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Topic Name: New ways to combat the persistent problem of thermal management
Category: Electronics
Research persons: Pulickel Ajayan,collaborated with Vajtai on the project. Krisztián Kordás, Géza Tóth, Pekka Moilanen, Mia Kumpumäki, Jouko Vähäkangas, and Antti Uusimäki from the University of Oulu
Location: Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,110 8th St., Troy, NY 12180. (518) 276-6000, United States
Details
As the electronics industry continues to churn
out smaller and slimmer portable devices, manufacturers have been challenged to
find new ways to combat the persistent problem of thermal management. New
research published in the March 19 issue of Applied Physics Letters
suggests that carbon nanotubes may soon be integrated into ever-shrinking cell
phones, digital audio players, and personal digital assistants to help ensure
the equipment does not overheat, malfunction, or fail.
The chips inside an electronic device give off
heat as a byproduct of power consumption when the object is on or being used. To
reduce high temperatures, heat sinks — finned devices made of conductive metal
such as aluminum or copper — are attached to the back of the chips to "pull"
thermal energy away from the microprocessor and transfer it into the surrounding
air. Fans or fluids are sometimes used to improve the cooling process, but they
increase the device weight, size, and bulk.
Using microfin structures made of aligned
multiwalled carbon nanotube arrays mounted to the back of silicon chips,
researchers from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and the University of Oulu in
Finland have proven that nanotubes can dissipate chip heat as effectively as
copper — the best known, but most costly, material for thermal management
applications. And the nanotubes are more flexible, resilient, and 10 times
lighter than any other cooling material available.
"As devices continue to decrease in dimension,
there is a growing need for miniature on-chip thermal management applications,"
said Robert Vajtai, a researcher with the Rensselaer Nanotechnology Center and
corresponding author on the paper. "When reduced to sub-millimeter sizes, the
integrity of materials typically used for cooling structures breaks down.
Silicon becomes very brittle and easily shatters, while metallic structures
become bendable and weak."
Carbon nanotubes, however, maintain their
impressive combination of high strength, low weight, and excellent conductivity,
and the carbon nanotube coolers can be manufactured very cost effectively,
Vajtai said.
The researchers have developed a simple and
scalable assembly, using an innovative processing and transfer technique to
integrate the nanotube structures on the chip. Thick films consisting of 1.2
millimeter long multi-walled carbon nanotubes were grown and detached from
silicon/silicon oxide templates, and a laser was used to carve out freestanding
10x10 fin array blocks. The bottom of the nanotube cooler blocks were then
soldered onto the backside of a thermometer test chip that was mounted on a
silicon substrate. This technique employs conventional manufacturing methods,
providing an easy protocol to transfer and integrate nanotube arrays onto the
silicon platforms currently used in electric circuits consisting of miniaturized
components, according to the researchers.
Compared to a chip with no cooling source, 11
percent more power was dissipated from the chip mounted with the nanotube
cooler. Under forced nitrogen flow, the cooling performance with the fins was
improved by 19 percent. "These numbers are consistent with the heat dissipated
by the best thermal conductors, and demonstrate the possibility of a
lightweight, solid-state add-on structure for an on-chip thermal management
scheme which works without involving heavy metal block and fan or fluid-flow
procedures for heat removal which can greatly increase the weight of electronic
devices," Vajtai said.
The researchers are continuing to explore a
variety of techniques to further optimize the nanotube's cooling capabilities by
improving the thermal interface between the chip and the nanotube, enlarging the
cooler's surface area, and perfecting the fin-array geometry
In picture:
Red graph lines show the
temperature of a bare chip as increased power is applied, while blue lines show
the reduced temperatures of a chip equipped with a carbon nanotube cooling
structure (pictured in the background). Solid and dashed lines represent
experimental and computational results, respectively. Both natural and forced
convection conditions are noted. Image
About researchers:
Pulickel Ajayan:
Ajayan's research at Rensselaer focuses on the
controlled growth of carbon nanotubes. He studies their structure and properties
in relation to size and confinement and their potential in a range of
applications, including composite materials, sensors, biomaterials, and
microelectronics. Ajayan is also a recognized expert in electron microscopy.
Throughout his career, Ajayan has received numerous honors including the
National Science Foundation CAREER Award in 1998, the Burton Award from the
Microscopy Society of America in 1997, and the Alexander von Humboldt Research
Fellowship in 1995. Ajayan also was awarded the Presidential Student Award from
the Electron Microscopy Society of America in 1989; the Hadfield Medal for
Outstanding Metallurgist in Calcutta, India in 1985; and the Bachelor of
Technology Gold Medal from Banaras Hindu University in 1985.
Ajayan is an editorial board member for several publications including
Advanced Materials and the Journal of Science and Nanotechnology, and
is a consultant for companies in the United States and Europe.
Ajayan earned a bachelor's degree in metallurgical engineering from Banaras
Hindu University in 1985 and doctorate in materials science and engineering from
Northwestern University in 1989. He joined the Rensselaer faculty in 1997. He is
a collaborator on nanotechnology research associated with Rensselaer's Center
for Directed Assembly of Nanostructures, one of only six NSF Nanoscale Science
and Engineering Centers in the United States.
Collaborated with
:
Vajtai on the project. Krisztián Kordás, Géza
Tóth, Pekka Moilanen, Mia Kumpumäki, Jouko Vähäkangas, and Antti Uusimäki from
the University of Oulu also contributed to the research.
Funded:
The research is funded by the Academy of
Finland, the Nokia Scholarship, and the Focus Center New York for Electronic
Interconnects
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