Keeping Your (PC) Cool – An Introduction to Fanless PC Cooling

By ·Categories: Tech Explained·Published On: August 1st, 2020·5.9 min read·

Since when does cooling something down mean heating it up? Since physics, for starters. To understand how PC fanless cooling works, it’s important to review the basics of thermal transfer. Think back to high school physics where you learned that energy cannot be created or destroyed; it can only move or change form. Heat will flow from hot to cold naturally and this understanding of heat’s relationship to temperature is fundamental to how fanless computers are cooled.

If talking about high school physics makes you break out in a sweat, let’s talk about it in terms that may be more appealing – for example, how the beer in your fridge is kept cold. (Go ahead and grab one, we’ll wait.) That perfectly-chilled beer got that way because your fridge was actively pulling heat from the beer and ejecting it somewhere else.

Photo of beer in a refrigerator

The principles keeping our beverages cool are the same ones responsible for cooling fanless PCs.

A refrigerator has the added benefit of using a compressor to rapidly pull and exhaust heat away from the contents inside. The warm air blowing out at your feet is actually the heat that was contained within your previously tepid beer. The typical vented PC cools similarly, without a compressor, but rather using a fan to exhaust that heat outside the computer chassis.

This is generally an effective way to keep a system running properly. The challenge is that fans can, and do, fail, sometimes taking the entire system down with them. Dirt, dust, and grime build up on internal components and fan blades, gradually increasing its base operating temperature over time until its time is up.

World's Dirtiest PC Week 4 Winner

Traditional PCs have a dirty habit of sucking up dirt, dust, grime and who knows what else while cooling themselves.

Fanless computers address this issue by removing the key failure point in most PCs – the fan. And, with good design, air vents aren’t needed to circulate air, adding further reliability by sealing internal components from outside debris. But how does it stay cool when there’s no fan to circulate air, and no openings in the case, especially with sensitive electronic components inside?

How does a PC fanless cooling work?

The trick here is to optimize the amount of thermal energy you can pull away from the systems’s heat generating components (processor, RAM, 4G card, etc.) and effectively dissipate into the surrounding environment. This is done not just with the design of the heatsink itself, but also by minimizing the number of junctions, or thermal transfer points, the heat must travel through. A path with the fewest stops is more efficient than one with many along the way.

Surely, having this much heat trapped in a metal box along with sensitive electronics is a recipe for disaster, right? Not necessarily. It’s important to draw a distinction between what a person considers “hot” and what “too hot” means to a computer. A person touching a surface between 50 – 70°C will immediately learn that they don’t want to be touching it for very long. However, industrial electronics can chug along quite happily in this range and beyond, up to 90°C.

In OnLogic fanless computers, heat travels through thermal conduction modules from heat sensitive components, such as CPUs and power supplies, to the external body panels of the computer chassis, which serve as a giant heatsink, with a broad surface area and heat dissipation fins. If you look closely at the fins, you’ll notice that even some of the fins have fins!

This distinctive haircut isn’t for show. This design allows for heat to convect and radiate into the surrounding environment, cooling the system.

diagram of fanless pc cooling process

Good fanless PC design minimizes thermal junctions and dissipates heat over a broad surface area.

The amount of heat a well-designed fanless system can dissipate is impressive. There is a large cooling gradient that forms from the exterior of the system to its surrounding environment, with the capability to keep even i7, i9, and Xeon processors functioning properly at full workloads.

This method of heat dissipation means that the heatsink and chassis are going to heat up as they’re working to cool down the system. Unlike many other electronics, if a fanless computer is heating up it’s a good thing. A hot exterior surface means the computer is successfully drawing heat from the inside and rejecting it quickly to the outside air. But how do you keep the system from overheating or becoming a safety hazard, especially if it’s running all the time?

How fanless computers deal with overheating

Keep in mind that the internal components that OnLogic uses in our computers are rated to function normally within specific temperature envelopes, and that a lot of engineering and testing has gone into ensuring a proper balance between the amount of heat that needs to be dissipated and the amount of heat the system itself generates.

When we’re designing fanless systems, we make sure that the system can operate within this pre-determined envelope, ensuring long-lasting reliability. We also use UL94 V0 self-extinguishing and non-ignitable materials for added assurance and as a prerequisite for UL Listing and CB Schemes.

Internal power supplies can also be a source of additional heat, especially if a power supply outside of standard specifications is used. In this case, the power supply may become unstable. This could cause a number of problems, including heat issues and voltage or hardware failure. Our standard power supplies are external to the PC, allowing for effective cooling. Any additionally required voltage regulators inside the computer are cooled by conduction and natural convection that bring heat from the components to the external heatsink of the chassis.

The cooling performance of our systems is also balanced against OSHA’s safe touch guidelines, ensuring the external surfaces and labeling are consistent with the safe handling and operation requirements for the product type. We’ve designed our systems to comply with UL 60950-1 and 62368-1 standards for safe operation and temperatures.

We’ve designed our systems to comply with UL 60950-1 and 62368-1 standards for safe operation and temperatures.

We’ve designed our systems to comply with UL 60950-1 and 62368-1 standards for safe operation and temperatures.

While it might feel counter intuitive that a fanless PC heats up in order to cool itself down, understanding that this is normal behavior for the system will put your mind at ease. When properly configured and installed, a fanless system can operate reliably for years without maintenance or failures.

If you’d like to learn more, check out our white paper that outlines the five ways fanless computers can help your business. If you’re ready to configure your own, check out our lineup of fanless industrial PCs and contact us if you have questions.

Download white paper to learn how fanless computers can help your business

Note: This blog was originally posted on October 17, 2018. It was updated for content on August 1, 2020.

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About the Author: OnLogic

OnLogic is a global industrial computer manufacturer that designs highly-configurable, solution-focused computers engineered for reliability for the IoT edge.