Solid State Fan, Ionic Cooling Hits The Big Time!

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jaganath
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Solid State Fan, Ionic Cooling Hits The Big Time!

Post by jaganath » Tue Mar 18, 2008 11:12 am

http://www.physorg.com/news125057974.html
Silent, microchip-sized 'fan' has no moving parts, yet produces enough wind to cool a laptop
The compact, solid-state fan, developed with support from NSF's Small Business Innovation Research program, is the most powerful and energy efficient fan of its size. It produces three times the flow rate of a typical small mechanical fan and is one-fourth the size.
"The RSD5 is one of the most significant advancements in electronics cooling since heat pipes. It could change the cooling paradigm for mobile electronics," said Singhal.
Within the intense electric field that results, ions push neutral air molecules from the wire to the plate, generating a wind. The phenomenon is called corona wind.
the researchers were able to control the micro-scale discharge to produce maximum airflow without risk of sparks or electrical arcing. As a result, the new device yields a breeze as swift as 2.4 meters per second, as compared to airflows of 0.7 to 1.7 meters per second from larger, mechanical fans.
"The technology has the power to cool a 25-watt chip with a device smaller than 1 cubic-cm and can someday be integrated into silicon to make self-cooling chips," said Schlitz.

FartingBob
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Post by FartingBob » Tue Mar 18, 2008 12:15 pm

Sounds very intriguing. Although the "intense electric field" part sounds like something to keep at a safe distance from my HDD.

tehfire
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Post by tehfire » Tue Mar 18, 2008 1:27 pm

Does sound very cool, though at 2.4m/s it seems that wind turbulence would still be an issue...

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Post by FartingBob » Tue Mar 18, 2008 2:01 pm

tehfire wrote:Does sound very cool, though at 2.4m/s it seems that wind turbulence would still be an issue...
Well it would make sense that by changing how much power you give the "fan" the airflow could go up and down. This would allow for very high CFM or a near silent option with CFM that we are used to seeing today.

jaganath
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Post by jaganath » Tue Mar 18, 2008 2:06 pm

tehfire wrote:Does sound very cool, though at 2.4m/s it seems that wind turbulence would still be an issue...
turbulence is necessary for good heat removal.
Although the "intense electric field" part sounds like something to keep at a safe distance from my HDD.
the electrodes are specially shaped to concentrate the electric field. I expect the voltage is not actually that high.

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Post by walkingjohn » Wed Mar 19, 2008 10:35 am

I recall people being worried about charge buildup from the ionized air from these--but apparently this moves only neutral particles, so the ionization would be only inside the "fan".

Now, how much do you suppose it buzzes?

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Post by spookmineer » Wed Mar 19, 2008 3:19 pm

jaganath wrote:
tehfire wrote:Does sound very cool, though at 2.4m/s it seems that wind turbulence would still be an issue...
turbulence is necessary for good heat removal.
A 120 mm fan spinning at about 1000 RPM will push approx. 40 CFM.
That is about 1.3 m/s.
Even at very low speeds, air will become turbulent (influenced by hitting hardware/obstructions inside a case amplifies this).

Some users will not even notice the air noise much at this speed, and at lower speeds the noise will become practically inaudible.

So, ± 1 m/s is "quiet", but there is a considerable amount of air moving.
Is this what causes the air/wind noise? Is CFM more of a contributing factor to noise than the speed of the air itself?

A "fan" producing 3 times as much flow at a quarter of the size of a normal fan will produce less CFM than the normal fan. The airflow is more concentrated, therefore the speed is higher, but the amount of air moving is only 75%.
So... I don't know if this will make more or less noise than a normal fan... :?:

edlight1
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Post by edlight1 » Wed Mar 19, 2008 5:29 pm

Perhaps if they make a bigger one and run it conservatively, then the airflow through each part of it would be slower and hence quieter, unless the technology buzzes.

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Post by Felger Carbon » Wed Mar 19, 2008 8:01 pm

edlight1 wrote:Perhaps if they make a bigger one and run it conservatively, then the airflow through each part of it would be slower and hence quieter, unless the technology buzzes.
You have just re-invented the "250mm" fan, widely ignored here at SPCR. Congratulations.

The energy of a fan's airstream is proportional to the cube of the air velocity. It doesn't matter what propells the air. Same CFM, same "whoosh". Interesting idea though: I don't see ball bearings anywhere and no ball bearings in a fan is a really good idea. :P

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Post by edlight1 » Wed Mar 19, 2008 11:44 pm

Felger:

I meant if they made a larger fan replacement grid thingy. They're talking about little ones that move lots of air, but could be loud. What if they made a 120mm one and barely ran it. How about fan replacements that fit standard 80mm, 92mm, and 120mm mounts.

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Post by jaganath » Thu Mar 20, 2008 1:13 am

You have just re-invented the "250mm" fan, widely ignored here at SPCR. Congratulations.
FC, a standard 25cm fan would take up most of the internal space in a standard laptop! these grids are intended to be not much larger than the chip/die package, and integrated onto them in the manufacturing process.

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Post by FartingBob » Thu Mar 20, 2008 5:16 am

The small ones would be good for targeted cooling (GPU and CPU chips), while larger ones would be better for general airflow and exhuasts.Now we just have to wait 5 years for them to become cheap and more efficient.

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Post by BillTodd » Thu Mar 20, 2008 5:52 am

Better picture of the thing here:

http://www.thorrn.com/technology.html

The curved and vented (aluminium?) part becomes the heat-sink when integrated onto a chip. There are (not visible in the picture) ultra fine wire electrodes that stretch down the length of each vented gully.

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Post by NeilBlanchard » Thu Mar 20, 2008 6:38 am

Hello,

My first question about this technology is does it produce ozone?

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Post by BillTodd » Thu Mar 20, 2008 6:39 am

jaganath wrote:
the electrodes are specially shaped to concentrate the electric field. I expect the voltage is not actually that high.
Yes. The device shown is 15 x 15mm, each 'gully' is ~3mm across, so air gap to electrode is ~1.5mm. Air breaks down at about 1100V/mm (if memory serves) so maximum voltage would be less than 1650v
Last edited by BillTodd on Thu Mar 20, 2008 6:43 am, edited 1 time in total.

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Post by BillTodd » Thu Mar 20, 2008 6:42 am

NeilBlanchard wrote:Hello,

My first question about this technology is does it produce ozone?
Probably not, certainly no more than a laser printer, photocopier, CRT, microwave oven etc.

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Post by BillTodd » Thu Mar 20, 2008 8:01 am

What a homebrew one might look like: :wink:

Image

Felger Carbon
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Post by Felger Carbon » Fri Mar 21, 2008 10:53 am

NeilBlanchard wrote:My first question about this technology is does it produce ozone?
Mine is, what happens when dust - somewhat conductive dust - settles on the very narrow electrode spacing? ZZAP!... or does the fan simply quit blowing air? Will circuits that shut down the computer be needed when the air stops blowing and cooling?

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Post by Krumb » Fri Mar 21, 2008 11:40 am

"This device is also more dust-tolerant than predecessors" I would still be worrying about that. its still going to collect dust and if left unchecked could be dangerous.

If you have ever looked through the instructions off the small plugin air purifiers using this kind of technology you will see all kinds of warnings, the most worrying being fire.

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Post by wwenze » Sat Mar 22, 2008 8:23 pm

We learnt in physics lessons:

Neutral and charged objects

Neutral object gets attracted to charged object

Dust is neutral, the device is not

Hello dust heap.

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Post by NeilBlanchard » Sun Mar 23, 2008 3:55 am

Hi,

I'm curious: which direction does the air flow?

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Post by Felger Carbon » Sun Mar 23, 2008 10:57 am

NeilBlanchard wrote:I'm curious: which direction does the air flow?
I'm curious about the energy balance. Real mass (air) is being accellerated from standstill to a moving column of air, just like a regular fan. Thus, the air gains kinetic energy. This energy has to come from somewhere. So at least one of the two electrodes of the ion machine will have to have input current, such that the electrical power input is at least as much as the power output. Do both electrodes require power (electrical current), or just one of them? Is the ion engine efficiency 100%? 10%? 1%? What?

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Post by Willy Higinbotham » Sun Mar 23, 2008 12:15 pm

Felger Carbon wrote:
NeilBlanchard wrote:I'm curious: which direction does the air flow?
I'm curious about the energy balance. Real mass (air) is being accellerated from standstill to a moving column of air, just like a regular fan. Thus, the air gains kinetic energy. This energy has to come from somewhere. So at least one of the two electrodes of the ion machine will have to have input current, such that the electrical power input is at least as much as the power output. Do both electrodes require power (electrical current), or just one of them? Is the ion engine efficiency 100%? 10%? 1%? What?
http://www.thorrn.com/technology.html

Quoting from the link above
It involves application of a voltage difference between two electrodes; a geometrically sharp electrode and a blunt electrode.
It doesn't say how many "volts" though.

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Post by BillTodd » Sun Mar 23, 2008 12:45 pm

NeilBlanchard wrote:Hi,

I'm curious: which direction does the air flow?
same direction as the electrons; from the thin wire to the blunt heat-sink

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Post by Ozkar » Wed Mar 26, 2008 5:04 am

There is a video of the thing here:

http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_videos.jsp ... a_id=62124

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