<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7898646#post7898646 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by hahnmeister
heatsinks are best if they are extruded from copper or aluminum.... casts or mixed materials usually have poor heat transfer.
Well lets look into this.
1) Alloys are used for heatsinks on a regular basis. What in the world do you think aluminum is? It is an alloy in the form we use it, not a pure element. It contains a fair amount of Iron, Silicon and Copper (among many other lesser quantits of metals).
2) Cast heatsinks are very common. VERY COMMON. Cost is a major factor. Needles to say, the thermal capacity between a cast and extruded part is dictated by much more than the base material or process.
3) We are certainly not out to engineer a heatsink to eeek every watt out of our pumps. The idea is for a general design that will remove some heat and help the pump run a bit cooler.
4) MOST COPPER heatsinks are either CAST or BONDED.
So in a nutshell, your statements are not really valid. There may be some truth to the statements (other than the comment about extruded copper), but they just has no bearing here. It is like saying "gold is a better conductor than copper, so you should not use copper for wire, you should look into Gold" The statement has some truth but is useless in most cases... I hope you see the point here.
Back to casting... here are a few notes on cast aluminum and the use of ZINC as an alloy.
Here is a site
http://www.cs.unc.edu/~pxfl/papers/heatsink.pdf with some basic information and a little more detail from the same person
http://www.cs.unc.edu/~pxfl/papers/efficiency.pdf
Here is a site that has some information on cast heatsinks
http://www.kineticdiecasting.com/heatsink.html
and a bit of tech about aluminum
http://www.kineticdiecasting.com/tech.html
And a site dedicated to computer heatsinks
http://www.heatsink-guide.com/content.php?content=heatsinkinfo-2.shtml
Copper heatsinks cost more (material cost) AND ARE NOT EXTRUDED, THEY ARE DIE CAST!!! Copper is just to hard to machine.
Read that again... copper heatsinks are DIE CAST not EXTRUDED!
Now lets get to the reality.
We need to move a rather small amount of heat that is spread over a fairly large surface. We have a fairly large amount of room for heatsink materiel. Therefore we really don't have a need to seek the BEST heatsink material so that we can maximize the process. All we need to do is a get a basic heatsink that can take some of the heat away a pump that has very poor conductivity to the air. We certainly don't have a 200 degree chip with 5mm of surface that is producing 200W of heat. We can therefore be somewhat lazy in the materials and design department.
I took a soda can, flattened it and cut fins into the edges. Wrapped the thing around my pump and put a fan on it. I was able to pull the pumps internal temperature down almost 1 degrees compared to the fan alone (therm placed in pump housing). My little experiment had NO MASS and the can is plastic coated (or whatever they do to soda cans these days). The contact was poor and I used velcro to strap it on.
So yes copper would be the best choice, but getting custom copper heatsinks for pumps is out of the questions.... Die Casting is something we can not do at home, so that leaves DIY home shop sand casting, DIY aluminum and epoxy laminations or a company like spazz has looked into.
And of course the injection molding that I mentioned.
Anyway...