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    Thermal Characterization of Interlayer Microfluidic Cooling of Three-Dimensional Integrated Circuits With Nonuniform Heat Flux

    Source: Journal of Heat Transfer:;2010:;volume( 132 ):;issue: 004::page 41009
    Author:
    Yoon Jo Kim
    ,
    Young-Joon Lee
    ,
    Sung-Kyu Lim
    ,
    Yogendra K. Joshi
    ,
    Andrei G. Fedorov
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4000885
    Publisher: The American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: It is now widely recognized that the three-dimensional (3D) system integration is a key enabling technology to achieve the performance needs of future microprocessor integrated circuits (ICs). To provide modular thermal management in 3D-stacked ICs, the interlayer microfluidic cooling scheme is adopted and analyzed in this study focusing on a single cooling layer performance. The effects of cooling mode (single-phase versus phase-change) and stack/layer geometry on thermal management performance are quantitatively analyzed, and implications on the through-silicon-via scaling and electrical interconnect congestion are discussed. Also, the thermal and hydraulic performance of several two-phase refrigerants is discussed in comparison with single-phase cooling. The results show that the large internal pressure and the pumping pressure drop are significant limiting factors, along with significant mass flow rate maldistribution due to the presence of hot-spots. Nevertheless, two-phase cooling using R123 and R245ca refrigerants yields superior performance to single-phase cooling for the hot-spot fluxes approaching ∼300 W/cm2. In general, a hybrid cooling scheme with a dedicated approach to the hot-spot thermal management should greatly improve the two-phase cooling system performance and reliability by enabling a cooling-load-matched thermal design and by suppressing the mass flow rate maldistribution within the cooling layer.
    keyword(s): Flow (Dynamics) , Cooling , Channels (Hydraulic engineering) , Microfluidics , Heat flux , Pressure drop , Integrated circuits , Geometry , Fluids AND Thermal management ,
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      Thermal Characterization of Interlayer Microfluidic Cooling of Three-Dimensional Integrated Circuits With Nonuniform Heat Flux

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/143889
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    contributor authorYoon Jo Kim
    contributor authorYoung-Joon Lee
    contributor authorSung-Kyu Lim
    contributor authorYogendra K. Joshi
    contributor authorAndrei G. Fedorov
    date accessioned2017-05-09T00:39:01Z
    date available2017-05-09T00:39:01Z
    date copyrightApril, 2010
    date issued2010
    identifier issn0022-1481
    identifier otherJHTRAO-27885#041009_1.pdf
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/143889
    description abstractIt is now widely recognized that the three-dimensional (3D) system integration is a key enabling technology to achieve the performance needs of future microprocessor integrated circuits (ICs). To provide modular thermal management in 3D-stacked ICs, the interlayer microfluidic cooling scheme is adopted and analyzed in this study focusing on a single cooling layer performance. The effects of cooling mode (single-phase versus phase-change) and stack/layer geometry on thermal management performance are quantitatively analyzed, and implications on the through-silicon-via scaling and electrical interconnect congestion are discussed. Also, the thermal and hydraulic performance of several two-phase refrigerants is discussed in comparison with single-phase cooling. The results show that the large internal pressure and the pumping pressure drop are significant limiting factors, along with significant mass flow rate maldistribution due to the presence of hot-spots. Nevertheless, two-phase cooling using R123 and R245ca refrigerants yields superior performance to single-phase cooling for the hot-spot fluxes approaching ∼300 W/cm2. In general, a hybrid cooling scheme with a dedicated approach to the hot-spot thermal management should greatly improve the two-phase cooling system performance and reliability by enabling a cooling-load-matched thermal design and by suppressing the mass flow rate maldistribution within the cooling layer.
    publisherThe American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleThermal Characterization of Interlayer Microfluidic Cooling of Three-Dimensional Integrated Circuits With Nonuniform Heat Flux
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume132
    journal issue4
    journal titleJournal of Heat Transfer
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4000885
    journal fristpage41009
    identifier eissn1528-8943
    keywordsFlow (Dynamics)
    keywordsCooling
    keywordsChannels (Hydraulic engineering)
    keywordsMicrofluidics
    keywordsHeat flux
    keywordsPressure drop
    keywordsIntegrated circuits
    keywordsGeometry
    keywordsFluids AND Thermal management
    treeJournal of Heat Transfer:;2010:;volume( 132 ):;issue: 004
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
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