[TenTec] Is there a beefier 2N5301?

Dr. Gerald N. Johnson geraldj at storm.weather.net
Tue Mar 6 21:30:55 EST 2007


On Tue, 2007-03-06 at 19:50 -0500, Gary Hoffman wrote:
> It is interesting that most of us don't know how important the heat sink
> goop is, and how much of the heat transfer takes place through it.
> 
> The two metal surfaces (heat sink and transistor) even if machined quite
> flat and smooth actually touch microscopically at a very few tiny points.
> That is the limit of the metal to metal transfer.  Even if you work really
> hard at it, that is the best you can do.
> 
> The rest of the space is filled with air, and air is an excellent insulator.
> 
> To fix this problem, one approach is to use conventional heat sink compound.
> These common compounds use a passivated aluminum oxide extremely fine powder
> suspended in a petrochemical.  This compound fills the air gaps and the
> aluminum oxide conducts the heat far better than the air would have.
> 
> In extreme applications, a better heat sink compound uses extremely fine
> silver in the place of the aluminum oxide, for many times better results,
> but at the expense of having the compound be electrically conductive which
> can cause many issues.
> 
> So, generally we use the aluminum compound and it works really well.
> 
> To go beyond that, you have to turn to the heat sink itself.  Make it
> bigger.  Make it Copper.  Give it more and larger fins.  Blow air on it.
>  Or - if you really want to do it right, use a TEC for active cooling and
> make that heat sink really really cold.  Just short of the dew point of
> course.  And much more practical than liquid cooling.

So today in Iowa that heat sink could be cooled to 15 F but on a warm
summer day in Houston, the dew point might be 95 F so you would have to
include a dew point sensor to pick the cooling point, or a moisture
sensor on the heat sink to detect the dew...
> 
> TECs really rock when used properly in this manner.
> 
> 73 de Gary, AA2IZ
> 

-- 
73, Jerry, K0CQ,
All content copyright Dr. Gerald N. Johnson, electrical engineer



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