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Microcoolers Could Change Processor Design

Skaven writes: "Nature.com is reporting about these nifty new microcoolers, tiny thermoelectric heat sinks that can be built directly onto CPUs. Using the new technology, scientists cooled a processor at 100 degrees C by 7 degrees. That's still a fried t-bird, but what this means is that if the technology gets good enough, cooling chips could soon be getting a lot easier. If anything, small 'hot spots' on the CPU could be avoided by strategic placement of microcoolers, thus helping all of us overclockers out. Heck, maybe even increasing the voltage to your CPU would make it run cooler...how weird would that be?"

1 of 112 comments (clear)

  1. Re:And these are different than Peltier pumps, by Grendel+Drago · · Score: 5

    So far as I can tell, the 'hot' side is much closer to the 'cold' side. How this helps is certainly beyond me.

    Did anyone else wonder how on earth they're actually moving the heat? Seems like "We've made a device that can move destructive heat a very small distance from where it's generated!", which I don't get the point of. Wouldn't this, at best, create a more uniform distribution of the heat? Doesn't say anything about where it goes...

    Well, maybe they're using a big peltier on top of the chip and using these little things to move heat over to it. Maybe.

    -grendel drago

    --
    Laws do not persuade just because they threaten. --Seneca