Home Knowledge Base Computational Fluid Dynamics for Cooling (CFD)

Computational Fluid Dynamics for Cooling (CFD) is the numerical simulation of airflow and liquid flow patterns around and through electronic cooling systems — solving the Navier-Stokes equations to predict air velocity, pressure, and temperature distributions in heat sinks, server chassis, and data center rooms, enabling engineers to optimize fan placement, heat sink fin geometry, and airflow paths to maximize cooling effectiveness and minimize energy consumption.

What Is CFD for Cooling?

Why CFD for Cooling Matters

CFD Simulation Process

CFD ApplicationScaleMesh SizeKey OutputTool
Heat Sink OptimizationComponent0.5-5M cellsFin temperature, pressure dropFloTHERM, Icepak
PCB/Board LevelBoard2-20M cellsComponent temperaturesFloTHERM, Icepak
Server ChassisSystem5-50M cellsInternal airflow, hot spotsIcepak, 6SigmaET
Server RackRack10-100M cellsInlet temperatures6SigmaET, Icepak
Data Center RoomFacility50-500M cellsRoom temperature map6SigmaET, TileFlow

CFD is the essential simulation tool for electronics cooling design — predicting airflow patterns and temperature distributions that cannot be determined by hand calculations or simple thermal resistance models, enabling optimization of heat sinks, fan configurations, and data center layouts to efficiently cool the increasingly power-dense processors and AI accelerators driving modern computing.

computational fluid dynamics for coolingcfdsimulation

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