Evaluation of Thermal Performance of a Wick-free Vapor Chamber in Power Electronics Cooling
Arani Mukhopadhyay (1), Anish Pal (1), Congbo Bao (2), Mohamad Jafari, Gukeh (1), Sudip K. Mazumder (2), Constantine M. Megaridis (1) ((1), Mechanical, Industrial Engineering, University of Illinois Chicago, IL,, US. (2) Electrical, Computer Engineering

TL;DR
This study evaluates the thermal performance of a wick-free vapor chamber in cooling high-power electronics, demonstrating its effectiveness with low-cost air cooling in a practical experimental setup.
Contribution
It provides experimental validation of wick-free vapor chambers for high-power electronics cooling, highlighting their advantages over traditional wick-based designs.
Findings
Wick-free vapor chambers can effectively spread heat in high-power electronics.
Surface wettability patterning enhances fluid transport without wicks.
Air cooling with vapor chambers offers a low-cost solution for thermal management.
Abstract
Efficient thermal management in high-power electronics cooling can be achieved using phase-change heat transfer devices, such as vapor chambers. Traditional vapor chambers use wicks to transport condensate for efficient thermal exchange and to prevent "dry-out" of the evaporator. However, wicks in vapor chambers present significant design challenges arising out of large pressure drops across the wicking material, which slows down condensate transport rates and increases the chances for dry-out. Thicker wicks add to overall thermal resistance, while deterring the development of thinner devices by limiting the total thickness of the vapor chamber. Wickless vapor chambers eliminate the use of metal wicks entirely, by incorporating complementary wettability-patterned flat plates on both the evaporator and the condenser side. Such surface modifications enhance fluid transport on the…
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