TY  - JOUR
T1  - Synergistic design of bi-level heat sink combining topology-optimized microchannels with jet impingement for high-heat-flux applications
AU  - Sun, Qidong
AU  - Guo, Junzhe
AU  - Zhou, Sheng
AU  - Chen, Mingji
AU  - Geng, Da
AU  - Tao, Ran
N1  - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Elsevier Ltd
PY  - 2026/2
Y1  - 2026/2
N2  - This study presents a bi-level heat sink designed through a manufacturing-aware framework that integrates macro-scale jet impingement manifolds with micro-scale topology-optimized channels. Prototypes were fabricated via laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) and examined using computed tomography (CT) to capture manufacturing-induced deviations. Coupled simulations and experiments evaluated three inlet–outlet configurations (2IN1OUT, 3IN2OUT, and 4IN5OUT, corresponding to two/one, three/two, and four/five inlet–outlet channel combinations, respectively) under high heat fluxes ranging from 83.3 to 200 W/cm². All designs achieved effective cooling, with the 4IN5OUT configuration delivering the best thermal performance in simulation, maintaining an average temperature of 51.3 °C, a peak of 54.0 °C, and a pressure drop of 31.0 kPa at 200 W/cm². CT analysis revealed that LPBF-induced imperfections, such as channel shrinkage and surface roughness, increased pressure drop by 8.8–30.9 % and explained the experimental–numerical temperature discrepancies of 7.2–16.8 %. The optimized 2IN1OUT design exhibited the smallest deviations, consistent with CT findings showing closer geometric fidelity. These results establish a robust design–fabrication–validation workflow that bridges digital optimization with realizable performance, offering a practical and scalable thermal management solution for next-generation high-power electronics.
AB  - This study presents a bi-level heat sink designed through a manufacturing-aware framework that integrates macro-scale jet impingement manifolds with micro-scale topology-optimized channels. Prototypes were fabricated via laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) and examined using computed tomography (CT) to capture manufacturing-induced deviations. Coupled simulations and experiments evaluated three inlet–outlet configurations (2IN1OUT, 3IN2OUT, and 4IN5OUT, corresponding to two/one, three/two, and four/five inlet–outlet channel combinations, respectively) under high heat fluxes ranging from 83.3 to 200 W/cm². All designs achieved effective cooling, with the 4IN5OUT configuration delivering the best thermal performance in simulation, maintaining an average temperature of 51.3 °C, a peak of 54.0 °C, and a pressure drop of 31.0 kPa at 200 W/cm². CT analysis revealed that LPBF-induced imperfections, such as channel shrinkage and surface roughness, increased pressure drop by 8.8–30.9 % and explained the experimental–numerical temperature discrepancies of 7.2–16.8 %. The optimized 2IN1OUT design exhibited the smallest deviations, consistent with CT findings showing closer geometric fidelity. These results establish a robust design–fabrication–validation workflow that bridges digital optimization with realizable performance, offering a practical and scalable thermal management solution for next-generation high-power electronics.
KW  - Heat sinks
KW  - High heat flux
KW  - Jet impingement
KW  - Laser powder bed fusion
KW  - Microchannels
KW  - Topology optimization
UR  - http://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105016890331
U2  - 10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2025.127875
DO  - 10.1016/j.ijheatmasstransfer.2025.127875
M3  - Article
AN  - SCOPUS:105016890331
SN  - 0017-9310
VL  - 255
JO  - International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer
JF  - International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer
M1  - 127875
ER  -