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contributor authorAmip J. Shah
contributor authorCullen E. Bash
contributor authorChandrakant D. Patel
contributor authorVan P. Carey
date accessioned2017-05-09T00:19:32Z
date available2017-05-09T00:19:32Z
date copyrightDecember, 2006
date issued2006
identifier issn1528-9044
identifier otherJEPAE4-26266#360_1.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/133498
description abstractChip power consumption and heat dissipation have become important design issues because of increased energy costs and thermal management limitations. As a global compute utility evolves, seamless connectivity from the chip to the data center will become increasingly important. The optimization of such an infrastructure will require performance metrics that can adequately capture the thermodynamic and compute behavior at multiple physical length scales. In this paper, an exergy-based figure-of-merit (FoM), defined as the ratio of computing performance (in MIPS) to the thermodynamic performance (in exergy loss), is proposed for the evaluation of computational performance. The paper presents the framework to apply this metric at the chip level. Formulations for the exergy loss in simple air-cooled heat sink packages are developed, and application of the proposed approach is illustrated through two examples. The first comparatively assesses the loss in performance resulting from different cooling solutions, while the second examines the impact of non-uniformity in junction power in terms of the FoM. Modeling results on a 16mm×24mm chip indicate that uniform power and temperature profiles lead to minimal package irreversibility (and therefore the best thermodynamic performance). As the nonuniformity of power is increased, the performance rapidly degrades, particularly at higher power levels. Additionally, the competing needs of minimization of junction temperature and minimization of cooling power were highlighted using the exergy-based approach. It was shown that for a given power dissipation and a specific cooling architecture (such as an air-cooled heat sink solution), an optimal thermal resistance value exists beyond which the costs of increased cooling may outweigh any potential benefits in performance. Thus, the proposed FoM provides insight into thermofluidic inefficiencies that would be difficult to gain from a traditional first-law analysis. At a minimum, the framework presented in this paper enables quantitative evaluation of package performance for different nonuniform power inputs and different choices of cooling parameters. At best, since the FoM is scalable, the proposed metric has the potential to enable a chip-to-data-center strategy for optimal resource allocation.
publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
titleAn Exergy-Based Figure-of-Merit for Electronic Packages
typeJournal Paper
journal volume128
journal issue4
journal titleJournal of Electronic Packaging
identifier doi10.1115/1.2351901
journal fristpage360
journal lastpage369
identifier eissn1043-7398
keywordsExergy
keywordsEnergy dissipation
keywordsJunctions
keywordsTemperature
keywordsCooling AND Heat sinks
treeJournal of Electronic Packaging:;2006:;volume( 128 ):;issue: 004
contenttypeFulltext


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