Thermal resistance
Thermal resistance is a heat property and a measurement of a temperature difference by which an object or material resists a heat flow. Thermal resistance is the reciprocal of thermal conductance.
- thermal resistance R in kelvins per watt is a property of a particular component. For example, a characteristic of a heat sink.
- Specific thermal resistance or thermal resistivity Rλ in kelvin metres per watt, is a material constant.
- Thermal insulance has the units square metre kelvins per watt in SI units or square foot degree Fahrenheit hours per British thermal unit in imperial units. It is the thermal resistance of unit area of a material. In terms of insulation, it is measured by the R-value.
Absolute thermal resistance
The thermal resistance of materials is of great interest to electronic engineers because most electrical components generate heat and need to be cooled. Electronic components malfunction or fail if they overheat, and some parts routinely need measures taken in the design stage to prevent this.
Analogies
Electrical engineers are familiar with Ohm's law and so often use it as an analogy when doing calculations involving thermal resistance.Mechanical and structural engineers are more familiar with Hooke's law and so often use it as an analogy when doing calculations involving thermal resistance.
type | structural analogy | hydraulic analogy | thermal | electrical analogy |
quantity | ... | volume | heat | charge |
potential | displacement | pressure | temperature | potential |
flux | load or force | flow rate | heat transfer rate | current |
flux density | stress | velocity | heat flux | current density |
resistance | flexibility | fluid resistance | thermal resistance | electrical resistance |
conductance | ... | fluid conductance | thermal conductance | electrical conductance |
resistivity | flexibility | fluid resistivity | thermal resistivity | electrical resistivity |
conductivity | stiffness | fluid conductivity | thermal conductivity | electrical conductivity |
lumped element linear model | Hooke's law | Hagen–Poiseuille equation | Newton's law of cooling | Ohm's law |
distributed linear model | ... | ... | Fourier's law | Ohm's law |
Explanation from an electronics point of view
Equivalent thermal circuits
The heat flow can be modelled by analogy to an electrical circuit where heat flow is represented by current, temperatures are represented by voltages, heat sources are represented by constant current sources, absolute thermal resistances are represented by resistors and thermal capacitances by capacitors.The diagram shows an equivalent thermal circuit for a semiconductor device with a heat sink.
Example calculation
Consider a component such as a silicon transistor that is bolted to the metal frame of a piece of equipment. The transistor's manufacturer will specify parameters in the datasheet called the absolute thermal resistance from junction to case, and the maximum allowable temperature of the semiconductor junction. The specification for the design should include a maximum temperature at which the circuit should function correctly. Finally, the designer should consider how the heat from the transistor will escape to the environment: this might be by convection into the air, with or without the aid of a heat sink, or by conduction through the printed circuit board. For simplicity, let us assume that the designer decides to bolt the transistor to a metal surface that is guaranteed to be less than above the ambient temperature. Note: THS appears to be undefined.Given all this information, the designer can construct a model of the heat flow from the semiconductor junction, where the heat is generated, to the outside world. In our example, the heat has to flow from the junction to the case of the transistor, then from the case to the metalwork. We do not need to consider where the heat goes after that, because we are told that the metalwork will conduct heat fast enough to keep the temperature less than above ambient: this is all we need to know.
Suppose the engineer wishes to know how much power he can put into the transistor before it overheats. The calculations are as follows.
where is the absolute thermal resistance of the bond between the transistor's case and the metalwork. This figure depends on the nature of the bond - for example, a thermal bonding pad or thermal transfer grease might be used to reduce the absolute thermal resistance.
We use the general principle that the temperature drop across a given absolute thermal resistance with a given heat flow through it is:
Substituting our own symbols into this formula gives:
and, rearranging,
The designer now knows, the maximum power that the transistor can be allowed to dissipate, so he can design the circuit to limit the temperature of the transistor to a safe level.
Let us substitute some sample numbers:
The result is then:
This means that the transistor can dissipate about 18 watts before it overheats. A cautious designer would operate the transistor at a lower power level to increase its reliability.
This method can be generalised to include any number of layers of heat-conducting materials, simply by adding together the absolute thermal resistances of the layers and the temperature drops across the layers.
Derived from Fourier's Law for heat conduction
From Fourier's Law for heat conduction, the following equation can be derived, and is valid as long as all of the parameters are constant throughout the sample.where:
- is the absolute thermal resistance across the thickness of the sample
- is the thickness of the sample
- is the thermal conductivity of the sample
- is the thermal resistivity of the sample
- is the cross-sectional area perpendicular to the path of heat flow.
where:
- is the absolute thermal resistance across the thickness of the sample,
- is the thickness of the sample,
- is the heat flux through the sample,
- is the temperature gradient across the sample,
- is the cross-sectional area perpendicular to the path of heat flow through the sample,
- is the temperature difference across the sample,
- is the rate of heat flow through the sample.
Problems with electrical resistance analogy
Measurement standards
The junction-to-air thermal resistance can vary greatly depending on the ambient conditions. JEDEC has a standard for measuring the junction-to-air thermal resistance of electronics packages under natural convection and another standard for measurement under forced convection.A JEDEC standard for measuring the junction-to-board thermal resistance has been published as JESD51-8.
A JEDEC standard for measuring the junction-to-case thermal resistance is relatively newcomer, having been published in late 2010; it concerns only packages having a single heat flow and an exposed cooling surface.
Resistance in Composite Wall
Parallel thermal resistance
Similarly to electrical circuits, the total thermal resistance for steady state conditions can be calculated as follows.The total thermal resistance
Simplifying the equation, we get
With terms for the thermal resistance for conduction, we get
Resistance in series and parallel
It is often suitable to assume one-dimensional conditions, although the heat flow is multidimensional. Now, two different circuits may be used for this case. For case , we presume isothermal surfaces for those normal to the x- direction, whereas for case we presume adiabatic surfaces parallel to the x- direction. We may obtain different results for the total resistance and the actual corresponding values of the heat transfer are bracketed by. When the multidimensional effects becomes more significant, these differences are increased with increasing.Radial Systems
Spherical and cylindrical systems may be treated as one-dimensional, due to the temperature gradients in the radial direction. The standard method can be used for analyzing radial systems under steady state conditions, starting with the appropriate form of the heat equation, or the alternative method, starting with the appropriate form of Fourier's law. For a hollow cylinder in steady state conditions with no heat generation, the appropriate form of heat equation isWhere is treated as a variable. Considering the appropriate form of Fourier's law, the physical significance of treating as a variable becomes evident when the rate at which energy is conducted across a cylindrical surface, this is represented as
Where is the area that is normal to the direction of where the heat transfer occurs. Equation 1 implies that the quantity is not dependent of the radius, it follows from equation 5 that the heat transfer rate, is a constant in the radial direction.
In order to determine the temperature distribution in the cylinder, equation 4 can be solved applying the appropriate boundary conditions. With the assumption that is constant
Using the following boundary conditions, the constants and can be computed
and
The general solution gives us
and
Solving for and and substituting into the general solution, we obtain
The logarithmic distribution of the temperature is sketched in the inset of the thumbnail figure.
Assuming that the temperature distribution, equation 7, is used with Fourier’s law in equation 5, the heat transfer rate can be expressed in the following form
Finally, for radial conduction in a cylindrical wall, the thermal resistance is of the form
such that