg. F (24 deg. C ) Assuming h=5, 14.8 W are emitted!
Analysis • Solution was a simple analysis of heat transfer from extended surfaces: • 2 large fins (9 x 5 x ½ inches) pure aluminum • 4 smaller fins (5 x 3 x ¼ inches) of alum. alloy • Small fan to increase h (assuming 25)
Methodology • Used Figure 3.18 on page 138 of text to determine efficiency of fins • Knowing lengths, widths, k (237 for pure aluminum, 177 for alloy) and h (50) we found efficiencies of 0.83 (large) and 0.84 (small) • Plugging efficiencies into heat transfer equation, found the temperature difference to be about 19 deg. C. • Iteration lead to a temperature change of about 8 deg. C, which seems accurate!
Resources • Moxtek Inc.- Special thanks to Michael Yost- Research and Development Engineer • http://www.fiberopticproducts.com/Luxeon.htm • ME 340 textbook