Category Archives: Thermal Design

ATS Collaborates on SAM Car Featured on the CNBC program ‘Jay Leno’s Garage’

On Jan. 6, 2000, champion race car driver Sam Schmidt crashed his vehicle at the Walt Disney World Speedway in Orlando, Fla. The accident severely injured his spinal cord, leaving him paralyzed from the neck down and with doctors telling him that he would never walk again, let alone get behind the wheel of a car.

SAM Car

ATS partnered with ARROW Electronics to devise a thermal solution for the computer system in the semi-autonomous car that allowed Sam Schmidt to get back behind the wheel. (Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc.)

Colorado-based neurosurgeon Dr. Scott Falci had other ideas and enlisted the aid of several technology companies, including ARROW Electronics, the Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL), and Ball Aerospace and Technologies Corp., to make his dream of helping Schmidt drive come to fruition 17 years after the accident.

The result was the SAM Car. Using infrared sensors, cameras, on-board GPS and other next-generation technologies, the team created a semi-autonomous vehicle that Schmidt could power by simply moving his head. Leaning right or left would steer the car, tilting his head back would cause the car to accelerate, and biting down on a special mouthpiece would cause the car to break.

Watch this CNBC video with Jay Leno to learn more and see the car in action:

Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc. (ATS) was brought in by ARROW to assist with the challenge of providing thermal management for the car’s on-board computer system. ATS designed an enclosure that cooled both sides of the board without the need for a fan and protected it from dust and other debris.

ATS engineers Bahman Tavassoli, Vineet Barot, and Anatoly Pikovsky are proud to have collaborated with these other innovative pioneers to provide Mr. Schmidt with the ability to get back behind the wheel where he belongs.

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

Heat Sink Design: ATS Engineers Bring Ideas to Life

Marketing Communications Specialist Josh Perry sat down with Product Engineering Manager Greg Wong to discuss the process that Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc. (ATS) engineers go through to create a heat sink and find a thermal solution for customers.

Watch the full conversation in the video below and scroll down to read the transcript of the interview.

JP: Greg, thanks again for joining us here in marketing to explain what it is that goes into designing a heat sink for a customer. So, how does that process begin?
GW: We usually start with a few basic parameters; we call them boundary conditions. So, we start with a few boundary conditions, basics like how much airflow we have, how much space constraint we have around a heat sink, and how much power we’re dissipating, as well as the ambient temperature of the air coming into the heat sink.

So, those are the real basic parts that we need to start out with and sometimes the customer has that information and they give it to us, and usually we double-check too, and then other times the customer has parts of the information, like they know what fan they want to use and they know what kind of chassis they’re putting it in and we take that information and we come up with some rough calculations so we can arrive at those things like air flow and stuff like that.

JP: When you get the data from the customer, how do you determine what the problem is, so that way you can move forward?
GW: We usually start out with an analytical analysis. So, we put pen to paper and we start out with basic principles of heat transfer and thermal resistance and stuff like that so we can understand if what we’re trying to achieve is even feasible and we can come up with some basic parameters just using that analytical analysis.

Like we can calculate what kind of heat sink thermal resistance we need or we can calculate how much air flow we need or, if we have several components in a row, we can calculate what the rough air temperature rise is going to be along that chain of parts. So, there’s a lot we can do when we get the basic information from the customer just on pen and paper.

JP: What’s the next step beyond analytical?
GW: Well, we can do some lab testing or a lot of times we also use CFD simulations and, if our customer has a model they can supply us, we can plug that into the CFD simulations and we can come up with an initial heat sink design and we can put that into the simulations as well and then we set those up and run them.

The great thing, having done these analytical analyses beforehand, we know what to expect from CFD simulations. So that way, if the simulations don’t run quite right, we already have an understanding of the problem, we know what to expect, because CFD is not 100 percent reliable.

I mean, you can go and plug all this stuff in there but you really have to understand the problem to know if the CFD is giving you a good result. So, oftentimes that’s the next stage of the process and from there we can actually produce low-volume prototypes right here in Norwood (Mass.), in our factory. We have CNC machines and manual milling machines, lathes, all that kind of stuff, and we can produce the prototypes and test them out here in our labs.

JP: How much of a benefit is it to be able to create a prototype and to be able to turn one around quickly like that?
GW: Oh, it’s great. I mean, if we had to wait to get parts from China it will take weeks to get. We can turn them around here in a few days and the great thing about that is we can test them in our labs and, you know, when it comes to getting results nothing beats the testing.

I mean, you can do analytical analysis, you can do CFD simulations, but when you actually test the part in a situation that is similar to what the actual thing is going to be that’s where the real meat comes down.

Heat Sink Design

ATS engineers take customer data and using analytical modeling and CFD simulations can design the right cooling solution to meet the customer’s specific thermal needs. (Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc.)

JP: So, we test the prototypes before sending them out to the customer? We do the testing here or do we send it to them first?
GW: It all depends on what the customer requires. Sometimes the customer has a chassis that we really can’t simulate in our labs, so we might send the prototype heat sinks to the customer and the customer will actually put them into their system to test them out.

Other times, a customer might have a concept and they don’t actually have a product yet, so we’ll mock something up in our labs and we’ll test it and it all just depends what the customer needs and also how complex the problem is.

If it’s a simple heat sink and pretty simple airflow, we might not need to test that because we understand that pretty well, but the more complex the chassis is and how the airflow bends and stuff like that, the greater benefits we get out of lab testing.

JP: Well, I appreciate it Greg. Thank you for taking us through the process of making a heat sink and solving thermal problems for our customers.
GW: Sure Josh. We love seeing new thermal challenges and coming up with ways of keeping stuff cool.

For more information about Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc. thermal management consulting and design services, visit www.qats.com or contact ATS at 781.769.2800 or ats-hq@qats.com.

What Cost Reduction Strategies Make New Product Introductions Faster?

Getting to markets faster and in the most cost-effective way is the primary goal of today’s product development process. Choosing a thermal design engineering partner that understands that goal makes a company’s product realization process simpler and faster. There are number of strategies a company’s project engineers can use to save time and money in the design of an electronics cooling solution. Two of the most efficient methods are Virtual Engineering Demos (VED) and Thermal Load Boards (TLB).

VEDs make it possible for project engineers to remotely see an instrument, how it operates, ask questions about how it works, and, if the project is included in the demo, get data in real time about a design. In this method, a live demo is setup at a thermal design engineering partner’s laboratory. Whether the project is a PCB, a system, or another product type, it can be included in the VED and be run through the lab set-up.

Greg Wong

ATS engineer Greg Wong gives a live, online demonstration from the ATS research lab to a potential customer. (John O’Day/Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc.)

Candlestick Sensor

ATS engineer Greg Wong sets up to demonstrate the ATVS-2020, Candlestick Sensors and StageVIEW Data Acquisition Software (DAQ) for measuring and analyzing temperature for an electronics board in this VED. (Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc.)

VED in Lab

Equipment setup and live camera feeds are all part of a VED setup. (Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc.)

As the project is analyzed, data is shown on the engineering partner’s computer screen, which is in turn broadcast in real time to the project engineers via a live video feed. The video feed simultaneously shows the demo and the software’s operation, while allowing bi-directional conversation between the engineering partner and the project engineers in one or more locations.

stageVIEW_software

Screenshot showing data being recorded in stageVIEW. This information is available to the remote team. (Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc.)

The advantages of this strategy to project engineers are:

• Quick evaluation of a design to determine if there is a need for new equipment in a project.
• No lag time in talking with a thermal design engineering partner about how to approach the thermal measurement of project
• Reducing the need to travel to a thermal design engineering partner’s lab.
• Faster response on lab testing, shortening the design cycle.

A Thermal Load Board (TLB) is another strategy for reducing the cost of a design, while getting a product to market faster. TLBs are created by a thermal engineering partner using a simple one- or two- layer non-populated PCB, heat sinks, thermally equivalent mock semiconductors and other mock components created with a 3-D printer.

TLB 3-D printing

Using these components a populated board is created that allows the testing of the heat sinks chosen for the project work and measurement of the airflow over the components and through the board. (Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc.)

The thermal engineering partner is effectively creating a mock version of the functional board. The design of the TLB is based on the size and placement of the semiconductors and other components on the actual board, which is provided by the project engineers, and provides a cheaper and quicker means of producing a prototype for testing. The data from that testing will in turn expedite the design process and time to market.

This can be a very cost-effective method for doing heat sink characterization for the following reasons:

It reduces electronic system development cost.
o A system developer can focus on thermal issues very quickly instead of waiting for an expensive prototype to come out of the factory.
o Rather than using a potentially expensive project, testing on prototypes can determine design flaws without requiring a significant
cost.
o Because prototypes are less expensive, each iteration of a design can quickly go through an initial series of tests.
It reduces time to market.
o Valuable resources can be applied to engineering the best solution because a load board can generally be created in 1-2 weeks and at a
fraction of the cost of a full PCB.
It allows a physical testing very early in the design.
o Many times components on a PCB will obstruct air flow, requiring either costly design changes during NPI (new product introduction) or
requiring engineers to over-design a board and the thermal management solution, putting the product outside its cost objective.

After a thermal load board is created, the board is ready to be used:

Completed Load Board

A completed load board ready for testing. (Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc.)

The heaters on the board can be powered up to dissipate the same level of power as the semiconductors they are meant to represent. Heat sinks can then be applied based on initial analysis done via integral modeling, mathematical modeling or through CFD (computational fluid dynamics). To test just air flow, heat sinks can even be created by 3-D printing.

Once populated with heat sinks, the board can be tested in a wind tunnel to see if the air flow will be sufficient. Wind tunnel testing methods include smoke flow visualization or water tunnel testing in order to examine air flow and ensure the most functional and cost-effective design is applied.

Getting to market faster and with the best possible design is very important in today’s product development process. Working with a thermal engineering partner, such as Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc. (ATS), that offers Virtual Engineering Demos (VED) and Thermal Load Boards (TLB) will benefit a project’s bottom line and ensure a project’s successful completion. Project engineers will know that their design has proper thermal management early in the process, meaning that they will not have to over-design the project, which will save time and money in the long run.

Learn more about ATS and its capabilities as a thermal engineering partner for your next project by visiting www.qats.com or by calling 781-769-2800.

References:

Thermal Load Board Design Considerations


http://www.3dsystems.com/learning-center/case-studies/lowering-cost-and-reducing-production-time-projet-3d-printing-lets

Electric Car Batteries Are Topic of Presentation by ATS CEO Dr. Kaveh Azar

Electric Car Batteries

ATS CEO Dr. Kaveh Azar will deliver a presentation on the thermal management of electric vehicle batteries on Thursday, Sept. 22. (Photo courtesy of Wikimedia Commons)

On Thursday, Sept. 22, Advanced Thermal Solutions, Inc. (ATS), a leading-edge engineering and manufacturing company focused on the thermal management of electronics, will host the New England Section of Society of Automotive Engineers International (SAE NE) for a tour of its Norwood campus and a presentation by ATS founder, President, and CEO Dr. Kaveh Azar.

Dr. Azar’s discussion is entitled, “Battery Thermal Management – The Gateway to the Successful Operation of Electric Vehicles.” He will review the role of temperature in the longevity and performance of nickel metal hydride (NiMH) and lithium-ion electric vehicle batteries; drawing analogies between battery temperature and the junction temperature of modern electronics. As Dr. Azar notes, “Both play an identical role in successful operation of their respective systems.”

There will be a discussion of the analytical methods and design criterion for predicting battery temperature and establishing safe temperature limits. Dr. Azar will present high-level possibilities for thermal management in the electric vehicle sphere as well as cooling options that are deployed for battery thermal management. Current cooling designs can be active or passive. There are forced air, liquid cooling, natural convection and conduction systems used by manufacturers.

Several thermal solutions that engineers have incorporated include increasing the thermal density of the battery, using phase-change material to store transient heat loads and graphite-impregnated paraffin waxes as gap fillers. It is also important for the designs to control temperature distribution across the battery to avoid degradation of cells.

Thermal management is crucial in the design of electric vehicle batteries because temperature has a direct correlation on battery life and performance. It will affect the battery’s ability to store and deliver a charge, weaken polymer- or fiber-based cell dividers, and could potentially lead to thermal runaway.

“The engineers who will design the next hybrid vehicle battery packs will need to be cognizant of the growing need for thermal management,” read a recent article on coolingZONE. “The increased need for thermal protection, due to safety considerations; the reduced thermal capacity, due to lesser mass; and the reduced workable volume are among the challenges to be faced. The hybrid vehicle we may soon drive must have reliable and intelligent cooling systems to cool down their high-density battery packs.”

Why is this topic of particular relevance now?

Electric vehicle sales worldwide have jumped 57 percent from 2015 to 2016, according to data reported by Bloomberg New Energy Finance. The article referenced a Bloomberg report stating that electric vehicle sales could be as much as 47 percent of the automotive market by 2040 (dependent on factors such as oil prices). In the U.S., manufacturers have been urged by President Barack Obama’s EV Everywhere challenge to make electric cars as affordable and convenient as gas-powered vehicles by 2022.

Like cell phone technology in the past two decades, electric vehicles have the potential for widespread usage and to wide-ranging effects inside and outside of the automotive industry. The “digitization of the transport system” will effect, among others, oil companies, car dealerships, maintenance services, and utility suppliers.

“If it is hard to predict when phase change in complex systems begins, it is even harder to predict where it ends,” said Michael Leibreich and Angus McCrone, the authors of the Bloomberg article. “No list of potential impacts of the ‘Transformation of Transportation’ can be complete. However, one thing is for sure: if our predictions for the uptake of electric vehicles are anything like correct, there is no part of the global economy which will not, in some way, be affected.”

Currently, electric vehicles cost an average of $30,000 and travel 100 miles or less on a single charge. Tesla (Model 3) and Chevrolet (Bolt EV) have both promised electric vehicles that will travel 200 miles on a charge within the year. Other car makers, such as Volkswagen and BMW, have announced plans to turn a large portion of their production to electric vehicles in the next few years as well.

While the changes in infrastructure and the length of time that most car owners keep a vehicle (11 years on average) have limited electric vehicle sales to this point, according to Christopher Mims of the Wall Street Journal, the next vehicle that most consumers purchase is likely to be electric.

Mims explained, “It is the nature of disruptive technological shifts that it seems like nothing is changing—until it seems as if everything is changing at once. Electric vehicles have been a long time coming, but they now represent such a clear and present threat to the gasoline engine that Mr. Fox, of the service-station association, now recommends that members signing long-term contracts for fuel include an option to renegotiate if more than 10 percent of a state’s fleet goes electric.”

Electric vehicles offer a smooth drive with better acceleration, less moving parts requiring less maintenance, better air quality, and a better platform for autonomous driving, said Bloomberg. Electric vehicles are the future and that means designing better, longer-lasting, higher-performing batteries will be the future as well.

Cooling those batteries will be critical. As Dr. Azar will explain, without proper thermal management the electric vehicle battery will be inefficient and unable to provide the performance that consumers demand.

The Sept. 22 event is free for SAE NE members and $5 for non-members. It runs from 6-9:15 p.m. with tours of the ATS campus from 7-8:00 p.m. and Dr. Azar’s presentation at 8:00. Register online at http://www.sae.org/servlets/sectionEvent?PAGE=getSectionEvents&OBJECT_TYPE=SectionEventAdmin&HEIR_CODE=MS045#249128&saetkn=w1aFMMls8Y or contact SAE member Jeff Mobed at jeffrey.mobed@gmail.com or 508-367-6565.

ATS’ Standard Board Level Heat Sinks for PCB

We’ve just released our new line of standard board level heat sinks. These stamped heat sinks are ideal for PCB application, especially where TO-220 packages are used. Available now through Digi-Key Electronics​ or at this link from ATS http://www.qats.com/eShop.aspx?produc…

 

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