US20010007525A1 - Docking station with thermoelectric heat dissipation system for docked portable computer - Google Patents
Docking station with thermoelectric heat dissipation system for docked portable computer Download PDFInfo
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- US20010007525A1 US20010007525A1 US09/785,148 US78514801A US2001007525A1 US 20010007525 A1 US20010007525 A1 US 20010007525A1 US 78514801 A US78514801 A US 78514801A US 2001007525 A1 US2001007525 A1 US 2001007525A1
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- heat
- computer
- portable computer
- cooling system
- housing
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- G—PHYSICS
- G06—COMPUTING OR CALCULATING; COUNTING
- G06F—ELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
- G06F1/00—Details not covered by groups G06F3/00 - G06F13/00 and G06F21/00
- G06F1/16—Constructional details or arrangements
- G06F1/1613—Constructional details or arrangements for portable computers
- G06F1/1632—External expansion units, e.g. docking stations
-
- G—PHYSICS
- G06—COMPUTING OR CALCULATING; COUNTING
- G06F—ELECTRIC DIGITAL DATA PROCESSING
- G06F1/00—Details not covered by groups G06F3/00 - G06F13/00 and G06F21/00
- G06F1/16—Constructional details or arrangements
- G06F1/20—Cooling means
- G06F1/203—Cooling means for portable computers, e.g. for laptops
Definitions
- the present invention generally relates to computer apparatus and, in a preferred embodiment thereof, more particularly relates to apparatus for dissipating operating heat from a portable computer operatively connected to a docking station used to electrically connect the docked computer to desktop peripheral devices.
- the display screen lid portion of the notebook computer is opened, thereby increasing the total exterior surface area of the computer exposed to ambient air to which computer operating heat may be dissipated.
- the computer's display screen lid is closed, thereby reducing the overall exposed exterior computer surface area from which heat may be dissipated.
- This tends to appreciably increase the interior and exterior operating temperatures of the docked computer compared to applications in which it operated by itself with its display screen lid in its opened orientation.
- Such operating temperature increases are aggravated by the fact that the docking station physically covers and insulates large exterior portions of the docked computer and inhibits the dissipation of heat therefrom.
- a modern high speed notebook computer microprocessor can generate within the computer on the order of about 8 watts when the computer is in its battery mode, about 10-12 watts when the computer is in its AC mode, and up to about 20 watts when the computer is operatively coupled to a docking station.
- a specially designed docking base is utilized to provide auxiliary operating heat dissipation for a portable computer, representatively a notebook computer, operatively docked thereto.
- This auxiliary heat dissipation provided by the docking base advantageously reduces the amount of computer operating heat dissipation that must be provided for by apparatus carried within the portable computer itself.
- the docking base has a housing with which a thermoelectric cooling system is operatively associated.
- the docking base housing has a receiving area through which a portable computer may be moved through a docking path into an operatively docked position relative to the docking base housing.
- thermoelectric cooling system is operative to dissipate operating heat from the docked portable computer and has a cold side portion positioned to be engaged and receive heat from a heat dissipation portion of the portable computer, which is thermally communicated with an internal heat-generating component within the computer, in response to movement of the portable computer through the docking path.
- the cold side portion of the thermoelectric cooling system projects into the docking path and, in conjunction with a portable computer configuration useable with the docking base, is receivable in an external computer housing side surface recess when the computer is docked.
- the computer's heat dissipating portion representatively a finned heat sink member thermally connected to the computer's microprocessor, is exposed within the recess and is engageable by the cold side portion as the computer is docked.
- the thermoelectric cooling system includes a thermoelectric heat pump unit having a cold side from which a metal heat slug member projects upwardly through a docking base housing wall into the docking path, the metal heat slug member defining the aforementioned cold side portion of the thermoelectric cooling system.
- the docking path extends rearwardly through the docking base receiving area, and the exposed top side surface of the heat slug member is rearwardly and upwardly sloped.
- the computer housing recess is formed in a bottom side thereof, with the bottom side surface of the computer's heat dissipating member being covered with a suitable thermal interface material and sloped in a manner such that it is in parallel abutment with the top side surface of the cooling system heat slug member when the computer reaches its docked orientation.
- a protective spring-loaded cover door is slidably secured over an outer side portion of the computer housing recess and is pushed into the housing by docking base wall projections adjacent the cooling system heat slug member entering the computer recess, and spring-returned to its original position when the slug member is withdrawn from the computer recess.
- the hot side of the thermoelectric heat pump unit within the docking base housing illustratively has a heat sink member secured thereto, and a cooling fan is provided for use in dissipating heat from the heat sink member.
- the cooling fan representatively has its inlet coupled by a duct structure to an inlet opening in an exterior wall section of the docking base housing and is operative to sequentially flow ambient air inwardly through the inlet opening, across the hot side heat sink, and then outwardly through an outlet opening in an exterior wall section of the docking base housing.
- FIG. 1 is a simplified, somewhat schematic perspective view of a representative portable notebook computer being operatively coupled to a docking station expansion base;
- FIG. 2 is an enlarged scale perspective view of a left rear portion of the notebook computer and an adjacent portion of the top side receiving area of the expansion base;
- FIGS. 3A and 3B are enlarged scale schematic cross-sectional views taken along line 3 - 3 of FIG. 2 through the expansion base and notebook computer and respectively illustrate the portable computer in undocked and docked positions thereof in addition to schematically illustrating the operation of a specially designed thermoelectric computer heat dissipating system incorporated in the expansion base.
- FIG. 1 Perspectively illustrated in simplified, somewhat schematic form in FIG. 1 is a specially designed docking station expansion base 10 that embodies principles of the present invention and is used to operatively couple a representative portable notebook computer 12 to selected desktop peripheral devices (not shown) such as a monitor, mouse and keyboard.
- desktop peripheral devices not shown
- the expansion base 10 has a generally rectangularly configured housing with a horizontal bottom side wall 14 adapted to rest on a horizontal support surface such as a desktop 16 , a horizontal top side wall 18 , left and right vertical side walls 20 and 22 , and front and rear end walls 24 and 26 .
- Expansion base 10 also has an upwardly projecting rear housing end portion 28 which includes the rear end wall 26 and has a vertical front wall 30 forwardly spaced apart therefrom.
- Upper side edge portions 20 a , 22 a of the housing side walls 20 , 22 project upwardly beyond the top side wall 18 and form therewith a recessed computer docking receiving area 32 that horizontally extends between the vertical housing walls 24 and 30 .
- Connector 34 is operatively coupled to interface circuitry 38 located within the expansion base 10 (see FIGS. 3A and 3B).
- Interface circuitry 38 functions in a conventional manner to operatively couple the connector 34 (and thus the computer 12 when it is docked to the expansion base 10 as later described herein) to selected desktop peripheral devices (not shown) such as a monitor, a mouse and a keyboard.
- thermoelectric computer cooling system 40 (see FIGS. 3A and 3B) is disposed within the interior of the expansion base 10 and is used, as later described herein, to provide auxiliary operating heat dissipation for the computer 12 when it is operatively docked to the expansion base 10 .
- the cooling system 40 includes a thermoelectric (Peltier effect) heat pump unit 42 having vertically opposite cold and hot side plates 44 , 46 and being supplied with DC electrical power from a suitable source thereof via a pair of electrical leads 48 .
- the thermoelectric heat pump unit 42 may be a commercially available unit such as those manufactured in solid state modular form by the Melcor Corporation of Trenton, N.J. under the tradename “FRIGICHIP”. Basically, in response to the supply of electrical power thereto, the heat pump unit 42 acts as a thermoelectric cooler (TEC) that continuously moves heat from its upwardly facing cold side 44 to its downwardly facing hot side 46 .
- TEC thermoelectric cooler
- a metal heat slug member 50 is secured to the cold side 44 , in a thermally conductive relationship therewith, by a layer of suitable thermal interface material 52 and projects upwardly through an opening 54 in the top side wall 18 of the expansion base 10 into the receiving area 32 forwardly adjacent the front wall 30 of the rear housing end portion 28 .
- the top side surface 50 a of the heat slug member 50 slopes rearwardly and upwardly at a relatively small angle and two small upward projections 59 are formed on the top expansion base wall 18 (see FIG. 2) adjacent the front corners of the upwardly projecting portion of the heat slug member 50 .
- a finned metal heat sink structure 56 is secured to the hot side 46 of the heat pump unit 42 by a layer of suitable thermal interface material 58 .
- the thermoelectric cooling system 42 also includes a cooling fan 60 disposed within the interior of the expansion base housing forwardly of the heat sink structure 56 .
- the inlet of the cooling fan 60 is coupled to a perforated air inlet area 62 on the expansion base housing wall 22 by a suitable duct or shroud 64 .
- a perforated air outlet opening area 66 is formed in the rear end wall 26 of the expansion base housing.
- the notebook computer 12 has generally rectangular base and display screen lid housings 68 and 70 .
- Base housing 68 has top and bottom side walls 72 and 74 , front and rear side walls 76 and 78 , and left and right end walls 80 and 82 .
- a heat generating electronic component representatively a microprocessor 84 , which is mounted on the bottom side of a horizontally oriented circuit board 86 inwardly adjacent the rear base housing wall 78 .
- the bottom side of the microprocessor 84 is secured to the top side of a finned metal heat sink structure 88 , in thermal communication therewith, by a suitable thermal interface material 90 .
- a rearwardly extending recess 92 is formed in a bottom edge portion of the rear base housing wall 78 and has an open bottom side and is upwardly bounded by a downwardly and forwardly sloping recessed wall portion 94 of the expansion base housing.
- the slope of the wall 94 is identical to that of the exposed top side 50 a of the heat slug member 50 .
- the recess 92 is horizontally aligned with the exposed upper end portion of the heat slug member 50 so that such upper end portion enters the recess 92 as the computer 12 reaches its docked orientation on the expansion base 10 .
- a lower portion of the heat sink structure 88 projects downwardly through a suitable opening in the top recess wall 94 , into the recess 92 , and has a downwardly and forwardly sloping bottom side surface 88 a which has a slope angle identical to that of the exposed top side 50 a of the heat slug member 50 and is covered by a suitable thermal interface material 95 .
- a recessed electrical connector 34 a which is releasably mateable with the expansion base connector 34 , is centrally located on the rear side wall 78 of the base housing 68 between two circular holes 36 a formed in the wall 78 and configured to releasably receive the guide pins 36 as the computer 12 is being docked as later described herein.
- the rectangular display screen lid housing 70 of the portable notebook computer 12 is secured by a hinge structure 96 to a top rear side edge portion of the base housing 68 for pivotal movement relative to the base housing 68 between a closed position (shown in FIGS.
- lid housing 70 extends across and covers the top side 72 of the base housing 68 , and an open position (not shown) in which the lid housing 70 is pivoted away from top base housing side 72 to a generally vertical stand-alone use orientation.
- a suitable latch mechanism (not shown) is provided for releasably holding the display screen lid housing 70 .
- the computer With the notebook computer 12 in its illustrated closed orientation, the computer is docked to the expansion base 10 by placing the computer 12 in the recessed receiving area 12 with the lid housing 70 facing upwardly and the rear side wall 78 of the base housing 68 facing the front wall 30 of the expansion base rear housing end portion 28 .
- the bottom wall 74 of the base housing 68 contacts the top side wall 18 of the expansion base 10 in a manner vertically aligning the computer connector 34 a , guide pin openings 36 a and base housing rear side recess 92 respectively with the expansion base electrical connector 34 , guide pins 36 and the exposed, upwardly projecting portion of the heat slug member 50 .
- left and right end walls 80 , 82 of the computer base housing 68 slidingly engage the upwardly projecting expansion base guide portions 20 a , 22 a in a manner horizontally aligning the computer connector 34 a , guide pin openings 36 a and base housing rear side recess 92 respectively with the expansion base electrical connector 34 , guide pins 36 and the exposed upwardly projecting portion of the heat slug member 50 .
- the computer 12 is moved rearwardly toward the vertical expansion base wall 30 —either manually or by a suitable motorized drive system appropriately incorporated into the expansion base 10 —to the computer's docked orientation shown in FIG. 3 and in dotted lines in FIG.
- thermoelectric cooling system heat slug member 50 enters the computer base housing recess 92 to bring the sloping top side 50 a of the heat slug member (which forms a portion of the overall cold side section of the thermoelectric cooling system 40 ) into complementary heat transfer engagement with the thermal interface material layer 95 on the identically sloped bottom side 88 a of the computer heat sink structure 88 (see FIG. 3B).
- a protective door panel 100 (shown in FIG. 2, but omitted from FIGS. 3A and 3B for illustrative clarity) is horizontally mounted on the computer base housing 68 , by rail structures 102 , along the bottom side of the recess 92 and is resiliently biased rearwardly, by a schematically depicted spring structure 104 , to its solid line FIG. 2 position in which its rear edge 100 a is aligned with the rear wall 78 of the base housing 68 .
- the projections 59 engage the rear edge 100 a of the door panel 100 and, as indicated by the arrow 106 in FIG. 2, move the door panel 100 to its forwardly deflected dotted line position to permit the previously described thermal interface contact between the heat slug 50 and the computer's heat sink structure 88 .
- the computer operating heat dissipation provided by the specially designed expansion base thermoelectric cooling system 40 of the present invention augments the cooling system disposed within the interior of the computer 12 , which may include the heat sink structure 88 and other components not illustrated herein.
- the additional computer heat load created by docking the computer 12 with its display screen lid housing 70 closed and major portions of its exterior surface area blocked by portions of the expansion base 10 is dissipated without increasing the interior computer space that must be dedicated to heat dissipation apparatus.
- the heat dissipation system within the notebook computer 12 need only be sized to handle the substantially lesser operating heat generated by the computer 12 in its undocked battery and AC power modes.
- the representatively illustrated vertically facing arrangement of the abuttable expansion base and computer heat transfer elements 50 and 88 is particularly well suited to the typically horizontal orientation of the computer microprocessor 84 .
- these abuttable heat transfer elements could be placed in other locations, and in other facing orientations if desired.
- the cooling system heat slug member 50 could project forwardly from the vertical expansion base wall 30 and abut a forwardly facing surface of the computer heat sink structure 88 .
- the abutting surfaces of these heat transfer elements could be vertically oriented, and would not have to be sloped.
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- General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
- Cooling Or The Like Of Electrical Apparatus (AREA)
Abstract
Description
- 1. Field of the Invention
- The present invention generally relates to computer apparatus and, in a preferred embodiment thereof, more particularly relates to apparatus for dissipating operating heat from a portable computer operatively connected to a docking station used to electrically connect the docked computer to desktop peripheral devices.
- 2. Description of Related Art
- With the advancement of computer microprocessor technology, portable computers such as the increasingly popular notebook computer are beginning to equal larger desktop computers in performance. The more advanced notebook computers also produce, in quite a small spatial envelope, a very significant amount of operating heat which approaches that generated in a desktop computer and provides the computer designer with the challenging task of sufficiently dissipating the operating heat in order to avoid undesirably high temperatures within the interior of the notebook computer and on its various external surface areas.
- Many modern notebook computers are typically operated in three modes—(1) by itself under internal battery power, (2) by itself using converted DC electrical power from an AC electrical source, or (3) operatively connected (or “docked”) to a docking station expansion base structure which electrically couples the docked portable computer to desktop peripheral devices such as a monitor, mouse and keyboard.
- In the first two of these operating modes the display screen lid portion of the notebook computer is opened, thereby increasing the total exterior surface area of the computer exposed to ambient air to which computer operating heat may be dissipated. When the notebook computer is coupled to the docking station, however, the computer's display screen lid is closed, thereby reducing the overall exposed exterior computer surface area from which heat may be dissipated. This tends to appreciably increase the interior and exterior operating temperatures of the docked computer compared to applications in which it operated by itself with its display screen lid in its opened orientation. Such operating temperature increases are aggravated by the fact that the docking station physically covers and insulates large exterior portions of the docked computer and inhibits the dissipation of heat therefrom.
- As an example, a modern high speed notebook computer microprocessor can generate within the computer on the order of about 8 watts when the computer is in its battery mode, about 10-12 watts when the computer is in its AC mode, and up to about 20 watts when the computer is operatively coupled to a docking station.
- Of course, from an operating heat dissipation standpoint, provisions must be made to handle the maximum heat load condition—i.e., when the notebook computer is docked with its lid closed. This has proven to be an extremely challenging design task since the small spatial envelope of modern notebook computer as a practical matter precludes the use therein of traditional desktop computer cooling apparatus such as large internal fans and heat sinks.
- A need thus exists for apparatus which will adequately dissipate the substantially increased operating heat generated by a docked portable notebook computer. It is to this need that the present invention is directed.
- In carrying out principles of the present invention, in accordance with a preferred embodiment thereof, a specially designed docking base is utilized to provide auxiliary operating heat dissipation for a portable computer, representatively a notebook computer, operatively docked thereto. This auxiliary heat dissipation provided by the docking base advantageously reduces the amount of computer operating heat dissipation that must be provided for by apparatus carried within the portable computer itself.
- In a preferred embodiment thereof, the docking base has a housing with which a thermoelectric cooling system is operatively associated. The docking base housing has a receiving area through which a portable computer may be moved through a docking path into an operatively docked position relative to the docking base housing.
- The thermoelectric cooling system is operative to dissipate operating heat from the docked portable computer and has a cold side portion positioned to be engaged and receive heat from a heat dissipation portion of the portable computer, which is thermally communicated with an internal heat-generating component within the computer, in response to movement of the portable computer through the docking path.
- Preferably, the cold side portion of the thermoelectric cooling system projects into the docking path and, in conjunction with a portable computer configuration useable with the docking base, is receivable in an external computer housing side surface recess when the computer is docked. The computer's heat dissipating portion, representatively a finned heat sink member thermally connected to the computer's microprocessor, is exposed within the recess and is engageable by the cold side portion as the computer is docked.
- In accordance with one aspect of the invention, the thermoelectric cooling system includes a thermoelectric heat pump unit having a cold side from which a metal heat slug member projects upwardly through a docking base housing wall into the docking path, the metal heat slug member defining the aforementioned cold side portion of the thermoelectric cooling system. The docking path extends rearwardly through the docking base receiving area, and the exposed top side surface of the heat slug member is rearwardly and upwardly sloped. The computer housing recess is formed in a bottom side thereof, with the bottom side surface of the computer's heat dissipating member being covered with a suitable thermal interface material and sloped in a manner such that it is in parallel abutment with the top side surface of the cooling system heat slug member when the computer reaches its docked orientation. A protective spring-loaded cover door is slidably secured over an outer side portion of the computer housing recess and is pushed into the housing by docking base wall projections adjacent the cooling system heat slug member entering the computer recess, and spring-returned to its original position when the slug member is withdrawn from the computer recess.
- The hot side of the thermoelectric heat pump unit within the docking base housing illustratively has a heat sink member secured thereto, and a cooling fan is provided for use in dissipating heat from the heat sink member. The cooling fan representatively has its inlet coupled by a duct structure to an inlet opening in an exterior wall section of the docking base housing and is operative to sequentially flow ambient air inwardly through the inlet opening, across the hot side heat sink, and then outwardly through an outlet opening in an exterior wall section of the docking base housing.
- FIG. 1 is a simplified, somewhat schematic perspective view of a representative portable notebook computer being operatively coupled to a docking station expansion base;
- FIG. 2 is an enlarged scale perspective view of a left rear portion of the notebook computer and an adjacent portion of the top side receiving area of the expansion base; and
- FIGS. 3A and 3B are enlarged scale schematic cross-sectional views taken along line 3-3 of FIG. 2 through the expansion base and notebook computer and respectively illustrate the portable computer in undocked and docked positions thereof in addition to schematically illustrating the operation of a specially designed thermoelectric computer heat dissipating system incorporated in the expansion base.
- Perspectively illustrated in simplified, somewhat schematic form in FIG. 1 is a specially designed docking
station expansion base 10 that embodies principles of the present invention and is used to operatively couple a representativeportable notebook computer 12 to selected desktop peripheral devices (not shown) such as a monitor, mouse and keyboard. - The
expansion base 10 has a generally rectangularly configured housing with a horizontalbottom side wall 14 adapted to rest on a horizontal support surface such as adesktop 16, a horizontaltop side wall 18, left and rightvertical side walls 20 and 22, and front and 24 and 26.rear end walls Expansion base 10 also has an upwardly projecting rearhousing end portion 28 which includes therear end wall 26 and has avertical front wall 30 forwardly spaced apart therefrom. Upper 20 a,22 a of theside edge portions housing side walls 20,22 project upwardly beyond thetop side wall 18 and form therewith a recessed computerdocking receiving area 32 that horizontally extends between the 24 and 30.vertical housing walls - Centrally disposed on the
front wall 30 of the upwardly projecting rearhousing end portion 28 is a forwardly projecting, horizontally elongatedelectrical connector 34 positioned between two forwardly projectingguide pins 36.Connector 34 is operatively coupled tointerface circuitry 38 located within the expansion base 10 (see FIGS. 3A and 3B).Interface circuitry 38 functions in a conventional manner to operatively couple the connector 34 (and thus thecomputer 12 when it is docked to theexpansion base 10 as later described herein) to selected desktop peripheral devices (not shown) such as a monitor, a mouse and a keyboard. - According to a key aspect of the present invention, a specially designed thermoelectric computer cooling system 40 (see FIGS. 3A and 3B) is disposed within the interior of the
expansion base 10 and is used, as later described herein, to provide auxiliary operating heat dissipation for thecomputer 12 when it is operatively docked to theexpansion base 10. - Turning now to FIG. 3A, the
cooling system 40 includes a thermoelectric (Peltier effect)heat pump unit 42 having vertically opposite cold and 44,46 and being supplied with DC electrical power from a suitable source thereof via a pair ofhot side plates electrical leads 48. Representatively, the thermoelectricheat pump unit 42 may be a commercially available unit such as those manufactured in solid state modular form by the Melcor Corporation of Trenton, N.J. under the tradename “FRIGICHIP”. Basically, in response to the supply of electrical power thereto, theheat pump unit 42 acts as a thermoelectric cooler (TEC) that continuously moves heat from its upwardly facingcold side 44 to its downwardly facinghot side 46. - A metal
heat slug member 50 is secured to thecold side 44, in a thermally conductive relationship therewith, by a layer of suitablethermal interface material 52 and projects upwardly through anopening 54 in thetop side wall 18 of theexpansion base 10 into thereceiving area 32 forwardly adjacent thefront wall 30 of the rearhousing end portion 28. For purposes later described herein, thetop side surface 50 a of theheat slug member 50 slopes rearwardly and upwardly at a relatively small angle and two smallupward projections 59 are formed on the top expansion base wall 18 (see FIG. 2) adjacent the front corners of the upwardly projecting portion of theheat slug member 50. A finned metalheat sink structure 56 is secured to thehot side 46 of theheat pump unit 42 by a layer of suitablethermal interface material 58. - The
thermoelectric cooling system 42 also includes acooling fan 60 disposed within the interior of the expansion base housing forwardly of theheat sink structure 56. The inlet of thecooling fan 60 is coupled to a perforatedair inlet area 62 on the expansion base housing wall 22 by a suitable duct orshroud 64. To exhaust the flow of air created by thecooling fan 58, a perforated airoutlet opening area 66 is formed in therear end wall 26 of the expansion base housing. - Referring now to FIGS. 1-3B, the
notebook computer 12 has generally rectangular base and display 68 and 70.screen lid housings Base housing 68 has top and 72 and 74, front andbottom side walls 76 and 78, and left andrear side walls 80 and 82. Disposed within theright end walls base housing 68 is a heat generating electronic component, representatively amicroprocessor 84, which is mounted on the bottom side of a horizontally orientedcircuit board 86 inwardly adjacent the rearbase housing wall 78. - The bottom side of the
microprocessor 84 is secured to the top side of a finned metalheat sink structure 88, in thermal communication therewith, by a suitablethermal interface material 90. AS best illustrated in simplified form in FIG. 2, a rearwardly extendingrecess 92 is formed in a bottom edge portion of the rearbase housing wall 78 and has an open bottom side and is upwardly bounded by a downwardly and forwardly slopingrecessed wall portion 94 of the expansion base housing. The slope of thewall 94 is identical to that of the exposedtop side 50 a of theheat slug member 50. When theportable computer 12 is operatively placed in the expansionbase receiving area 32 as later described herein, therecess 92 is horizontally aligned with the exposed upper end portion of theheat slug member 50 so that such upper end portion enters therecess 92 as thecomputer 12 reaches its docked orientation on theexpansion base 10. AS can best be seen in FIG. 3A, a lower portion of theheat sink structure 88 projects downwardly through a suitable opening in thetop recess wall 94, into therecess 92, and has a downwardly and forwardly sloping bottom side surface 88 a which has a slope angle identical to that of the exposedtop side 50 a of theheat slug member 50 and is covered by a suitablethermal interface material 95. - Turning now to FIG. 1, a recessed
electrical connector 34 a, which is releasably mateable with theexpansion base connector 34, is centrally located on therear side wall 78 of thebase housing 68 between twocircular holes 36 a formed in thewall 78 and configured to releasably receive the guide pins 36 as thecomputer 12 is being docked as later described herein. The rectangular displayscreen lid housing 70 of theportable notebook computer 12 is secured by ahinge structure 96 to a top rear side edge portion of thebase housing 68 for pivotal movement relative to thebase housing 68 between a closed position (shown in FIGS. 1-3B) in which thelid housing 70 extends across and covers thetop side 72 of thebase housing 68, and an open position (not shown) in which thelid housing 70 is pivoted away from topbase housing side 72 to a generally vertical stand-alone use orientation. A suitable latch mechanism (not shown) is provided for releasably holding the displayscreen lid housing 70. - With the
notebook computer 12 in its illustrated closed orientation, the computer is docked to theexpansion base 10 by placing thecomputer 12 in the recessed receivingarea 12 with thelid housing 70 facing upwardly and therear side wall 78 of thebase housing 68 facing thefront wall 30 of the expansion base rearhousing end portion 28. When thecomputer 12 is placed in the receivingarea 32 in this manner, thebottom wall 74 of thebase housing 68 contacts thetop side wall 18 of theexpansion base 10 in a manner vertically aligning thecomputer connector 34 a,guide pin openings 36 a and base housingrear side recess 92 respectively with the expansion baseelectrical connector 34, guide pins 36 and the exposed, upwardly projecting portion of theheat slug member 50. Additionally, the left and 80,82 of theright end walls computer base housing 68 slidingly engage the upwardly projecting expansion 20 a,22 a in a manner horizontally aligning thebase guide portions computer connector 34 a,guide pin openings 36 a and base housingrear side recess 92 respectively with the expansion baseelectrical connector 34, guide pins 36 and the exposed upwardly projecting portion of theheat slug member 50. - Next, as indicated by the
arrow 98 in FIGS. 1 and 3A, thecomputer 12 is moved rearwardly toward the verticalexpansion base wall 30—either manually or by a suitable motorized drive system appropriately incorporated into theexpansion base 10—to the computer's docked orientation shown in FIG. 3 and in dotted lines in FIG. 1—As the rear side of thecomputer 12 approaches the verticalexpansion base wall 30, the guide pins 36 enter the rearcomputer wall openings 36 a, the 34,34 a are releasably mated to couple the internal computer electronics to the desktop peripheral devices (not shown) via theconnectors interface circuitry 38, and the exposed top side portion of the thermoelectric cooling systemheat slug member 50 enters the computerbase housing recess 92 to bring the slopingtop side 50 a of the heat slug member (which forms a portion of the overall cold side section of the thermoelectric cooling system 40) into complementary heat transfer engagement with the thermalinterface material layer 95 on the identically slopedbottom side 88 a of the computer heat sink structure 88 (see FIG. 3B). - To shield the heated computer
heat sink structure 88 from a user's touch, a protective door panel 100 (shown in FIG. 2, but omitted from FIGS. 3A and 3B for illustrative clarity) is horizontally mounted on thecomputer base housing 68, byrail structures 102, along the bottom side of therecess 92 and is resiliently biased rearwardly, by a schematically depictedspring structure 104, to its solid line FIG. 2 position in which itsrear edge 100 a is aligned with therear wall 78 of thebase housing 68. As the upwardly projecting portion of theheat slug member 50 enters therecess 92, theprojections 59 engage therear edge 100 a of thedoor panel 100 and, as indicated by thearrow 106 in FIG. 2, move thedoor panel 100 to its forwardly deflected dotted line position to permit the previously described thermal interface contact between theheat slug 50 and the computer'sheat sink structure 88. - With the
computer 12 docked as schematically illustrated in FIG. 3B, operating heat from the computer processor 84 (or other heat-generating electronic component to which theheat sink structure 88 could be connected) is transferred downwardly through the abuttingheat sink 88 andheat slug 50 to thecold side 44 of theheat pump unit 42, thermoelectrically transferred to thehot side 46 and into theheat sink member 56, and then dissipated from theheat sink member 56 by operation of thefan 60 which sequentially flowsambient cooling air 108 inwardly through the airinlet opening area 62, through theduct 64, across theheat sink member 56 and outwardly through the expansion base airoutlet opening area 66. - The computer operating heat dissipation provided by the specially designed expansion base
thermoelectric cooling system 40 of the present invention augments the cooling system disposed within the interior of thecomputer 12, which may include theheat sink structure 88 and other components not illustrated herein. Importantly, the additional computer heat load created by docking thecomputer 12 with its displayscreen lid housing 70 closed and major portions of its exterior surface area blocked by portions of theexpansion base 10 is dissipated without increasing the interior computer space that must be dedicated to heat dissipation apparatus. Thus, the heat dissipation system within thenotebook computer 12 need only be sized to handle the substantially lesser operating heat generated by thecomputer 12 in its undocked battery and AC power modes. - The representatively illustrated vertically facing arrangement of the abuttable expansion base and computer
50 and 88 is particularly well suited to the typically horizontal orientation of theheat transfer elements computer microprocessor 84. However, as will be appreciated by those of skill in this particular art, these abuttable heat transfer elements could be placed in other locations, and in other facing orientations if desired. As but one example, the cooling systemheat slug member 50 could project forwardly from the verticalexpansion base wall 30 and abut a forwardly facing surface of the computerheat sink structure 88. In this representative alternate arrangement, the abutting surfaces of these heat transfer elements could be vertically oriented, and would not have to be sloped. - The foregoing detailed description is to be clearly understood as being given by way of illustration and example only, the spirit and scope of the present invention being limited solely by the appended claims.
Claims (22)
Priority Applications (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US09/785,148 US6362959B2 (en) | 1998-11-12 | 2001-02-16 | Docking station with thermoelectric heat dissipation system for docked portable computer |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US09/191,455 US6191943B1 (en) | 1998-11-12 | 1998-11-12 | Docking station with thermoelectric heat dissipation system for docked portable computer |
| US09/785,148 US6362959B2 (en) | 1998-11-12 | 2001-02-16 | Docking station with thermoelectric heat dissipation system for docked portable computer |
Related Parent Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US09/191,455 Continuation US6191943B1 (en) | 1998-11-12 | 1998-11-12 | Docking station with thermoelectric heat dissipation system for docked portable computer |
Publications (2)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| US20010007525A1 true US20010007525A1 (en) | 2001-07-12 |
| US6362959B2 US6362959B2 (en) | 2002-03-26 |
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| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US09/191,455 Expired - Fee Related US6191943B1 (en) | 1998-11-12 | 1998-11-12 | Docking station with thermoelectric heat dissipation system for docked portable computer |
| US09/785,148 Expired - Fee Related US6362959B2 (en) | 1998-11-12 | 2001-02-16 | Docking station with thermoelectric heat dissipation system for docked portable computer |
Family Applications Before (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US09/191,455 Expired - Fee Related US6191943B1 (en) | 1998-11-12 | 1998-11-12 | Docking station with thermoelectric heat dissipation system for docked portable computer |
Country Status (1)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (2) | US6191943B1 (en) |
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Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| US6191943B1 (en) | 2001-02-20 |
| US6362959B2 (en) | 2002-03-26 |
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