By Courtney E. Howard
SAN DIEGO, 12 March 2008. Gerald Janicki, senior director, Meggitt Defense Systems Inc. in Irvine, Calif., closed this year's Military & Aerospace Electronics Forum with the presentation, "Liquid Cooling Solutions."
Heat threatens the longevity and performance of electronics, especially vetronics, in mil-aero environments. Among the potential sources of heat are computer processors, solar loads, thermal management systems that make heat, and the vehicle itself, Janicki explains.
Trends driving the need for thermal management, says Janicki, include the following: Netcentric warfare driving higher functional density electronics, current and planned military platforms electronics requiring from several kW to several hundreds of kW, and thermal management becoming a mission-critical function and subsystem in support of key vetronics.
"Thermal management systems need to be simple, modular, and upgradeable to cost-effectively support COTS electronics on legacy and future military platforms," Janicki notes.
The recommended solution set, says Janicki, includes: Ruggedized conduction-cooled cards with thermal spreaders, LFT enclosures with self-contained LFT side-wall cooling, an affordable active cooling and heating system, and modular platform integration.
"We talked to the soldiers; they want cooling," Janicki insists, referencing increased heat dissipation from expanded in-vehicle electronics. "Thermal management is the central issue today."