
When it comes to PC hardware, we can boil a lot of things to the basics. Normally: more transactions, more power; More strength, more heat; You think And today I am reminded of another basic principle of hardware design: high level area means better heat consumption.
Georgia Tech has a Brought in our attention (Through Semicmed Digest Digest) a Patent that was granted For sources to use “micro -fluidic channels” to eliminate heat from a chip last year. The tech was developed by Dr. Daniel Lorenzini and it seems that it has been traded in the form of A.Micro -fluidic block“From Tech Startup Immoral.
After the first reading of the press release, his words assumed me that “micro -pin” has been embedded somehow in the product I Whatever chip is cooling, and it will be great.
But in fact, it seems that these micro -wings sit underwater, get away from the chip, and turn the whole thing into something like a hat pipe that has been flattened. The liquid flows and heat the micro -pin.
It seems like a standard cooling case, but thanks to these small pins with more surface area of heat consumption, the same principle that guides the design of a standard heat sink.
The other side of this is, although it can be used above the CPU -integrated heat -spreading (IHS), but its purpose is to “contact directly to die” but it, Apparently“Best results require the use of liquid metal.” And obviously it will need to eliminate your CPU, which is sure that the PC builder’s spinal cord is shaking.
You ask what is the end result? Evidence of this, as no one ever says, is in the kheer. According to Emocular’s homepage visual, a scene bench R -23 bench mark showed no low temperature and such water block with such a water block.
Without a water block, the P -Corps temperature of Intel Core I9 14900K reached 100 ° C and the high speed 5.7 GHz vs. Vs.6.2 GHz at 74 ° C, which was obtained with a water block.
All of this reminds the importance of the basics: heat transfer levels will increase areas and reduce temperatures and increase efficiency. It looks like it seems to be the first, but we don’t have to resurrect the wheels to see the real improvements, do we?