Researchers cool chips with tiny storms

subscribe

Researchers at Purdue University said recently that they have come up with a way to cool computer chips by using the power of electrical storms.

Mechanical engineers at Purdue have filed patents for technologies that eventually could be used to create a device that would cool computer chips by generating lightning and wind on a microscopic level using carbon nanotubes. The patents arose from a research project funded in part by the U.S. National Science Foundation.

The researchers have only demonstrated the idea conceptually, but they assert that it could help future computer builders tackle the growing problem of chip generated heat in a more reliable way than they could through liquid cooling.

In the Purdue device, an array of carbon nanotubes — long, thin strands of specialized carbon molecules — would be placed near a chip. A negative charge would be applied to some of the nanotubes, which would cause electrons to be emitted. When the electrons mix with the surrounding air, the air becomes ionized. The microscopic cloud of ionized air then leads to an imbalance of charge in the micro-atmosphere, and lightning results. It's microscopic lightning, but the principle is the same as in an electrical storm.

Meanwhile, the cloud of electrons would be alternatively attracted to and repelled by adjacent electrodes. Alternating the voltages on the electrodes creates a cooling breeze because the moving cloud stirs the air.

"To create lightning, you need tens of kilovolts, but we do it with 100 volts or less," said a statement from Suresh Garimella, a professor of mechanical engineering at Purdue who is working on the device. "In simple terms, we are generating a kind of lightning on a nano-scale here."

The next step for the researchers will be to develop a prototype and examine different materials along with nanotubes that could be used in the device. Several technical problems will also likely have to be resolved before these types of devices, even if made, can be put into computers. Semiconductors, for instance, are wrapped with spark arresters. Static electricity can blow a hole through a chip, and the Purdue device is essentially creating static.

Heat is the chief problem facing semiconductor designers today. Future microprocessors will generate as much heat, proportionally speaking, as a nuclear power plant if solutions are not developed, several researchers have theorized. IBM, Intel and others have already begun inserting energy-conserving technology into their chips.

Several start-ups and established companies are also looking at better heat sinks, which draw heat away from chips and into the atmosphere. Additionally, some companies, such as Zyvex and Carbon Nanotechnologies, are devising ways to use carbon nanotechnologies in gels that will remove heat from tiny places.

Related News

national grid

UK Emergency energy plan not going ahead

LONDON - National Grid has decided not to activate a scheme on Tuesday to help the UK avoid power cuts after being poised to do so.

It would have seen some households offered discounts on their electricity bills if they cut peak-time use.

National Grid had been ready to trigger the scheme following a warning that Britain's energy supplies were looking tighter than usual this week.

However, it decided that the measure was not required.

Alerts are sent out automatically when expected supplies drop below a certain level. But they do not mean that blackouts are likely, or that the situation is critical.

National Grid…

READ MORE
houston-power-outage-extends

Frustration Mounts as Houston's Power Outage Extends

READ MORE

power lines

France hopes to keep Brussels sweet with new electricity pricing scheme

READ MORE

POWERLINES

Hydro wants B.C. residents to pay an extra $2 a month for electricity

READ MORE

ball and oregan talks

No public details for Newfoundland electricity rate mitigation talks

READ MORE