Watercooling is a method of heat removal from components. Contrary to air cooling, it uses water as the heat transmitter and is commonly used for cooling motors in automobiles. Other uses include cooling the lubricant oil of pumps; for cooling purposes in heat exchangers; and cooling products from tanks or columns.
The advantages of using water cooling over air cooling include water's higher specific heat capacity, density and thermal conductivity, meaning water can transmit heat over greater distances with much less volumetric flow and reduced temperature difference. This leads to the primary advantage watercooling enjoys over conventional heatsinks: the tremendously increased ability to transport heat away from source to a secondary cooling surface allows for large, more optimally designed radiators rather than small, inefficient fins mounted on or near a heat source such as a CPU core.
A typical watercooling setup consists of an object to be cooled, a pump which circulates the water and a radiator such as a large heatsink (possibly with a fan). These components are linked by tubes.
An optional watercooling component is a reservoir, which helps to prevent the formation of air bubbles in the system. However, if the watercooling system is properly configured and sealed, there is no need for a reservoir, though it does make the system much easier and less time-consuming to fill. Another option is simply using a T-Line, which usually costs about $1. There is no need for either of these components, though one is recommended to make the operation quicker to fill and bleed.
Watercoolers for computers (other than mainframes) were, up until the end of the 90's, homemade. They were put together using car radiators, aquarium pumps and home made water blocks. More recently a growing number of companies are manufacturing premade, specialised components, allowing watercooling to be compact enough to fit inside a computer case. This, coupled with the growing amount of heat coming from the CPU has greatly increased the popularity of water cooling. However it is still a very niche market.
Dedicated overclockers will occasionally use phase change cooling or thermoelectric coolers in place of more common standard heat exchangers. Watercooling systems in which water is cooled directly by the evaporator coil of a phase change system are able to chill the circulating coolant below the ambient air temperature (an impossible feat using a standard heat exchanger) and, as a result, generally provide superior cooling of the computer's heat-generating components. The downside of phase-change or thermoelectric cooling is that it uses much more electricity and antifreeze must be added due to the low temperature. Additionally, insulation, usually in the form of lagging around water pipes and neoprene pads around the components to be cooled, must be used in order to prevent damage caused by condensation of water vapour from the air on the surfaces at below ambient temperature. Common places from which to borrow the required phase change system are a household dehumidifier or air conditioner.
An alternative cooling system, which enables components to be cooled below the ambient temperature, but which obviates the requirement for antifreeze and lagged pipes, is to place a thermoelectric device (commonly referred to as a 'Peltier' or 'pelt' after Jean Peltier, who documented the effect) between the heat-generating component and the water block. Because the only sub-ambient temperature zone now is at the interface with the heat-generating component itself, insulation is required only in that localised area. The disadvantage to such a system is that pelts typically draw a large amount of power, and the watercooling system is required to remove this power, in addition to the heat generated by the component.
The Apple Macintosh G5 was the first mainstream desktop computer to have watercooling (for the CPU) as standard.
Some industrial plants located in coastal areas use "once-through" seawater for their cooling needs and the warm seawater is returned and discharged offshore.
High grade industrial water (produced by reverse osmosis) and potable water is sometimes used in industrial plants requiring high-purity cooling water.
Some nuclear reactors use heavy water as cooling. Most of the time, heavy water is employed in a nuclear reactors because it is a moderator for the nuclear chain reaction. For the main cooling system, normal water is preferably employed through the use of a heat exchanger as heavy water is much more expensive. Reactors that use other materials for moderation (graphite) may also use normal water for cooling.
Cooling technology | Computer hardware cooling
Wasserk%C3%BChlung | Refrigeración líquida (informática) | Watercooling
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