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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Study on Alternative Cooling Methods Beyond Next Generation Microprocessors

Albert W. Chan, +1 more
- Vol. 2, pp 97-102
TLDR
In this article, a feasibility study on alternative cooling methods to air-cooling with heat sinks is provided, focusing on cooling of 64-bit microprocessor at 80nm technology node with projected heat dissipation of 200W.
Abstract
Feasibility study on alternative cooling methods to air-cooling with heat sinks is provided in this paper. The study focuses on cooling of 64-bit microprocessor at 80nm technology node with projected heat dissipation of 200W. An example was presented to illustrate limitation of air-cooling for the 200W microprocessor using an all-Cu heat sink with tall fins. Three alternatives to air-cooling were studied in this work: liquid cooling, two-phase convective flow cooling and refrigeration cooling. Thermodynamic analysis was used to estimate operating conditions and fluid flow rates for each alternative. The information provides a preliminary basis for assessing capabilities and weaknesses among alternatives. Liquid and two-phase cooling simply transfer heat from high to low temperature. In contrast, refrigeration cooling operates as a heat pump, moving heat from low to high temperature. Refrigeration cooling offers capability to cool microprocessor (LSI) chip to temperatures below ambient or freezing. The drawback is more heat must be removed from the system. Liquid cooling operates at close to ambient pressure, while two-phase and refrigeration cooling operate at higher pressures. Challenges to implementation of all three alternatives include availability of low cost, miniature components (pumps or compressors, heat exchanger and condenser), designing for redundancy (or reliability) and ease of installation and field service. In terms of component availability and cost, liquid cooling is preferred choice, followed by two-phase and refrigeration cooling.Copyright © 2003 by ASME

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Thermal management of high power dissipation electronic packages: from air cooling to liquid cooling

TL;DR: In this article, the characterization of air-cooled vapor chamber heat sink (VCHS) and liquid cooled heat sinks (LCHSs) for electronic packages with a targeted power dissipation of 140W is presented.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Novel thermally enhanced power package

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a power package design that enables heat conduction to the top surface of the microelectronic package through the use of a high thermal conductivity path which reduces by more than a factor of ten the junction-to-top thermal resistance compared to standard solutions.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Power and temperature requirements for refrigerated systems

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors showed that reducing junction temperatures from a traditional value of 85 C to a near-ambient value of 25 C can reduce leakage current to a fraction of its usual value, and total power by nearly one-third.
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