Sunday, October 29th 2006
Most of the time, when people see cuts or grooves in their heatsinks or Integrated Heat Spreader (IHS), they think that it will really reduce thermal transfer. However, IBM is working on a technology that actually uses those grooves, and organizes them into a system of canals. By carving these canals into the IHS of a processor, or a heatsink, IBM actually increases the efficiency of thermal paste. The technology is still in prototype stage.


Source: The Register
posted by zekrahminator - 4:38 PM |  Related News

User comments
1 to 26 of 26 | Go to Page 1 2    Previous | Next
by v-zero (4:40 PM) - Reply
Oh.
by xylomn (4:42 PM) - Reply
i'll believe it when i see actual results
by Jimmy 2004 (4:57 PM) - Reply
Probably nothing huge I'd expect, but we'll see. IBM have done good stuff in the past (obviously :D).
by spectre440 (5:04 PM) - Reply
by: xylomn
i'll believe it when i see actual results
agreed.
by tigger (5:13 PM) - Reply
thats it,i'm slicing up my ihs.:D
by xylomn (5:14 PM) - Reply
by: tigger69
thats it,i'm slicing up my ihs.:D
shall i start dialing 999 now?
by tigger (5:15 PM) - Reply
nah,it aint got no rights man.
by DanTheBanjoman (5:17 PM) - Reply
by: Jimmy 2004
Probably nothing huge I'd expect, but we'll see. IBM have done good stuff in the past (obviously :D).
They still do, they request and get the most patents per year.
by xylomn (5:17 PM) - Reply
by: tigger69
nah,it aint got no rights man.
i meant for yourself when you put in your pc and blow yourself up :p
by cdawall (6:20 PM) - Reply
thats nice so ibm is making a way to cool down there chips since they happen to be some of the hottest runnning since prescott problem meet solved
by EastCoasthandle (7:29 PM) - Reply
Hmm, i found that a smooth IHS yielded the lowest cpu temps vs. ihs with grooves or unfinished ihs.
by Agility (7:30 PM) - Reply
Wow i'm going to cut my IHS into bits and pieces like those 1MM sizes. Weeeeee.
by pt (7:55 PM) - Reply
time to start cut my IHS :D *gone look for a chainsaw*
by xylomn (8:01 PM) - Reply
by: pt
time to start cut my IHS :D *gone look for a chainsaw*
chainsaw :eek:
by pt (8:33 PM) - Reply
by: xylomn
chainsaw :eek:
too powerfull? :rolleyes:
by RaDaR (9:22 PM) - Reply
Make sense to me
by infrared (10:34 PM) - Reply
Copper conducts heat far better than thermal grease, i don't see how cutting groves in the copper is going to help.
by KennyT772 (2:21 AM) - Reply
i think it is to reduce the amount of thermal paste between the highpoints on the ihs and the cooler. that way if too much tim is used it will be squished into the channels and wont interfear with the heat transfer.
by kakazza (6:28 AM) - Reply
More area = More heat can be transfered. The same way heaters work, just that his is for cooling ;p So if there is more area on the IHS it can transport more heat to the copper cooler. And yes I think this will work. Not like -20°C but it will give some advantage. Why? a) IBM scientists better know what they are doing, b) the 'more area = more heat dispense' has been used for decades anywhere where heat dispension is important.
by infrared (7:26 AM) - Reply
I think kenny's got it figured. Nice thinking mate ;)
by Slater (9:40 AM) - Reply  | Edit
by: xylomn
i'll believe it when i see actual results
Actually when you look at it on a molecular level yes, because they are removing a little bit they increase the surface area, and since it doesnt require a thicker layer of thermal paste, it will increase thermal transfer. __________________ vs. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Thats how it prob is My way is right. :)
by olstyle (11:16 AM) - Reply
In some test of an Arctic Cooling CPU-cooler it was said that in its manual Arctic says they use the same method on the bottom of this Cooler.
by Firedomain (12:22 PM) - Reply
well i guess it'd make more surface area between the thermal paste & IHS..... but wouldn't it also make more air pockets? We'll see what they manage to do with it!
by Jimmy 2004 (2:05 PM) - Reply
Probably no air pockets if it's applied correctly.
by Alec§taar (6:44 PM) - Reply
by: kakazza
More area = More heat can be transfered. The same way heaters work, just that his is for cooling ;p So if there is more area on the IHS it can transport more heat to the copper cooler. And yes I think this will work. Not like -20°C but it will give some advantage. Why? a) IBM scientists better know what they are doing, b) the 'more area = more heat dispense' has been used for decades anywhere where heat dispension is important.
You're "dead on right" & it's the SAME principal heatsinks use really... increase of surface area, via folding the surface & allowing for more of a "heat transferral event horizon". APK P.S.=> Personally, I wouldn't expect 'gigantic/knockout' blow-your-mind levels of better cooling, but it should work... IBM imo @ least, STILL has some of the finest most experienced minds out there in this field... apk
1 to 26 of 26 | Go to Page 1 2    Previous | Next
4642 Users online, 3.61 mbps
Quick Search
Already a member?
Username:
Password:
Register Here!
TechPowerUp on Facebook 
TechPowerUp on Google+ 
TechPowerUp Mobile App
New Forum Posts
03:12 by neo668
Which XFX HD6870 BIOS? (0)
03:10 by random
Diablo III Clubhouse (1174)
03:08 by kiddagoat
PSU Deterioration Info (1)
03:08 by TRWOV
Green Tea: retro AMD-nVidia build (177)
03:08 by Yo_Wattup
Google Android users clubhouse (2171)
03:04 by sneekypeet
Sexy Hardware Close-Up Pic Clubhouse. (4989)
02:42 by t_ski
my first SSD (1)
02:38 by Arjai
Milestones (5309)
Popular Reviews

Latest VGA Drivers

ATI Catalyst 12.4 WHQL

XP32 | XP64 | W7 32 | W7 64

NVIDIA GeForce 301.42 WHQL

XP32 | XP64 | W7 32 | W7 64