Microcoolers Could Change Processor Design 112
Skaven writes: "Nature.com is reporting about these nifty new microcoolers, tiny thermoelectric heat sinks that can be built directly onto CPUs. Using the new technology, scientists cooled a processor at 100 degrees C by 7 degrees. That's still a fried t-bird, but what this means is that if the technology gets good enough, cooling chips could soon be getting a lot easier. If anything, small 'hot spots' on the CPU could be avoided by strategic placement of microcoolers, thus helping all of us overclockers out. Heck, maybe even increasing the voltage to your CPU would make it run cooler...how weird would that be?"
And these are different than Peltier pumps, (Score:2)
Integrate this technoloy into beer cans. (Score:1)
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Sounds like ... (Score:1)
Return to sanity (Score:2)
This has some really far-reaching effects. Where heat was previously one of the prime concerns, it will become less so. I've heard stories of supercooled Pentium II's overclocked to around 1GHz. This could mean an instant increase in processor speeds, without any changes in the actual design. R&D, baby. R&D
And? (Score:1)
http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/03/16/145
?
As if California doesn't have it bad enough (Score:4)
I adds a lot of waste heat too. It would be funny to see the web farms have to upgrade their air conditioning plants because their chips require on-board heat disposal. A double whammy. Dissipate an extra 7C, but spend 200W to get it!
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Superconducting chips (Score:1)
Now if we could just get harddrives to run silent, we'd be all set (yes, I know about the solid state drives, but they're way too expensive and have too little capacity). Maybe when holographic drives become reality...
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7 degrees? (Score:1)
If you read past the first paragraph, it says "the layers can reduce the local temperature on a silicon chip by up to 7 degrees Celsius".
I'm sorry, but that's not going to keep your CPU from turning into bubbly goo.
Wow. (Score:1)
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Put the MB in the freezer (Score:1)
But people would look at you strange if you had your cables running into a freezer and just used it as a normal computer. wouldn't they?
Okay, got to say it. I wonder what this would do for a beowulf cluster of overclocked computers...
DanH
Cav Pilot's Reference Page [cavalrypilot.com]
This is a very good tool (Score:1)
However, the cost of these things isn't mentioned. Judging by the way this article is presented though, it should be relatively cheap to make.
The cooling units consist of 200 alternating layers of two semiconductors stacked atop one another like tiles.
I wonder how many layers you can put on top of each other before it becomes inefficient.
Better yet, make a chip that's 2 pieces, so that each side of the cooling mini-fridges could cool 2 sides. Of course this isn't feasible because of fabrication costs, but hey, it's an idea!
Let me see if I've got this... (Score:2)
It sounds from the article (which was lacking in technical detail), like the microcoolers can chill the portion of the chip they're in contact with. Okay, I'm good with that. But where does the heat go?
Assuming that it's redistributed, what we're really looking at is a way to take that 1GHz+ CPU and let it run nice and cool while we fry everything else inside the case, right?
See this article also (Score:3)
Re:As if California doesn't have it bad enough (Score:1)
Maybe you should...and take note about how they are more efficient....
This looks interesting, especially if they caan improve this tech even further...but if they are to be fabbed in with the chip, does this mean we will have to expect Intel, AMD, and/or Transmeta to adopt this?
Caino
Don't touch my .sig there!
Is anyone else amused? (Score:2)
7 degrees (Score:4)
Re:Sounds like ... (Score:1)
I just can't see this being practical (Score:2)
It is interesting science, though, and makes me wonder if this will lead to efficient cooling devices for non-computing applications. For example, if this were made very efficient, chair-rail air conditioners could become possible (and low-noise too!). Me, I'll wait until the next breakthrough before shouting triumphantly.
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it's obvious (Score:1)
Re:See this article also (Score:1)
Re:Return to sanity (Score:1)
Re:And you get less use time (Score:1)
Re:And? (Score:2)
Actually, there was a whole story on this thing, I think, here:
http://slashdot.org/articles/01/01/23/1350208_F.sh tml [slashdot.org].
Originally New Scientist had a story on it (here [newscientist.com]), and now it looks like it made it into Nature.
I guess it must be officially "cool" now.
but we will not likely see it next year... it will take a while.
Why not mount the CPU differently? (Score:1)
200W? Chump change. (Score:1)
Re:Put the MB in the freezer (Score:1)
Re:7 degrees? (Score:2)
Re:And these are different than Peltier pumps, (Score:5)
Did anyone else wonder how on earth they're actually moving the heat? Seems like "We've made a device that can move destructive heat a very small distance from where it's generated!", which I don't get the point of. Wouldn't this, at best, create a more uniform distribution of the heat? Doesn't say anything about where it goes...
Well, maybe they're using a big peltier on top of the chip and using these little things to move heat over to it. Maybe.
-grendel drago
Project E.U.N.U.C.H (Score:1)
Re:Is anyone else amused? (Score:1)
Oh crap. Better go change all my passwords now.
Mod this up, people! +1, Funny (Score:1)
Someone oughta mod this up.
Re:Why not mount the CPU differently? (Score:1)
Re:As if California doesn't have it bad enough (Score:2)
Yes. However, prohibitive licensing costs aside, it doesn't sound like this is a particularly expensive process, so I don't see why any chip manufacturer would shy away from this. Of course, I'm no engineer.
Re:Why not mount the CPU differently? (Score:2)
Re:Why not mount the CPU differently? (Score:1)
-grendel drago
need a cooler chip? (Score:1)
Nothing to say here, keep moving (Score:1)
. . .
Re:Why not mount the CPU differently? (Score:1)
=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\
still need a heatsink and/or fan? (Score:1)
Re:Is anyone else amused? (Score:2)
Actually, it's even more amusing, if I'm guessing the tones right, xiao-feng means 'small-air'. So, the name is 'Small-Air Fan'; which is in some respect what was invented. How often do you invent something described by your own name?
I should probably stay out of cooling research, my last name being 'Burns'. I knew there was a reason I left EE for CS... :-)
Deja vu all over again. (Score:1)
link [slashdot.org].
If... (Score:1)
Re:And you get less use time (Score:1)
JOhn
And Here's The Poll (Score:2)
What would you do with a "Peltier-on-a-chip"?
1. Assemble a Beowulf cluster of them.
2. Leech more mp3s from Napster.
3. Bundle censorware with each one (in compliance with Texas law).
4. Leech more mp3s from Napster, but call it "hacktivism".
5. Wintel r00l3z!
6. Cowboy Neal.
Re:Why not mount the CPU differently? (Score:1)
I see two problems (Score:1)
Re:7 degrees (Score:1)
On Slashdot, basic high-school science principles can be posted and moderated to Insightful in a matter of minutes.
Yes gentleman (and not-so-gentle women ;-), the world is a better place with Slashdot.
Good idea but... (Score:1)
Reminds me of - (Score:1)
Well maby exept the IDE cables, but hey bluetooth is coming out!
Helping out overclockers (Score:1)
"If anything, small 'hot spots' on the CPU could be avoided by strategic placement of microcoolers, thus helping all of us overclockers out."
And we all know how much they want to help us overclockers out. Heh.
Would be a real boon to getting a quiet PC, though.
Re:If... (Score:1)
If designers incorporate this into their chip, they'll be cheaper/cooler/whatever! It isn't like you can mount one of these things on your chip yourself, you know.
Re:As if California doesn't have it bad enough (Score:2)
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This will never help OverClockers because... (Score:3)
If these advances allow for reliable on-chip cooling, then you can bet that both AMD and Intel will keep these chips clocked as absolutely high as they'll go, thus eliminating the practice of user overclocking altogether.
Re:And you get less use time (Score:1)
This was a corporate effort IIRC. They weren't your average business machines or gaming machines, but high performance computing systems.
Re:Reuse (Score:1)
http://dmoz.org/Computers/Software/Operating_Syst
Re:Let me see if I've got this... (Score:3)
I hate to point out the obvious, but any form of cooling is heat displacement.. including ur current heatsink / fan combo.. all it does is take the heat and pump it into your case.
However the heat a 1.x Ghz cpu generates is nothing compared to the heat a 10k rpm HD generates. The harddrive has a larger surface, so feels 'cooler' per square inch, but the total amount of energy displaced is a lot bigger. (this is why case fan's are good to use)
so i dont think the comment 'fry everything else in the case' is very relevant, since the microcoolers dont change the question or situation, just the method for re-distributing the heat.
-- Chris Chabot
"I dont suffer from insanity, i enjoy every minute of it!"
Re:And these are different than Peltier pumps, (Score:1)
But then I think that if I had actually read the article, I might have something more insightfull to say.
full Applied Physics Letters journal article (Score:1)
Re:And these are different than Peltier pumps, (Score:2)
Re:And these are different than Peltier pumps, (Score:1)
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spam spam spam spam spam spam
No one expects the Spammish Repetition!
Re:Integrate this technoloy into beer cans. (Score:1)
watch me lose karma for the sake of a pun
sic semper tyrannis
Re:Let me see if I've got this... (Score:2)
Here's the theory... Right now, you can't build a CPU that generates too much heat, or it will fry itself. If you come up with an efficient way to remove the heat (without pumping it out of the case entirely), then they'll make hotter-running CPUs, which will cause more heat in the case, which will cause nearby chips to overheat and fail instead.
Re:Return to sanity (Score:1)
price of liquid nitrogen (Score:1)
My understanding is that in bulk quantities, beer is cheaper than milk - there are milk marketing boards that set prices on the white stuff. Nobody is doing that for tanker trucks of beer.
more voltage - run cooler? (Score:1)
Heck, maybe even increasing the voltage to your CPU would make it run cooler...how weird would that be?
We learned in physics that it takes energy to move energy. Leaving a refridgerator open will heat up the room eventually (that was actually an exam question, I remember). So putting the microcoolers on/in the chip might allow the chip to run with more stability at higher voltages and clock speeds, but it won't make the chip run cooler. If anything, overclockers will need even bigger heatsinks and peltiers than they're using now to deal with the heat of the chip plus the heat generated by the microcoolers moving heat from the inside of the chip to the outside.
-ck
Re:200W? Chump change. (Score:3)
Forest...trees... The amount of power being used completely unnecessarily [yafla.com] by residential users is significant : Maybe it doesn't make a big difference when you consider one single home and you can laugh at initiatives for conservation, but when you consider an entire state it can be substantial. In 1999 there were 11,490,000 households in California. If every one of them replaced a single 100W lightbulb with a 15W compact flourescent, that is 976,650,000W of savings. Do you realize that most nuclear power plants only produce around 100,000,000W? So there you've potentially eliminated the need for >9 nuclear power plants by REPLACING A LIGHTBULB and you're talking about how individual users don't make a difference? Give me a break...
And you say that an extra 200W per PC, or >2,000MW over the state, isn't a big deal. Let me guess : You don't vote because your vote doesn't count, right?
Re:Helping out overclockers (Score:1)
What I think will happen: the chip makers will overclock the slower chips and charge the higher chip prices for them. *shrug* People tell me that I am cynical.
-CrackElf
Incorrect assumptions... (Score:3)
If every one of them replaced a single 100W lightbulb with a 15W compact flourescent, that is 976,650,000W of savings.
You assume that the lightbulb is on all the time, which is incorrect. I hardly have any lights on ever at my place, and most people I know at most use bulbs for a few hours per day - and they're not going to spend a hundred bucks swapping bulbs - those 15W ones are expensive as hell. Telling people to buy them at an added cost to them - less beer, for example - without raising the price accordingly flies in the face of the economics upon which your country was built.
Not to say conversion isn't a good thing, but the reason people waste power IS BECAUSE THE PRICE IS ARTIFICIALLY LOW. If you want people to use less power, for god's sake, just RAISE THE PRICE. That's capitialism, aren't you guys the united states of america? The supply falls, the price rises, more people will want to build power stations - but oh, wait, you've gone and fucked yourselves with environmental legislation that flies in the face of reality. You SHOULD have several more nuclear power plants, or hydro, or coal, or whatever, if you want to sustain the current price to consumers.
You can buy all the power you want from us in Canada - it just isn't going to be cheap. Raise the price, and watch all those 15W bulbs fly off the shelves. Lower the enviromental regulations, and build some power plants. Just wait until people start using their A/C in summer - you have lots of people, well, you get lots of pollution to match.
Re:Let me see if I've got this... (Score:1)
Re:I find.. (Score:1)
"Funny" is not usually something thought of as being posessed. Usually you need a noun for possessives: "his shirt", "her car", "their country".
Now if the intent was to talk about "people who think that they are funny", one might want to use a contraction (which generally is frowned up on in written communications) to say something like "people who think that they're funny". Dropping the "that" is probably fine for an informal forum such as this.
One benifit of avoiding contractions (and their apostrophies) is that you can avoid the confusion between "it's" (contraction of "it is") and "its" (possessive of "it").
Of course none of this is on topic...
Not necessarily (Score:2)
You assume that the lightbulb is on all the time, which is incorrect. I hardly have any lights on ever at my place, and most people I know at most use bulbs for a few hours per day - and they're not going to spend a hundred bucks swapping bulbs - those 15W ones are expensive as hell.
Ah but therein lies the crunch : Most of the power system in place is to deal with momentary peaks because people do tend to all do the same things at the same time: Everyone cranks their ovens on at the same time, and generally at the same time AC powers up (and of course in warmer places like California every W of lighting turns into a W of heat that the AC has to remove from the air). At common times a good portion of the population has their hairdriers on in the morning, and their water heaters come on because they had a shower. Every W that is piled on top of that load is a W that has to be accomodated in the power grid.
Having said that a couple of quick points
Your assumptions are still incorrect (Score:1)
Tell people to conserve, but don't make up faulty data to support your claim.
Re:And this will work how? (Score:1)
Re:Reminds me of - (Score:1)
Kimberly-Clark to introduce wet toilet paper [naplesnews.com]
What can I say, go figure.
I inveted that years ago, something to do with it falling into the bathtub.
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Re:This is a very good tool (Score:1)
Re:And these are different than Peltier pumps, (Score:1)
Missing the point (Score:1)
Re:Let me see if I've got this... (Score:1)
Re:Let me see if I've got this... (Score:1)
So, in the future we will hear... (Score:1)
"who the hell overclocked this comp ? we are freezing to death !"
Re:Helping out overclockers (Score:1)
They're also called peltiers (Score:1)
Re:And Here's The Poll (Score:1)
Re:Incorrect assumptions... (Score:1)
You can buy all the power you want from us in Canada - it just isn't going to be cheap. Raise the price, and watch all those 15W bulbs fly off the shelves. Lower the enviromental regulations, and build some power plants. Just wait until people start using their A/C in summer - you have lots of people, well, you get lots of pollution to match.
As a sidenote I am from Canada (Ontario) and while we have a surplus of power in general, the fact that there is a large coal-burning power generation plant up the lake instantly tells me that we don't conserve enough, or we're not exploring more sustainable methods of power generation enough. With all the hydroelectric and alternative power generation, still we're burning coal?
Power generation, just like all industry, should be based upon real numbers. If you're running a plant that is emitting massive pollutants into the air, the degradation of quality of life, increased health costs, lowered land value in proximity, and future cleanup costs should all be assessed and built into the cost of that power. If that were the case there would be far more environmentally friendly power generation facilities because the real numbers would be more apparent. As it is we like to charge it on the environmental credit card and pretend it's cheaper while disparaging "environmentalist", when in the long run it always ends up costing us far more in health care costs, we live shorter lives, and we (the public) end up funding billions of dollars in clean up costs. Although I generally think nuclear power is a good option, that same dreamland thinking has proven detrimental because at the outset everyone talked about cheap nuclear power...not adding in the cost of tens of thousands of years of nuclear waste monitoring/cleanup.
People seem to be missing the point here... (Score:3)
Re:200W? Chump change. (Score:1)
Which ones are you using? Visible light output is measured in lumens and if two lights are a given lumen output they are measurabley and visibly putting out the same amount of light. The current 15W compact-flourescents put out the same lumens as a 75W incandescent.
If you mean quality of light I greatly disagree : I find that compact flourescents put out whiter, more natural light. There is no flicker with CFs.
good for microbrews? (Score:2)
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Re:nothing yet (Score:1)
People have been waiting for this for many a year and nothing has come of it. I remember reading that it required supercooled nitrogen which is not exactly ecconomical.
Right, but what I'm referring to are high temperature superconductors. If some day a way is determined to create such things, the liquid nitrogen will be unnecessary.
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Re:And this will work how? (Score:1)
Re:Incorrect assumptions... (Score:2)
They cost about 8x the price of a normal lightbulb, use up 1/5 of the energy, and last 5 - 10x longer. What is the problem? Oh, you live in America, there is probably some 1000% (to get a $100 lightbulb) tax on energy efficient devices from lobbying from traditional lightbulb manufacturers. Get real.
Even when they originally came out and cost about 30x the price of a normal lightbulb, they would still save you money over the lifetime of the bulb because of the reduced electricity costs.
However, where I live, there was a normal lightbulb that gave out a few weeks ago. It was bought 70 years ago. Got a good lifespan from that one. I think that new cheap lightbulbs are like new floppy disks - they always give up after about a few months or if you use them.
All the bulbs in my house are energy efficient. From the 7W candle bulbs (replacing 40W bulbs) that you can hold in your hand when on after a few hours, to the 11W (60W) bulbs, to the 20W (100W) main lightbulb. I can have 4 lights on in the lounge using up a total of 53W in total, not 240W.
fried t-bird... (Score:1)
Re:Incorrect assumptions... (Score:2)
I agree that prices should be raised. What is happening now is that the utilities are having to take out loans, which will be repaid with interest both from higher utility rates and taxes. Great, as if CA state tax wasn't high enough already.
Re:Incorrect assumptions... (Score:1)
This summer I'm going to put aluminum foil over one of my apartment windows (there's no shade at all), has anyone tried this?
Bzzzzzzt....... (Score:1)
Re:Incorrect assumptions... (Score:2)
The problem is that many types of electricity generating plants cannot be "turned on" and "off" quickly. Things like nuclear plants and hydroelectric are great for supplying the base load but for the peaks you need something you can bring online quickly and take off just as quickly. Natural gas and coal are the most popular choices here. Bad Things (tm) happen if you have more or less generating capacity than the load you're trying to supply.
Voltage (Score:1)
Re:Whoopeee! (Score:1)
side effect (Score:1)
Possible problems, possible good things, too. (Score:1)
It makes perfect sense. (Score:2)
Peltier devices move heat away from one side to the other side.. and they also generate heat (which ends up on the hot side of course). That's why there is always a point where it's generating more heat than it can move, and becomes inefficient.
The point is, it moves heat away from the chip surface faster and more reliably.. that heat still has to be bled off with a heat sink/fan/whatever.