A heat transfer system is presented for managing thermal transients, thus providing
engineers greater flexibility in designing thermal solutions for applications subject
to transient heat-generation. A heat reservoir device for managing a heat input
subject to transient conditions includes a heat transfer subsystem having a first
end and a second end, where the first end is thermally coupled to the heat input;
a heat storage subsystem coupled to the second end of the heat transfer subsystem,
where the heat storage subsystem comprises a phase change material responsive to
the transient conditions. The excess heat load during transient operation is temporarily
absorbed by the latent heat of fusion when the phase change material changes its
phase from solid to liquid. Subsequently, the absorbed heat can be released back
to the ambient via a heat rejection subsystem. This allows engineers to design
smaller heat sinks capable of accommodating given transient conditions. This results
in heat sinks which are lower cost and smaller size, or which reduce the requirement
to provide higher airflow, thereby also decreasing cost and noise, and increasing reliability.