Category Archives: Medical

Designing Safe and Reliable Medical Devices with WPG and ATS

Thermal management is important in all electronics, but the thermal management of medical electronics is especially important as it deals with the health of all of us and our families. WPG Americas Inc., along with Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc. (ATS) and other manufacturers, has released an eBook designed to provide helpful information for the proper power design for those systems.

WPG Americas Inc., ATS, and other companies joined together to create this
Medical Device eBook for Engineers. (WPG Americas Inc.)

The eBook discusses the main principles of IEC 60601-1 and how they apply to power supply design. It also looks at the evolution of the standard through to the fourth edition and provide an overview of medically-safe power solutions available for medical equipment designers and manufacturers.

Finally, the book touches on solutions in the medical device design space by leading manufacturers like Cosel, NMB and Advanced Thermal Solutions.

Download the eBook at Designing Safe and Reliable Medical Devices.

At ATS, we work with engineers to design thermal management solutions optimized for a variety of applications, including Medical Diagnostic, Biomedical, and Gene Sequencing Equipment.

Below are some of the products we’ve used for this engineering work:

Products Used in
Medical Applications
Application Notes
Heat PipesOften used to draw heat away from a high-power area, such
as from an image processor to a
medical device chassis.
TLC-100 and tvLYT™Less expensive than an IR camera
or other options, these instruments
give engineers reliable liquid
crystal surface thermography to
visualize hot spots on
semiconductors or other parts of a PCB.
Push Pin Heat SinksUsed when a very secure
attachment is needed, such as in
applications with consistent shock
and vibration concerns.
Cold PlatesOften used as part of a liquid loop
in larger medical diagnostic
equipment for high-power
applications such genome
sequencing, imaging, or
tissue thermal management.
Candlestick Sensor and Hot Wire
Anemometers
For measuring air temperature and air velocity at one point, with the
same sensor. Ensures that a system design has the right level of
airflow to ensure safe and proper
operation.
Pin Fin Heat SinksThese are inexpensive heat sinks
with good thermal performance
that accommodate multi-
directional air flow.
Power Brick Heat Sinks Used most commonly in the power supply of the system for cooling DC-DC power bricks.
Heat ExchangersOften used as part of a liquid loop
in larger medical diagnostic
equipment. For high-power
applications such as genome
sequencing, imaging, or
tissue thermal management.
fanSINK Heat Sinks with maxiGRIPUsed for medical applications that have limited airflow where direct airflow is required.
Extrusion Profile Heat SinksThese are often used in custom
medical equipment applications
when an engineer wants to
experiment with a variety of fin
fields, lengths and base thicknesses.

For more information about Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc. (ATS) thermal management consulting and design services for medical applications, visit
https://www.qats.com/Applications/Medical-Applications or contact ATS at 781.769.2800 or ats-hq@qats.com.

ATS holding webinar on Thermal Management of Medical Electronics

Medical Webinar

DR. Kaveh Azar, founder, CEO and President of Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc. (ATS), will present a free webinar on “Thermal Management in Medical Electronics” on Dec. 15, 2016.

On Thursday, Jan. 26, Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc. (ATS) will host a free, online webinar on “Thermal Management of Medical Electronics”. The hour-long webinar will begin at 2:00 p.m. and there will be 30 minutes of question and answer time after its completion.

The webinar will be presented by thermal management expert Dr. Kaveh Azar, the CEO, President and founder of ATS. Dr. Azar will speak about the unique challenges that are present in finding a thermal solution for medical electronics and the importance of including thermal management in the design process.

The object of all thermal management is to ensure that the device junction temperature, the hottest point on a semiconductor, stays below a set limit. While this is true for all electronic systems, medical electronics pose unique thermal challenges that have to be overcome to meet the junction temperature requirements.

Medical electronics could have stringent material selection. For example, copper is a common metal chosen in thermal management, but can cause irritation or a neurodegenerative condition for patients and has to be used carefully. In addition, medical electronics may have spatial constraints, such as forceps that have only 2-4 millimeters of width, which is a constrained space with very little airflow.

Other challenges presented by medical electronics include the need for constant, reliable repeatability; temperature reliability within a range; and in some cases specific FDA requirements.

Dr. Azar will address each of these issues and more. To register for the free webinar on Thursday, Jan. 26, visit http://www.qats.com/Training/Webinars.

Case Study: Thermal Management in Harvard Medical School Tissue Analysis Instrumentation

Designers of today’s highly advanced medical diagnostic equipment must overcome many of the same thermal challenges common to telecommunications, industrial and information technology electronics.

In addition, medical diagnostic devices present unique design issues and boundary conditions that factor into thermal solutions. These include isothermal and cyclic temperature demands, precise test repeatability, and maintaining the patient’s safety and comfort.

These kinds of issues were presented by Harvard Medical School to the experts at Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc. (ATS) when it needed a cooling solution for the diagnostic equipment it was relying on for the analysis and observation of human tissue samples in a controlled laboratory setting. This was the school’s Frozen Tissue Microarrayer System.

ATS engineers had to provide thermal solutions to meet a range of design goals:

• Provide long-term temperature control for tissue samples embedded in an optimum cutting temperature fluid.
• Create a cooling system to maintain tissue samples below -70°C for six hours.
• Ensure operator visibility of the samples.
• Eliminate humidity and frost within the system to prevent sample contamination.

ATS Cooling Solutions

ATS engineers developed highly effective thermal solutions to meet all the design requirements of the diagnostic equipment. A reservoir in the device holds the liquid cooling medium and tissue samples are loaded through an opening at the top. Through a duct, cool air is circulated over the top of the samples to maintain temperature and humidity requirements.

As seen in Fig. 1 (below), the diagnostic system consisted of:

• Frozen tissue coring machine (on the right in the photo)
• Tissue sample loading area at the top of the cooling system (seen on the left)
• Duct system (on both sides of system) to circulate cool air
• Ice/alcohol reservoir at the system’s bottom to contain the cooling medium

Harvard Case Study

Figure 1. Prototype system created by ATS engineers for Harvard Medical School laboratory. (Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc.)

Conduction Cooling Design

In operation, tissue samples are loaded into removable aluminum cassettes that fit tightly into a metal receiver (top left, Figure 2). The receiver contacts the cassette on five sides which allows for cooling of the samples by conduction. The receiver is lowered into a reservoir containing a slurry of dry ice and ethyl alcohol. Here the receiver is maintained at a constant temperature until the dry ice evaporates. The reservoir is double-walled and insulated to extend the evaporation time of the dry ice.

The receiver also features integral fins that increase surface area for drawing heat downward from the base of the cassettes into the icy slurry (bottom left, Figure 2). These fins are based on the same ATS heat sink design principles used in the company’s high performance maxiFLOW™ heat sinks.

Using analytical modeling, ATS engineers determined that 10 fins were the optimal number for cooling the cassette receiver and its contents. CFD simulations also showed that the 10-fin concept resulted in an optimal design. The engineers validated their analytical and CFD results through empirical testing. It was determined that extending 10 fins into the slurry provided the cooling performance to maintain tissue sample temperatures below the -70°C threshold for 9.75 hours.

Further temperature testing using thermocouples showed only a 2.5°C difference between the coldest points at the bottom of the fins and the tissue samples in the cassette. This proved that the design overcame thermal conduction resistance and could effectively maintain the samples below their critical temperature.

Figure 2. Temperature testing with thermocouples demonstrated that the temperature difference between the bottom of the fins and the top of the cassette, through three intervening layers, was only 2.5°C. This proved that the thermal design was successful. (ATS)

Figure 2. Temperature testing with thermocouples demonstrated that the temperature difference between the bottom of the fins and the top of the cassette, through three intervening layers, was only 2.5°C. This proved that the thermal design was successful. (ATS)

Figure 3. Using a heat sink-specific thermal resistance network ATS determined that the optimal number of fins was 10. (ATS)

Figure 3. Using a heat sink-specific thermal resistance network ATS determined that the optimal number of fins was 10. (ATS)

Convection Cooling Design

The above conduction cooling design provided only part of the solution. There were additional needs to maintain the temperature at the top of the samples and to decrease the relative humidity of the cool air from the ambient air in the lab. ATS engineers designed a convection cooling system to fulfill these requirements.

A heat exchanger was installed with its fins in the dry ice/alcohol slurry and its other side extending into a duct to cool the air passing over it. This approach uses the same cooling medium for both convection and conduction to ensure there is no temperature differential throughout the sample and that the sample is as isothermal as possible.

Air is pushed by a counter-rotating fan through the duct and into the heat exchanger. The heat exchanger forms a thermal link between this air and the slurry mixture. The heat exchanger was designed with an optimum balance between its surface area and the resulting pressure drop to ensure the fan was operating with the most effectiveness.

Once the air passes the heat exchanger, it moves through the ducts and into a diffuser at the top of the system. The diffuser disperses the air over the sample creating a barrier between the tissue and the ambient environment of the lab so outside moisture and heat are not transferred in.

The ATS engineers tested this design using an array of thermocouples and ATS hotwire anemometer Candlestick Sensors connected to an ATS ATVS-2020, a temperature and air velocity scanner. They determined there was too much mixing between the air flowing over the samples and ambient air. The diffuser was redesigned with a new connection to the duct and an optimized outlet radius (see Figure 4).

In the ducts, a molecular sieve desiccant housed in a honeycomb structure was used to reduce the dew point of the air to -84.4°C, which was well below the -72°C air temperature in the duct.

Figure 4. Initial testing led to a redesign of the air diffuser to prevent ambient humidity from mixing with the air over the tissue samples. (ATS)

Figure 4. Initial testing led to a redesign of the air diffuser to prevent ambient humidity from mixing with the air over the tissue samples. (ATS)

Conclusions

ATS engineers performed a final series of tests of the Frozen Tissue Microarrayer System using Candlestick Sensors, thermocouples and the ATVS 2020 scanner. The tissue temperature stayed constant over the required six-hour period and well below the -70°C threshold. In fact, testing determined that the tissue temperature remained below the threshold for nearly eight hours before warming above a usable temperature (Figure 5). The multi-part cooling system was a success, meeting the original design objectives provided by Harvard Medical School.

Figure 5. Final testing showed that the ATS cooling design kept tissue temperature (shown in blue in the graph above) below the -70°C threshold for more than the required six hours. (ATS)

Figure 5. Final testing showed that the ATS cooling design kept tissue temperature (shown in blue in the graph above) below the -70°C threshold for more than the required six hours. (ATS)

The process of designing cooling solutions for the Frozen Tissue Microarrayer demonstrated that thermal design practices used throughout electronics cooling can be applied in the medical device industry. Fin efficiency, thermal resistance, and pressure drop calculations are standard regardless of the application. Thermal solutions should be considered early in the design process so they can be incorporated into the overall system as efficiently as possible.

The experts at ATS used traditional thermal calculations, CFD simulations, empirical testing, and its leading-edge heat sink technology to successfully design the thermal solution for this medical equipment application. The ATS design allowed Harvard Medical School to test tissue samples while meeting its strict requirements.

To learn more about the design, watch the video below:

Download a PDF of this case study at http://www.qats.com/cms/wp-content/uploads/Harvard-Medical-case-study.pdf.

Visit www.qats.com, call 781-769-2800 or email ats-hq@qats.com to learn more about ATS and its Thermal Management Analysis and Design Services.

Thermal Management in Medical Equipment: an ATS Webinar, 6/11 @ 2PM

ATS is holding a free webinar on thermal management in medical diagnostic equipment. This information packed webinar will cover such topics as:

  • How thermal management for medical diagnostic equipment differs from non-medical equipment
  • Key issues to consider in thermal management
  • Case studies

Taught by one of Senior Thermal Engineers, this free webinar is geared to equipping you with tips for success in designing your next thermal management system for medical diagnostic equipment.

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Thermal Management in Medical Diagnostic Equipment : ATS Thermal Webinar, June 11, 2PM

Thermal challenges in medical diagnostic equipment such as EKG machines, defibrillators, telemetry, ultrasound and other products present both similar challenges to other electronics as well as their unique set of needs due to their importance in people’s lives. This free vertical webinar will focus on the specific needs that medical diagnostic equipment requires.

To register for this free webinar, please click to: Thermal Management in Medical Diagnostic Equipment, June 11 2PM