Microfluidic Cooling Turns Down the Heat On High-Tech Equipment 21
An anonymous reader writes with a snippet from HelpNet Security about a technology that sounds promising down the road for consumer equipment, but may land a lot sooner than that in high-end applications where cooling is critical: Thousands of electrical components make up today's most sophisticated systems – and without innovative cooling techniques, those systems get hot. Lockheed Martin is working with DARPA on its ICECool-Applications research program that could ultimately lead to a lighter, faster and cheaper way to cool high-powered microchips – by cooling the chips with microscopic drops of water. This technology has applications in electronic warfare, radars, high-performance computers and data servers. The micro-cooler is only 250 microns thick, and 5 millimeters long by 2.5 millimeters wide.
Really? (Score:3, Insightful)
It might allow you to spread the heat or avoid direct water transfer but you still have to move that heat somewhere. You're not REDUCING the heat, are you? It's still producing the same amount of heat and you're still needing to get rid of it.
At the end of the day, whatever fancy technique you use, there's still going to be a large bit of aluminium somewhere, and probably a cheap fan blowing over it. If not, then you're into things more complicated, fragile or liquid than you want them to be.
The only other cooling technology I've seen was a heat-pipe cooled PSU that I still have. No moving parts at all, just clever design, and natural air-flow. But things like that aren't scaling and can't be used on more heat-generating parts (do PSU's really generate that much heat?).
No matter how you look at it, whether you water-cool or whatever, you still need a big piece of metal with huge surface area being cooled somehow to actually "get rid" of the heat. Everything else is just a matter of the efficiency or difficulty of how you get the heat to that point.
With consumer items like laptops and desktop PC's, you're not going to change anything. And bigger things like cars, planes, etc. don't really have a problem - localised heating might be problematic but space isn't at such a premium that you can't solve it with "normal" techniques and a huge heatsink (i.e. the bodywork).
However, I still don't get why all laptops / tablets don't just have a large metal base inside their plastics to just spread the heat over everything, so you don't get one burned thigh and one cold thigh.
Re: (Score:3)
Everything else is just a matter of the efficiency or difficulty of how you get the heat to that point..
It reduces the thermal resistance between the chip and the heat sink, so for a given installation and heat rejection rate the chip itself will be cooler.
You do not add any weight to an aircraft that isn't absolutely necessary and you do not add any kind of active device where a passive one could work because of reliability. Keeping electronics cool in an aircraft is a very complex and expensive problem. Keeping a c
Re: (Score:3)
It requires good engineering to do robustly, quietly, in a relatively compact unit, etc; but dumping large amounts of waste heat once
Re: (Score:2)
It might prove to be the case, especially if somebody comes up with a clever way of producing the stuff in bulk, that these microfluidic interfaces will end up being used in larger cooling applications as well;
Never mind cooling applications -- make this cheap enough, and I want to see it in cookware.
Not to be flip, but there are quite a few applications where keeping a uniform temperature across a surface with widely varying heat loads would be a big win. The mind boggles.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
It may be because fluid-based heat-piping systems rely on vaporizing a working fluid to absorb heat and condensing it to dispose of that heat. Evaporation and condensation tend to happen at a fixed temperature (varying with pressure) for a given working fluid. I don't know how well such a system would let you keep a wide surface at a uniform arbitrary temperature. In other words, it might be easy to build a plate that would keep your food warm for serving at a perfect 60 C, or one to fry things at 180 C, bu
Re: (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
You fools! (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:1)
Wrong type of nerds. They've got to many trekkies.
Re: (Score:2)
Fine, you worrywart. We'll make sure it's ray-shielded and and tucked away in a protective trench somewhere.
Easy hack (Score:2)
All you have to do is hook a stepper motor to a cam and position the cam against the trigger of a spray bottle filled with water, and viola, and point it at your CPU and voila, you've got microfluidic cooling. Your CPU fan will naturally direct the droplets to the heat sink. You should also tie the stepper motor to your cpu temperature sensor so that it can alter the squirt rate for higher demand times.
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
CPU fans always blow down onto the heat sink. Mounting them the other way allows a hot spot to form in the center as the fan tends to just pull air from around the heat sink instead of through it.
Re: (Score:2)
CPU fans always blow down onto the heat sink. Mounting them the other way allows a hot spot to form in the center as the fan tends to just pull air from around the heat sink instead of through it.
As opposed to the hot spot in the center of the blowing side? There's nothing blowing from the hub of the fan, and of course the highest speeds are on the outer edge. This doesn't yet account for idiotic heatsink designs that don't let air straight through, but instead divert it to the sides, thus leaving a high pressure center.
I agree with the general point though, it's almost always better to blow onto the heatsink. Try sucking out a candle, as our fluid mechanics professor used to challenge us.
Re: (Score:2)
Microfluidic cooling increases the surface area for heat transfer by running the water through lots of tiny tubes in the heat spreader (metal-to-metal heat transfer generally is a lot faster than metal-to-water heat transfer, so the small surface area of the CPU-to-heat spreader interface isn't limiting). The surface area for heat transf