Use thermoelectric coolers with real-world heat sinks

W Stephen Woodward, Chapel Hill, North Carolina -- EDN Europe, 01 Jun 2008

Peltier devices, also known as solid-state refrigerators, or TECs (thermoelectric coolers), actively cool temperature-sensitive electronic components, such as optical detectors and solid-state lasers. A glance at any TEC data sheet reveals that some primary and fairly easily understood parameters characterize a TEC: The maximum current is the TEC’s current drive for maximum cooling, and the maximum differential temperature is the no-load cooling temperature at maximum current and with no heat load. The maximum voltage is the TEC’s voltage drop at the maximum-current drive, and the maximum heat transfer (QMAX) is the maximum cooling-heat load at a maximum current and differential temperature of zero.

However, one TEC data-sheet requirement that designers sometimes miss is that you always measure these parameters with the TEC mounted on an effectively zero-thermal-impedance— that is, perfect—heat sink. This point is an important one and deserving of the designer’s rapt attention because heat sinks always have at least some thermal impedance, and all the primary TEC parameters change— sometimes dramatically—when the TEC is mated to an imperfect sink.

The family of impedance-versuscurrent curves in Figure 1 illustrates this effect. Each curve corresponds to a different heat-sink thermal impedance, normalized to one for 11 values from zero to two.

Although the maximum current is, by definition, the optimal current for maximum cooling at a heat-sink impedance of zero, the situation changes radically with increasing impedance until there’s no net cooling whatsoever. Further, for impedance greater than one, instead of cooling, the maximum TEC drive actually heats rather than cools. Figure 2 shows a simple solution for this problem: You must replace the data sheet’s maximum current and voltage values with new, lower maximumdrive values corresponding to the optimal numbers you need to achieve maximum cooling whenever impedance is greater than zero.


 

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