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High-performance heat sinking for VLSI
5.1K
Citations
8
References
1981
Year
EngineeringVlsi DesignLiquid Metal CoolingComputer ArchitectureIntegrated CircuitsLiquid CoolingRefrigerationHigh-performance ArchitectureThermodynamicsElectrical EngineeringComputer EngineeringHeat TransferMicroelectronicsHeat SinkSurface AreaVlsi ArchitectureHeat Transfer EnhancementThermal ManagementHigh-performance Heat SinkingThermal Engineering
The problem of achieving compact, high-performance forced liquid cooling of planar integrated circuits has been investigated. The convective heat-transfer coefficient h between the substrate and the coolant was found to be the primary impediment to achieving low thermal resistance. For laminar flow in confined channels, h scales inversely with channel width, making microscopic channels desirable. The coolant viscosity determines the minimum practical channel width. The use of high-aspect ratio channels to increase surface area will, to an extent, further reduce thermal resistance. Based on these considerations, a new, very compact, water-cooled integral heat sink for silicon integrated circuits has been designed and tested. At a power density of 790 W/cm <sup xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">2</sup> , a maximum substrate temperature rise of 71°C above the input water temperature was measured, in good agreement with theory. By allowing such high power densities, the heat sink may greatly enhance the feasibility of ultrahigh-speed VLSI circuits.
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1967 | 4K | |
1960 | 2.8K | |
1978 | 792 | |
1969 | 726 | |
1974 | 318 | |
1975 | 300 | |
1981 | 92 | |
1981 | 19 |
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