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12/16/2014, 06:43 AM | #1 |
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DIY LED Build - Anodized Heatsink
Hi,
All my parts and lights have arrived and I am about to start building my own LED lights. My question is what is the MAX LED's I can safely use on my heatsink. I don’t have cooler fans at the moment but may look into it, if there is a big increase. So how many LED's can I use without and with a cooling fan. I will be using two Black Anodized Aluminium heatsinks 30cm x 12cm x 2cm 3x Mean Well ELN-60-48D 60W 48V 1.3A Power Supply LED Driver (Dimmable) The lights that I have - I ordered extra as they were cheaper to buy in 10's 5x 3W 420nm - 425nm Super Actinic Violet Blue 20x CREE XP-E 3W Royal Blue LED 450-455nm 10x CREE XP-E 3W Warm White 10x CREE XP-E 3W Cool White Also I will be using Arctic Silver Premium Silver Thermal Adhesive - is there any issues using this on anodized heatsinks? Would there be any benefit to sand down the area for LED's to stick directly to the aluminium? |
12/16/2014, 11:18 AM | #2 |
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The only way to really know is to build it and monitor temperatures via thermocouples for a minimum of 1 hour. As it can easily take that long to reach thermal equilibrium.
Typically one can estimate it IF all thermal resistances are known. But as this application involves multiple heat sources and one LED can easily effect the other the calculations can be fairly complex. Temperature profiling is the ONLY way to know for sure. No need to sand.. Just apply a VERY thin layer of adhesive (read the datasheet for the recommended application thickness) |
12/16/2014, 03:16 PM | #3 |
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What heat sinks are they? The dimensions are a very small part of the story. Depending on the profile, a 30x12x2 heat sink may have a thermal capacity varying massively!
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12/16/2014, 04:50 PM | #4 | |
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As far as using thermal adhesives, I won't use them, because part of the equation is pressure, and with an adhesive, you get 0 pressure. This just increases the thermal resistance. Black anodizing is an excellent finish on heatsinks for improving radiation ability, and preventing corrosion. Anodizing results in significant electrical but negligible thermal insulation. It need only be removed from the contact area if electrical contact is needed. The anodized surface does allow for easy mounting of devices that require electrical isolation in low voltage applications, however before getting bold make sure the anodizing meets the specifications for the voltage in use. If interested in learning the mysteries of heatsinks, more than you ever cared to know about heatsinks: http://sound.westhost.com/heatsinks.htm
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"Things should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler." (oft attributed to Einstein; most likely paraphrasing by Roger Sessions; compactly articulates the principle of Occam's Razor) Current Tank Info: 325 6' wide Reef Last edited by uncleof6; 12/16/2014 at 04:59 PM. |
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12/16/2014, 05:02 PM | #5 |
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12/17/2014, 05:14 AM | #6 |
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http://www.ebay.com/itm/321340702389...%3AMEBIDX%3AIT
Thats the heatsink I will be using, regarding presure I would much rather use a drilled heatsink but as my first project i will stick to the thermal adhisive for now may look at drilled ones once I move to a bigger tank and light. |
12/17/2014, 06:50 AM | #7 | ||||
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As to anodizing itself.. I have no reason to doubt this at this point: Quote:
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http://www.eevblog.com/forum/project...h;attach=11032 http://www.irf.com/technical-info/appnotes/an-1057.pdf Last edited by oreo57; 12/17/2014 at 07:15 AM. |
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12/17/2014, 07:08 AM | #8 |
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45W would seem a fairly small amount of power for a heat sink that size, but then it does have a very thin base and the usual issue of 45W of one LED will put out a damn site more heat than 45W of a different LED, so it isn't the most helpful figure when it comes to heat sinks. What temp have they considered acceptable when coming up with that measure? What efficiency LEDs?
Tim |
12/17/2014, 11:09 AM | #9 | |
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45W does not seem a small amount of power at all for a LED heatsink of that size and natural convection (no fan/forced air). Typically one would only shoot for a junction temp of 40-60 deg C max over ambient (assuming 25 deg C ambient) to ensure long LED life. Anything over that and lifespan decreases drastically. A heatsink from a "professional" company will always state its thermal resistance. As I stated above when all thermal resistances are known its fairly easy to estimate if one heatsink is sufficient for the heat load. But as with most "low cost/chinese" products they very rarely state a thermal resistance. |
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12/17/2014, 05:21 PM | #10 |
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yours looks similar to some of the Rapid LED heatsinks.
http://www.rapidled.com/as-is-6-x-10...num-heat-sink/ I have built a few fixtures with these. The one that I built for me (and is on at the moment) has 26 3W CREE diodes, all running at about half power. it is in open air with no fans and is barely warm to the touch (sides and tops of fins, there is a plexi shield on the bottom). |
12/17/2014, 06:24 PM | #11 | |
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And I certainly agree with you on thermal capacity - personally, for a critical application like main lights for a reef, i would not buy a heat sink that didn't come with a quoted °C/W... Tim |
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12/17/2014, 06:31 PM | #12 |
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12/17/2014, 06:35 PM | #13 | |
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http://www.digikey.com/en/articles/t...mal-management |
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12/18/2014, 06:18 AM | #14 | |
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I'm talking aavid thermalloy/wakefield,etc... Just because you start a Kickstarter thing and can get an extrusion made does NOT make you a professional heatsink company. Last edited by mcgyvr; 12/18/2014 at 06:28 AM. |
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12/18/2014, 06:23 AM | #15 | |
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The "junction" could easily be 20deg C hotter than what you can physically measure on the package of the LED (the case). As junction to case thermal resistance is stated in the datasheet (for Cree LEDs anyways) its easy to calculate junction temp from the case temp. I always mount a thermocouple on the body/case of the LED then calculate junction temp to achieve the 40-60deg C rise over ambient (with 25degC ambient).. Or Never let the junction get over 85degC. And any fixture I've built I don't let get even close to that. My personal goal is 65degC MAX junction temp at 100% |
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12/18/2014, 06:29 AM | #16 |
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I was thinking junction between LED star and heat sink, not between LED chip and the star, yes. Since that or similar is usually all you can (reasonably) measure!
Tim |
12/18/2014, 06:32 AM | #17 | |
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http://www.unionledlight.com/ewebedi...2217859501.jpg |
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01/23/2015, 08:20 AM | #18 |
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WOW! never even thought there could be that much thought and info behind a heatsink, thanks for all the info lads!!
I dont have anything to measure the temperature with, but my results are this.... After powering up all the LED's and running them for about 15-20 minutes the heatsink get too hot to keep you hand on it for too long, so I have ordered some 120mm PC fans to keep them cool. So untill they arive i am stuck just running the blues on their own to keep the temp low. Here is the link to the build thread if anyone is interested..... http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/sh....php?t=2474729 |
01/23/2015, 01:36 PM | #19 | |
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you can decrease the current by 25% in the driver.. Probably would "cool" all channels enough....... AFAICT you ar already over driving them at 1.3A. Normal rating is 1A AFAICT.. Last edited by oreo57; 01/23/2015 at 01:42 PM. |
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01/23/2015, 02:51 PM | #20 |
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Thanks I have the blue and whites running at 760mA and UV at 650mA but still alot of heat
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01/23/2015, 10:26 PM | #21 |
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violets in most cases shouldn't be run over 700mA absolute max! due to higher heat at the junction of those chips.
With the heatsink you linked fans will temendously increase thermal load capacity as they are ribbed fins, which with forced air flow give a large increase in cooling power. The downside is the base of the heatsink is thin which doesn't spread the individual led's heat out as efficiently as a thicker base heatsink so the fans and fins can't remove the heat as fast. without getting into technical calculations if you can maintain a heatsink temp that allows you to keep your finger on it near the edge of the led star chip where it meets the heatsink for a long time without pain you are in a good place and way under what the led can tolerate long term.......violets often being the exception but Cree can run at temps that would burn you and have no issue. Just better to err on the side of caution and run some fans knowing that the Crees at least will be able to tolerate it for some time should the fans ever fail... |
01/26/2015, 08:12 AM | #22 |
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Thanks zachts, I will make some andjustments once I get all the parts together, I am also going to add 2 24w T5's so I have some room to play with dimming the LED's down with out the tank getting too dark
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anodized heatsink, build, dimmable led, diy, led |
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