Study of cooling solutions for compact electronic systems
3D technologies (i.e. electronic components vertically stacked) constitute an axis of global research, both at the architectural and manufacturing level. The Grenoble area is at the heart of these technological breakthroughs with world first prototypes that make Cea-Leti one of the leaders in these advanced technologies.
One of the critical points of this innovative technology is to control the thermal management in such 3D components regardless of the final application. Nowadays conventional solutions like adding a fan cannot fit all the thermal requirements, and may be of limited effectiveness. More integrated solutions are now unavoidable and can be considered from two points of view: heat can be managed directly at the component-level in silicon chips that make up the 3D-stack, or it can be managed at package level. Ideally, the two approaches should be combined.
The first objective of this study is to achieve an exhaustive state of the art and evaluate the potential of the different solutions for the components developed at Leti. This evaluation will be based on thermal simulations and a critical analysis based on technological feasibility, consumption, efficiency, cost,… and lead to choose the most appropriate solution.
The second part of the work will be dedicated to the implementation of this solution. Relying on experts of silicon and packaging technologies, the candidate will be responsible for contributing to the design of the component (design and implementation) and its characterization.
This position is for a researcher with a strong background in the areas of thermal and microelectronic components. This position requires analysis skills, a large autonomy and unifying skills.
Droplets motion through modulation of surface energy gradient
Droplet motion through electro-wetting is nowadays largely studied and used in several systems and applications. In order to be useful, this technique needs an electrical field to monitor the droplet. For this post-doctoral fellowship, the main objective is to define an alternative method to the using of the electro-wetting technique in order to generate a droplet motion. The elaboration of surfaces with energy gradients conceived by thin film deposition or by laser ablation will be realized inside this study. The main difficulty is related to the patterns realization in order to obtain the appropriate hydrophilic/hydrophobic resolution. Apart from these “classical” techniques, an innovative method will be studied here by using switchable molecules. These molecules could modify the contact angle between a surface and a droplet, when acting on the potential of hydrogen (pH) or the wall temperature. For all the defined surfaces, the post-doctoral fellow will also analyze the coupling effect between the surface energy gradient and a thermal energy gradient on the droplet motion dynamics.
Electrochemical device for purifying hydrogen in a reformed gas
This project aims to establish a new research and development on purification devices for fuel reformers for hydrogen fuel cells. This work is of prime importance for fuel cell systems fed by different sources of hydrogen. Used in "power full" or "range extender" modes, the reformer and gas purification system are elements of the chain that have to be optimized.
Objective is to develop an electrochemical device for purifying the gas from a reformer whose basic principle is similar to that of a PEM electrolyzer. The gases from the reformer undergo a selective electrocatalytic oxidation to separate hydrogen and conventional pollutants directly power a fuel cell.
The project will focus on selection and characterization of catalysts electrocatalytic performance and the achievement of functional prototypes. These developments will assess the economic relevance of the device vis-à-vis other systems and identify areas of research to develop thereafter.
Study and realization of thermal energy harvesting prototypes by thermal/fluidic coupling, and then electrical conversion. Application to electronic circuits.
The objective of this study is to explore possibilities of using systems with fluidic/thermal coupling to harvest the thermal energy released by an electronic device and then convert it into electricity that can be stored or used again. In those systems, the fluidic can be also used for a cooling purpose.
The two main steps will be the design of devices allowing controlling the operating regimes of the fluidic system submitted to a constant heat source (thermo-fluidic coupling) and the characterization of the best coupling conditions with the electrical conversion devices, in particular piezo-electrical. The studies will also explore new mechanisms taking place in the small scale fluidic systems compared to models known macroscopically. The work will be mostly experimental but will also include a simulation part.
The study should also provide an estimation of the harvesting efficiency as well as the power densities taking place in this kind of new devices.
Process evaluation of 3rd generation biofuel production from micro-algae
CEA contributes to R&D activities in 3rd generation biofuel production from micro-algae by its fundamental research in biology (understanding of biological mechanism and improvement of microorganism performances) led by DSV at CEA Cadarache. LITEN Institute, belonging to CEA/DRT, investigates 2nd biofuel generation, from studies on resources (biomass, waste) up to industrial, economical and environmental integration.
This post doc fellow will use the different approaches developed at LITEN/DTBH to :
- perform a prospective study on process integration, for biofuel production from micro-algae,
- realize a technico-economical study of the more promising process solutions in the 2rd generation domain and industrial use of micro-algae,
- estimate the environmental impact (especially CO2) of these processes.
This work will take place in in frame of a collaboration of both labs (DSV/IBEB and DRT/LITEN/DTBH), the first one bringing its very fundamental knowledge on technical ability and performance of the micro-organism, the second one giving the knowledge on process and technico-economical evaluation of industrial reactor systems.
The post doc fellow, located in Grenoble, will go as needed in Cadarache to discuss with biology experts.
Optimal Multi Agent System management of smart heat grid using thermal storage
The aim of this work is a major contribution to a software framework based on coupling of Modelica/Jade environments that will allow to model, to simulate and to optimise the control of smart heat grid through dedicated thermal storage models development: interface specification to control the storages in the grid, simplified models design of heat grid’s most crucial components to be integrated in Agents (production, distribution/storage, consumption) and design of consumption and production forecast models in order to manage anticipation and improve the overall efficiency. The evaluation of performance is based on the test case build in Modelica simulation environment.
Hydrothermal carbonization as a pretreatment of wastes before their thermochemical conversion by gasification
Gasification, a thermochemical transformation generally performed at about 850°C, produces a gas that can be valorised in cogeneration, or for the synthesis of chemical products or fuels. Some bottlenecks are still present mainly for the gasification of biogenic or fossil origin wastes: irregular feeding in the reactor due to the heterogeneity in form and composition; formation of inorganic gaseous pollutants (HCl, KCl, NaCl, H2S) or organic ones (tars), which are harmful for the process and/or decrease its efficiency, and must be removed before the final application.
The objective of the post-doctoral work will be to test and optimize a pre-treatment step of the resource based on hydrothermal carbonisation (HTC). This transformation is performed at 180-250°C, in a wet and pressurised environment (2-10 MPa). The principal product is a carbonaceous solid residue (hydrochar), that can be valorised by gasification. HTC aims to limit the release of inorganic and organic pollutants in gasification, and to homogenise and improve the physical properties of the resource.
The proposed approach will consist in: experimentations in batch reactors on pre-selected resources and model materials, together with quantification and analyses of products; analysis of results aiming at elucidating the links between the resource and the properties of the hydrochar, as a function of operating conditions; an evaluation of mass and energy balances for the HTC-gasification process.
Couplings between the distributions of water and current density in operating Proton Exchange Membrane Fuel Cell (PEMFC)
The post-doc work will be focused on the measurement of the current density and of the water distributions in an operating fuel cell with a real design, in order to give a better understanding of PEMFC operation as a function of the operating parameters (Temperature, Gas hydration, Pressure, Gas composition). The measurement of the distribution of the current density will be performed using a reliable commercial setup on a full size cell. CEA developed a technique based on Small Angle Neutron Scattering (SANS) as a non-intrusive tool in order to quantify the water distribution during fuel cell operation within and without the membrane. CEA benefits for international recognition on this topic. These measurements will be conducted in high flux neutron reactors, such Institut Laue Langevin (ILL). Some specific high and low resolution neutron imaging experiments could be also be conducting additionally in order to have a complete 3D view of water repartition.
Large-scale depletion calculations with Monte Carlo neutron transport code
One of the main goals of modern reactor physics is to perform accurate multi-physics simulations of the behaviour of a nuclear reactor core, with a detailed description of the geometry at the fuel pin level. Multi-physics calculations in nominal conditions imply a coupling between a transport equation solver for the neutron and precursor populations, thermal and thermal-hydraulics solvers for heat transfer, and a Bateman solver for computing the isotopic depletion of the nuclear fuel during a reactor cycle. The purpose of this post-doc is to carry out such a fully-coupled calculation using the PATMOS Monte Carlo neutron-transport mini-app and the C3PO coupling platform, both developed at CEA. The target system is core of the size of a commercial reactor.
Simulation of reactive gas-liquid multi-phase flows
The objective of this postdoctoral position is to develop and implement a simulation method for the simulation of a
sodium spray fire. Two key points need to be adressed. First, one needs to propose a proper representation of the sodium
droplets (dispersed phase) from their generation by a jet (separate phase) fragmentation to their behavior (motion,
oxidation, combustion) in the air atmosphere. This requires to derive a flow model that accounts for multiple components
with multiple interface topology regimes (dispersed and separate). Second, one needs to develop a robust discretization
strategy for this complex flow model.
The numerical work will be implemented in a new numerical tool to perform simulations of sodium spray fires developed at CEA. This tool is based on the canoP. Canop is a library designed for solving computational fluid dynamics problems using a cell-based
Adaptive Mesh Refinement (AMR) approach and parallel calculation.