Enclosure manufacturer, Rittal Corporation, has won Processing magazine’s 2015 Breakthrough Products of the Year award for their Blue e+ Cooling Unit Series for enclosures. “The award recognizes products, technologies and services that have made significant contributions to the process industries within the last year and are expected to continue impacting the market in the … [Read more...]
New Solid-State Wine Cellar Cooling Technology
At the recent Consumer Electronics Show, Haier America introduced its “new alternative cooling system for wine cellars,” as reported by DigitalTrends.com. This technology “couples a solid-state chip that is 25 times lighter and 100 times smaller than other cooling compressors with H20/C02 heat exchange technology,” according to DigitalTrends.com. DigitalTrends.com also says … [Read more...]
New Cooler Can Advance Heat Exchanger Technology
Recently, researchers at the Energy Department’s Sandia National Laboratories have developed an innovative new air-cooling technology called the Sandia Cooler. “The Sandia Cooler combines a fan and a finned metal heat sink into a single element called a heat-sink-impeller in which the fins of the heat sink rotate, improving heat transfer by a factor of ten,” reports … [Read more...]
New Cooling System for Automotive Battery is Simpler and Offers Higher Cooling Rates
As electric cars go to higher charging rates, better cooling will be needed. Direct Expansion, or DX, is a new cooling system that “uses the same refrigerant as used in your vehicle’s air conditioning system to cool the battery directly,” according to HybridCars.com. DX eliminates liquid glycol, even has a cooling rate of 3-4 times higher, and simplifies the battery’s … [Read more...]
New High-Rise Nano-Materials Incorporate Thermal Cooling Layers
Researchers and Stanford engineers are creating a new approach to the layout of computer processors and memory chips (called Nano-Engineered Computing Systems Technology, or N3XT) where processors and memory are stacked on top of one another like a high-rise architecture. This could cause immediate problems involving heat, but Stanford mechanical engineers Kenneth Goodson and … [Read more...]
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