ASHRAE OR-05-12-1-2005 Thermal Road Map for Telecom Equipment《电信设备的热的路线图》.pdf
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1、OR-05-12-1 Thermal Road Map for Telecom Equipment Gamal Refai Ahmed, PhD ABSTRACT The objective ofthis paper is to establish a thermal road mupfor telecom equipment. The intention ofthe authors is not to define a comprehensive thermal road map for telco equip- ment but rather to introduce the basis
2、for a thermal road map that needs to be investigated und examined by the thermal community in this arena. Thepresentpaper also establishes the air cooling limitfrom the component, board, and system level in telecom equipment. Finally, it proposes a growing trend of the bandwidth verses power dissipa
3、tion. INTRODUCTION Until recently, telco providers, as all other electronic system providers, favored the use of air cooling as a means to thermally manage their equipment. A recent worthwhile book on this is by Yeh and Chu (2002). In the early 1980s indirect liquid cooling in the form of a TCM was
4、introduced to cool IBMs multi-chip modules. The cooling package utilizes solid pistons contacting chips and directs the heat to a hat and onto a detachable water-cooled cold plate. One of the big chal- lenges of introducing liquid cooling is the lack of size. Agonafer et al (1994, 1996) introduced p
5、atents on “convert- ible heat exchanger for air or water cooling of electronic circuit components and the like” and “convertible cooling module for air or water cooling of electronic circuit compo- nents” to address some of these issues. The service providers still have concerns about using either l
6、iquid cooling or refrig- eration cooling since a reliable track record has not been estab- lished using liquid cooling. Furthermore, introducing a new cooling approach in the next generation of telco equipment can be associated with a dramatic change in the thermal management ofthe central offices a
7、nd their setups. Therefore, Dereje Agonafer, PhD it is essential to define the air-cooling limits oftelco equipment in the central offices, since it is pertinent in the decision of management to make a change. In addition, the limitations of air-cooling capacity eventually will lead the service prov
8、iders to adapt more aggressive cooling technologies. These types of aggressive technologies should have the capability to support the growing power density in the long term in order to give stability to the infrastructure of the hosted offices. A growing number of papers address electronic cooling.
9、Three levels of cooling need to be addressed in the tele- communication sector: local cooling for critical modules in the system, centralized cooling for the telecom frame (rack cooling), and cooling of the central office. The first item is more controlled by the component and module vendors for amp
10、lifier modules, Raman modules (a specific pump laser), optical switching pump, power supplies, and ASIC devices (e.g., Corning, Furukawa, JDS Uniphase, AMCC, and Agere). The second item is owned by the system vendors, SV (such as Alcatel, Cisco, Sienna, Nortel, and Corvis). However, the SVs will hav
11、e a lot of influence and are really the main drivers, even at the module level of cooling, since the SVs are the main drivers for the launching of tech- nology by the module/component vendors. Indeed, this rela- tion is the opposite of the computer industry, where INTEL and AMD are enforcing the coo
12、ling approach to their custom- ers (computer manufacturers). This is because the technology vendors simply do not know how the technology will be implemented in a cabinet or rack. It is also common to find that Gamal Refai Ahmed is staff thermal engineer at AT1 Technologies, Inc., Canada. Dereje Ago
13、nafer is professor and director of electronics, MEMS, Nano-Electronics and System Packaging Center, University of Texas, Arlington. 02005 ASHRAE. 91 3 the thermal architecture from the frame point of view is quite different from one SV to another. In addition, the centralized cooling of the cabineth
14、ack must be easily integrated in the present central offices as well as easily maintained. It is essential to remember that telecom services are very critical services compared to other indus- tries, including the computer industry. Losing service can be very costly to the SV if the fault is due to
15、the SV. A system vendor can easily be charged hundreds of thousands of dollars for losing one minute of service. For example, it is critical that there be no down time in teleco services for 91 1 emergency calls. Therefore, the availability and reliability of the cooling system for teleco equipment
16、must be very high. In the present paper, local cooling for critical modules in the system and centralized cooling for the telecom cabinet or rack cooling will be addressed. It is important to note that this study will only focus on the telco industry and will not address the thermal challenges in ei
17、ther the military or the computer industry, which is indeed a very critical and broad market that will be addressed in an upcoming paper. In the next three sections, the following will be discussed: Defining the operating environment for indoor telco equip- ment Present cooling strategies in a telco
18、 system fiom a compo- nent point of view Present cooling strategy of a telco cabinet (rack cooling) 1. 2. 3. DEFINING THE OPERATING ENVIRONMENT FOR INDOOR TELCO EQUIPMENT The Telcordia Generic Requirements (GR) documents are published by Telcordia to inform the industry of Telcor- dias view of gener
19、ic requirements for a variety of conditions affecting the telecommunications industry and the equipment it uses. One can find the imposing criteria in the thermal management of telco equipment from GR-63 and GR-3028 (Telcordia 2002,2001). These criteria can be summarized as follows: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. T
20、he surrounding ambient temperature can be varied between 5C and 40C. For short-tem operations, the ambient temperature range can be -5C to 50C; however, for a less than half populated frame, the maximum temper- ature is 55C. The nominal ambient temperature is 24v (*2“C). The specific humidity can be
21、 between 5% and 85%, and for short-term operation the range can be extended from 5% to The high altitude range is -60 m below sea level to 1800 m above sea level. However, it is recommended that the equip- ment should be operated up to 4000 m above sea level. The air intake to the equipment can be f
22、rom the front or the bottom of the equipment. However, the exhaust air can either come from the top or the back of the equipment. 90%. PRESENT COOLING STRATEGIES FROM COMPONENT POINT OF VIEW IN A TELCO SYSTEM The primary cooling technology in telecom equipment is air cooling. Forced convection air a
23、nd free convection air cool- ing were used as the main technology for many years. In the last 15 years, we have started to approach forced convection air cooling limits at localized spots in the system at the module level. Therefore, forced air convection was enhanced with the use of heat pipes and
24、more exotic heat sinks to spread the heat to areas where appropriate cooling can be implemented. For example, a heat pipe can be an extremely effective heat spreader as its thermal conductivity can be on the order of 1 O0 times that of copper (Nnanna et al. 2001). In addition, in the last 1 O years,
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