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Scythe Shogun Low Noise Heatsink Review
Scythe Shogun Low Noise Heatsink Review
  75%   
Abstract: The Scythe Shogun weighs in a hefty 790 grams, and stands to a towering height of 147mm above the CPU.

 Manufacturer  Category  Published  Author 
Scythe   Cooling / Heatsinks   May 13, 2006   Max Page  

Home > Reviews > Page: TS Heatronics Akachi Heatlane Heatpipe

The Scythe Shogun looks like an industrial cooler plucked out of a radar system, but it's actually built around some pretty common cooling technologies we've seen before.

Essentially, a 4mm thick copper baseplate is soldered to the bottom of an Akachi heatlane heatpipe whose only purpose is to move heat along its length. The heatlane transfers this energy to multiple aluminum fins soldered to its surface, which are cooled when air from the 120mm fan blows over the thin metal.

It can sometimes be easy to confuse the role of heatpipes (or heatlanes) in a heatsink, but basically these thermal devices just transfer heat from one location to another. Within the Scythe Shogun, the heatlane increases the total cooling surface area by redistributing the thermal energy absorbed from the CPU over to many small cooling fins, but it actually doesn't "cool" anything.

Traditional vs Akachi Heatpipes

Traditional heatpipes are really neat devices; as heat energy enters into the pipe, water under a vacuum inside the tube is converted into vapour (water boils at a lower temperature when there is less atmospheric pressure). That water vapour is used to transfer the heat it has absorbed to the other end of the heatpipe. As the vapour reaches the colder side of the tube it condenses, and returns back to liquid form. As it does so, the energy which caused the water to turn to vapour is dumped into the surrounding metal of the heatpipe, which impart transfers it to cooling fins. A physical property know as capillary action then takes hold and draws the freshly condensed liquid back along an internal wick structure to the hot side of the heatpipe, where the entire process repeats.

What goes on inside the Akachi heatpipe is similar to this process, but the technology has a few distinct differences. First of all, where a standard copper heatpipe uses water as a working fluid, this Akachi pipe uses a slightly more exotic chemical; hydroflurocarbon-134a (HFC-134A).

The HFC-134a working fluid, once heated, circulates through a "meandering capillary tube" that is formed from about 30 individual 1mm x 1mm channels within the 2mm thick x 50mm wide extruded aluminum pipe structure. If you're a little unsure of what that describes, just look at the edge of a corrugated cardboard box where you see all those little folds, and visualize pretty much the same thing in aluminum.

If the side of the Shogun's Heatlane pipe reminds us of corrugated cardboard. While it seems as though it's a solid strip of aluminum, it is actually composed of 30-40 very tiny pipes joined side-to-side. You can see the outlines of these pipes in the picture above.

Invented by Hisateru Akachi who called the technology "self-excited oscillation heatpipe", the Akachi pipe works something like this:

The working fluid is loaded into the tiny 1mm x 1mm sized capillaries of the pipe under pressure, and with small pockets of a gas every so often. As an area of the flat Heatlane pipe is heated, the working fluid in those pipes directly behind the heat source (in our case the entire width of the pipe, or 30-40 individual pipes) expands slightly as it transforms to heat-carrying vapour.

That expansion of the working fluid into a vapour, into the small microvoids, drives all of the fluid and vapour in the entire system to move forward/backward (oscillate) at a certain velocity.

All the little pipes in the entire Heatlane heatpipe are connected, so whatever happens at one point drives everything else - kind of like slurping soda through a curly straw with a bunch of trapped air bubbles. The oscillating motion transfers the heated vapour to a cooler area of the Heatlane pipe where the latent heat is then transferred to the surrounding cool metal structure. The cooled vapour then condenses back to a working fluid, and the process continues on ad infinitum as long as the heating and cooling conditions are maintained.

TS Heatronics have a quick video of the process in motion on this page, taken with an X-ray machine so you can actually see the little vapour bubbles and working fluid racing through the aluminum Heatlane pipes.

 Previous Page ° ° Next Page 

Table of Contents:

 1:  Scythe Shogun Low Noise Heatsink Review
 2: — TS Heatronics Akachi Heatlane Heatpipe
 3:  360° View - Scythe Shogun heatsink
 4:  Surface Roughness and Acoustic Comparisons
 5:  Final Heatsink Temperature Comparisons

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