Heat transfer enhancement for high power chips in immersion cooling by ducted propellers

Puhang Jin, Jinhong Yang, Xiaoteng Zhang, Xue Zhang, Gongnan Xie

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Immersion cooling offers significant potential for various scenarios facing increasingly severe heat dissipation challenges. Increasing the overall flowrate of immersion cooling is a non-efficient method to enhance the heat dissipation for high power chips, since most of components can be cooled with very small flow velocity. To alleviate the hotspots issues while minimizing cooling power consumption, this study proposes a design of installing ducted propellers to accelerate the local fluid flow around the high power chips to improve their heat dissipation performance. The numerical simulations were conducted with varied installation position and duct shape, and dual-propeller configurations. The coolant is FC40, the heat load for a 40*40 mm heat source is 400 W, the free stream velocity is 0.5 m/s, and the propellers is working under 2500 revolutions per minute (rpm). The ducted propeller positioned at the rear of the heat sink reduces the average temperature of the heat source by 6.2 °C, and the inlet velocity is increased by 15.9 % and the outlet velocity is increased by 213.0 %. The rear-mounted propeller covered a wider area than the front-mounted one, while the front-mounted ducted propeller exhibited better local heat transfer enhancement in central channels of the heat sink. The rectangular duct positively contributes to improving the uniformity of the heat source surface temperature and performs better than the circular duct in the front-mounted configuration with a 1.5°C lower maximum temperature. Single propeller exhibits the intrinsic weakness that the side channels can hardly by influenced by suction effect, resulting the hot spots at the side region near the outlet. The dual-propeller design provided a pronounced enhancement in heat dissipation, lowering the maximum temperature of the heat source surface by 15.6 °C and reducing the temperature difference by 10.4 °C compared to the case without propellers. The maximum power consumption for single and dual propellers is 0.31 W and 0.56 W, respectively. The results demonstrate that the ducted propeller is a good candidate for heat transfer enhancement, hotspot temperature control and cooling power saving for immersion cooling server with high power chips.

Original languageEnglish
Article number126469
JournalApplied Thermal Engineering
Volume273
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Aug 2025

Keywords

  • Ducted propeller
  • Heat transfer enhancement
  • Immersion cooling
  • Thrust and suction effects

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