[go: up one dir, main page]

WO2008060644A2 - Apparatus and method for cooling ics using nano-rod based chip-level heat sinks - Google Patents

Apparatus and method for cooling ics using nano-rod based chip-level heat sinks Download PDF

Info

Publication number
WO2008060644A2
WO2008060644A2 PCT/US2007/064541 US2007064541W WO2008060644A2 WO 2008060644 A2 WO2008060644 A2 WO 2008060644A2 US 2007064541 W US2007064541 W US 2007064541W WO 2008060644 A2 WO2008060644 A2 WO 2008060644A2
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
clhs
nano
coolant
micro
cooling
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Ceased
Application number
PCT/US2007/064541
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2008060644A3 (en
Inventor
Carlos Dangelo
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Nanoconduction Inc
Original Assignee
Nanoconduction Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Nanoconduction Inc filed Critical Nanoconduction Inc
Publication of WO2008060644A2 publication Critical patent/WO2008060644A2/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Publication of WO2008060644A3 publication Critical patent/WO2008060644A3/en
Ceased legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L23/00Details of semiconductor or other solid state devices
    • H01L23/34Arrangements for cooling, heating, ventilating or temperature compensation ; Temperature sensing arrangements
    • H01L23/46Arrangements for cooling, heating, ventilating or temperature compensation ; Temperature sensing arrangements involving the transfer of heat by flowing fluids
    • H01L23/473Arrangements for cooling, heating, ventilating or temperature compensation ; Temperature sensing arrangements involving the transfer of heat by flowing fluids by flowing liquids
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B82NANOTECHNOLOGY
    • B82YSPECIFIC USES OR APPLICATIONS OF NANOSTRUCTURES; MEASUREMENT OR ANALYSIS OF NANOSTRUCTURES; MANUFACTURE OR TREATMENT OF NANOSTRUCTURES
    • B82Y10/00Nanotechnology for information processing, storage or transmission, e.g. quantum computing or single electron logic
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L23/00Details of semiconductor or other solid state devices
    • H01L23/34Arrangements for cooling, heating, ventilating or temperature compensation ; Temperature sensing arrangements
    • H01L23/46Arrangements for cooling, heating, ventilating or temperature compensation ; Temperature sensing arrangements involving the transfer of heat by flowing fluids
    • H01L23/467Arrangements for cooling, heating, ventilating or temperature compensation ; Temperature sensing arrangements involving the transfer of heat by flowing fluids by flowing gases, e.g. air
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H01ELECTRIC ELEMENTS
    • H01LSEMICONDUCTOR DEVICES NOT COVERED BY CLASS H10
    • H01L2924/00Indexing scheme for arrangements or methods for connecting or disconnecting semiconductor or solid-state bodies as covered by H01L24/00
    • H01L2924/0001Technical content checked by a classifier
    • H01L2924/0002Not covered by any one of groups H01L24/00, H01L24/00 and H01L2224/00

Definitions

  • Electronic components are known to dissipate heat during their active and standby operation.
  • the heat generated may cause the ambient temperature around such components to increase to levels that deteriorate the performance of the components, at best, or permanently damage the component.
  • Various cooling solutions including heat sinks, fans, and more exotic approaches, such as liquid or gas cooling, are known used for the purpose of keeping the temperature of the components at an ambient temperature level, which is close to optimal for the components' operation.
  • the current art for cooling electronic assemblies at the chip, chip set, board, and rack levels suffers from a number of limitations that are the result of: a) nano-scale heat transfer bottlenecks at transistor level; b) lack of sufficient surface area required by a heat exchanger to dissipate the large amounts of heat generated by dense packing of chips, chip sets, and/or stacked boards; c) the small form-factor of electronic boxes, which limits the volume required for a cooling solution; d) established limits on noise levels generated by a fan, pump, or other devices required by the heat exchanger; and, e) the amount of power available for cooling the assembly.
  • a method and apparatus for overcoming the problems of rapidly increasing complexity and cost and degrading reliability measures in connection with the cooling of a multi-chip mounted on an electronic printed circuit board Accordingly, there are combined a) nano-structures materials for micro or nano-scale heat transfer from a substrate; b) small dimension heat sinks or heat spreaders matched to the mico-scale heat transfer to control the spread resistance; c) nano-scale cooling channel surfaces or micro-channel heat exchangers to improve heat transfer coefficients of the hot components to the cooling agent, air or liquid; and d) sharing of the active device such as a fan, pump, compressor, etc., that are responsible for moving the cooling agent in an active cooling embodiment.
  • the active device such as a fan, pump, compressor, etc.
  • the invention relates to integrate circuits, more particularly, the invention relates to an apparatus and method for cooling ICs using nano-rod based CNIP-level heat sinks.
  • Figure 1 shows a layout of an electronic circuit having a cooling system in accordance with the disclosed invention
  • FIG. 2 shows a cross section of a chip level heat sink (CLHS) in accordance with the disclosed invention
  • Figure 3 shows an upper level view of the CLHS
  • Figure 4 shows a CLHS structure further comprising an expansion chamber
  • Figure 5 shows a cross section of a portion of an electronic circuit that is cooled in accordance with the disclosed invention.
  • physical dimensions of the active component responsible for movement of a cooling fluid e.g. gas or liquid is vastly reduced by deploying a set of components that also combined to improve the thermal performance, and reduce costs, of the overall cooling apparatus. This is accomplished by combining: a) a vastly improved thermal interface resistance; that is made possible by new nano-materials which have excellent thermal properties, e.g.
  • MEMs micro-in-the-art
  • micro-fans micro-fans
  • micro- compressors etc.
  • the advantages of the disclosed invention are achieved by matching the dimensions of chip micro-electronics, e.g. nano-scale dimension transistor heat source, micron sized hot spots, millimeter chip sizes, centimeter sized card or printed circuit boards, etc., to the smallest dimension cooling components that are still compatible to micro-electronic cards.
  • the reliability measure is improved by minimizing local, high- temperature spots. This becomes possible when dimensions of relatively the same scale are applied to each and every element of the cooling hierarchy.
  • Fig. 1 is an exemplary and non-limiting top view of an electronic circuit 100 cooled in accordance with the disclosed invention.
  • a printed circuit board (PCB) 140 there are mounted a plurality of integrated circuits (ICs) (not shown). Each IC is coupled to a CLHS 120.
  • PCB printed circuit board
  • CHLS 120 is described in more detail below.
  • Each CHLS 120 is equipped with an inlet and an outlet that allows the flow of a cold source, e.g. a gas or a liquid, to flow through the CHLS 120 and thereby remove heat that is transferred from the respective IC that is being cooled.
  • CHLS 120 for example CHLS 120-1 through 120-6 is connected inlet to outlet, in series by means of conduits 130, in series to allow the flow of the cold source through a number of components.
  • the total number of components to be connected in series in this way is only limited by the amount of heat that is necessary to be removed from the components.
  • a control unit 110 is comprised of a compressed air tank and/or an array of micro-valves and/or a micro- compressor pump and/or a liquid micro-pump, and an SLHS.
  • the control unit 110 provides the cold source under ample pressure to flow through the CHLS 120 and remove the heat therefrom and then, using the SLHS, get rid of the heat from the cold source, such that the card source may be used to reflow through the system, or otherwise remove the heat to a distance from the electronic circuit being cooled.
  • CLHS 200 having small dimensions for use with ICs, is shown in Figs. 2 and 3.
  • One advantage of the CLHS is the amount of surface area provided for heat transfer which is drastically increased through the use of a plurality nano-scale rods 220 that are spaced appropriately to allow for the flow of the cold source. Spacing between the nano-rods is, for example, 400 nanometers in each direction thus allowing for a flow of the cold source. Nano-rods are grown on a substrate 210, at a distance from each other to allow for the flow of a compressed cold source, and thereby form a channel in between the nano-rods, the nano-scale channel having very small hydraulic diameters.
  • a higher heat transfer coefficient is achieved with smaller hydraulic diameters.
  • a vast increase of surface area is achieved by growing nano- rods 220 on substrate the 210 that have a high aspect ratio.
  • the current literature with regard to creating functionalized carbon nanotubes teaches various methods of creating conformal coating of nanotubes with various materials, e.g., metals, conductive polymers, etc..
  • the carbon nanotubes need a pre-treatment, e.g. high temperature annealing, to remove amorphous carbon found on the nanotubes, nanowires, nanofibers, or nanotowers.
  • the nano-rods 220 may be coated by a coating 225 for the purpose of better heat transfer between the nano-rod 220 and the cold source.
  • the conformal coating 225 of the nano-rods 220 may be achieved using highly thermally conductive materials, e.g. metals such as Pd, Au, Ag, Cu, and the like.
  • metals such as Pd, Au, Ag, Cu, and the like.
  • Fig. 4 shows an exemplary and non-limiting CLHS structure 400 further comprising an expansion chamber 420.
  • the expansion chamber 420 is placed immediately after the inlet 410 thus allowing rapid expansion of the cold source that, as is well-known in the art, causes a decrease of temperature of the cold source by several degrees, further contributing to the cooling process.
  • the design and proportions of the expansion chamber 420 may vary to suit the specific characteristics of the CLHS 400 and the cold source used, without departure from the spirit of the disclosed invention.
  • Fig. 5 shows a cross section of a PCB 520 on top of which an IC 510 is mounted. On top of the IC 510 there is mounted a CLHS, for example CHLS 400, that is used for the purpose of removing heat from the hot surface of the IC 510.
  • CLHS for example CHLS 400
  • control unit 110 One example of a suitably designed micro-pump for the liquid coolant that may be found is a 3.5 cm x 4.5 cm x 3.0 cm micro-pump with pressure drops in the range of 6 kPascal and 400 ml/ min flow rates.
  • a suitably designed air micro-compressor of similar dimensions is readily found in the current art.
  • MEMs micro electronic mechanical systems
  • MEMs micro electronic mechanical systems
  • heat density is high. It is therefore important to have control of fluid coolant temperature at all points of the thermal path between the heat source, for example 120-2 and the heat exchanger in the control unit 110.
  • the invention disclosed herein provides advantages over the prior art in various aspects. Cost of electronic cooling is minimized by sharing the cold source compressor, for example an air compressor, storage tank, and micro- liquid pumps required to cool the IC set at the board level. The compressor, the tank, and liquid pumps provide the control needed to achieve the cost/performance required at the heat dissipation level by the electronic box.
  • the air compressor and storage tank can be, in some embodiments, replaced by one or more fans that blows air to the heat exchanger's heat sink when a shared micro-pump is used to pump the liquid cooling in serial mode thru an individual hot chip's heat sink or heat spreader.
  • the embodiments disclosed herein provide for area minimization by sharing coolant moving devices, e.g. fan, pump, or blower, to move small volumes of the cold source used in the electronic enclosure.. Further advantages of the invention include, for example, the minimization of noise generated by the coolant-moving-devices due to the sharing of such devices for a plurality of ICs. As heat density generated by each chip increases, the cooling capacity is increased by increasing the coolant, e.g.
  • the cooling loop may be a closed loop when a liquid or target gas are used, or an open loop when air is used. Pressure is controlled, for example, by the air storage tank, by micro-valves, or by a liquid pump in the cooling circuit. The path seen by air flow is controlled via pipes and conduits leading to appropriate heat sink fins/pins depending upon the air temperature required at these heat sink locations.
  • the temperature of coolant fluid is under control of the control unit 110.
  • the cooling components 120 are deployed in a manner depicted in Fig. 1 according to physical layout available from constraints in the design of PCBs where the micro-electronic chips are laid out.
  • the physical location of the cold air inlet to the pump into the storage tank is chosen in a way to access the coldest possible source of ambient temperature air.
  • the hot air from heat exchanger in the control unit 110 is directed to regions of the PCB layout where no heating damage is inflicted to other micro-electronic chips.
  • the storage tank is deployed in such a manner to provide an air flow at the appropriate orientation, as may be required by fins or pin direction of heat sinks, at a quantity and pressure required, and as allowed by physical constraints or spacing available for cooling components. This similarly applies to the pumps and the associated chip-level heat sinks.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Power Engineering (AREA)
  • General Physics & Mathematics (AREA)
  • Computer Hardware Design (AREA)
  • Microelectronics & Electronic Packaging (AREA)
  • Condensed Matter Physics & Semiconductors (AREA)
  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Nanotechnology (AREA)
  • Mathematical Physics (AREA)
  • Theoretical Computer Science (AREA)
  • Crystallography & Structural Chemistry (AREA)
  • Cooling Or The Like Of Electrical Apparatus (AREA)
  • Cooling Or The Like Of Semiconductors Or Solid State Devices (AREA)

Abstract

A method and apparatus for overcoming the problems of rapidly increasing complexity and cost and degrading reliability measures in connection with the cooling of a multi-chip mounted on an electronic printed circuit board. Accordingly, there are combined a) nano-structures materials for micro or nano-scale heat transfer from a substrate; b) small dimension heat sinks or heat spreaders matched to the mico-scale heat transfer to control the spread resistance; c) nano-scale cooling channel surfaces or micro-channel heat exchangers to improve heat transfer coefficients of the hot components to the cooling agent, air or liquid; and d) sharing of the active device such as a fan, pump, compressor, etc., that are responsible for moving the cooling agent in an active cooling embodiment. By providing appropriate passage for the cooling agent an effective and efficient cooling of the hot surfaces is achieved.

Description

Apparatus and Method for Cooling ICs Using Nano-Rod Based Chip-Level Heat Sinks
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
DESCRIPTION OF THE PRIOR ART
Electronic components are known to dissipate heat during their active and standby operation. The heat generated may cause the ambient temperature around such components to increase to levels that deteriorate the performance of the components, at best, or permanently damage the component. Various cooling solutions including heat sinks, fans, and more exotic approaches, such as liquid or gas cooling, are known used for the purpose of keeping the temperature of the components at an ambient temperature level, which is close to optimal for the components' operation.
Nonetheless, the current art for cooling electronic assemblies at the chip, chip set, board, and rack levels, suffers from a number of limitations that are the result of: a) nano-scale heat transfer bottlenecks at transistor level; b) lack of sufficient surface area required by a heat exchanger to dissipate the large amounts of heat generated by dense packing of chips, chip sets, and/or stacked boards; c) the small form-factor of electronic boxes, which limits the volume required for a cooling solution; d) established limits on noise levels generated by a fan, pump, or other devices required by the heat exchanger; and, e) the amount of power available for cooling the assembly.
Together, the above limitations create severe limitations in providing cooling solutions having lower complexity, lower cost of extremely dense, hot microelectronic assemblies, such as boards, racks, etc., which must fit in small boxes and enclosures. In the current art, the cost and the complexity of cooling grows very fast with ever increasing density of micro-electronic assemblies, e.g. chip, chip set, board and board assemblies. Aside from cost considerations, the reliability of the micro-electronic assemblies suffers from high, local temperatures which translate into lower mean-time-between failure (MBTF) performance.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A method and apparatus for overcoming the problems of rapidly increasing complexity and cost and degrading reliability measures in connection with the cooling of a multi-chip mounted on an electronic printed circuit board. Accordingly, there are combined a) nano-structures materials for micro or nano-scale heat transfer from a substrate; b) small dimension heat sinks or heat spreaders matched to the mico-scale heat transfer to control the spread resistance; c) nano-scale cooling channel surfaces or micro-channel heat exchangers to improve heat transfer coefficients of the hot components to the cooling agent, air or liquid; and d) sharing of the active device such as a fan, pump, compressor, etc., that are responsible for moving the cooling agent in an active cooling embodiment. By providing appropriate passage for the cooling agent an effective and efficient cooling of the hot surfaces is achieved.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
TECHNICAL FIELD
The invention relates to integrate circuits, more particularly, the invention relates to an apparatus and method for cooling ICs using nano-rod based CNIP-level heat sinks.
Figure 1 shows a layout of an electronic circuit having a cooling system in accordance with the disclosed invention;
Figure 2 shows a cross section of a chip level heat sink (CLHS) in accordance with the disclosed invention; Figure 3 shows an upper level view of the CLHS;
Figure 4 shows a CLHS structure further comprising an expansion chamber; and
Figure 5 shows a cross section of a portion of an electronic circuit that is cooled in accordance with the disclosed invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
In accordance with the disclosed invention, physical dimensions of the active component responsible for movement of a cooling fluid, e.g. gas or liquid is vastly reduced by deploying a set of components that also combined to improve the thermal performance, and reduce costs, of the overall cooling apparatus. This is accomplished by combining: a) a vastly improved thermal interface resistance; that is made possible by new nano-materials which have excellent thermal properties, e.g. nano rods, nano-wires, carbon nanotubes, carbon nanofibers, etc.; b) a small foot-print, micro-channel heat evaporator or heat exchanger; and c) a small dimension fan(s), pump(s) such as those known-in-the-art as MEMs or conventional micro-pumps, micro-fans, micro- compressors, etc. The advantages of the disclosed invention are achieved by matching the dimensions of chip micro-electronics, e.g. nano-scale dimension transistor heat source, micron sized hot spots, millimeter chip sizes, centimeter sized card or printed circuit boards, etc., to the smallest dimension cooling components that are still compatible to micro-electronic cards. Furthermore, the reliability measure is improved by minimizing local, high- temperature spots. This becomes possible when dimensions of relatively the same scale are applied to each and every element of the cooling hierarchy.
The following components comprise an exemplary embodiment of the novel heat removing system: a) a compressed air tank and/or an array of micro- valves and/or a micro-compressor pump and/or a liquid micro-pump; b) a chip-level heat sink or heat spreader (CLHS); c) access to a cold source, e.g. cold gas or liquid; and d) a system-level heat sink (SLHS), also known as a heat exchanger. Fig. 1 is an exemplary and non-limiting top view of an electronic circuit 100 cooled in accordance with the disclosed invention. On top of a printed circuit board (PCB) 140 there are mounted a plurality of integrated circuits (ICs) (not shown). Each IC is coupled to a CLHS 120. The CHLS 120 is described in more detail below. Each CHLS 120 is equipped with an inlet and an outlet that allows the flow of a cold source, e.g. a gas or a liquid, to flow through the CHLS 120 and thereby remove heat that is transferred from the respective IC that is being cooled. CHLS 120, for example CHLS 120-1 through 120-6 is connected inlet to outlet, in series by means of conduits 130, in series to allow the flow of the cold source through a number of components. The total number of components to be connected in series in this way is only limited by the amount of heat that is necessary to be removed from the components. A control unit 110 is comprised of a compressed air tank and/or an array of micro-valves and/or a micro- compressor pump and/or a liquid micro-pump, and an SLHS. The control unit 110 provides the cold source under ample pressure to flow through the CHLS 120 and remove the heat therefrom and then, using the SLHS, get rid of the heat from the cold source, such that the card source may be used to reflow through the system, or otherwise remove the heat to a distance from the electronic circuit being cooled.
An exemplary and non-limiting CLHS 200, having small dimensions for use with ICs, is shown in Figs. 2 and 3. One advantage of the CLHS is the amount of surface area provided for heat transfer which is drastically increased through the use of a plurality nano-scale rods 220 that are spaced appropriately to allow for the flow of the cold source. Spacing between the nano-rods is, for example, 400 nanometers in each direction thus allowing for a flow of the cold source. Nano-rods are grown on a substrate 210, at a distance from each other to allow for the flow of a compressed cold source, and thereby form a channel in between the nano-rods, the nano-scale channel having very small hydraulic diameters. To those skilled in the art, it is readily apparent that a higher heat transfer coefficient is achieved with smaller hydraulic diameters. In addition to increased heat transfer coefficients, a vast increase of surface area is achieved by growing nano- rods 220 on substrate the 210 that have a high aspect ratio. The presently preferred aspect ration of a nano-rod 220 is measured as the ratio between its diameter 'd' and length T. In an exemplary and non-limiting embodiment, where d=100 nano-meters and l=50 micro-meters, the nano-rod aspect ratio is 500, and the increase of surface area achieved thereby is approximately 90:1.
The current literature with regard to creating functionalized carbon nanotubes teaches various methods of creating conformal coating of nanotubes with various materials, e.g., metals, conductive polymers, etc.. Usually, the carbon nanotubes need a pre-treatment, e.g. high temperature annealing, to remove amorphous carbon found on the nanotubes, nanowires, nanofibers, or nanotowers. Furthermore, the nano-rods 220 may be coated by a coating 225 for the purpose of better heat transfer between the nano-rod 220 and the cold source. The conformal coating 225 of the nano-rods 220 may be achieved using highly thermally conductive materials, e.g. metals such as Pd, Au, Ag, Cu, and the like. For optimal functionality of the CLHS it is enclosed from all sides and further equipped with an inlet and an outlet, such that the cold source can flow in a known direction from the inlet to the outlet.
Fig. 4 shows an exemplary and non-limiting CLHS structure 400 further comprising an expansion chamber 420. The expansion chamber 420 is placed immediately after the inlet 410 thus allowing rapid expansion of the cold source that, as is well-known in the art, causes a decrease of temperature of the cold source by several degrees, further contributing to the cooling process. The design and proportions of the expansion chamber 420 may vary to suit the specific characteristics of the CLHS 400 and the cold source used, without departure from the spirit of the disclosed invention. Fig. 5 shows a cross section of a PCB 520 on top of which an IC 510 is mounted. On top of the IC 510 there is mounted a CLHS, for example CHLS 400, that is used for the purpose of removing heat from the hot surface of the IC 510.
Returning to Fig. 1 , the discussion continues with respect to the control unit 110. One example of a suitably designed micro-pump for the liquid coolant that may be found is a 3.5 cm x 4.5 cm x 3.0 cm micro-pump with pressure drops in the range of 6 kPascal and 400 ml/ min flow rates. Similarly, an example of a suitably designed air micro-compressor of similar dimensions is readily found in the current art. Furthermore, the current art of MEMs (micro electronic mechanical systems) provides for a number of examples of micro- vales to control fluid, i.e. micro-fluid applications. Therefore, constructing the control unit 110 from such components is readily within the capabilities of those skilled-in-the-art.
As noted above, in the small dimensions of micro-electronic enclosure, e.g. electronic boxes, heat density is high. It is therefore important to have control of fluid coolant temperature at all points of the thermal path between the heat source, for example 120-2 and the heat exchanger in the control unit 110. The invention disclosed herein provides advantages over the prior art in various aspects. Cost of electronic cooling is minimized by sharing the cold source compressor, for example an air compressor, storage tank, and micro- liquid pumps required to cool the IC set at the board level. The compressor, the tank, and liquid pumps provide the control needed to achieve the cost/performance required at the heat dissipation level by the electronic box. The air compressor and storage tank can be, in some embodiments, replaced by one or more fans that blows air to the heat exchanger's heat sink when a shared micro-pump is used to pump the liquid cooling in serial mode thru an individual hot chip's heat sink or heat spreader. The embodiments disclosed herein provide for area minimization by sharing coolant moving devices, e.g. fan, pump, or blower, to move small volumes of the cold source used in the electronic enclosure.. Further advantages of the invention include, for example, the minimization of noise generated by the coolant-moving-devices due to the sharing of such devices for a plurality of ICs. As heat density generated by each chip increases, the cooling capacity is increased by increasing the coolant, e.g. air or liquid, flow and further by increasing the pressure required to move such coolant across the thermal path, as shown with respect to Fig. 1. The cooling loop may be a closed loop when a liquid or target gas are used, or an open loop when air is used. Pressure is controlled, for example, by the air storage tank, by micro-valves, or by a liquid pump in the cooling circuit. The path seen by air flow is controlled via pipes and conduits leading to appropriate heat sink fins/pins depending upon the air temperature required at these heat sink locations. The temperature of coolant fluid is under control of the control unit 110. The cooling components 120 are deployed in a manner depicted in Fig. 1 according to physical layout available from constraints in the design of PCBs where the micro-electronic chips are laid out. The physical location of the cold air inlet to the pump into the storage tank is chosen in a way to access the coldest possible source of ambient temperature air. Similarly, the hot air from heat exchanger in the control unit 110 is directed to regions of the PCB layout where no heating damage is inflicted to other micro-electronic chips. The storage tank is deployed in such a manner to provide an air flow at the appropriate orientation, as may be required by fins or pin direction of heat sinks, at a quantity and pressure required, and as allowed by physical constraints or spacing available for cooling components. This similarly applies to the pumps and the associated chip-level heat sinks.
Although the invention is described herein with reference to the preferred embodiment, one skilled in the art will readily appreciate that other applications may be substituted for those set forth herein without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention. Accordingly, the invention should only be limited by the Claims included below.

Claims

Claims
1. Apparatus for cooling integrated circuits (ICs) that are mounted on top of a printed circuit board, comprising:
a control unit for suppling a coolant;
a plurality of chip level heat sinks (CLHS) attached to said ICs transferring heat from said ICs, each CHLS comprising a coolant inlet and a coolant outlet; and
a plurality of conduits connecting an outlet of one CLHS to an inlet of a subsequent CLHS thereby providing a serial path for said coolant, a first CLHS in said path having an inlet coupled to said control unit via a conduit coolant, therefrom and a last CLHS in said path having an outlet coupled to said control unit via a second conduit to return said coolant thereto.
2. The apparatus of Claim 1 , further comprising:
a heat exchanger connected via a conduit to said last CLHS in said path for dissipating heat from said coolant.
3. The appartus of Claim 1 , wherein said control unit pressurizes said coolant through said path.
4. The apparatus of Claim 1 , said CLHS further comprising an expansion chamber.
5. The apparatus of Claim 1 , said CLHS further comprising a plurality of nano-rods spaced from each to define micro-channels.
6. The apparatus of Claim 5, wherein said micro-channels enable a micro- flow of said coolant from an inlet of said CLHS to an outlet of said CLHS.
7. The apparatus of Claim 5, wherein the aspect ratio between the diameter of a nano-rod and the length of a nano-rod is greater than 250.
8. The apparatus of Claim 5, said nano-rods further comprising a conformal coating.
9. The apparatus of Claim 8, said conforming coating comprising of thermal a conductive metal orpolymer.
10. The apparatus of Claim 9, said metal comprising any of: palladium, gold, silver, and copper.
11. The apparatus of Claim 1 , thermal path of said coolant comprising any of a closed loop, open loop.
12. The apparatus of Claim 1 , said coolant comprising either of a gas and a liquid.
13. The apparatus of Claim 12, wherein said gas is air.
14. A method for cooling integrated circuit (ICs) mounted on top of a printed circuit board (PCB) said comprising the steps of:
coupling said ICs to a plurality of chip-level heat sink (CLHS);
connecting said CLHSs in series via a plurality of conduits cooling pathto form a;
attaching a first conduit to a control unit for supplying a coolant flows through said CLHSs and said conduits; and said control unit pressurizing said coolant to cause said coolant flow through said CLHSs in said cooling path.
15. The method of Claim 14, wherein said coolant is either of a gas and a liquid.
16. The method of Claim15, said gas comprising air.
17. The method of Claim 14, said CLHS further comprising a plurality of nano-rods spaced from each tor create micro-channels.
18. The method of Claim 17, wherein said micro-channels enable a micro- flow of said coolant from an inlet of said CLHS to an outlet of said CLHS.
19. The method of Claim 17, wherein the aspect ratio between the diameter of a nano-rod and the length of the nano-rod is greater than 250.
20. The method of Claim17, wherein said nano-rods are coated with a conformal coating.
21. The method of Claim 20, wherein said conforming coating comprises of a thermally conductive metal orpolymer.
22. The method of Claim 21 , wherein said metal comprises any of palladium, gold, silver, and copper.
23. A chip-level heat sink (CLHS), comprising:
a substrate;
a plurality of nano-rods grown from said substrate in an array, said nano- rods having an aspect ratio between the nano-rod length and diameter that is greater than 250; and, an encasement having an inlet and an outlet for a coolant, said encasement forcing said coolant to flow through saidarray of nano-rods.
24. The CLHS of Claim 23, further comprising an expansion chamber extending from said inlet.
25. The CLHS of Claim 23, wherein said array of nano-rods forms micro- channels for the flow of said coolant.
26. The CLHS of Claim 23, wherein said coolant is either of a gas and a liquid.
27. The CLHS of Claim 26, wherein said gas comprises air.
28. The CLHS of Claim 23, said nano-rods further comprising conformal coating.
29. The CLHS of Claim 28, said conforming coating comprising of a thermally conductive metal or polymer.
30. The CLHS of Claim 29, said metal comprising any of palladium, gold, silver, and copper.
PCT/US2007/064541 2006-03-21 2007-03-21 Apparatus and method for cooling ics using nano-rod based chip-level heat sinks Ceased WO2008060644A2 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US11/387,019 2006-03-21
US11/387,019 US20060231237A1 (en) 2005-03-21 2006-03-21 Apparatus and method for cooling ICs using nano-rod based chip-level heat sinks

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
WO2008060644A2 true WO2008060644A2 (en) 2008-05-22
WO2008060644A3 WO2008060644A3 (en) 2009-04-16

Family

ID=39402297

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
PCT/US2007/064541 Ceased WO2008060644A2 (en) 2006-03-21 2007-03-21 Apparatus and method for cooling ics using nano-rod based chip-level heat sinks

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (1) US20060231237A1 (en)
WO (1) WO2008060644A2 (en)

Families Citing this family (13)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2945835B1 (en) 2009-05-25 2016-01-22 Commissariat Energie Atomique PRESSURE AND COMPRESSION TRANSFORMATION MICROSYSTEMS, SENSOR, WHEEL, CHIP, MICROMOTOR, BATTERY INCORPORATING THE MICROSYSTEM, AND METHOD OF MANUFACTURING THE MICROSYSTEM
WO2013043883A1 (en) 2011-09-20 2013-03-28 Lockheed Martin Corporation Extended travel flexure bearing and micro check valve
US9784505B2 (en) 2012-05-15 2017-10-10 Lockheed Martin Corporation System, apparatus, and method for micro-capillary heat exchanger
US9683766B1 (en) 2013-07-12 2017-06-20 Lockheed Martin Corporation System and method for electronic de-clogging of microcoolers
US9999885B1 (en) * 2014-05-30 2018-06-19 Lockheed Martin Corporation Integrated functional and fluidic circuits in Joule-Thompson microcoolers
US10067006B2 (en) 2014-06-19 2018-09-04 Elwha Llc Nanostructure sensors and sensing systems
US10285220B2 (en) 2014-10-24 2019-05-07 Elwha Llc Nanostructure heaters and heating systems and methods of fabricating the same
US10785832B2 (en) 2014-10-31 2020-09-22 Elwha Llc Systems and methods for selective sensing and selective thermal heating using nanostructures
CN106816803B (en) * 2015-11-27 2019-06-18 讯凯国际股份有限公司 Pump module and pump thereof
US10492334B2 (en) 2017-01-12 2019-11-26 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Methods, systems, and assemblies for cooling an electronic component
CN112086415B (en) * 2020-08-11 2022-08-02 中国电子科技集团公司第二十九研究所 A Novel Multiscale Thermal Management Structure and Micro-assembly Method
CN113541050B (en) * 2021-05-21 2022-11-08 中国电子科技集团公司第十四研究所 Liquid cooling radiating wire harness clamp device
CN114698230B (en) * 2022-02-23 2023-05-12 中国电子科技集团公司第二十九研究所 Three-dimensional integrated structure of printed circuit board embedded with micro-channels and preparation method thereof

Family Cites Families (32)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3481393A (en) * 1968-01-15 1969-12-02 Ibm Modular cooling system
US4485429A (en) * 1982-06-09 1984-11-27 Sperry Corporation Apparatus for cooling integrated circuit chips
JPH03208365A (en) * 1990-01-10 1991-09-11 Hitachi Ltd Cooling mechanism for electronic device and usage thereof
JPH06342990A (en) * 1991-02-04 1994-12-13 Internatl Business Mach Corp <Ibm> Integrated cooling system
DE69321501T2 (en) * 1992-02-10 1999-03-04 Nec Corp., Tokio/Tokyo Cooling device for components with electronic circuits
KR100211058B1 (en) * 1995-12-23 1999-07-15 이계철 Cooling device and method of multichip module
US6111749A (en) * 1996-09-25 2000-08-29 International Business Machines Corporation Flexible cold plate having a one-piece coolant conduit and method employing same
US6166907A (en) * 1999-11-26 2000-12-26 Chien; Chuan-Fu CPU cooling system
US6796370B1 (en) * 2000-11-03 2004-09-28 Cray Inc. Semiconductor circular and radial flow cooler
EP1372367A4 (en) * 2001-03-02 2008-09-03 Sanyo Electric Co Electronic device
US6965513B2 (en) * 2001-12-20 2005-11-15 Intel Corporation Carbon nanotube thermal interface structures
US6888720B2 (en) * 2002-06-18 2005-05-03 Sun Microsystems, Inc. Distributed graphitic foam heat exchanger system
US7156159B2 (en) * 2003-03-17 2007-01-02 Cooligy, Inc. Multi-level microchannel heat exchangers
US7316061B2 (en) * 2003-02-03 2008-01-08 Intel Corporation Packaging of integrated circuits with carbon nano-tube arrays to enhance heat dissipation through a thermal interface
US6705393B1 (en) * 2003-02-25 2004-03-16 Abc Taiwan Electronics Corp. Ceramic heat sink with micro-pores structure
US7273095B2 (en) * 2003-03-11 2007-09-25 United States Of America As Represented By The Administrator Of The National Aeronautics And Space Administration Nanoengineered thermal materials based on carbon nanotube array composites
US7017654B2 (en) * 2003-03-17 2006-03-28 Cooligy, Inc. Apparatus and method of forming channels in a heat-exchanging device
DE10327530A1 (en) * 2003-06-17 2005-01-20 Electrovac Gesmbh Device comprising at least one heat source formed by a functional element to be cooled, having at least one heat sink and at least one intermediate layer of a thermal conductive material between the heat source and the heat sink and thermal conductive mass, in particular for use in such a device
US7168484B2 (en) * 2003-06-30 2007-01-30 Intel Corporation Thermal interface apparatus, systems, and methods
US6864571B2 (en) * 2003-07-07 2005-03-08 Gelcore Llc Electronic devices and methods for making same using nanotube regions to assist in thermal heat-sinking
US7732918B2 (en) * 2003-08-25 2010-06-08 Nanoconduction, Inc. Vapor chamber heat sink having a carbon nanotube fluid interface
US7109581B2 (en) * 2003-08-25 2006-09-19 Nanoconduction, Inc. System and method using self-assembled nano structures in the design and fabrication of an integrated circuit micro-cooler
US20050128705A1 (en) * 2003-12-16 2005-06-16 International Business Machines Corporation Composite cold plate assembly
US6992382B2 (en) * 2003-12-29 2006-01-31 Intel Corporation Integrated micro channels and manifold/plenum using separate silicon or low-cost polycrystalline silicon
US7187549B2 (en) * 2004-06-30 2007-03-06 Teradyne, Inc. Heat exchange apparatus with parallel flow
TWI309877B (en) * 2004-08-13 2009-05-11 Hon Hai Prec Ind Co Ltd Integrated circuit package
US7473943B2 (en) * 2004-10-15 2009-01-06 Nanosys, Inc. Gate configuration for nanowire electronic devices
US20060090885A1 (en) * 2004-10-29 2006-05-04 Stephen Montgomery Thermally conductive channel between a semiconductor chip and an external thermal interface
US20060196640A1 (en) * 2004-12-01 2006-09-07 Convergence Technologies Limited Vapor chamber with boiling-enhanced multi-wick structure
CN100453955C (en) * 2005-01-07 2009-01-21 鸿富锦精密工业(深圳)有限公司 Heat pipe and manufacturing method thereof
US7219713B2 (en) * 2005-01-18 2007-05-22 International Business Machines Corporation Heterogeneous thermal interface for cooling
US7336487B1 (en) * 2006-09-29 2008-02-26 Intel Corporation Cold plate and mating manifold plate for IC device cooling system enabling the shipment of cooling system pre-charged with liquid coolant

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US20060231237A1 (en) 2006-10-19
WO2008060644A3 (en) 2009-04-16

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
WO2008060644A2 (en) Apparatus and method for cooling ics using nano-rod based chip-level heat sinks
CN102577654B (en) Heat conveying structure for electronic device
US11467637B2 (en) Modular computer cooling system
US10727160B2 (en) Thermal management component
US7755186B2 (en) Cooling solutions for die-down integrated circuit packages
US9687943B2 (en) Heat sink structure with a vapor-permeable membrane for two-phase cooling
US6536510B2 (en) Thermal bus for cabinets housing high power electronics equipment
JP4949669B2 (en) Heat transfer device, heat transfer system, and method for removing heat from a heat source
JP4511601B2 (en) Cooling system and method
US7304842B2 (en) Apparatuses and methods for cooling electronic devices in computer systems
US20060060333A1 (en) Methods and apparatuses for electronics cooling
US20120087088A1 (en) Microscale heat transfer systems
US20110277967A1 (en) Liquid cooled condensers for loop heat pipe like enclosure cooling
US10874034B1 (en) Pump driven liquid cooling module with tower fins
JP2009532871A (en) Cooling system
JP2008523599A5 (en)
WO2008073675A1 (en) Method and system for extracting heat from electrical components
US20070068172A1 (en) Liquid cooling system
US8082978B2 (en) Fluid-to-fluid spot-to-spreader heat management devices and systems and methods of managing heat
US20090116192A1 (en) Method and System for Removing Heat
US20110297354A1 (en) System and method that dissipate heat from an electronic device
US20050135061A1 (en) Heat sink, assembly, and method of making
US20130213602A1 (en) Cooling system and method for cooling a heat generating unit
EP0709885A2 (en) Circuit pack with integrated closed-loop cooling system
CN101477841B (en) Dual temperature difference multiple heat transferring channel automatic compensation type heat radiation method

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
121 Ep: the epo has been informed by wipo that ep was designated in this application

Ref document number: 07868187

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A2

NENP Non-entry into the national phase

Ref country code: DE

32PN Ep: public notification in the ep bulletin as address of the adressee cannot be established

Free format text: NOTING OF LOSS OF RIGHTS PURSUANT TO RULE 112(1) EPC

122 Ep: pct application non-entry in european phase

Ref document number: 07868187

Country of ref document: EP

Kind code of ref document: A2