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Proceedings ArticleDOI

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

TLDR
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.
Abstract
Performance-driven electronic packaging demands for thermal solutions of high power dissipation such as enhanced air cooling or, alternatively, liquid cooling technologies. This paper reports the characterization of air-cooled vapor chamber heat sink (VCHS) and liquid cooled heat sinks (LCHS) for electronic packages with a targeted power dissipation of 140W. The test vehicle flip chip plastic BGA package (FC-PBGA) involves a thermal test chip with a footprint of 12mm/spl times/12mm mounted on a high density substrate of 40mm/spl times/40mm with 1296 I/Os. The VCHS for characterization consists of a copper vapor chamber attached to the base of an Aluminum heat sink. Five types of thermal interface materials were used in the characterization study. In liquid cooling testing, two Aluminum LCHSs with microchannel width around 0.2mm were designed, fabricated and assembled with the chip. De-ionized water was used as coolant. Thermal measurements were conducted and the system-level thermal analysis shows that, for the VCHS, the overall thermal resistances ranged from 0.72 to 0.61/spl deg/C/W, and maximum power dissipations around 100W are achieved given allowable chip temperature rise of 60/spl deg/C. For the liquid cooling characterization, both thermal resistances and pressure drops were obtained at different flowrates and the system thermal resistances ranged from 0.42 to 0.35/spl deg/C/W at pressure drop less than 0.1 bar, indicating the achievable power dissipation of 140 to 170W. This study reveals that there exist performance limits for the air cooling techniques and liquid cooling technique is a feasible candidate for cooling next-generation high-performance electronic packages.

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Citations
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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

High-performance heat sinking for VLSI

TL;DR: In this paper, a water-cooled integral heat sink for silicon integrated circuits has been designed and tested at a power density of 790 W/cm2, with a maximum substrate temperature rise of 71°C above the input water temperature.

Thermal Performance Challenges from Silicon to Systems

Ram Viswanath
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors highlight design and technology challenges encountered in mobile computers, desktops, and servers with respect to thermal design for a microprocessor and highlight the concurrent development and packaging of all these elements to ensure that a viable thermal design solution space exists.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spreading in the heat sink base: phase change systems or solid metals??

TL;DR: In this paper, two simple models are presented to address the heat transfer limitations in phase change systems, and the ratio of phase change spreading resistance over solid metal spreading can be estimated, using these models, the authors determine the envelope of the limitations for phase change heat spreaders used in processor cooling, and to compare their performance against high thermal conductivity solid metals.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Validation of models for air cooled plane fin heat sinks used in computer cooling

TL;DR: In this article, a simple model based on developing laminar flow in rectangular channels is proposed to predict the performance of two representative plane fin aluminum heat sinks, one for each flow configuration, compared with the proposed model for parallel flow and a selected model for impinging flow.
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