A solid copper pad is integrated into the heating side of a wickless copper thermal ground plane (TGP) with deionized water as the working fluid. Experimental TGP performance tests, along with pool boiling experiments and conduction thermal numerical simulations, are used to quantify the effect of the copper pad thickness on the overall thermal performance of the TGP. Even though adding the copper pad weakens the effective thermal conductivity of the TGP slightly, it improves the dryout within the TGP and allows operation at up to 1.6 times higher heat flux value. Boiling inside the TGP yields a reduced boiling heat transfer coefficient in the narrow gap, coupled with a higher dryout point due to the bubble-induced flow inside the TGP. The effective thermal conductivity remains 1.5 to 1.8 times higher than that of plain copper, and the weight of the TGP is approximately 60% of the weight of a solid copper block of the same size. The TGP is orientation-independent regardless of the pad thickness and water amounts.
This work was supported by the Civil-Military Technology Cooperation Program of the Institute of Civil-Military Technology Cooperation (ICMTC), with a grant funded by the Defense Acquisition Program Administration and the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy (Grant No. 18CM5017) and the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant funded by the Ministry of Science and ICT, Korea (No. NRF-2020R1A2C3008689).