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Liquid Metal CPU Cooling

IceFoot writes "Bored with water cooling? Try a liquid metal cooler. It's a proven technology, used in nuclear reactors for decades because it carries heat away much better than a heat sink, heat pipe, or water cooling."

494 comments

  1. email. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    To email IceFoot, send to sales@nanocoolers.com

    1. Re:email. by Abreu · · Score: 1

      Nope, not yet... strange, one would think it has matured

      --
      No sig for the moment.
    2. Re:email. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah I know. I have around 50 to give. If you don't want it don't take it. My offer was to maybe those 2 people here on Slashdot who wants one but doesn't have one.

    3. Re:email. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Allright it is taken. Link is no longer valid. If you want more I guess I could throw a few more out. It doesn't matter to me.

    4. Re:email. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you'll have to e-mail him, because you sure won't be getting any info off their website today.

    5. Re:email. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Liquid Metal CPU Cooling" is more heavy, dangerous, higher consumption & expensive than "Water CPU Cooling".

      open4free ©

    6. Re:email. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Still better than timothy alias zonk posting stories to another alter ego of himself: Roland Stinkypalle

    7. Re:email. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bin Laden guys Liquid Metal CPU Cooling for his nuclear reactor inside of his suitcase.

  2. That's a little... extreme by AKAImBatman · · Score: 4, Informative

    Try a liquid metal cooler. It's a proven technology, used in nuclear reactors for decades because it carries heat away much better than a heat sink, heat pipe, or water cooling. /me picks jaw up off the floor.

    Liquid metal cooling is used in reactors because of the *extreme temperatures*, not just because it's more efficient. The metal (usually Sodium, but sometimes lead) is maintained in a molten state as it passes through the reactor and on back to the heat exchanger. Are they *really* saying that a CPU is going to pump enough heat to maintain a molten state inside the cooling device? If yes, that's kind of scary.

    Maybe it's time to rethink the approach of driving up power usage to 300 watts just to get an extra 2 frames per second on Doom? Either that or we should start installing nuclear reactors in computers! :-D

    1. Re:That's a little... extreme by 0x461FAB0BD7D2 · · Score: 4, Funny

      Are they *really* saying that a CPU is going to pump enough heat to maintain a molten state inside the cooling device?

      Ever used a P4 for rendering?

    2. Re:That's a little... extreme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's not an article--it's an ad. I hope /. gets some $$$ for it... *sigh*

    3. Re:That's a little... extreme by avandesande · · Score: 4, Informative

      it is probably a gallium alloy, they melt at just a little above body temperature

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
    4. Re:That's a little... extreme by ledow · · Score: 0, Redundant

      I should imagine that they are probably thinking more along the lines of mercury... liquid at room temperature.

    5. Re:That's a little... extreme by Nos. · · Score: 1

      I was thinking the same thing, then I thought maybe they'll use mercury, liquid at room temperature. While I'm sure a liquid metal is great at dispersing heat (there's a reason most cookware is made from metal), I don't think the extra dangers involved with extra mercury around is a great idea either. Are there other, safer metals, that will stay liquid at room (or near-room) temperature that would work?

    6. Re:That's a little... extreme by wolenczak · · Score: 0, Redundant

      How about mercury? it's liquid at room temperature IIRC

    7. Re:That's a little... extreme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Are they *really* saying that a CPU is going to pump enough heat to maintain a molten state inside the cooling device?

      I don't understand your problem.

      I'm sure you know there are metals that are liquid a room temperature (mercury). There a also safe alloys that melt in you hand.

    8. Re:That's a little... extreme by SidV · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah the EPA won't have a problem with people using Mercury to cool their computers.

    9. Re:That's a little... extreme by shis-ka-bob · · Score: 1

      Perhaps the metal in question is mercury :-) If you are running at liquid sodium temperatures, I'm guessing that your Pentium isn't going to last long (melting point of sodium is 371.1 K, or about the boiling point of wate, this is a tad hot for a CPU. Besides, if mercury was good enough for the Mad Hatter, it should be good enough for us Slashdotters!

      --
      Think global, act loco
    10. Re:That's a little... extreme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Actually, sticking small nuclear reactors in PCs might be a good idea. You could add a meltdown to that "edge-of-seat" experience whilst playing your favourite online game.

      Losing player on Doom3 deathmatch loses his life?

      What about those Nuclear Silos on Red Alert 2? Boom goes the nuke? And your house goes with it. You should have got those harriers to take care of it earlier.

    11. Re:That's a little... extreme by henrywood · · Score: 1

      It's good to see (http://hardware.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/05 /02/1921257&tid=142&tid=137) that the latest generation of AMD processors are reversing the trend towards higher power consumption.

      Now if we can just get a bit of sense into the world of graphics processors...

      --
      Something is happening here but you don't know what it is, do you, Mr Jones.
    12. Re:That's a little... extreme by BrokenHalo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What about common or garden mercury? Liquid at room temperature. Though you really don't want it to leak...

    13. Re:That's a little... extreme by thsths · · Score: 5, Interesting

      > it is probably a gallium alloy

      Or some other weird alloy. You can buy "liquid metal" for fun at http://www.scitoys.com/scitoys/scitoys/thermo/ther mo4.html . They even claim it is nontoxic (no cadmium or mercury).

      But I still wonder what this has that water does not? :-) Cooling wise, I mean.

    14. Re:That's a little... extreme by leathered · · Score: 5, Informative

      Not quite as extreme as you think. According to Pat Gelsinger (Intel VP), the surface area power dissipation of a modern CPU *is* rapidly approaching that of a nuclear reactor (around 150-300W/cm2)

      Of course even when that becomes the case it doesn't justify the use of sodium or lead to cool them. Si starts to break down at 120 degrees C and the primary concern for CPU makers is to maintain temperatures well below this. Sealed water cooling systems will become widespread within the next couple of years but for now liquid metal is just a gimmick for the overclocking crowd.

      --
      For all intensive porpoises your a bunch of rediculous loosers
    15. Re:That's a little... extreme by salzbrot · · Score: 1

      Try Woods Metal, although it is probably not really that much safer (contains lead and cadmium). Melts at 65 deg C (150 F for the metric impaired) though, so a regular processor should keep it liquid with no problems.

    16. Re:That's a little... extreme by calennert · · Score: 1

      Or OSHA, or the local health department

    17. Re:That's a little... extreme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where have you been the past 3 years? AMD has improved so much they now beat Intel at their own game.

    18. Re:That's a little... extreme by flaming-opus · · Score: 1

      Sodium would be very good for cooling things down to 400-C, more than enough to melt the entire CPU.

      They would have to use some exotic conditions to get a liquid metal at under 50-C. I can't imagine they would talk about gamers (i.e. consumer products, i.e. liability) if they were using Mercury.

    19. Re:That's a little... extreme by TFGeditor · · Score: 1

      "But I still wonder what this has that water does not? "

      Density?

      --
      Ignorance is curable, stupid is forever.
    20. Re:That's a little... extreme by philipgar · · Score: 1
      Sealed water cooling systems will become widespread within the next couple of years but for now liquid metal is just a gimmick for the overclocking crowd.

      I'm not quite sure what world you're living in if you think this is the case. Liquid cooling will become more common for the enthusiasts, however it will not become "widespread". First laptop sales make up over half of pc sales today, and they're not going to go water-cooling.
      On top of that the average consumer is buying the cheaper computers. Most people use their computer to browse the web, check email, write/read office docs and possibly watch videos. Maybe even organize pictures taken. These are fine on todays low end pcs (actually many of todays lowend pcs are as fast as the fastest pc I own).
      Going the water cooling route will easily add another $100 to the cost of a computer, and the market isn't really there. Plus all the computers purchased by schools and companies, how many of them will be watercooled. Not to mention the fact that servers can't be producing that much heat or the rooms will melt (a water cooled system will create more heat then an air cooled system).
      Phil
    21. Re:That's a little... extreme by dillon_rinker · · Score: 5, Funny

      While common or "garden" mercury is quite familiar to element watchers, a far more rewarding sight is the rare "mercury of paradise." Element watchers are dying in droves to see this incredible manifestation of mercury.

    22. Re:That's a little... extreme by Reducer2001 · · Score: 1

      The over-clockers are crazy already. Imagine what would happen if that started handling mercury!

      --
      When you get to hell -- tell 'em Itchy sent ya!
    23. Re:That's a little... extreme by mpe · · Score: 1

      Are they *really* saying that a CPU is going to pump enough heat to maintain a molten state inside the cooling device? If yes, that's kind of scary.

      Depends what metal you use, Gallium melts at 30C (yet dosn't boil until over 2,200C). Alternativly there is Mercury which is liquid between -38.88 and 356.73.

    24. Re:That's a little... extreme by FreakyControl · · Score: 1

      Liquid metal cooling is used in reactors because of the *extreme temperatures*, not just because it's more efficient. The metal (usually Sodium, but sometimes lead) is maintained in a molten state as it passes through the reactor and on back to the heat exchanger.

      Recently (as in the past 1-2 years) there has also been work done on using liquid lithium traveling through a wick for use in space based reactors, where you don't have gravity around to help you out. The research seemed rather promising from the results that I saw. And I agree, the use of liquid metal to cool your CPU, combined with the comparison of your CPU to a nuclear reactor is rather absurd.

      What's with all of the ads today? First the Alienware "article", followed by this one?

    25. Re:That's a little... extreme by phyruxus · · Score: 2, Informative
      >>You can buy "liquid metal" [...] But I still wonder what this has that water does not? :-) Cooling wise, I mean.

      It can put John Connor on Ice?

      --
      "A witty saying proves nothing." ~Voltaire
      "d'Oh!" ~Homer
    26. Re:That's a little... extreme by turgid · · Score: 1

      I saw a presentation on CPU design a couple of years back. It had graphs of heat output for various CPU designs. The high-end Pentium IV Xeon had higher surface heat density than an AGR, in fact I think it was nearer to a Fast Reactor.

    27. Re:That's a little... extreme by Craig_P92669 · · Score: 0

      Imagine what would happen if that started handling mercury!

      A very interesting week at the morgue.

      --
      http://xs4.xs.to/pics/04481/p556222.gif
    28. Re:That's a little... extreme by cagle_.25 · · Score: 1

      The second problem is that keeping water -- essentially any water, to 3 or 4 places -- out of the cooling system will require a higher level of (read: more expensive) engineering. The problem is that small amounts of water will lead to ionic compounds like NaOH, Na2O, etc. ... all of which will "slag" the sodium and prevent it from flowing or transferring heat efficiently.

      The third problem is containing the molten sodium in a container which will not spontaneously alloy with the hot sodium.

      Check out decent reactor cooling discussion here (note the "fuel can be bonded to container with liquid metal" line!)

      Some of the other metals discussed here -- Wood's metal, mercury, etc., have varying levels of these problems. For example, a friend of mine got an unwelcome "addition" to her silver ring when she mishandled some mercury in a chem demo.

      --
      Human being (n.): A genetically human, genetically distinct, functioning organism.
    29. Re:That's a little... extreme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *lol* I have waited for this. Just watch the Darwin Award pages for occurences of stupid 1337 0vercl0ckerz who tried to cool their CPU with mercury.

      Hint dimwit: Mercury is quite poisonous.

    30. Re:That's a little... extreme by TCM · · Score: 1

      Hmm, what could happen? Some healthy reduction in stupidity perhaps?

      --
      Of course it runs NetBSD. BTC: 1NT7QvbetmANwaMzhpVL6
    31. Re:That's a little... extreme by Suppafly · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure which world you're living in, but sealed water cooling systems in the form of heat pipes are already used by many big name pc companies and in laptops.

      As for the $100 price you are clearly talking out of your ass. A DIY water cooling system might be in the neighborhood of $100 now, but due to the economy of scale, a water cooling system in a big name pc would only add a few dollars at most to the cost of them system.

    32. Re:That's a little... extreme by bugnuts · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Very unlikely. Besides the poisonous aspects of mercury, mercury tends to dissolve all metals in contact with it.

      If you force mercury over a copper block, that block will be dissolved in a few months.

      Got some mercury? Drop a dime into it and watch what happens after a week or so.

    33. Re:That's a little... extreme by jmichaelg · · Score: 4, Informative
      But I still wonder what this has that water does not? :-) Cooling wise, I mean.

      Galinstan conducts heat far better than water. Galinstan's conductivity is 16.5 W/(MK) vs. water's value of between .4 to .7.

      Several posters have suggested gallium which melts at 40 C. Using pure gallium would be a disaster because when it freezes, it expands like water does. It'd rupture the plumbing inside your computer. Galinstan stays liquid down to -19 C. A spec sheet is available.

      Galinstan has a couple of drawbacks. A, it's corrosive and B, it sticks to most surfaces unless the surface is properly prepared. That means your radiator, water block and all the tubing has to be internally coated before you pour Galinstan into your cooling rig.

    34. Re:That's a little... extreme by JDWTopGuy · · Score: 1

      I knew I wasn't the only one thinking of T2/T3 when I saw this story... :D

      --
      Ron Paul 2012
    35. Re:That's a little... extreme by philipgar · · Score: 0

      First there's a difference between heat pipes and water cooling. Water cooling means active cooling whereas heat pipes are passive. Heat pipes are, and will become more common in a system, particularly in smaller systems where size is constrained and we wish to minimize weight (large copper heat sinks are anything but light). And while big name retailers are introducing water cooled systems, they aren't exactly cheap machines. The economies of scale might help them lower the cost of water cooling, but I doubt they will that that much. They require extra space in the case (more shipping costs), a larger power supply or a separate powersupply for the pump. A pump that works reliably, a radiator as well as hoses that won't deteriorate, etc. These things aren't that cheap. Also even if these only added a little (say $50) to the cost, the hardware that would benefit from water cooling is not exactly cheap. Most users are using integrated video, so we don't have to worry about that, as for processors, only a 3GHz or above P4 is really going to gain from it. And the dual cores, while producing more heat are only for enthusiasts. On top of that add that fact that most users want a machine thats easy to maintain, not necessarily blazing fast. Also the extra noise made by a water cooled system isn't going to be something people want. The current trend in processor design has been for lower power cpus (i.e. the new 90nm Athlon 64's, and the Bania's core or whatever it is for the Pentium-M). The idea of water cooling will likely stay for the enthusiasts market. Phil

    36. Re:That's a little... extreme by fshalor · · Score: 2, Interesting

      At the very least we get to show them another example of why such cooling is necessary. 28 comments, and the site's php rendering is already taxed.

      It's been 3 minutes, and I still don't have the pictures...

      "The ever increasing demands put on cooling solutions for semiconductor devices have never been greater than today" ... now that we're being slashdotted!.

      Hehe...

      Since there's almost no actual substance in the ad, I'll hold off commenting on its feasability. Unless the've matched some melting point to the cpu (and that would give them a very small window of max effectiveness), the'd be better off using water or ethylene glycol.

      Phase changes are evil and tougher to deal with.

      --
      -=fshalor ::this post not spellchecked. move along::
    37. Re:That's a little... extreme by Phanatic1a · · Score: 1

      Lead-bismuth alloy, actually.

      And I wonder what they mean by 'proven' technology. I guess it has been proven...to be a bad idea. SSN-75, the Seawolf, had an experimental metal-cooled reactor, which proved so problematic they ripped it out and replaced it with a PWR. The Soviets had I think 2 classes of submarine powered by lead-bismuth cooled reactors, the Alphas and the Papas; there was only ever one built of the latter class, and they lost a few Alphas because the shore-based heaters broke down when the subs were dockside, and the coolant solidified inside the reactors and heat exchangers.

      If this were such a proven technology, someone would be using it for something. They're not.

    38. Re:That's a little... extreme by Sique · · Score: 1

      No one talks about sodium or lead cooled CPUs.

      Wood's metal for instance (an amalgam containing bismut) melts at 70C. While this is still to much for cooling (you want your coolant being liquid at 35C). But other bismut amalgams melt at 35C (Bismut itself melts at 271,4C).

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    39. Re:That's a little... extreme by kruithof · · Score: 1

      [quote]
      Si starts to break down at 120 degrees C
      [/quote]

      Tell that to amongst other the automotive industry, the military, or the oil industry, where Si chips are used well above 120 degrees C; for some applications in the oil industry the environmental temperature is even above 170 degrees C.
      The problem with modern days CPUs is that they generate so much heat, and have such a high transistor density, that the Si-temperature is a lot higher than the environmental temperature, as you indicate as well. We know that at higher temperature the performance degrades, until the temperature is so high that the chip doesn't work according to specs, and we get system failures; the primary problem for overclockers.
      Another problem is ofcourse that as temperature increases the lifetime expectancy decreases, but 120 degrees is not a magical temperature where this starts.

    40. Re:That's a little... extreme by kevlar · · Score: 1

      Ever heard of Mercury?

    41. Re:That's a little... extreme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reactor on my sub used water to drive steam turbins. What reactors use metal???

    42. Re:That's a little... extreme by FuzzyBad-Mofo · · Score: 1

      Either that or we should start installing nuclear reactors in computers!

      That would give a whole new meaning to "atomic transactions"..

    43. Re:That's a little... extreme by AKAImBatman · · Score: 1

      Subs generally utilize light water reactors instead of the more difficult to maintain liquid metal reactors.. Here is a page that gives a quick description of early Liquid Cooled reactors.

      More links:

      http://www.nuc.berkeley.edu/~gav/almr/01.intro.htm l
      http://www.nuc.berkeley.edu/thyd/ne161/shir/projec t5.html
      http://www.nucleartourist.com/type/metal.htm

    44. Re:That's a little... extreme by InvalidError · · Score: 1

      65C is a regular processor's temperature?

      Last time I checked, my two P3s, my P4-3G and A64-3000+ rarely exceeded 50C under constant 100% load and closed cases... and the P4 is in a rather crappy Antec Aria case: although the PSU has a 120mm fan, it runs at 1800ROM max and the PSU's casing has almost no internal venting - there are two models of that PSU and I got the venting-deficient one.

      There are many reasons why I got a P4-3G... first because I am cheap, then because I wanted multi-threading and also because I did not want to set a foot too close to the >90W area.

      Of course, I am not one of those who run their RAM at 3V and cores at 2V...

    45. Re:That's a little... extreme by Angst+Badger · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What about common or garden mercury? Liquid at room temperature. Though you really don't want it to leak...

      That's probably why. Can you imagine the product liability lawsuits when such systems begin to vent mercury vapor as they age (or get banged about at LAN parties)? May as well have a hardware-based random number generator built around an unshielded chunk of plutonium. ;)

      --
      Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
    46. Re:That's a little... extreme by Tacky+the+Penguin · · Score: 1

      Liquid metal cooling is used in reactors because of the *extreme temperatures*, not just because it's more efficient. The metal (usually Sodium, but sometimes lead) is maintained in a molten state as it passes through the reactor and on back to the heat exchanger. Are they *really* saying that a CPU is going to pump enough heat to maintain a molten state inside the cooling device?

      It all depends on the metal you choose. Mercury would work very well at keeping the CPU well chilled.

    47. Re:That's a little... extreme by bobcat7677 · · Score: 1

      ...And it won't stop...EVER!

    48. Re:That's a little... extreme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mercury-poisoning is not an instant keel over and you're dead type of things. Like lead people handled it freely for extended periods for quite a long time before we realized it was dangerous.

    49. Re:That's a little... extreme by Strontium-90 · · Score: 1

      One little clarification...

      Symbol: Bi
      Atomic Number: 83

      German: Bismut
      English: Bismuth

    50. Re:That's a little... extreme by Sique · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Another little clarification: German: Wismut. Discovered about 1540 in the Schneeberg mining region. Translated into latin by Georgius Agricola to Bismutum (there is no W in the latin alphabet). Therefore the chemical symbol Bi.

      Newest english-asskissing craze: Writing "Bismut" in german, because it looks so english and thus so scientific.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    51. Re:That's a little... extreme by milprodin · · Score: 1

      Don't forget that any substance if properly controlled can have different boiling / melting points. Usually systems as such are closed systems, under vacuum where one has full control of the "environment".

    52. Re:That's a little... extreme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ever used an Athlon to cook breakfast?

    53. Re:That's a little... extreme by BLKMGK · · Score: 1

      It's quite obvious you have never water cooled a system or spent much time researching it. The fact that you think a water cooled system has "extra noise" whenin fact it's barely above a whisper and certanily more quite and than anything air cooled speaks volumes. Heat pipes ARE water cooling and in fact are SEALED systems - exactly what the poster stated! There are water systems that can remain self contained in a standard PC case too, minimal water storage mind you but yes that small.

      Ya' really ought to do a little research....

      --
      Build it, Drive it, Improve it! Hybridz.org
    54. Re:That's a little... extreme by m50d · · Score: 1
      They shoot down the harriers with those damn flak cannons. Just keep sending spies in to delay the launch indefinitely. Or a navy seal. Not because he's good, but because seals are cool

      /played RA2 far too much

      --
      I am trolling
    55. Re:That's a little... extreme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have heard of a few people being crazy enough to use mercury. The only problem is the to get pure mercury is expensive (you have to order it from stores that specialize in chemistry to get it in large emounts) Then you have to to think about what the murcury might do to the plastic in the cooling system so you might have to use small copper pipe instead of water cooling hose. In my opinion by the time you go through all the trouble of getting all the right parts and modifying it you might as well save up and buy a vapochill or prometeia. At least with those you don't have to worry about toxic fumes. A small drop of murcury doesn't evaporate like water and if not cleaned up could release toxic fumes into the air for months. It's not worth it.

    56. Re:That's a little... extreme by swv3752 · · Score: 1

      Many alloys of Gallium (mainly various ratios of Gallium, Irdium, and Tin) have very low melting points. Some as low as -4C. Problem is that Gallium is fairly corrosive to other metal particularly Aluminum. Aluminum blocks would be corroded away in minutes then there is a fairly exothermic reaction that is made with water.

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    57. Re:That's a little... extreme by SCVirus · · Score: 1

      That's a little... extreme

      Ever heard of Intel extreme edition?

    58. Re:That's a little... extreme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Either that or we should start installing nuclear reactors in computers!"

      I love this concept... I've heard something about small nuclear reactors for use in unmanned spacecrafts...

    59. Re:That's a little... extreme by Muhammar · · Score: 1

      cesium catches fire on air almost instantly. So does potassium/sodium alloy which is liquid at room temperature. (The Na/K alloy is infamous - lotsa people had an accident with it.)

      I worked only with solid potassium metal and had a nice little fire that burned through the lab floor. Sodium is benign compared to K or Cs or the Na/K alloy.

      --
      I doubt that we will ever figure out - and I suspect that even if we did figure out we couldn't do much about it
    60. Re:That's a little... extreme by jonadab · · Score: 1

      Yep. It does nasty things to gold, too, a property that has greatly dismayed many women over the decades, when they (accidentally) break a thermometer while wearing a wedding ring. Oops!

      On the whole, there's a good reason most people on the street don't think of metals as liquids: the normal sorts of metals that sane people use every day *aren't* liquids at standard temperature and pressure. The metals that *are* liquid under normal conditions are unpleasant to be around in various ways.

      --
      Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
    61. Re:That's a little... extreme by pclminion · · Score: 1
      Are they *really* saying that a CPU is going to pump enough heat to maintain a molten state inside the cooling device? If yes, that's kind of scary.

      Yes, a CPU generates heat at almost nuclear levels.

      A typical nuclear reactor has a power density of about 250 watts per square centimeter of cooled surface. Let's compare to an Athlon XP 3200, shall we? According to AMD, this chip has a die size of 101 mm^2 (almost exactly a square centimeter), and a max power consumption of 68.6 watts. So, it has a power density of about 70 watts per square centimeter.

      That's only 3.5 times less than your typical nuclear reactor. To put it another way, if CPU power levels increase by 3.5 times, or if die sizes decrease by 3.5 times, then CPUs will be generating heat at the same level as your typical nuclear reactor.

      It's really, truly sad that our CPUs are so inefficient that we require nuclear cooling technology. What is even sadder is that people think this is "elite." No, I don't think you are cool for overclocking your CPU and slapping some insane cooling equipment on it. It's like boasting about how much soot your car spews out of the exhaust pipe.

      I love my Mac Mini. And the planet.

    62. Re:That's a little... extreme by awing0 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The parent post is not Flamebait. Check out this excerpt from http://www.osha-slc.gov/SLTC/healthguidelines/merc uryvapor/recognition.html:
      2. Effects on Humans: Mercury vapor can cause effects in the central and peripheral nervous systems, lungs, kidneys, skin and eyes in humans. It is also mutagenic and affects the immune system [Hathaway et al. 1991; Clayton and Clayton 1981; Rom 1992]. Acute exposure to high concentrations of mercury vapor causes severe respiratory damage, while chronic exposure to lower levels is primarily associated with central nervous system damage [Hathaway et al. 1991]. Chronic exposure to mercury is also associated with behavioral changes and alterations in peripheral nervous system [ACGIH 1991]. Pulmonary effects of mercury vapor inhalation include diffuse interstitial pneumonitis with profuse fibrinous exudation [Gosselin 1984]. Glomerular dysfunction and proteinuria have been observed mercury exposed workers [ACGIH 1991]. Chronic mercury exposure can cause discoloration of the cornea and lens, eyelid tremor and, rarely, disturbances of vision and extraocular muscles [Grant 1986]. Delayed hypersensitivity reactions have been reported in individuals exposed to mercury vapor [Clayton and Clayton 1981]. Mercury vapor is reported to be mutagenic in humans, causing aneuploidy in lymphocytes of exposed workers [Hathaway et al. 1991].
      As said, you may as well have a hardware-based random number generator built around an unshielded chunk of plutonium.
      --
      Cthulhu Saves.
    63. Re:That's a little... extreme by Craig_P92669 · · Score: 0

      Thank you, Dr. Spock.

      --
      http://xs4.xs.to/pics/04481/p556222.gif
    64. Re:That's a little... extreme by strider44 · · Score: 1

      mercury is, incidentely, where the Mad Hatter term comes from (people who made hats used it quite often and slowly went mad).

    65. Re:That's a little... extreme by DrMrLordX · · Score: 1

      Sadly, AMD just won't release space-heaters like the Thunderbird anymore. My old Thunderbird would routinely hit 66-74C depending on ambient temperature, and that was with the case off and a noisy-ass HSF. I'm sure those things really could cook breakfast.

      My new Sempron 2800+, even when OCed to 2.32 ghz(720 mhz OC), only hits 49-50C at load. It also manages to make less noise. And, I can even leave the case on. Yay! Sadly, there's no cooking eggs & bacon with this rig.

    66. Re:That's a little... extreme by doug141 · · Score: 1

      Fifteen years ago I visited a tourist attraction at the first experimental breeder reactor (EBR-1). http://www.atomicheritage.org/ebr1.htm There I learned the liquid metal was an alloy which could be pumped magnetically, with no moving pump parts. If you are ever in the middle of the Idaho desert I recommend stopping by,

    67. Re:That's a little... extreme by sickofthisshit · · Score: 1

      Newest english-asskissing craze: Writing "Bismut" in german, because it looks so english and thus so scientific.

      Hit a nerve? :-)

    68. Re:That's a little... extreme by Sique · · Score: 1

      Not really. Once it was hip and great to write "Bismut" because it looked latin and thus scientific. Now it's the english language. Somehow it's impossible to go with the original name, originally invented in the southern mountains of Saxony, to celebrate the original scientific effort which lead to the discovery of a new chemical element.

      (As a side note: I also don't understand why one should name Natrium [chemical symbol Na] Sodium and Kalium [chemical symbol K] Potassium. When the symbols got defined, surely Natrium and Kalium were the names widely used.)

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    69. Re:That's a little... extreme by VolciMaster · · Score: 1

      At least you wouldn't have to worry about your electric bill going up. You'd probably be able to pump some back into the grid :)

  3. The Article (site is already slow...) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Liquid-Metal Cooling Loop Technology for CPU and processor cooling,
    for laptops, desktops, servers, and graphics cards

    The ever increasing demands put on cooling solutions for semiconductor devices have never been greater than today and there are no indications that these requirements will diminish in the future. With higher power dissipation due to higher speed processors, ever increasing leakage losses and extremely high heat flux densities due to hot spots on the chip, the demand for advanced cooling solutions continues to increase.

    Until recently the demand for advanced cooling solutions was reserved for a small fraction of the ICs produced. Today these needs are becoming pervasive. New CPUs in almost every application are starting to require more than just a heat sink and a fan, and the need is not just with the CPU. In a modern portable computer or server there are several different heat sources that require advanced cooling. One can easily imagine a CPU, GPU, power supply, and other heat sources that need to be cooled.

    nanoCoolers has developed a unique approach to cooling these high power heat sources. Cooling with liquid metals has been used for decades in the nuclear reactor industry, but never before have the systems been miniaturized and developed specifically for computer cooling. nanoCoolers has developed solutions to address the high heat source issues for portable computers, desktop computers, servers and other electronic applications. Within each of these categories are specialized situations that have additional needs, such as the elevated temperature requirements for ruggedized computers, or the overclocking requirements from gamers. nanoCoolers' advanced liquid metal cooling solutions address each of these concerns.

    Processor Cooling and CPU Cooling for Portable Computing

    Each application has issues with high heat flux densities and high power dissipation, but each also has their own unique issues that need to be addressed. nanoCoolers' solution for portable computers not only solves the power dissipation and high heat flux densities with the use of a highly thermally conductive liquid metal but also allows the system to be completely orientation independent. Since our solution is a completely filled and sealed unit, there are no gravitational effects on the thermal solution and therefore on the computer itself. Our electromagnetic pump, consisting of magnets and electrodes allows for extremely small pumps with a variety of profiles. Since the pump has no moving parts, it is inherently reliable. In the future, advanced cooling solutions will be required in portable computers for cooling CPUs, GPUs, other ICs, power supplies and even fuel cells. Our technology lets the system designer determine how many heat sources they would like to cool and at what remote location they would like to dissipate the heat. Another trend for portable computers is to make the computer thinner. nanoCoolers' heat exchangers can be made extremely thin to allow for these design challenges. The heat can be efficiently removed from the heat source and then transported to a remote location where it can be rejected to ambient air. Finally, one of the most important issues with a portable computer is the battery life of the unit. nanoCoolers' thermal solution is not only very power efficient, it could also be designed to vary based on the amount of cooling needed. If the system is idling, the current to the pump could be reduced or even shut off. However, if the CPU is running at 100%, the pump current could be increased for maximum cooling. These attributes allow for system designers to be able to design the very best portable solution available.

    CPU Cooling and Graphics Card Cooling for Desktop Computing

    Desktop computers have many of the same issues as all CPU driven devices; high power dissipation and high heat densities. Our desktop solution solves the most demanding thermal requirements. Desktop solutions might not be as concerned about power efficiencies,

    1. Re:The Article (site is already slow...) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks. Nanocoolers.com seems to be slag. :)

    2. Re:The Article (site is already slow...) by Stankatz · · Score: 1

      Yup, /.ed I hope they have liquid metal cooling on their servers.

  4. liquid sodium by avandesande · · Score: 1, Redundant

    They use liquid sodium metal in nuclear reactors. you do NOT want this in your computer.

    --
    love is just extroverted narcissism
    1. Re:liquid sodium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They use liquid sodium metal in nuclear reactors. you do NOT want this in your computer.

      It would be fine until someone with a coolant leak spills water in their laptop.

    2. Re:liquid sodium by harrkev · · Score: 5, Funny
      They use liquid sodium metal in nuclear reactors. you do NOT want this in your computer.
      Says who? Where's your sense of adventure?
      --
      "-1 Troll" is the apparently the same as "-1 I disagree with you."
    3. Re:liquid sodium by RobertB-DC · · Score: 4, Funny

      They use liquid sodium metal in nuclear reactors. you do NOT want this in your computer.

      Maybe YOU don't want liquid sodium metal in your computer. I think it would be beyond cool, especially when the unit reaches end-of-life and it's disposal time.

      --
      Stressed? Me? Of course not. Stress is what a rubber band feels before it breaks, silly.
    4. Re:liquid sodium by caluml · · Score: 1

      Why not, out of interest?

    5. Re:liquid sodium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is this getting modded up? Sure, you don't want liquid sodium metal in your computer, but it's got nothing to do with it being present in nuclear reactors. Nuclear reactors use water as well, that doesn't make water a bizarre, toxic, radioactive substance that needs to be avoided, does it?

    6. Re:liquid sodium by avandesande · · Score: 1

      because the quote about 'used in nuclear reactor cooling' has about as much applicability to your cpu as if you were talking about water cooling.

      the nuclear reactor quote is pointless.

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
    7. Re:liquid sodium by Sam+Nitzberg · · Score: 2, Funny

      They use liquid sodium metal...

      I'll just have to take this idea with a grain of salt ;-)

    8. Re:liquid sodium by Alioth · · Score: 1

      Well, it'd be useless for one - sodium doesn't melt at even the temperatures that the P4 runs at. To be effective, the metal would have to be liquid at pretty near room temperature.

    9. Re:liquid sodium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ummm,

      The only way to have sufficient cooling beyond what we have now is bare die contact. Put Sodium anything near bare (or even passivated) silicon and you will have massive failure. You think these people haven't thought of this before?

      Try http://www.spraycool.com/

    10. Re:liquid sodium by MrLint · · Score: 1

      Imagine spilling your coffee on your liquid sodium? It aint gonna be 2 great tastes that taste great together.

    11. Re:liquid sodium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ::shudders::

      I'm now left with the mental image of sodium-cooled desktop breaking at a LAN party. The notion of one's computer catastrophicaly failing over to an incendiary device akin to a lump of C4, does not seem like a sane idea.

      Cool story though, thanks for the link.

    12. Re:liquid sodium by CyberKnet · · Score: 2, Funny

      Now look what you've done. The moment you added your Cl, the idea pool went sterile.

      Congratulations.

      --
      Video meliora proboque deteriora sequor - Ovidius
    13. Re:liquid sodium by Alsee · · Score: 2, Informative

      It explodes on contact with water. Or almost anything else for that matter.

      The sodium binds with the -OH in water to produce NaOH, a powerfully corrosive base. This happens to releases a hell of a lot of heat. It also happens to release a hell of a lot of gaseous hydrogen (H2O minus OH leaves H). Hydrogen+heat, kaboom.

      If you take a lump of solid sodium metal and toss it into a lake it will sink for a moment, reacting as described. In a split second it explodes throwning the chunk of metal back up into the air - possibly at a random angle. It falls back into the water (assuming it didn't hit you in the face) and repeats. I've heard it can easily go on for 15 minutes or a half hour.

      Splash-BOOM.... up it goes... down it comes...
      Splash-BOOM.... up it goes... down it comes...
      Splash-BOOM....

      Metallic potassium is even better if you can get it. It is even more intensely reactive than sodium, plus the explosion should have a cool purplish color to it.

      Hmmm, I just realized somthing... if we're talking about liquid sodium, well tossing that in a lake would damn near detonate all at once rather than a series of blasts. The initial contact and heat and explosion would blast the sodium into a near mist and into the water. Don't try this one at home kids.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    14. Re:liquid sodium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Imagine how ...

      the terrorists can buy laptops with liquid sodium to build nuclear weapons ...

      xDDDD, is it a joke or not?

      open4free ©

    15. Re:liquid sodium by rleibman · · Score: 1

      Don't worry, it's ok as long as you don't combine it with water cooling.

    16. Re:liquid sodium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So we can use Metallic potassium and make Morter Grenades like in Tribes 2? Cool! Where can I get some?

    17. Re:liquid sodium by khrtt · · Score: 1

      They use liquid sodium metal in nuclear reactors. you do NOT want this in your computer.

      I dunno 'bout computers... I know I definitely don't want this in my toilet.

    18. Re:liquid sodium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They use it in automoblie exhaust valves too, and its decades-old tech.

    19. Re:liquid sodium by fistfullast33l · · Score: 1

      you do NOT want this in your computer.

      Maybe not my computer, but what about a nice birthday present for a soon-to-be-enemy?

    20. Re:liquid sodium by karstux · · Score: 1

      The fact that your toilet needs sophisticated cooling systems is a tell-tale sign that you should consider a visit to your urologist soon. Or you should change those chili ingredients...

      --
      Don't whistle while you're pissing.
    21. Re:liquid sodium by Calyth · · Score: 1

      It might be the case that when the unit reaches the end of life, you can't remove the core, just like the Russian Alfa subs. The liquid metal coolant froze solid, and often wrecks the reactor in the process...

    22. Re:liquid sodium by surprise_audit · · Score: 1
      Heh... Reminds me of a guy in school who was trying to collect hydrogen over water. The theory was good: take a water bath with a couple of gallons of water, put a gas jar full of water in it with the open end down, generate hydrogen under the open end. Hydrogen bubbles to the top. All is peachy.

      All is peachy, except that this genius (high school senior) decided to generate the hydrogen by pushing a pellet of sodium under the gas jar... The resultant explosion launched the gas jar across the room. The shock wave headed in the opposite direction and very neatly separated the circular wall of the glass water bath from the base, allowing several gallons of water and spitting sodium to wash across the desk.

      I didn't actually see it happen, but I did see the big glass disk and ring that were once a water bath...

  5. Origin by 2.7182 · · Score: 3, Informative

    This actually was first used at Los Alamos in part of the bomb project in WW II - see John Mcfees book "the curve of binding energy".

  6. Three in a row! by Dot.Com.CEO · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I don't expect the slashdot editors to live in poverty but I think having three slashvertissments one after the other is really pushing it. This one even goes directly to a sales pitch with a sales contact at the bottom...

    --
    Mother is the best bet and don't let Satan draw you too fast.
    1. Re:Three in a row! by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Who knows. Maybe Slashdot is going on a revenue binge in order to meet their bandwidth bills now and in the future. I will give it another week though before I form more of an opinion of this distasteful practice.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    2. Re:Three in a row! by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "I don't expect the slashdot editors to live in poverty but I think having three slashvertissments one after the other is really pushing it. This one even goes directly to a sales pitch with a sales contact at the bottom..."

      Even though I'm interested in the item listed in the topic, it's an advertisement so I ... must... resist!

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    3. Re:Three in a row! by JRIsidore · · Score: 1

      Hm, there are still people who do not use Adblock?

      --
      :w!q
    4. Re:Three in a row! by Dot.Com.CEO · · Score: 1

      Well, I don't use adblock because I think that it's an extremely antisocial endeavour; nevertheless, unless it has a capability I don't know of, it cannot possibly detect slashvertissments, can it now?

      --
      Mother is the best bet and don't let Satan draw you too fast.
    5. Re:Three in a row! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes it can. Block *.slashdot.*

    6. Re:Three in a row! by JRIsidore · · Score: 1

      I don't think so. I can turn off the TV if I don't want to watch the commercials, why should I not have the possibility when surfing websites?

      And for its capabilities, it detects advertisement by URL matching. Luckily most sites have advertisements from a dedicated ad server, making it very easy to block them. I have not seen any advertisements on Slashdot for a long while now.

      --
      :w!q
    7. Re:Three in a row! by Dot.Com.CEO · · Score: 1
      First of all, the last three articles on slashdot were obvious ads, that's what I was talking about. Second, I just cannot agree that blocking ads is socially responsible - feel free to not click them if they don't interest you but just outright blocking them means you are depriving the site owner from their only source of income, in most cases. You are, in fact, being a free loader.

      This anti-social behaviour bothers me even more in sites like slashdot or gamespy where one of the incentives of subscribing is, indeed, taking off ads.

      I am also frankly tired of those half-thought metaphores people dig-up to justify their behaviour. Visiting a web site is completely different from watching TV, I'm sure you can see the differences yourself without my pointing them out.

      --
      Mother is the best bet and don't let Satan draw you too fast.
    8. Re:Three in a row! by JRIsidore · · Score: 1

      I just cannot agree that blocking ads is socially responsible - feel free to not click them if they don't interest you but just outright blocking them means you are depriving the site owner from their only source of income, in most cases. You are, in fact, being a free loader.

      At first you cannot generalize the matter like you just did. Most advertisements can be found on large news sites, and they are the ones that are most annoying (sometimes 3 or more large ads per site). I mainly use adblock to catch these. And you can't tell me they have to rely on ads for their income...
      When it comes to Joe Average who put up a private site (let's say a forum or so) or a Free Software project who choses to display a banner to get some money back I have no problem with those ads and do not block them.

      This anti-social behaviour bothers me even more in sites like slashdot or gamespy where one of the incentives of subscribing is, indeed, taking off ads.

      Fine for you if you can afford subscriptions to several sites just to get rid of the ads. I cannot.

      Visiting a web site is completely different from watching TV, I'm sure you can see the differences yourself without my pointing them out.

      Not really, no. When watching TV they offer me a program and put ads in it. I can choose to watch them or not. When I surf a website the site offers me some information with ads put in here and there and I can also choose to block them or not. I don't see a fundamental difference.

      --
      :w!q
  7. My next project by lake2112 · · Score: 1

    I am going to move into outer space and have my computer run in the cold vacuum of space. Think about it, no dust particles to gummy up the works.

    1. Re:My next project by troon · · Score: 4, Informative

      Best of luck trying to get rid of the heat. Remember, convection won't work, only radiation.

      --
      Ydco co ,df C erb-y go. a Ekrpat t.fxrapev
    2. Re:My next project by Mifflesticks · · Score: 1

      Too bad you'd then have to rely on your devices radiating their energy away in the electronmagnetic spectrum (probably Infrared?). I dare say it'd probably just burn up if you could feed it the energy required to run.

    3. Re:My next project by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am going to move into outer space and have my computer run in the cold vacuum of space. Think about it, no dust particles to gummy up the works.

      Good luck. Vacuums are not very good at heat dissipation.

    4. Re:My next project by Shanep · · Score: 5, Funny

      Best of luck trying to get rid of the heat. Remember, convection won't work, only radiation.

      Silly, convection couldn't work because there is no real "up" in space. You know? Heat rises? I therefore propose the use of fans. Imagine how fast the fans could spin in the vacume of space!!! They would be much more effective "up there" than down here with all this inefficient "atmosphere" crap. The fans could also redundantly double for propulsion when needed.

      Why has NASA not thought of these things? NASA really ought to be hiring real geniuses like many of the other gifted /. readers here. Oh well, you know what they say, "it's not what you know, it's who you know".

      --
      War crimes, torture, lies, illegal spying... Would someone give Bush a blowjob, already, so he can be impeached?
    5. Re:My next project by everphilski · · Score: 4, Informative

      Radiative heat transfer isnt as bad as you think, its a function of T^4, whereas convection is a function of T^1.
      The background of space is aproximately 4 degrees kelvin. So running your computer at room temperature (~304 kelvin, lets make numbers easy). 300 to the fourth power is a big number. And we've been doing radiative heat transfer for a long time. In fact, on some missions (for example, Voyager) they had to install resistive heaters to keep the compters warm enough to keep them running because it was so cold.
      IAAAE. (I Am An Aerospace Engineer).
      -Philski-

    6. Re:My next project by TimeTraveler1884 · · Score: 1

      In fact, on some missions (for example, Voyager) they had to install resistive heaters to keep the compters warm enough to keep them running because it was so cold. Yeah, but back in the 1970's computers actually absorbed heat. Unlike the Pentiums of today.

    7. Re:My next project by Craig_P92669 · · Score: 0

      I guess you missed the part in Forrest Gump when he worked at NASA in '85.

      --
      http://xs4.xs.to/pics/04481/p556222.gif
    8. Re:My next project by Mondoz · · Score: 1
      Best of luck trying to get rid of the heat. Remember, convection won't work, only radiation.
      Silly, convection couldn't work because there is no real "up" in space. You know? Heat rises? I therefore propose the use of fans...

      These comments are touching on several different concepts.
      1. Within an the artificial atrmosphere of a pressurized orbiting vehicle, stand-alone convection doesn't help to cool the heat source. (Heat not rising and all) Fans are employed heavily to keep the air moving away from the heat source. Laptops and other computers on board have these problems solved quite well due to the fans.

      2. Radiation: Radiation doesn't work any differently in space than on the ground. Hot objects emit heat. Convection is the method of moving the heat away from the radiating object. Objects radiating heat simply create a ball of heat surrounding the radiating object. (candle flames are spherical)

      3. Radiation in the vacuum of space: This works quite well. Space is so damn cold (-157 C), radiators are employed heavily in spacecraft to dissipate heat. The International Space Station uses massive radiators (using a system of heat exchangers, amonia/water loops, 17,000-rpm impellers, etc..) to release the heat as infrared radiation.
      The Space Shuttle Orbiters use massive radiators along the length of the payload bay. That's why you never see the orbiter with the doors closed during nominal operations. If they can't get the doors open upon reaching orbit, they've got to come right back, because they can't vent their heat.

      So... If you put your CPU outside and it could survive the -157C temperature, it wouldn't need fans for cooling.
      Inside, you'd need all sorts of equipment to get the heat away from the CPU, and outside your environment.

      As for the efficiency of fans in microgravity, I've not seen any data indicating positive or negative effects.

      --
      /sig
    9. Re:My next project by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but back in the 1970's computers actually absorbed heat. Unlike the Pentiums of today.

      You haven't been around all that long, have you...

    10. Re:My next project by __aaxtnf2500 · · Score: 1

      So... If you put your CPU outside and it could survive the -157C temperature, it wouldn't need fans for cooling.
      so infrared radiation heat flux from the cpu is going to reach 150w at a temperature below where the cpu begins to glow? below the point where thermal damage begins to occur?

    11. Re:My next project by fabs64 · · Score: 1
      Objects radiating heat simply create a ball of heat surrounding the radiating object. (candle flames are spherical)
      huh, well now I wanna go to space just so I can light a freakin candle and see that
  8. Slashdot: by DrWhizBang · · Score: 5, Funny

    Ads for nerds, stuff that pays.

    --
    Schrodinger's cat is either dead or really pissed off...
    1. Re:Slashdot: by NanoGator · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Other people read this and had something interesting to say. That says to me that it doesn't really matter if it's an ad or not.

      Even products can be news.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    2. Re:Slashdot: by DrWhizBang · · Score: 1

      That's fair, but when three articles in a row (all posted by Taco) are little more than product promotion it does not seem unreasonable to point it out, or even make a humourous (albeit sarcastic) comment to the effect.

      --
      Schrodinger's cat is either dead or really pissed off...
    3. Re:Slashdot: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know why it is so fashionable to bash slashdot these days. There are two parts of the tagline. "News For Nerds. Stuff that Matters." So if I see something cool I will email my friend the link, regardless of whether it is an advertisement. If it is cool, it is cool. So what if the guy makes a buck. When I email my friends a link is that a "Kev-vertisement?" NO! I am just showing my friends something cool. This is stuff that matters. Just because some guy *may* make a few bucks off of this does not mean that the world is ending or that anyone is doing anything wrong. They are not supposed to put "cool" things on the front page because someone might make money (other than you?).

      Slashdot has always attracted the tinfoil hat conspiracy theory type crowd, but there is a better way to get the point across other than bitching. Just dont read the site. Go somewhere else and take your vocal minority with you. It is their site. They don't owe you anything.

      Ok, that was a long time in coming. That felt good.

    4. Re:Slashdot: by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      I don't know why it is so fashionable to bash slashdot these days.

      Because some of us who have been around a year or two have the distinct impression that the site has really gone down hill.

  9. But.... by OfficerNoGun · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...what happens when our heatsink tries to kill John Connor?

    1. Re:But.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You change the BIOS clock to 1984, duh

    2. Re:But.... by centauri · · Score: 1

      Nothing. Despite the lessons of the first two movies, the third showed us that the future clearly IS set. There is fate, despite what we try to make.

      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Durga.
    3. Re:But.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You send your father back in time so that you can be born, of course.

    4. Re:But.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      terminate 3 did not exist
      the series stopped after T2. RIGHT!!!!

    5. Re:But.... by Peldor · · Score: 1

      My old-school Nintendo robot (aka ROB, Robotic Operated Buddy) will have to kick his liquid metal ass.

    6. Re:But.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After it fails, it runs for governor.

  10. Um, details? by Alcimedes · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I actually went ahead and read TFA, at least the linked one.

    Although there was talk of "high tech this" and "required for the future" type crap, there really wasn't a whole lot of meat to the story.

    Maybe I missed the link that actually describes what kind of metals they're using, how the pump actually works (it's magnets! doesn't count) and what types of temperatures they're able to achieve relative to other liquid cooling methods.

    Could someone please fill in the other half of this submission, this time with less Sales pitch and more Info?

    1. Re:Um, details? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The principle is the Hall Effect

      There were no details because Slashdot is now Non-news for Nerds. Ads that work. (plus push Taco's conservative agenda)

    2. Re:Um, details? by rylin · · Score: 3, Funny

      Sure, just wait for tomorrow's dupe.

    3. Re:Um, details? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There were no details because ostensibly we're nerds who would theoretically either know about the Hall Effect or would have the brains to look it up.

    4. Re:Um, details? by Bushcat · · Score: 3, Funny

      I think they're using a metallic form of chocolate. Where's the graphite guy when you need him?

    5. Re:Um, details? by jmichaelg · · Score: 1

      Why do you think it'll take that long for a dupe?

    6. Re:Um, details? by nietsch · · Score: 1

      the metals used are indeed undisclosed, but the magnetic pump is fairly straigthforward:

      You run a current in a magnetic field(between two magnets) the current creates it's own magnetic field. Two magnetic fields means you get a force on the magnets and the conducting medium: the medium is pumped in the direction of the force. Voila your pump without moving parts.

      Actually in the cold war era, it was believed that the USSR had submarines that had this type of propulsion system. The fact that it has no propellor makes it pretty silent, which is a bonus for submarines.

      --
      This space is intentionally staring blankly at you
    7. Re:Um, details? by koick · · Score: 1

      I actually went ahead and read TFA, at least the linked one.

      At least you could. Looks like they need some serious liquid metal cooling for their servers which are on the verge of melting.

    8. Re:Um, details? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      They don't say what metal it is -- but mercury is out of the question -- too hazardous.

      An alloy of Indium and Gallium is liquid at room temperature -- I have used it in laboratories for some other application. I think it is safe to assume that they plan to use some alloy metal involving In, Ga, Sn etc. All these are by the way, considered moderately hazardous. They will definitely have to come up with a solid plan about what to do if it leaks out during installation/assembly/disassembly. Also, since all these are conducting, they will short any part of a circuit board they contact -- and they can not be simply wiped away. BTW. In-Ga eutectic also eats up aluminum.

      Pumping is an easy problem really. For pumping any conducting metal (mercury), people always use a type of induction pump. The path of the fluid is lined with magnet and a current is flowed through the mercury and the force exerted on the current carrying liquid by the magnetic field propels the liquid in its path.

    9. Re:Um, details? by woefulhc · · Score: 1

      By being patient and browsing their marketing/sales site I found http://www.nanocoolers.com/technology_liquid.php

      Not that it provides the details I was looking for (like which metal or allow they are talking about) but it does give a little bit more info (How the motor works, a slightly more details schematic of such a system).

      I think I'll start asking my chemist friends if they can deduce which metal we're talking about here.

      --
      Paul
    10. Re:Um, details? by bobv-pillars-net · · Score: 2, Informative

      See their technology page.

      --
      The Web is like Usenet, but
      the elephants are untrained.
    11. Re:Um, details? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Actually in the cold war era, it was believed that the USSR had submarines that had this type of propulsion system. The fact that it has no propellor makes it pretty silent, which is a bonus for submarines.

      As a former submarine chaser from the cold war era, I can say that "it" was not believed so. But Tom Clancy made a lot of money from the idea.

      The magnetostrictive effect didn't scale nearly well enough to do more than power a few small scale demos. Definitely not a sub. And, for what it's worth, the mechanism from the slashvertisement is not the same as a magnetostrictive drive.

  11. Tx1000 ? by giampy · · Score: 1

    I just hope that the Tx1000 will not come around my PCs one night to reclaim its parts ...

    --
    We learn from history that we learn nothing from history - Tom Veneziano
  12. Another reason T2 is all baloney by dzym · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Because the T1000 could've used this in the steel mill and not have been so glitched up in the heat as to not be able to reconstitute itself after the bazooka hit!

  13. Geek Meeting by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 2, Funny

    G1:So.. how do you cool your machine? I use water cooling.
    G2:Ha!! I use alcohol based cooling so that if I get a leak I do not get a short in the system
    G3:your both losers.. I use Liquid Sodium.

    --



    I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    1. Re:Geek Meeting by aaamr · · Score: 1

      Sigh.

      "You're" is a contraction meaning "you are," and "your" is a possessive pronoun.

    2. Re:Geek Meeting by TripMaster+Monkey · · Score: 1



      My both losers what?

      --
      ____

      ~ |rip/\/\aster /\/\onkey

    3. Re:Geek Meeting by NanoGator · · Score: 2, Funny

      "You're" is a contraction meaning "you are," and "your" is a possessive pronoun."

      Sigh.

      It's a fictional satirical conversation between two geeks, and yes they talk like that.

      Double sigh.

      Did you really come to a public forum expeting a spelling rodeo?

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    4. Re:Geek Meeting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      G4: I use both water and liquid sodium so that if the Secret Service shows up I can easily destroy my data with a large explosion

    5. Re:Geek Meeting by Reignking · · Score: 1

      Did you really come to a public forum expeting a spelling rodeo?

      Expecting :)

      --
      One man's Funny is another man's Offtopic.
    6. Re:Geek Meeting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My machines have cooling lasers on their frickin heads.

    7. Re:Geek Meeting by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      Greaaaaaaaaaat. He's going to read my post and go Marvin on us.

      Heh.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    8. Re:Geek Meeting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alright! My first score other than a zero is a negative 1!
      Feeeeeeeeel the Karma. Beeeeee the Karma.

      But seriously, it is important to learn the difference between 'your' and 'you're'. Another major mishap to include with this is 'their/there/they're'. If you want people to take you seriously, and appear intelligent, using the correct word is crucial, espeically on a resume. I have heard from some people that don't use the correct word that it comes from laziness. Resumes get instantly tossed into trashcans for such lazy errors.

    9. Re:Geek Meeting by aaamr · · Score: 1
      I think you mean, "and yes, the write like that." :-)

      Doesn't mean we have to.

    10. Re:Geek Meeting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They :)

      Too funny!

  14. Too dangerous? by oldosadmin · · Score: 0, Redundant

    The only metal that would be molten at the appropriate temperature would be Mercury. Putting Mercury in a CPU cooler would probably have a high risk of leakage, and killing ppl with mercury poisoning.

    --
    Jay | http://oldos.org
    1. Re:Too dangerous? by AtariDatacenter · · Score: 1

      No... mercury is JUST the thing! I mean... think of it... not only are you overclocking your PC to the extreme, but you are using a cooling system that is so extreme, it can kill people! I tell you, geeks will trip all over themselves for this one! :)

    2. Re:Too dangerous? by igb · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Actually, metallic mercury is fairly innocuous. It's the compounds that are nasty, especially vapours formed when heating it. It's also not a very good conductor of heat.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury_(element)

      ian

    3. Re:Too dangerous? by RobKow · · Score: 2, Informative

      Gallium melts around room temperature.

    4. Re:Too dangerous? by ledow · · Score: 1

      Why would mercury have a greater risk of leakage than water? Obviously, your computer would be wrecked if either leaked but I assume that the reason nobody has used mercury so far is that it does need extra protection. They'd hardly be allowed to sell it if it were THAT hazardous, so it must be sealed securely. Besides, my thermometer has mercury in it (yes, real mercury, not red liquid) and that doesn't need four inches of insulation to stop a leak.

    5. Re:Too dangerous? by Cheeko · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Mercury is the only elemental metal that is liquid at room temp. There are other liquid metals. Someone in another post mentioned gallium, as being liquid at just about human body temp, which would certainly be maintained within the cooling process of a PC. Additionally there are other elemental metals with low enough melting points that they would be concievable within a tight cooling loop that runs at a higher temp.

      The key for using liquid metal in this as I see it, is to move heat away quickly, rather than moving large amounts. As such the metal itself would stay rather hot, and they would take advantage of the conductive properties of it, to get the heat away more rapidly. The loop containing the liquid metal would likely be localized to an area right around the chip you are cooling. No long pump and hose loops like in water cooling. Think of this more like heat pipe technology, but using a fluid to more efficiently move the heat energy.

    6. Re:Too dangerous? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you sure? what about http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gallium or alloys like Field's Metal?

    7. Re:Too dangerous? by confused+one · · Score: 1

      Gallium would be liquid at CPU operating temperatures as well. You'd only have to keep the radiator slightly above room temperature to maintain a complete loop of liquid.

    8. Re:Too dangerous? by PhuCknuT · · Score: 1

      Not true, there are other metals that would work. For example, gallium melts at about 30C (and is even naturally occuring in the body).

    9. Re:Too dangerous? by Zerth · · Score: 1

      As someone posted elsewhere, gallium melts around 30C/84F and an alloy of gallium, indium, and tin (don't have the %s handy) will melt below the freezing point of water!

    10. Re:Too dangerous? by Senor_Programmer · · Score: 2, Informative
      Lead-tin-bismuth-cadmium alloys have low melting points. example.

      In the early days of commercial radio these alloys were used as a conductive form to secure galena or other semiconductors for use as the detector in 'crystal' radio sets. Low melting point avoided damage to the mineral.

      They are also used in making for many low temp(so as not to damage the mold) casting of patterns from a single rubber(latex) mold for use in making mold 'trees'.

      I'm sure there are some /. readers who know of other uses for 'Woods' metal?

      Let us know...

    11. Re:Too dangerous? by Inigo+Soto · · Score: 1

      Actually they do not give any details about the metal. What they do is mention that the pump has no moving parts and works electromagnetically. Mercury is diamagnetic . I guess this makes it unsuitable for moving along the cooling circuit in this manner.

    12. Re:Too dangerous? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, Woods metal is liquid at 70 C.
      http://www.goodfellow.com/csp/active/gfMaterialInf o.csp?MATID=BI02

      Don't know what the heat capacity would be compared to water though, and that would be the key.

    13. Re:Too dangerous? by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "Putting Mercury in a CPU cooler would probably have a high risk of leakage, and killing ppl with mercury poisoning." ... and sharp stabbing weapons.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    14. Re:Too dangerous? by dfn5 · · Score: 1
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury_(element)

      Did you not even read the article you linked to?

      Even though it is far less toxic than its compounds, elemental mercury still poses significant environmental pollution and remediation problems due to the fact that mercury forms organic compounds inside of living organisms.

      --
      -- Thou hast strayed far from the path of the Avatar.
    15. Re:Too dangerous? by hubang · · Score: 1

      Phosphorus and Potassium would also be liquid at CPU operating temperatures.

    16. Re:Too dangerous? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It sounds like they're using magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) pumping, which uses a conductive liquid to make a linear motor. Any conductive liquid will work: mercury, sea water, molten iron, ...

    17. Re:Too dangerous? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amazing, and I thought Gallium is prohibitively expensive, but no, its only around $500/kg. It used to be around $3000/kg in 1950.

    18. Re:Too dangerous? by phasm42 · · Score: 1

      One interesting thing about using liquid metals is that you would need to make sure that it stayed melted. This is pretty easy with water, but if your metal melts at room temperature, your pipes may freeze/burst and no liquid metal is going to get pumped... The longer your pipes are, the more problematic this could get with metals that melt around room temperature.

      --
      "No one likes working in a hamster wheel, and your shop smells of cedar shavings from here." - TaleSpinner
    19. Re:Too dangerous? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not entirely true:

      "On the other hand, liquid mercury vaporizes at room temperature, and when you inhale the vapor it moves right from the lungs to the bloodstream to the brain. A broken thermometer can release enough mercury vapor to poison the air in a room"

      http://www.discover.com/issues/mar-05/features/our -preferred-poison/

      Of course a cooling system using mercury would heat the mercury so any leaks would release more vapor. Any leaks would likely enter the watershed and wind up in our food supply.

    20. Re:Too dangerous? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pipes burst because water has the unusual property of expanding when it freezes. This is due to the structure of ice, and it's unlikley that any metal used will have the same problem.

      If your CPU has good heat management, it will be able to run at a lower speed until the pipes thaw.

    21. Re:Too dangerous? by hankwang · · Score: 1
      Lead-tin-bismuth-cadmium alloys have low melting points.

      Lead and cadmium, now that is a good alternative to that toxic mercury! ;-)

    22. Re:Too dangerous? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Besides, my thermometer has mercury in it (yes, real mercury, not red liquid) and that doesn't need four inches of insulation to stop a leak.

      I know I'm wasting my time, but could you please turn your old thermometer in and have it properly disposed of, instead of waiting until someone drops it. Maybe you are old and senile and don't care, but more likely there are young people in your house or will be someday. Do it for them.

    23. Re:Too dangerous? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bursting probably isn't a problem, since few thing other than water expand when they freeze. I guess they would rely on the conductivity of the metal to help it start melting.

    24. Re:Too dangerous? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only metal that would be molten at the appropriate temperature would be Mercury. Putting Mercury in a CPU cooler would probably have a high risk of leakage, and killing ppl with mercury poisoning.

      Not to mention the more obvious problems with mercury: it conducts *electricity* plus likes to *dissolve* gold and silver: say goodbye to your thermal paste and contacts on your CPU.

    25. Re:Too dangerous? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Phosphorus isn't a metal.

    26. Re:Too dangerous? by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Your pipes wouldn't burst.

      One of the unusual properties of water is the solid is less dense than the liquid. So if you freeze a particular volume of water the solid will take more space than the liquid.

      In most materials, the solid is more dense than the liquid. So if you freeze a particular volume of liquid metal, the solid will take less space than the liquid.

      However, freezing could still be an issue, in that you're not going to be able to dissipate much heat until the entire cooling system is hot enough to melt the metal. That is, unless they choose an alloy that melts at more like 15C.

    27. Re:Too dangerous? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Freezing wouldn't be the issue... you have bigger issues if you use a metal that is solid at room temperature, because then you can't ever turn off your computer without it completely seizing. A power-outage would completely ruin your cooling setup until you could pull out the blow-dryer.

    28. Re:Too dangerous? by phasm42 · · Score: 1

      D'oh! Forgot about that :-]

      --
      "No one likes working in a hamster wheel, and your shop smells of cedar shavings from here." - TaleSpinner
  15. OK everyone by gblues · · Score: 1, Funny

    Put all your Terminator 2 jokes here, please.

    Nathan

    1. Re:OK everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...

      (no? it's not funny? you just dont get it)

    2. Re:OK everyone by pete19 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Put all your Terminator 2 jokes here, please.

      Can't think of any at the moment... but I'll be back!

      --
      There is nothing more practical than a good abstract theory.
    3. Re:OK everyone by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "Can't think of any at the moment... but I'll be back!"

      With psuedo puns like that, is it any wonder that his database doesn't encompass the dynamics of human pair bonding?

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    4. Re:OK everyone by Ziviyr · · Score: 1

      Uhmmmm...

      "Have you seen this CPU core?" (holds up picture)

      --

      Someone set us up the bomb, so shine we are!
    5. Re:OK everyone by evilmousse · · Score: 1

      vote with me if you want to live!

      ahhnold's wacky japanese commercials

    6. Re:OK everyone by michrech · · Score: 1

      In Soviet Old Asian Man, All your base are belong to a bewolf (SP?) cluster of T2 robots, but only if the Old Asian Man is angry.

      (Not sure if I got everything in there, or if any of it is quite correct, but it's close enough. :) )

      ---

      telnet://sinep.gotdns.com -- It's my BBS - Enjoy!

      --
      bork bork bork!
    7. Re:OK everyone by grendelkhan · · Score: 1

      It doesn't work that way. It only cools solid objects. Knives and stuff.

      --
      Wu-Tang Name: Half-Cut Skeleton Get your own Wu-Na
  16. Bored with grass fields? by roystgnr · · Score: 5, Funny

    Try synthetic turf. It's a proven technology, used for years because its rugged construction is so hard to distinguish from real grass roots.

    1. Re:Bored with grass fields? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Moderated offtopic by someone who obviously doesn't get it.

    2. Re:Bored with grass fields? by good-n-nappy · · Score: 1

      That's ForeverLawn XP . The wave of the future, dude.

      --
      Never underestimate the power of fiber.
  17. Chernobyl at home? by cyclocommuter · · Score: 0

    I may be wrong but isn't the Chernobyl reactor cooled by liquid metal (graphite I believe)? If I am not mistaken, the Chernobyl disaster showed that water cooling is safer than liquid metal cooling.

    1. Re:Chernobyl at home? by hoofie · · Score: 1

      Graphite is used as a nuclear reaction moderator :

      Moderator. This is material which slows down the neutrons released from fission so that they cause more fission. It may be water, heavy water, or graphite.

      Whilst the graphite moderator caught fire and other Western designs use water instead, it wasn't a coolant.

    2. Re:Chernobyl at home? by troon · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yes, graphite, that well known metal...

      I hope you don't ever use polystyrene, after that Shuttle crash showed how dangerous it can be.

      --
      Ydco co ,df C erb-y go. a Ekrpat t.fxrapev
    3. Re:Chernobyl at home? by isdnip · · Score: 4, Informative

      Graphite is not a metal; its a form of carbon. Chernobyl was a bad Russian design, based on graphite as the moderator and IIRC gas as the coolant, not based on liquid metal at all.

      Many American reactors do use pressurized water, not liquid sodium, for cooling. The primary (really "hot" in both senses) loop runs at several hundred degrees, but pressure keeps it from boiling. There's also the Boiling Water reactor design, which does indeed let the primary water boil and generate steam, which condenses in the heat exchanger and is returned as a liquid.

    4. Re:Chernobyl at home? by shis-ka-bob · · Score: 1

      I thought that Moderators are what Slashdot needs to keep CommanderTaco from posting advertisments with no meat.

      --
      Think global, act loco
    5. Re:Chernobyl at home? by Zembar · · Score: 3, Informative

      Graphite is a) not a liquid and b) not a metal.

      Graphite was present in Chernobyl, but it was used as a moderator. The coolant was our good friend h2o.

      http://www.chernobyl.info/ has great info (The .info domain used for a legit site? Who knew?)

    6. Re:Chernobyl at home? by teh+kurisu · · Score: 1

      If you're cooling a nuclear reactor using a liquid metal system filled with a solid non-metal (such as graphite), your nuclear reactor probably will go the way of Chernobyl...

    7. Re:Chernobyl at home? by confused+one · · Score: 1

      Chernobyl is water cooled. Graphite is neither a metal or a liquid.

    8. Re:Chernobyl at home? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny
      I may be wrong... If I am not mistaken


      You may be, and you are. Good grief, I mean, have you seen any complex solutions to the pencil-lead-liquifying-at-room-temperature problem? No? There's a reason for that.

    9. Re:Chernobyl at home? by LWATCDR · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yes you are wrong.
      1 Graphite is not a liquid or a metal. It is a form of carbon. Typically uses for pencil lead.

      2 Graphite is not used for cooling it is used as a neutron moderator. It slows neutrons so that they are more likely to be captured and cause an atom to fission.

      3 Chernobyl was water cooled.

      4. The Chernobyl did not show anything about liquid metal cooling. It did show that containment buildings should not be considered optional. Graphite moderated reactors have more than a few safety issues.

      Now Russia has had some fun with liquid metal cooled reactors. The Alpha class subs used them. If you ever shut them down the froze solid and would never work again. I hear that they have solved this issue.
      The US used a liquid metal cooled reactor on the second SSN made. The USS Seawolf. It had to many problems and was replaced with a water cooled reactor. BTW this USS Seawolf was retired many years ago. There is a new USS Seawolf and it has always used a water cooled reactor.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    10. Re:Chernobyl at home? by grazzy · · Score: 1

      Usually "shutting down" an nucular reactor isn't the big problem ;)

    11. Re:Chernobyl at home? by Bonhamme+Richard · · Score: 1
      From what I've read about Chernobyl, it was cooled by water. Water flowed through the reactor, collecting energy and moving heat away from the fuel. The fuel rods were tipped with graphite (I haven't found a good reason for this, and maybe there isn't. Graphite doesn't absorb neutrons, so it doesn't work as a moderator...)

      The people running the reactor wanted to set what would happen in a kind of worst case condition. There was an tank full of extra water in case of emergencies, but it required power off the grid to run it, so they decided to see if the reactor itself could provide the power if there was a problem and they were cut off from the gird.

      Long story short, the water in the reactor began boiling off too quickly to effectively cool the reaction, which cause it to over heat, which DID NOT lead to a meltdown, the pressure built so high that there was a steam explosion before it was hot enough for a meltdown. Of couse, the steam explosion set of a graphite explosion... and between the two a bunch of radiation was released into the surrounding area.

      As far as I know, the second explosion was the only part of Chernobyl where the presence of graphite played a major role, but I could be wrong, this is mostly on the spot research off Google...

    12. Re:Chernobyl at home? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn that dangerous dihydrogen monoxide.

    13. Re:Chernobyl at home? by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      It is when you're on a nuclear submarine in the middle of the ocean...

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    14. Re:Chernobyl at home? by Dewser · · Score: 1

      This is cool (no pun intended) and scary at the same time. I mean really 10 years from now are we going to see little radioactive signs on computer boxes??? Will we need to keep alarm systems in the home to alert us if there is a core breach on our CPU?? Holy crap the canary grew a 3rd eye, EVERYBODY OUT!!!! :D

      --
      Dewser - all around techy "In the immortal words of Socrates - 'I drank what?'"
    15. Re:Chernobyl at home? by khrtt · · Score: 1

      I think it was sodium cooled, and a sodium explosion was both part of the disaster, and the "disassembly method".

    16. Re:Chernobyl at home? by Inebrius · · Score: 1

      US reactors also have a negative moderator temperature coefficient - which basically means that as the temperature rises, the number of fission reactions decreases. I think it has something to do with the neutron absortion rate.

      In a BWR, the boiling action carries the heat produced away - and it also is an integral part of maintaining the reaction. If the pumps stop, the reactor will not run away.

    17. Re:Chernobyl at home? by n9891q · · Score: 1

      Chernobyl was indeed moderated by graphite, but the graphite was quite solid until the unfortunate incident. (insert burst of satire particles here) For history buffs, Enrico Fermi used graphite in his first reactor under the stands of the stadium at the University of Chicago. Quite stable, but very messy.

    18. Re:Chernobyl at home? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      On the Alpha it was. If the reactor was allowed to cool enough the liquid metal coolant would be come solid metal. The reactor could never be restarted. The the USSR considered them "single use" reactors. They could not be refueled. The Soviet navy setup docks with steam plants, that would heat the reactor/coolant loop enough to keep the metal liquid. This proved too dangerous so they just kept the reactors running all the time.
      The Alpha turned out to be a very expensive failure. They where fast and could dive deep but they where loud, broke down a lot, and only useful for scaring the daylights out of the USN.
      They ended up being the Navy's Mig25.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    19. Re:Chernobyl at home? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Wow, if graphite is such a good moderator, then user 15167 must have lots of good karma

      http://slashdot.org/users.pl?uid=15167

    20. Re:Chernobyl at home? by Muhammar · · Score: 1

      If the pumps stop, the reactor will not run away (as the fission stops due to lack of moderation) but this does not guarantee safety! There is enough heat generated by decay of fission products in spent fuel that the core gets red-hot and melts without cooling in matter of minutes.

      --
      I doubt that we will ever figure out - and I suspect that even if we did figure out we couldn't do much about it
    21. Re:Chernobyl at home? by __aaxtnf2500 · · Score: 1

      In general a negative void coefficient. It has something to do with the slowing down length. The average logarithmic energy decrement will remain constant IIRC, but you have a lower density of water(hydrogen) atoms. Once the temperature increases significantly, the effects of increased resonance absorption may also become significant.

    22. Re:Chernobyl at home? by Zog+The+Undeniable · · Score: 1

      No, they were light water-cooled graphite reactors.

      --
      When I am king, you will be first against the wall.
  18. Nice, but be careful with it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Don't go smacking your computer the next time you get pissed off, or it's likely to morph itself into a sword and stab you through the head.

  19. Not even nuclear reactors by panurge · · Score: 4, Informative
    Sodium cooled exhaust valves were common on old fashioned auto engines at one time. In fact, anyone who remembers the Manx Norton will recall the sodium cooled exhaust valve and how you had to warm the thing up carefully to prevent it from sticking.

    However, I very much doubt that sodium will be the metal of choice for CPU cooling, no matter how popular it is in submarines. The obvious candidates are mercury and gallium. Mercury is rapidly falling out of favor because it is so toxic and, if you spill it and it gets under the floorboards it is floor removal time. Gallium is a little expensive.

    --
    Panurge has posted for the last time. Thanks for the positive moderations.
    1. Re:Not even nuclear reactors by Senor_Programmer · · Score: 2, Informative

      There are low MP alloys of tin-lead-cadmium-bismuth. This example melts at 70C.

    2. Re:Not even nuclear reactors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is modern engine that uses sodium filled exhaust valves for cooling, it's a SR20DET from a GTi-R.

    3. Re:Not even nuclear reactors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it was used to cool the reactor in Russian Alpha subs.

    4. Re:Not even nuclear reactors by hb253 · · Score: 1

      Er, sodium is still used in exhaust valves on modern high performance engines. The 2005 Corvette is just one example.

      --
      Self awareness - try it!
    5. Re:Not even nuclear reactors by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Cadmium and lead are too toxic to see a cooler based on Wood's alloy.

      Wood's alloy can be replaced by alloys of indium, gallium, and bismuth, but the first two on that list are pretty expensive, Indium is about twice the cost of Silver for example.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    6. Re:Not even nuclear reactors by LemonFire · · Score: 1

      That reminds me of my childhood.
      I used to play around with mercury, before I went on having fun with my melting lead experiments.

      -- This SIG needs cooling ...

    7. Re:Not even nuclear reactors by __aaxtnf2500 · · Score: 1

      How popular is it on submarines? I was under the impression that the US stopped development of the technology after the SEAWOLF(the 2nd wolf, not the third one) was built, and the last time the russians used it was the Alfa class...

    8. Re:Not even nuclear reactors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hell, water is toxic if mishandled. cadmium and lead are fine metals and are not going to leap out of a cooler. I have a big hunk of wood's metal on my desk. as salts and oxides spread about where they will find there way into living things, well that's another story. copper salts will kill trees but we don't see a mad rush to rip out all the old copper plumbing or keep copper out of landfills.

  20. Hell it's been used in IC engines for decades by Senor_Programmer · · Score: 1

    Sodium filled valves are nothing new in IC engines.

    1. Re:Hell it's been used in IC engines for decades by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's an IC engine? Pardon me for not being a queerbait like yourself.

    2. Re:Hell it's been used in IC engines for decades by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To a complete layman on engines, 5 seconds on Google tells me it's simply "Internal Combustion". Big mystery solved there for ya, buddy.

    3. Re:Hell it's been used in IC engines for decades by Senor_Programmer · · Score: 1

      Jeez and I wasn't even fishing.
      It's IC as n nternal combustion...

      Now don't go getting all excited but in particular the suck squish pop blow sort

      too bad for you big fella, I'm an artificial bait

  21. How could anyone get bored!? by bigtallmofo · · Score: 5, Funny

    Bored with water cooling?

    Bite your tongue! How in the world could anyone ever get bored with cooling CPUs with water? I've thrown dozens of water-cooled-CPU-themed parties in the last several years and my guests have never wanted for excitement!

    Once there was this time at one of the parties that this one CPU got up to 68 degrees celcius. Way too hot! We put a custom water cooler job on that guy and got it down to 45 degrees celcius in no time. Good times.

    How could you ever be bored!?

    --
    I'm a big tall mofo.
    1. Re:How could anyone get bored!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bored with water, then start using Orange Juice. There's plenty of that around.

    2. Re:How could anyone get bored!? by selectspec · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that the industry already thinks water cooling is too expensive over air cooling. Somehow I doubt these liquid metals are cheaper than water.

      --

      Someone you trust is one of us.

    3. Re:How could anyone get bored!? by DJCacophony · · Score: 1

      Somehow I doubt these liquid metals are cheaper than water.

      What about water made of gold?

      --
      Slow Down, Cowboy! It's been 60 minutes since you last successfully posted a comment.
  22. Sure, it's all well and good... by spun · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Until the liquid metal escapes out of the cooling system and turns into Robert Patrick.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  23. Low-Temp Alloys by disposable60 · · Score: 1

    There are more than a couple of low-melting-temp alloys that could work. Edmund Scientific had one that would melt in your hand from mere body heat.
    High geek factor, too. Where are the T2 references, though?

    --
    You're looking for quotes? See my journal.
    1. Re:Low-Temp Alloys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      do you have more information on this? I'd love to buy a few small chunks to show my less than scientific friends!

    2. Re:Low-Temp Alloys by disposable60 · · Score: 1
      --
      You're looking for quotes? See my journal.
    3. Re:Low-Temp Alloys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      thanks!

  24. I thought this was a cooling solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since our solution is a completely filled and sealed unit, there are no gravitational effects on the thermal solution and therefore on the computer itself. looks more like a space drive to me.

  25. no problemo by travvy · · Score: 1

    It cant form complex machines, guns and explosives have chemicals, moving parts, it doesn't work that way, but it can form solid metal shapes. Knives and stabbing weapons and uhh....pc cooling.

    1. Re:no problemo by PGC · · Score: 1

      Well , that's only for the T1000; the one from T3 was indeed capable of forming guns and explosives, heck even a flamethrower. Any other news today besides ads ?

      --
      The Dutch will inherit the earth. If not, we'll settle for a bit of ocean. Beta delenda est!
  26. Liquid coolers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I tried to cool my computer off with coffee once, but it stopped working.

    1. Re:Liquid coolers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You need to use -cold- coffee.

  27. Slashdotted by c0ldfusi0n · · Score: 1

    I sure hope that's what IceFool^Ht's server is cooled with. Slashdotted.

    --
    A computer makes it possible to do, in half an hour, tasks which were completely unnecessary to do before.
  28. Useless for us now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why do you take so long to develop sucha thing??? You bastards!!!

    AMD R&D Dept

  29. Temperature ? by MaGogue · · Score: 1


    Unless they are using a very unusual metal I doubt they can beat liquid nitrogen..
    Lower temp means less resistance and less noise.
    Hmm, I really think this is a red herring. MG

    1. Re:Temperature ? by StonedRat · · Score: 1

      Isn't liquid nitrogen only liquid because it has been cooled to such a low temp? Thus it'll just turn to gas and stay as gas when it heats up. Ok for a short time cooling über-overclocked cpus, but not much use for running a machine full time.

      --
      "Religion is the most malevolent of all mind viruses." - Arthur C. Clarke.
    2. Re:Temperature ? by MaGogue · · Score: 2, Informative

      but the article said if you ever get bored with water cooling

      What could me more fun than proven technology - LN2 cooling, that has been used for supercomputers for decades.

      The beast : http://www20.tomshardware.com/cpu/20031230/

  30. Minature steam turbine by creamcracker · · Score: 1

    In another news, a minature steam turbine was announced. This turbine, in combination with the cooling system, allows you to do something useful with the excessive heat, i.e. like powering your PC! ;-)

    1. Re:Minature steam turbine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perpetual motion. Woohoo!

    2. Re:Minature steam turbine by MikeFM · · Score: 1

      Maybe you could use it to power your USB devices?

      --
      At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
  31. Several alloys have very low melting points,, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    for example, Field's metal (a fusible alloy of bismuth, tin, and indium) melts at 62C (144F).
    There are others by Indium Corporation (branded as Indalloys), that are liquid at room temperature, and have a high thermal conductivity.
    These materials are designed for specific heat conducting applications, i.e. for heat dissipation of sensitive components during operation, machining and/or manufacturing.
    Before these, mercury was the metal of choice for these applications..

  32. Mod parent up by DigitalCrackPipe · · Score: 1

    Mod parent up. Slashdot just advertized a product that is almost guaranteed to be hazardous to your health. And it goes against recent trends to have LESS lead and mercury in electronics (ah, but who cares about the environment anyway).

  33. That'd be right... by Svartalf · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's most likely Galinstan, a metal alloy developed by Geratherm to replace mercury in medical thermometers.

    In the case of a cooling system, the heat flux will be higher than with water or alcohol (heatpipe...). The specific heat's waaay lower, but the thermal conductivity (as in the rate the heat's absorbed or dissipated...) is much, much higher. So, if you have a decent convective flow via thermosiphon or by way of pumping, it becomes this very extended air-cooled heatsink.

    You won't be overclocking with this stuff unless you couple it with something like Peltiers or Vapor-phase, but you CAN make a decent quiet PC with it.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    1. Re:That'd be right... by Sai+Babu · · Score: 1

      Why not a classic phase change cooling system?

      I can buy a gallon of distilled water for 55 cents. Or use naturally distilled rainwater.

      It's good for keeping a 100W source at 100C for about 24 hours and the best part is you can let the steam travel through an insulated pipe and out the window.

      You could get fancy and slightly pressurize the system. This would let you use, say 110C, steam to run your own distillation. You want distilled water for the boiler so you don't have to keep cleaning a mess of tiny parts.

      You might get even fancier if you live in a country where it is permitted and use alcohol as the coolant letting it distill more alcohol and all attached to a condensor outdoors. This way you get a useful product from the cooling process. Water and starch and sugar content scraps in. Motor fuel or booze out!

    2. Re:That'd be right... by Cylix · · Score: 1

      Or you can build a steam collector at the top of your computer.

      You know your really pumping those frames when your system percolates.

      --
      "You should always go to other people's funerals; otherwise, they won't come to yours." -- Yogi Berra
    3. Re:That'd be right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Empirical information on the topic is hard to find, but from what I gather, the life expectancy curve of CPUs begins to sag noticeably at 50C, more so at 60C, and to the point of failure during test at 70C.

  34. morally clueless story moderators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    haven't we foobar'd the environment enough? i don't know of anyone important enough to require more leaky chemicals, heavy metals, or organic-life-form incompatible carbon nanotubes so they can run games faster.

    1. Re:morally clueless story moderators by anakin876 · · Score: 0, Troll

      why do people post these sorts of responses anonymously? Are they really THAT worried about someone being unhappy with them? Lots of environmnetalists post things on Slashdot without worries - so are you just trolling?

    2. Re:morally clueless story moderators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Posting anonymously avoids the Karma loss associated with being modded down - just so you know for next time.

  35. Three slashvertisements in a row by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    OK guys. Can we have 1 news story before you post the next 3 ads? Thanks.

    1. Re:Three slashvertisements in a row by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "OK guys. Can we have 1 news story before you post the next 3 ads? Thanks."

      Do subscribers see the slashvertisements too?

    2. Re:Three slashvertisements in a row by Senor_Programmer · · Score: 1

      "Do subscribers see the slashvertisements too?"
      The /. article on forums mighthave some soggestions.
      For example, a new forum...

  36. Easy to Clean Up by aggies11 · · Score: 3, Funny
    Liquid Sodium would be great!

    I mean, if ever there is a leak, all you need to clean it up is a bit of Water!...

    Aggies

    1. Re:Easy to Clean Up by cynicalmoose · · Score: 1

      If you'd ever seen a real sodium accident, you wouldn't make that joke.

      Na looks fun skitting across the top of a water bath. That's usually using a couple of grams. The amount you'd need in a cooling system --- and, as others have pointed out, you couldn't use sodium, as the temperature would be way above the operational envelope --- would blow up in your face. I once saw 14g of sodium hit some water. The guy who chucked it in got a hunk of glass from the beaker stuck in his arm. It wasn't pretty.

      If you are interested in big, nasty, explosions, then water isn't the best choice; hot concentrated HCl reacts much more violently, producing a dangerous explosion with only a few grams.

      In my experience, there are two types of people when it comes to explosions: those who have never seen an explosion go wrong unexpectedly, and those who have. Those who have will testify that explosive substances can be handled safely, but you avoid it at all costs.

      --
      Exercise your right not to vote. thinkoutside.org
    2. Re:Easy to Clean Up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You remind me of the "don't joke about that, guys! My cousin died doing that!" kind of person.

    3. Re:Easy to Clean Up by aggies11 · · Score: 1
      Yeesh.

      I guess I should be glad I didn't say

      "Forget Sodium. Liquid Cesium is the way to go! So easy to cleanup, just wipe with a WET cloth..."

      instead.

      ;) Aggies

  37. Uhm... Pay attention here... by Svartalf · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Sodium's not liquid at room temps or anywhere near water's boiling point. However, having said this, there's alloys to be used that ARE liquid at room temp- and that they're non-toxic, and have little in the way of obnoxious behaviors (though they DO have some obnoxious characteristics...). About all I'll say about the subject for now...

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  38. Reactors are Go by Ironsides · · Score: 1

    Either that or we should start installing nuclear reactors in computers! :-D

    I remember hearing a few years ago that we will soon get to the point where the cores of the CPUs would be hotter than the interior of a nuclear reactor. So, that may just be a serious solution after all!

    --
    Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
  39. Bismuth alloy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    A Bismuth alloy of
    Bismuth 49%
    Lead 18%
    Tin 12%
    Indium 21%

    has a melting point of 58%C
    it could be used safely and is widely available
    no need for liquid sodium pity.

    1. Re:Bismuth alloy by Chemisor · · Score: 1

      > has a melting point of 58%C

      My water cooling setup keeps the CPU at around 55C. I don't see how this would be an improvement.

    2. Re:Bismuth alloy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think you took Physics..

    3. Re:Bismuth alloy by The_Mr_Flibble · · Score: 1

      Er also wouldn't you have a problem starting the computer It's a solid until it hits 58 C so the whole system goes upto 58 c or it jams

      or you get the system running and the heat exchanger is a little to efficient and it gets cooled to 57 C oops jammed again.

      without some serious electronics making sure the temp of the cooling medium remained at 58 C or above you would have problems.

    4. Re:Bismuth alloy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No your assuming that cooling doesen't begin until 58%C
      In fact the solid metal would conduct the heat away
      quite efficiently before melting.
      these alloys also shrink while melting so they wont
      overpressure the container holding them.
      circulation would be by convection once the body of the alloy melted no need for a pump.

    5. Re:Bismuth alloy by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Is that Eutectic? If not, is 58C fully liquid?

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    6. Re:Bismuth alloy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's why you add a heater to the system to keep your coolant melted.

  40. Just what I need... by bananahead · · Score: 1
    Just what I need in my computer room, leaking 'liquid metal coolant'. Computer manufacturers need to realize that the lowest common denominator for intelligence and technical knowledge is dropping (has been for years) within the ranks of computer owners. I realize that they will 'make sure' that this type of system is foolproof, but we are human, and they are going to leak, break, hiss or whatever.

    Is this really necessary?

    --
    A most overlooked advantage to owning a computer is if they foul up there's no law against wacking them around a bit.
  41. T2 by CamilaAcolide · · Score: 1

    It might work... after all the liquid metal cyborg in T2 was a very COOL guy! (This joke was awful!)

    1. Re:T2 by rob_squared · · Score: 0

      So *that's* how you mod yourself down!

      --
      I don't get it.
  42. Remember T2 by wcitech · · Score: 0

    Remember that scene where the T1000 walked through those flames? Now we know how he stayed so cool...

  43. these guys must not be reading /. by eferrari · · Score: 1
    "The ever increasing demands put on cooling solutions for semiconductor devices have never been greater than today and there are no indications that these requirements will diminish in the future."

    No indications of it diminishing? Obviously they missed the AMD posting yesterday http://hardware.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/05/ 02/1921257&tid=142&tid=137
  44. WRONG!!! by Svartalf · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Nobody ever gives consideration to Eutetic alloys of Gallium...

    Do a google search on Galinstan or Geratherm.

    You'll find you were wrong about the mercury.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    1. Re:WRONG!!! by VON-MAN · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Ok, i'll bite. I've searched for uses of liquid metal in cooling, i know of eutectic alloys and searched for cooling uses of it. I found fast breeder reactors and stuff.

      Then i searched for mercury cooling and, bingo! About 695,000 hits. The first hit is on www.devhardware.com. So, it's simply mercury, it's not new, and certainly not some eutectic alloy. Or do you happen know something more?

    2. Re:WRONG!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  45. Mirror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  46. hot computers by John+Macdonald · · Score: 1
    used in nuclear reactors


    So, just how HOT is your computer?

    1. Re:hot computers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "It was so hot that I saw a robin dipping his worm in Nestea." Hi-o! (Johnny Carson bad joke)

  47. Specific heat vs. heat capacity by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 2, Informative
    The specific heat's waaay lower

    In addition to the other (correct) points you make, the specific heat (in J/(g*K)) may be lower, but the heat capacity (in J/K) isn't. Since most of these systems are probably volume/area limited instead of mass limited, I'd consider heat capacity more relevant, and reveals an even greater advantage for metals. I'd use J/(g*L) or something like that if you want to use specific heat, that way you consider the higher density of metals.

    1. Re:Specific heat vs. heat capacity by uniqueUser · · Score: 0

      To get around the heat capacity, one could just pump at a higher rate. I think that the specific heat would be more important in this situation.

      --
      GENERATION 25: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. Social exper
    2. Re:Specific heat vs. heat capacity by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1
      To get around the heat capacity, one could just pump at a higher rate. I think that the specific heat would be more important in this situation.

      Then as I said the more important measure would be the volume-based specific heat, not the mass based one. I don't see a reason why the mass would matter, and the size of the components would limit volume, not mass.

      Pumping at a higher rate would help regardless of which metric you use, but metals shouldn't be penalized in this case for having higher mass.

    3. Re:Specific heat vs. heat capacity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heat capacity in a system with flow is (mass flow rate)*(specific heat), so metals are not penalized for higher mass. The units are then W/K, not J/K. Liquid metals are penalized for being, in general, very dangerous.

    4. Re:Specific heat vs. heat capacity by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1
      Heat capacity in a system with flow is (mass flow rate)*(specific heat), so metals are not penalized for higher mass.

      If we're considering replacing conventional liquids with metals in a system with a fixed volume, then as I said a volume-based specific heat makes more sense than a mass-based one. Or one could simply not normalize at all.

      Also, the units for specific heat are J/(g*K). Heat capacity is J/K. That is the unit I originally suggested, so it seems as if you agree. My original point was that specific heat (which has a unit of mass in the denominator) isn't as useful as an overall measure of energy or power per degree.

      Incorporating a static vs. dynamic system makes no difference regardless as the only thing you've done is exchange J for W, which only differ by a factor of time.

    5. Re:Specific heat vs. heat capacity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For heat exhanger systems (as this device is), the correct definition of heat capacity does not result in your units. You asked for this: The conventional calculation of rate of heat transferred to the fluid is

      q = \dot{m} c_p (T_o - T_i)

      This neglects axial conduction in the fluid, which complicates matters (and in the case of liquid metals, it is not negligible). The product \dot{m} c_p is the heat capacity. One cannot say that time is unimportant. Your reasoning (if one can call it that) is flawed. Very flawed. The density of the fluid matters only when we start talking about getting from velocities to mass flow rate. My advice to you: consult a heat transfer textbook before making wildly inaccurate statements.

    6. Re:Specific heat vs. heat capacity by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1
      For heat exhanger systems (as this device is), the correct definition of heat capacity does not result in your units.

      In the sciences, the difference between *specific* heat and heat *capacity* is units of mass. I'm quite sure of this, we teach this to freshmen every year. That's why water has a specific heat of 4.184 J/g/K, and 10g of water has a heat capacity of 41.84 J/K. I'd suggest you consult a basic chemistry or physics text, engineers often misuse terms which leads to confusion like this. I'm not particularly concerned with incorrect and field specific terminology pertaining to heat exchangers.

    7. Re:Specific heat vs. heat capacity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      As a scientist myself, I am quite comfortable with different terminology in different fields. However, the process here is fundamentally a rate problem, not a total transfer problem. The There is nothing incorrect about the terminology. Addressing this problem as if it is a transfer of energy (J) to a static and unmoving fluid is wrong, and that is that.

  48. Gravitational Effects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    They say their cooler has no gravitational effects on the thermal solution and therefore on the computer itself.

    Can I get one with gravitational effects on the computer? Cranking up the cooling and watching the computer levitate would be neat!

    1. Re:Gravitational Effects by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And here I was, stupidly thinking that gravity was an effect of ALL mass.

  49. WRONG!!!-Recycling. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's still the recycling issue to worry about.

  50. "The heat can be efficiently removed from the by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    heat source and then transported to a remote location where it can be rejected to ambient air."

    The brassier can be efficiently removed from the hootage where it can be rejected to the back seat.

  51. WMD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    nanocoolers.com is down!

    Stealth bombers were seen in the area.

    GW has declared war on "nanocoolers" for using "stuff" that can be used in manufacturing WMD, including "TUBES"!

  52. Concepts of Cooling by Dixie+Flatliner · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Cooling with liquid, in flux or stasis, would be inefficient within a transistor based environment, since it is more important to quickly dissipate small amounts of heat, then slowly dissipate immense amounts. The simplest way to upgrade a water/ethynol based cooler is to replace the coolent with two parts high performance synthetic engine oil (high lubricity dyno nascar oil is best) and 1 part synthetic stasis thinning agent. While it cannot absorb as much energy as metal (1/1000th that of copper) it dissipates it many hundred times faster, and will obviously not conduct a charge. The downside is it requires a 5 psi tested sealed system, since it can leak through even airtight connections.

    Also magnetic flow operated sodium sinks tend to polarize contact points over time (the reason that dusted and secured used plutonium rods form a distinctive magnetic nickel finish) which unless I'm mistaken would invalidate gates on a microprocessor.

  53. What recycling? by Svartalf · · Score: 1

    The metals themselves are non-toxic, liquid at room temperature when alloyed the way they are. You collect the damn stuff and re-use it. It's that simple.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  54. specific heat by ehudokai · · Score: 4, Interesting
    IANAC , and it's been a while since I took chemistry, although I did ACE it. Isn't the specific heat of water 4x greater than that of metal?, or does the specific heat of metal increase in a liquid state.

    IIRC, the specific heat of water is around 4 while most metals are around 1. This means it takes 4x the amount of heat energy to raise water by 1 degree than to raise a similar metal by 1 degree.

    therefore, what is the benefit of metal cooling?

    Just because they used it to cool nuclear reactors, doesn't mean its good for computer cooling.

    --
    This is just sig!
    1. Re:specific heat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      You're right. Water has the HIGHEST specific heat of all substances in the liquid phase. The only compund that has a higher specific heat than water is ammonia but only in the gas phase and in a certain temperature range.

      -The Chemist

    2. Re:specific heat by bitkari · · Score: 2, Informative

      It depends on what type of metal you use. Different metals have differing specific heat capacity.

      get your specific heat calculation on!

    3. Re:specific heat by rob_squared · · Score: 0
      Because it's just so cool!

      Please put me out of my misery.

      --
      I don't get it.
    4. Re:specific heat by hankwang · · Score: 3, Informative
      IIRC, the specific heat of water is around 4 while most metals are around 1. This means it takes 4x the amount of heat energy to raise water by 1 degree than to raise a similar metal by 1 degree.

      Correct, but that is by weight. With a CPU, you want as much heat-absorbing capacity on as little space as possible, so it makes more sense to calculate the heat capacity per unit volume, which is the heat capacity times the density. The density of most metals is between 3 and 10 times more than that of water, so there you have your factor 4 back. Plus the advantage of a much better heat conductivity.

    5. Re:specific heat by MaGogue · · Score: 1

      You're right, but most metals are ten times heavier than water, so while specific heat of metal per kg is smaller, it is greater per liter.

      If you wanna run cool, you gotta run on heavy heavy fuel // Dire Straits, On Every Street

    6. Re:specific heat by timbit · · Score: 4, Informative

      the specific heat capacity of water may be higher, but it does not transfer heat well at all. put your water bottle upside down buried in snow, bottom will freeze, top will stay melted. you'll also note that metal heats up a lot faster than water. why? because it transfers heat a lot faster. that's the property you want for cooling. quickly picks up heat from the cpu, and quickly gets rid of it at the radiator or fan.

    7. Re:specific heat by megalomang · · Score: 1

      Specific heat is actually counterproductive if your sink is a solid. What you really want is thermal conductivity, because without that, you will have a hard time absorbing and dissipating heat. Infinite conductivity and minimal specific heat is ideal because you can effectively dissipate heat over an infinite area.

      If the material is a fluid, you need higher capacity. While the fluid is absorbing heat at the source, you want really high conductivity and capacity. Then you need insulation until reaching the sink, and then you want conductivity again.

      Water has low thermal conductivity compared to metal therefore requires relatively enormous heat transfer mechanisms compared to metal, effectively limiting the ability to dissipate a given heat density. (Metal thermal conductivity is several hundred times higher than water, IIRC.)

      The whole reason that water is used in a curculatory cooling system instead of in a static heat sink fashion demonstrates its limitation due to low thermal conductivity.

    8. Re:specific heat by ehudokai · · Score: 1
      mod up parent

      Thank you, I should have thought of that.

      :)

      --
      This is just sig!
    9. Re:specific heat by hyfe · · Score: 1
      Heat transfer is a function of Heat conductivity and Temperature difference. Metals conduct heat much better, hence the energy transfer for equal temperatures will be larger for metals than water.

      You are however, correct in noting that the water will heat up slower, however that is just a matter of getting the liquid away fast enough. After all, lower heat up time also means lower cool down time, so the overall temperature of the system won't be affected.

      Either way, and alternate solution is to just move here to Norway and open your window occasionally.

      --
      "" How about taking the safety labels off everything, and let the stupidity-problem solve itself? """
    10. Re:specific heat by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      It makes most sense to calculate it per unit per second in the moving system in question.

      If you pump a litre a second of one liquid that can absorb x joules of energy per second, that's not better than a liquid you can pump 100 litres per second of with half the original energy absorption characteristics.

      If the material is moving, it makes a difference when the heat is constantly being generated -- think wind chill.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    11. Re:specific heat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We are trying to move heat, not store it. Conductivity is the main thing, not heat capacity.

    12. Re:specific heat by vrt3 · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure about that: I would expect all the water to freeze.

      Assuming the water is colder than 4 degrees Celsius, which it will be after a while, colder water will be less dense so the coldest water will always be at the top; the hottest water will be at the bottom where it is cooled by the snow.

      I didn't actually do the experiment, so I might be wrong.

      --
      This sig under construction. Please check back later.
  55. Why subscribe... by soops1966 · · Score: 0, Troll

    to get crap 'news' like this before anyone else.

    'Liquid metal' cooling, stickers that improve battery life...

    Just how gullible is CmdrTaco? How much did they pay you to put this crap up?

    Waste of bloody bandwidth...

    Rant fades off into the distance....

  56. a big scale solution by LordAlpha · · Score: 1

    Seek and ye shall find!
    Pretty Graphics Included (tm)!

    http://www.frigprim.com/articels4/LiqMetal.html

    1. Re:a big scale solution by Guysmiley777 · · Score: 1

      There are some very odd typos in that link, but it has an interesting blurb on MHD pumps.

      --
      Coding with assembly is like playing with Legos. Coding an application in assembly is like building a car with Legos.
  57. I don't want this crap in my computer by HaloZero · · Score: 1

    It's bad enough with a water-cooled system that a leak could destroy your machine. Before I invest in a liquid-cooling system, I want to use a material that isn't going to be potentially harmful to my components. 3M does make a solution, but it costs 320 dollars per litre. I can only imagine what a liquid-metal spray would do to some of my components.

    --
    Informatus Technologicus
    1. Re:I don't want this crap in my computer by Tenebrious1 · · Score: 1

      but it costs 320 dollars per litre

      Wow... at that price, it's not so much a liquid-cooling system for a computer, but rather a computer-powered heating system for a liquid.

      --
      -- If god wanted me to have a sig, he'd have given me a sense of humor.
    2. Re:I don't want this crap in my computer by bugnuts · · Score: 1

      They stuff to which you refer (the non-water, non-wetting fire-extinguisher liquid which doesn't harm electronics) has a boiling point of around 45C, which would be too low for an effective coolant unless you use a compressor.

  58. What about cesium by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    IIRC cesium melts at close to room temperature. A CPU could easily hit that temperature. Mercury would be good if it weren't for the whole "highly poisonous" thing.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    1. Re:What about cesium by Mr+Tall · · Score: 1

      Whereas caesium, with it's whole "explode violently on contact with water" thing is completely safe ;)

    2. Re:What about cesium by scheme · · Score: 4, Informative
      IIRC cesium melts at close to room temperature. A CPU could easily hit that temperature. Mercury would be good if it weren't for the whole "highly poisonous" thing.

      Wait, you want to replace mercury with a metal that reacts violently with oxygen and water vapor in an explosion and which reacts with water vapor to form the strongest base known. CsOH is caustic enough to go through glass and will go through metals. IIRC, the only safe way to store cesium is to keep it in a glass ampule under a vaccuum or an argon atmoshphere.

      I would stick to the mercury, at least with mercury you can use EDTA or some other chelating agent to sequester it and counteract mercury poisoning.

      --
      "When you sit with a nice girl for two hours, it seems like two minutes. When you sit on a hot stove for two minutes, it
    3. Re:What about cesium by darkpixel2k · · Score: 2, Funny

      Wait, you want to replace mercury with a metal that reacts violently with oxygen and water vapor in an explosion and which reacts with water vapor to form the strongest base known.

      Yes! That way when the MPAA shows up for those MP3's I've been downloading I can hit "The Big Red Button" and *poof*--no more computer. ;)

      --
      There's no place like ::1 (I've completed my transition to IPv6)
    4. Re:What about cesium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, it can be hard to obtain (search for "bona fide institution" in this http://www.cs.rochester.edu/users/faculty/nelson/c esium/cesium_faq.htmlpage!

      As a poor-person's alternative, try an alloy of
      22% Sodium 78% Potassium (by weight)
      http://www.sigmaaldrich.com/Brands/Fine_Chemicals/ Product_Focus/Suparna/Sodium_Potassium_Alloy.html this alloy is liquid down to -12C

      If you have the inclination
      (THIS IS DANGEROUS!),
      you could probably make it at home by electrolysis from the hydroxides
      (YOU COULD HURT YOURSELF OR SOMEONE ELSE VERY BADLY!)
      http://www.sas.org/E-Bulletin/2001-10-05/chem/colu mn.html
      (THIS IS DANGEROUS!)

    5. Re:What about cesium by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Potassium is probably nicer than cesium, but it is defintely not fun to get into an accident with.

      There is a reason why Na is used in demos with water, but K is not. The energy liberated is quite high!

    6. Re:What about cesium by Glonoinha · · Score: 1

      Had my chemistry lab instructor in college do the demo with potassium.
      Read the instructions, and it went something like this :
      Hmmm, it says 'wrap a small piece in aluminum foil that has had two small holes poked in it, then drop in a bucket of water and step back.'
      'Screw that.'
      (Scooped a piece about one cubic centimenter in size out of the jar (potassium metal under some sort of oil) and then with everybody standing close by paying attention plop'ed it into the water.
      Two seconds of small bubbles before it exploded in the most amazing purple flash I have ever seen, left burn marks on his lab coat.

      It was amazing. God I miss college.

      --
      Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
    7. Re:What about cesium by dbIII · · Score: 1
      Wait, you want to replace mercury with a metal that reacts violently with oxygen and water vapor in an explosion
      Yes, but I am the sort of guy that has heated copper powder in a pure hydrogen atmosphere at 400C for a few hours to save time.

      You keep it away from water, just as you try to make sure that you don't get any vapour from the mercury.

      Cesium does sound a lot worse than NaK alloys (which also react with water), but this suggestion is not using either.

      Computers get pulled apart by kids and end up in landfills, so anything that is truly nasty on an industrial scale should be avoided.

    8. Re:What about cesium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> ... and which reacts with water vapor to form the strongest base known?

      > Yes! That way when the MPAA shows up for those MP3's I've been downloading I can ...

      Dear Sir,

      Sorry. Even your strongest base are belong to us.

      Sincerely, the MPAA

  59. Vapor? by k98sven · · Score: 1

    How about vaporising a liquid?

    It's the most efficient way to transport heat in terms of joules per kg coolant.

    Think about a pot of water. It takes much less time to bring a pot of water to the boil than to boil off the same amount of water. And while the water is boiling, it stays at the boiling point (with constant pressure) since all energy is going towards vaporizing the liquid.

    Seems to me the best choice would be to just choose some liquid like, say, methanol (boiling point 65 C/150 F) and let it boil on the processor and have a condensation loop and reservoir.

    1. Re:Vapor? by Trumpetgod2k1 · · Score: 0

      Thats precisely what a heat pipe does, only in a closed system. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_Pipe for your reading pleasure.

  60. What's the thermodynamic motivation? by Biff+Stu · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As I understand it, the advantage for liquid metal cooling in nuclear reactors is the high operating temperature. For an ideal Carnot heat engine, a larger deltaT leads to a more efficient engine.

    In the case of a processor, I don't see any clear advantage. As far as room temperature liquid coolants are concerned, water is hard to beat because it has an unusually high heat capacity.

    1. Re:What's the thermodynamic motivation? by Firethorn · · Score: 1

      Don't forget: cheap, easily available, non-toxic(in pure form), only mildly corrosive, etc...

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
  61. But why? by I+don't+want+to+spen · · Score: 1

    Its a long time since I've done my physics (and I haven't read the article!), but metals are conductors, so surely (unless we are talking about a large volume of metal being circulated such as in the nuclear reactors mentioned in other posts) solid metal is conducting heat away anyway. Water (or air) are insulators, so they need to circulate to remove the heat, but I would have thought a solid metal heatsink (which is air or water cooled) would be just as good.

    --
    Don't go to a brothel if you want to buy broth
  62. Other metals besides Sodium can be used... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seesh people, there are lots of metals that can be used besides sodium, and all of them have a higher heat capacity than water ( which makes them better coolers, they can absorb more heat ).

    Low melting Gallium, liquid Mercury, or Indium could be used. Mercury is unlikely though, as it has disposal issues.

    So undoubtably, they will be using a Indium-Gallium alloy that is liquid at room temperature.

    They are not going to use molten Sodium or Lead. Do some research before jumping to conclusions.

    Does anyone take chemistry anymore?

  63. Cerro Alloys by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cerrolow-117: Melting point is 117 F. Composition is 44.7 percent Bismuth, 22.6 percent Lead, 8.3 percent Tin, 5.3 percent Cadmium, 19.1 percent Indium.

    Cerrolow-136: Melting point is 136 F. Composition is 49 percent Bismuth, 18 percent Lead, 12 percent Tin, 21 percent Indium.

    Cerrosafe: Melting point is 160 to 190 F. Cerrosafe has no definite melting point. Composition is 42.5 percent Bismuth, 37.7 percent Lead, 11.3 percent Tin, 8.5 percent Cadmium.

    etc...

  64. It was used by the Navy in a reactor or two... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And abandoned in favor of pressurized water.

    Liquid metal as coolant is a pain in the ass to maintain.

  65. It's used in car engines, too by JonTurner · · Score: 4, Informative

    Sodium (and sometimes potassium) is used inside high-performance automobile engine pistons and valves to transfer heat from the surface of the piston to the skirts (or the valve face to the stem), where the heat can be shed to the engine block. Porsche and Mercedes Benz have been doing this for thirty years or more.

    1. Re:It's used in car engines, too by khrtt · · Score: 1

      Is it true that sodium has been used as coolant in the piston engines of circa-WWII aeroplanes? I heard some stories...

  66. Dammit, where's the -1 WRONG moderation? by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 4, Informative

    Chernobyl was a water-cooled graphite-moderated reactor.

    There were a few bad things about this design:
    1) If the reactor loses all of its coolant, it does not lose its moderator. Thus, losing coolant does not slow the reaction down. In fact, I believe that the Chernobyl reactor had a number of operating regimes where increases in temperature would increase the output power.
    2) Graphite is very combustible. Highly flammable materials in an extremely high-temperature environment such as a nuclear reactor is a Bad Idea. Especially in a facility with no containment building whatsoever.

    U.S. reactors are very different. Like Chernobyl, they are water-cooled, BUT they are also water-moderated. If they begin losing coolant, the reaction will begin to slow down. There are no highly combustible substances in the reactor core, and even if there were, U.S. reactors have very strong containment buildings so that if something goes horribly wrong, it will not likely ever escape containment.

    Liquid-metal reactors have the disadvantage that their coolants are in some cases very reactive, but that's not much of a problem with a strong containment building, especially since some of the liquid-metal reactors are FAR more efficient as far as making use of their fuel and also produce waste that has a much shorter half-life than the waste from pressurized water reactors, making disposal much easier.

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    1. Re:Dammit, where's the -1 WRONG moderation? by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Graphite is very combustible.

      This is incorrect, it's even used in fire extinguishers. It's used to smother extremely hot fires like burning magnesium.

      I'm not sure where the whole "graphite is flammable" myth came from. In fact the only references on google for "burning graphite" are in relation to chernobyl.

      I guess anything will burn if you get it hot enough, but calling graphite flammamble or combustible is just plain wrong.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    2. Re:Dammit, where's the -1 WRONG moderation? by bemenaker · · Score: 0

      Uhm, do a little more research, a search for "burning graphite" on google, comes up with lots of information, mostly academic about burning graphite. Yes, graphite burns, yes, it takes a tremendous amount of heat to cause this. But, alas, it WILL burn.

    3. Re:Dammit, where's the -1 WRONG moderation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Graphite was not burning or combusting in the Chernobyl reactor. What Graphite contributed to the problem of this disaster was the fact that it is a good conductor. It caused a spark which started a fire.

    4. Re:Dammit, where's the -1 WRONG moderation? by __aaxtnf2500 · · Score: 1

      There are no highly combustible substances in the reactor core, and even if there were, U.S. reactors have very strong containment buildings so that if something goes horribly wrong, it will not likely ever escape containment. How sure are you of this? Have access to a wide variety of core structural design information? No? As far as strong containment buildings, was there not a fission product release at TMI?

    5. Re:Dammit, where's the -1 WRONG moderation? by dbIII · · Score: 1
      Especially in a facility with no containment building whatsoever.
      There was containment - then a steam explosion took the room off! In hindsight the containment building was not good enough.
    6. Re:Dammit, where's the -1 WRONG moderation? by dbIII · · Score: 1
      Graphite is very combustible.
      This is incorrect, it's even used in fire extinguishers
      To add another example, it's used as the electrodes in industrial arc furnaces. That's furnaces open to the atmosphere full of molten steel. It's also used in crucibles, once again contact with molten metal close to 2000C with plenty of oxygen around.
    7. Re:Dammit, where's the -1 WRONG moderation? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      As far as strong containment buildings, was there not a fission product release at TMI?

      There was a radiation leak into the containment building. This essentially contained all the radioactivity, except for a trace amount of radio-iodine (about 15 curies) which got through some old filters.

      Much of the rest of the radiation release was through opening of the isolation (e.g. bilge pumps in the contaimnent left running, or where radioactive krypton was vented immediately prior to clean-up work beginning).
    8. Re:Dammit, where's the -1 WRONG moderation? by __aaxtnf2500 · · Score: 1

      so there was a fission product release is what you're saying. and it's activity that leaked, not radiation.

    9. Re:Dammit, where's the -1 WRONG moderation? by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 1

      "As far as strong containment buildings, was there not a fission product release at TMI?"

      A small amount of gas was released, stuff that was barely radioactive at all. The nastiest radioactive elements are all solids, which tend to be easier to contain.

      There are coal fired power plants in Utah that release more radioactive material into the air PER DAY due to trace amounts of such material in the coal they burn that TMI released during the entire incident.

      --
      retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
    10. Re:Dammit, where's the -1 WRONG moderation? by __aaxtnf2500 · · Score: 1

      my point is that there was a fission product release. equipment failed. the watchteam failed. containment failed. it could have failed catastrophically, and didn't, but the system did not perform as it was designed to, and as the public trusted it would. i'm for nuclear power, but attempting to allay peoples fear of a nuclear accident by explaining the insignificant contribution safely operated power reactors make to the mean natural dose is specious. (if that is in fact why you cited that factoid). didn't this thread have something to do with heatsinks? :)

  67. Re:Uhm... Pay attention here... by cyclopropene · · Score: 1
    Sodium's not liquid at room temps or anywhere near water's boiling point.

    Sodium metal melts at 97.8 degrees C. That's pretty damn near water's boiling point of 100 degrees C.
    --
    Shouldn't you be doing something useful?
  68. Better still ... by krygny · · Score: 1

    Tired of filling your car's tires with plain old air? Fill them instead with 78% pure nitrogen! The performance advantages cannot be understated.

    --
    Research shows that 67% of those who use the term "research shows", are just making shit up.
  69. pump versus convection by RealProgrammer · · Score: 1

    They say their magnetic pump (which is a cool idea, if you'll pardon the pun) is "inherently reliable". OK, but it's still there, generating its own heat, and everything breaks eventually.

    What if you could avoid having a pump altogether? I imagine the liquid metal coolant has convective properties the same as any other fluid. Probably the metal expands quite a bit with heat, just as mercury does. With proper case design (such as a vertical motherboard), you could probably get good coolant flow without a pump.

    O'course, the case might end up needing to be six feet high and require a solid gold heat sink or something.

    --
    sigs, as if you care.
  70. Re:Slashdot: Use a firewall that blocks ads by shyampandit · · Score: 1

    Well if you dont want to see ads then just use a firewall or adblocker. My firewall outpost automatically removes banner ads and others from pages so you dont even know they exist!

  71. The pump by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The pump is basically a linear electric motor. The liquid metal has an alternating current induced in it by electromagnets. That creates a magnetic field which reacts with the field of the electromagnet and creates force which moves the liquid.

  72. Whatever happened to ammonia liquid-gas phase? by amiable1 · · Score: 1

    Whatever happened to ammonia liquid-gas phase heat pipes? Doesn't the phase transition beat mere convection?

  73. So, do you want Chernobyl in your case or TMI by lquam · · Score: 1

    When my CPU overheats and I have pile of burning graphite in my case, is there someone offering a concrete "sarcophagus" for it?

    Disclaimer: Despite subject line, submitted by rabidly pro-nuke /.er.

  74. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  75. Water vs. Metal -- Try Mineral Oil by N30F3AR · · Score: 5, Interesting

    For the record... Water is chemically the best cooling agent available. The reason that liquid metal is used in nuclear reactors is that it's much easier to contain in a closed environment than water because it has a MUCH higher boiling point. For those of you that are concerned about the electroconductivity of your coolant, I suggest mineral oil. Mineral oil is cheap, cools well and above all not electroconductive. Unless, of course, your CPU is generating heats at nuclear levels, then i guess liquid sodium might be the only route.

    1. Re:Water vs. Metal -- Try Mineral Oil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The non-conductive 'water' used by watercooling enthusiasts is NOT cheap; however it's cost pales in comparison to the cost of the system being watercooled.

      Get the real stuff. Don't ruin your equipment with cheap mineral oil. ;)

    2. Re:Water vs. Metal -- Try Mineral Oil by uniqueUser · · Score: 0

      isn't also possible to make wather radio active?

      --
      GENERATION 25: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. Social exper
    3. Re:Water vs. Metal -- Try Mineral Oil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, if you fire neutrons at it, or drop a chunk of higly-radioactive material into it.

    4. Re:Water vs. Metal -- Try Mineral Oil by killproc · · Score: 0



      I've never heard of a Wather radio (I tend to stick to the more common brand names i.e. Sony, Panasonic, Alpine, etc.), but I make mine active by pushing the power button.

      Most also come with a volume knob to increase or decrease sonic activity. Your mileage may vary.

      --
      When you die, on your deathbed, you will receive total consciousness. So I got that goin' for me, which is nice.
    5. Re:Water vs. Metal -- Try Mineral Oil by databyss · · Score: 1

      Had I some mod points...

      Funniest I've read in along time here...

      --
      Hmmm witty sig or funny sig? Maybe elitest techy sig!
    6. Re:Water vs. Metal -- Try Mineral Oil by babyrat · · Score: 1

      Define best cooling agent available - if you are cooling something at over 100C and you can't pressurize it, water really rather sucks as a cooling agent. So too if you are cooling something below 0C and don't put in some additives to prevent freezing.

      Liquid metals generally have a higher heat capacity per unit volume than water and better conductivity, but are much more expensive, and depending upon the metal can be dangerous if leaked.

      So if cost is no object, the temperature range is correct and if the liquid can be safely contained then liquid metals are much better coolants than water.

    7. Re:Water vs. Metal -- Try Mineral Oil by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funniest I've read in along time here...

      Good thing we restrict the mod points to those with a sense of humor. Let me demonstrate -- here's a (-1, Offtopic) for you.

  76. Re:Slashdot: Use a firewall that blocks ads by zwei2stein · · Score: 2, Insightful

    but even best adblock solution wont remove PR and AD articles ...

    --
    -- Technology for the sake of technology is as pathetic as eschewing technology because it's technology.
  77. Slashdotted... by WD_40 · · Score: 1

    Is it just me, or is there an abudnaces of advertisement "stories" today?

    A word of advice to would-be advertisers: before you post your ad on the front page, make sure your website can handle the traffic that will be coming your way.

    --

    "With sufficient thrust, pigs fly just fine." -- RFC 1925

    1. Re:Slashdotted... by Craig_P92669 · · Score: 0

      Better hope not. It doesn't work well enough to keep their servers cool from a health slashdotting.

      --
      http://xs4.xs.to/pics/04481/p556222.gif
    2. Re:Slashdotted... by Craig_P92669 · · Score: 0

      healthy

      --
      http://xs4.xs.to/pics/04481/p556222.gif
  78. Here's a fun idea... by sayerofno · · Score: 1

    If I remember high school chemistry correctly, sodium and water make and interesting combination. So, use the sodium based liquid metal cooler on your video card, and a water based cooler on your cpu. Then, wait for leaks and your whole computer will explode! Fun, fun, and more fun! They'll have to print warning labels on computers - WARNING: Do not hit this computer with a large blunt instrument. Serious injury or death may result.

  79. Nuclear Reactors by ciphertext · · Score: 1

    Sodium (or combination of sodium and potassium) is usually the metal of choice when it comes to liquid metal cooled reactors. However, using liquid metal to cool a desktop doesn't seem to be a very safe alternative to water. There are super computer designs that rely on liquid metal to cool the core components. Do a google search and you will see some interesting designs.

    --
    To know is to have knowledge....to understand is to be enlightened.
    1. Re:Nuclear Reactors by BCW2 · · Score: 1

      The Russians tried this many times. Do we really want to try something like that? Look at their safety record, Or all the subs on the bottom.

      Yes I was a cold war Sub sailor.

      --
      Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
  80. What this story needs.... by Slashcrap · · Score: 1

    ...is more funny comments.

    Wouldn't it be great if there were a well known action movie that featured a liquid metal protagonist of some description. That way we could all make jokes about it.

    I bet it woudn't matter how many fucking people made the joke - it would just keep on getting funnier and funnier.

    1. Re:What this story needs.... by KillerBob · · Score: 1

      Ask and ye shall receive....

      The humans finally found a use for all those dead T-1000's after winning: the world's biggest lan party.

      --
      If you believe everything you read, you'd better not read. - Japanese proverb
  81. Liquid Metal = Death by imstanny · · Score: 1

    yes, liquid metal was actually used exclusively by Russian submarines. They encountered 1 major problem: When the liquid metal became hard under certain conditions it no longer provided cooling. In fact, that architectural design lead to the death of many russian submariners. Oh and, they now use water as cooling.

    1. Re:Liquid Metal = Death by TheHawke · · Score: 1

      The russkies used sodium liquid metal in their primary cooling loops to conduct the heat. Icebreakers and a few early subs used sodium, but had maintaince problems with the metal due to the fact that it solidifies at room temperature. One icebreaker was crippled for 2 years due to the sodium leaking out of the primary loop into the containment vessel, solidifying and damaging the control rod mechanisms.

      I agree, that sodium is a great idea to use as a heat conductor, but it does have a high price to keep the stuff contained.

      --
      First rule of holes; When in one, stop digging.
  82. Why not? by phorm · · Score: 1

    Then I can ditch both my existing PSU and my UPS... no more power outages for me!

    Now I just have to wait for enermax to release their NCLR-PSU001 line of PSU's...

  83. Liquid metal? by owlstead · · Score: 1

    Pfft. Everyone knows that liquid nitrogen just kills liquid metal.

  84. Where's the -1 (Misinformation) option? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Water is chemically the best cooling agent available. The reason that liquid metal is used in nuclear reactors is that it's much easier to contain in a closed environment than water because it has a MUCH higher boiling point."

    No, No, and No.

    Water is not "chemically" the best cooling agent available -- it is in fact rather reactive at nuclear reactor temperatures (~500 F), causing very significant corrosion problems. While Sodium is reactive with water, it does not react with structural metals internal to the reactor, and is thus quite desireable from that aspect.

    The reasons that liquid Sodium is sometimes considered for nuclear reactors are primarily due to heat transfer and neutron moderation considerations.

    Containment of liquid Sodium no less difficult than pressurized water/steam, because at some point you require a heat exchanger to transfer heat from the sodium to a working fluid (typically water), to construct a useful thermodynamic cycle. While Sodium is not at pressure, the implications of a leak inside such a heat exchanger are such that extraordinary precautions must be taken to prevent Sodium-water interaction. Typically, these heat exchangers have a double-tube construction, with Mercury serving as a boundary between the Sodium and water, allowing periodic sampling of the Mercury to ensure that no Sodium or water is leaking through the tubes.

    Oh, and it's (noo'-kle-er), not (noo'-kye-ler).

    1. Re:Where's the -1 (Misinformation) option? by wgaryhas · · Score: 1

      I thought the common way to mispronounce it was (noo'-kue-ler) not even bush pronounces it (noo'-kye-ler)

      --
      "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." - H.L. Mencken
  85. Gallium cooling by Animats · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Gallium would be a good choice for metal cooling. Melts at 29C. Non-toxic. Non-flammable. Costs about $550/Kg, so you'd probably have $50-$100 of metal in a cooling loop.

    Magnetic pumping of liquid metal is a standard practice. You run a current through the metal in the transverse direction, and put it in a DC magnetic field. This induces a force proportional to the cross product of the field and the current. No moving parts, and no seals to leak.

    The whole concept is probably pointless, but quite possible.

    1. Re:Gallium cooling by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 0

      While its true that gallium appears to be not very toxic on its own, it is also true that extensive tests of gallium's toxicity on humans has not been done.

      The real danger is releasing gallium that is then allowed to react with other chemicals which produce much more toxic, and sometimes explosive products.

      http://66.102.7.104/search?q=cache:7YXh1XFpnngJ:ww w.aps.anl.gov/xfd/tech_bulletins/tb4/TB-4_Appendix _A.html+gallium+poison&hl=en&start=19

      Did you notice that the company in the article never actually mentions what metal they are using anywhere on their website?

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
    2. Re:Gallium cooling by Animats · · Score: 1
      While its true that gallium appears to be not very toxic on its own, it is also true that extensive tests of gallium's toxicity on humans has not been done.

      Yes, it has. Gallium-67, a radioactive isotope of gallium, is routinely injected for medical diagnostic tests. Some gallium compounds have some toxicity, but the pure metal is mostly harmless.

      "Metallic gallium as well as the nitrate produced no skin injury, and subcutaneous injections of relatively large amounts could be tolerated both by rabbits and rats without evidence of injury."

      "Solid gallium can be picked up with ordinary housekeeping utensils. Liquid gallium should have cold water spilled on it to solidify it."

    3. Re:Gallium cooling by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 0

      "4. Gloves should be worn during any cleanup procedure because the heat of one's hand will melt the surface of small amounts of gallium that will then interact with the moisture in the skin, coating the skin with gallium oxide."

      "5. Approved respirators should be worn during cleanup because small particles of gallium oxide and other compounds can become airborne and be inhaled or ingested."

      "Very little toxicological data is available on Ga effects in humans. Experiments in general, on the Ga-containing drugs have shown that anorexia, nausea, vomiting, skin rashes, and depression of red and white blood cell counts can occur. Other clinical experiments on Ga-containing drugs have resulted in some bone marrow depression, dermatitis and severe itching and gastrointestinal disturbances."

      "ACUTE EFFECTS

      Harmful if inhaled or swallowed.

      May cause eye irritation.

      May cause skin irritation.

      To the best of our knowledge, the chemical, physical, and toxicological properties have not been thoroughly investigated."

      "Chronic Overexposure:
      gastrointestinal problems, skin and hemorrhagic nephritis resulting from soluble gallium salts"

      There's nothing like a little hemorrhagic nephritis to make your day memorable.

      --
      George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
  86. If by Mad+Ogre · · Score: 1

    If liquid metal was the ticket for super cooling... We would be using it in high performance automotive applications. Last time I checked, my 600 horsepower Bronco still uses regular old coolant.

    --
    MadOgre.com
  87. Re:Uhm... Pay attention here... by GigsVT · · Score: 1

    DO have some obnoxious characteristics.

    Yeah, like eating through Aluminum. Just don't combine Gallium alloy cooling with Aluminum cases! That's a recipe for disaster.

    --
    I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
  88. hey, i gots a new product idear too. by untaken_name · · Score: 1

    Anyone know the going rate for getting your sales pitch posted as an article? If it's under $50 I think I'll try it myself.

  89. hfb by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Happy Fun Ball anyone?

  90. Re:Please send me your gay porn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thanks dude,

    Please feel free to call anytime as well.

    I like it when people call and hang up, usually 2am to 4 am is best for me.

  91. If your shopping for nuclear reactor cooling by Gauchito · · Score: 1

    isn't it time you ask yourself, "How badly DO I want to play Doom 3?"?

  92. but... by saladami · · Score: 1

    Can it find Sarah Connor?

  93. ... review, please ... by ninjagin · · Score: 1
    Okay, it's nice to know that this thing exists, but can we have a review of it by THG or Anandtech?

    Thanks,

    --
    .. pa-ra-bo-la, pa-ra-bo-la, 2 pi R, 2 pi R, where's your latus rectum, where's your latus rectum, 2 pi R
  94. Many people buy AMD. by Teh+Anonymous+Coward · · Score: 1

    Thanks for reminding me about a demo that's years old.

    I hate to be the person to burst someone's inteL bubble, but AMD's chips do shut off when they reach an unsafe temperature.

    What I'm curious about is, what on earth could you be doing that would cause a CPU to get too hot? Why is this such a BIG deal to you?

    --

    If I throw a stick, will you go away?
    1. Re:Many people buy AMD. by redheaded_stepchild · · Score: 1

      A rather neat article (granted it's from 2001) from Tom's Hardware about CPU heat: http://www6.tomshardware.com/cpu/20010917/index.ht ml

      And a video to go along with it: http://www.tomshardware.com/cgi-bin/downloads.m?id =1

      --
      Don't use the Troll mod just because you disagree with me.
    2. Re:Many people buy AMD. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yup, just like the the parent poster said, "years old". Did you really think the THG thing is not what he was talking about?

      Moron.

    3. Re:Many people buy AMD. by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 1

      Perhaps I had a computer shipped to me, and the heat sink loosened in transit.

      Intel would shut off, AMD would burn, unless the overheat was building up slow enough for it to catch it before it burned.

      The AMD thermal shutdown stuff is slow. It can cope with a fan failure - but a heatsink falling off, or even insufficient goop, on a system doing 100% intense CPU (e.g. rendering) means a slowed down or crashed Intel until you fix the problem, or a burned up AMD processor and often motherboard.

      --
      Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
  95. MHD pumps by gr8_phk · · Score: 1
    And with a conductive fluid you can use an MHD (magnetohydrodynamic) pump - i.e. a couple magnets and some electrodes in the liquid metal. Or there are non-contact inductive versions that are more complex.

    How toxic is this "Galinstan" compared to mercury?

  96. Re:Please send me your gay porn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dude, check his posting history for a special message.

  97. The thermodynamic motivation by uberdave · · Score: 1

    It's to keep the computer cool, as in "radical, awesome" cool rather than "frigid, arctic" cool.

  98. your own nuclear reactor by Masq666 · · Score: 1

    You've got to be some heavy duty overclocker to have the need for liquid metal cooling, and maybe you even need your own nuclear reactor to supply you PC with enough power. Personally i wish there was no need for cooling at all, at least no need for fans or water cooling. Thats why i love Mac's theire silent...

    --
    Bits of News Giving you the latest bits.
  99. Liquid Nails? by AVryhof · · Score: 1

    Nahh, it won't work...I tried to use Liquid Nails to attach my cooler to my Athlon...boy what a show! Who ever knew glue was flammable?

  100. Why not a CPU that can run at 1500C? by wsanders · · Score: 1

    Why not just engineer a CPU that can run really hot? I'm no semiconductor expert, but at some point I guess the electrons would start to boil off the semiconductor or otherwise misbehave?

    Or standardize the interface to the CPU so you could just hook it up to your hot water heater with standard 3/4" FIPS thread.

    --
    Give a man a fish and you have fed him for today. Teach a man to fish, and he'll say "WHERE'S MY FISH, YOU IDIOT?"
  101. Brilliant! by aristus · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Let's put conductive liquid near the motherboard and magnets right next to the hard drive! Extended warranties ahoy!

    --
    Sometimes seventeen/Syllables aren't enough to/Express a complete
    1. Re:Brilliant! by visgoth · · Score: 1

      You do realize that the electric motor that spins the platters, and the stepper motor that moves the read/write heads around contain magnets, right?

      --
      My patience is infinite, my time is not.
    2. Re:Brilliant! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heck, yeah! Dead hard drives are a great way to get strong neodymium magnets. Just make sure your fridge has a textured finish or you'll put dents in it by using the things. Also great for destroying credit cards and floppies, a couple swipes with a finger-crushing magnet is more through than scissors.

      Dismantle enough hard drives like that, and the screwdriver you're using for leverage becomes permanently magnetized. Bonus!

    3. Re:Brilliant! by Syrrh · · Score: 1

      Little known addendum: most CD drives have them too. If you get to where the laser lens is held, it's usually wrapped in a coil and stabilized between two tiny magnets.

    4. Re:Brilliant! by anagama · · Score: 1

      After recently extracting the neodymium magnets from a hard drive, I wanted MORE. So I picked up these bad boys. They're awsome! I made the mistake of letting them stick together -- impossible to pull apart. I had to resort to wedging one against the plastic floor mat under my chair and pushing on the other one to slide it off. I had a blood blister within 30 minutes of opening the package. Before that, I had thought this bone crusher would be fun. Now, I'd be terrified to have it around. It'll hold 587 pounds.

      Note -- I have no business relationship with this place -- google for neodymium or rare earth magnets for your own sources if you like.

      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    5. Re:Brilliant! by networkBoy · · Score: 1

      FWIW, hard drives haven't used head stepper motors for a _very_ long time.
      They use Voice coil actuators, which are more accurate, and incedentally use more powerful magnets, but contained in Mu metal housings that form and contain the magnetic field.
      -nB

      --
      whois gawk date unzip strip find touch finger mount join nice man top fsck grep eject more yes exit umount sleep dump
  102. diamonds are a geeks best friend by cinnamon+colbert · · Score: 1

    Diamond has the highest thermal conductivity of any known substance, and isotopically pure diamond is better then "ordinary" diamond.

    So, the best possible heatsink would be an isotopically pure single crystal diamond - and, it is chemically robust, non toxic, and , in a pinch, can be traded for a new video card to run quake..

    PS: for the chemically dis-informed, isotopically pure diamond, even if it could be obtained in more then microgram amounts, would be astronomically exspensive

  103. Leaking by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

    I don't *even* want to think what would happen in case of a coolant leakage. I mean, we know water conducts electricity, but we're talking metal here! (No I didn't RTFA, sorry)

  104. Mystery metal revealed: by Alsee · · Score: 4, Informative

    Another promising Austin startup, NanoCoolers, says it is nearly ready to offer evaluation samples of its processor-cooling modules, based on a liquid form of gallium and indium.

    An alloy of gallium and indium. It is liquid well below room temperature, with a boiling point in the ballpark of 2000 C.

    Another neat trick is that the system has no moving parts. The tubing passes through a magnetic feild. A pair of electrodes stick into the liquid metal and introduce a DC electric current, effectively creating a liquid electromagnet. The electric current through the magnetic feild is exactly the same as single winding of an electric motor - except the motor force is directly on the liquid metal itself. This force pumps the liquid around the cooling loop.

    Silent, and no failure prone moving parts.

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
    1. Re:Mystery metal revealed: by arivanov · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It will fail for other reasons.

      People keep forgetting why liquid metal cooling is being abandoned in the nuclear industry. Liquid metals tend to be extremely aggressive substances. A Gallium-Indium mix will dissolve nearly any metal or alloy over time. Ceramics and glass tend to get permeated and lose their mechanical properties. Frankly no idea about plastics.

      --
      Baker's Law: Misery no longer loves company. Nowadays it insists on it
      http://www.sigsegv.cx/
    2. Re:Mystery metal revealed: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
      Liquid metals tend to be extremely aggressive substances.,

      Don't judge it by that Terminator film.

    3. Re:Mystery metal revealed: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no moving parts? so that fan doesn't move? so all this does is move the heat from a heat sink over the CPU to a heat sink 3 inches away? Wow, inovation worthy of Microsoft.

    4. Re:Mystery metal revealed: by Rei · · Score: 2, Informative

      Liquid metal cooling has not been abandoned by the nuclear industry, and I'm not sure where you got the idea that it had. There are many liquid sodium breeders out there (just not in the US) (now, liquid sodium, *there* is an aggressive substance!). Some of the most promising next-generation reactors are lead or lead-bismuth. While molten lead will corrode many things over time (as the Soviets learned in earlier subs), most of its corrosive properties are dealt with using proper materials for construction.

      Oh, and the original post was wrong (partially): Yes, nuclear reactors partially use liquid metals because they're good conductors of heat, but the main reason that they're used instead of water is that water is a moderator, and you use metal in breeder reactors where you want high energy neutrons colliding with U238 to produce plutonium.

      --
      It's a Cyrillic alphabet. It's like all those keys you never push on a calculator.
    5. Re:Mystery metal revealed: by dbIII · · Score: 2, Informative
      A Gallium-Indium mix will dissolve nearly any metal or alloy over time.
      It's called liquid metal embrittlement, and it's the reason you can't take mercury thermometers on aircraft. Liquid gets into cracks, attacks the microscopic area at the crack tip, and the crack gets longer and sharper (so less load is required to make the crack bigger) until the whole thing goes. One steel beam under load exposed to molten lead in a factory only lasted a few seconds before a spectacular failure.

      If the liquid can't dissolve the material it doesn't happen, but it's surprising what can be dissolved. Mercury can dissolve gold for instance, which is why it is used to extract gold from ore, and why a gold ring exposed to mercury (eg. as described in Mark Twain's "Roughing It") will turn small scratches into cracks and fall off.

      To sum up, it depends on what reaction there will be between the liquid and the solid. In the nuclear industry sodium is used, and sodium is just what you want to use to do quick liquid metal embrittlement experiments on steel. It raised the costs to keep the sodium contained.

    6. Re:Mystery metal revealed: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong....Do you still have a horse and buggy? They said that about cars years ago too...

  105. Oh, I get it... by mr.newt · · Score: 1

    Each application has issues with high heat flux densities and high power dissipation, but each also has their own unique issues that need to be addressed.

    This is one of those generated articles, right?

    If not, /. should be ashamed of itself.

  106. Hardly insightful... You looked for "mercury"... by Svartalf · · Score: 1

    And the answer to your question would be: Yes, I know something more; and apparently you didn't take my advice to google for Geratherm or Galinstan...

    http://64.233.187.104/search?q=cache:YP4EjsayVjQJ: imartinez.etsin.upm.es/lab1/Thermometry/Mercury%25 20problems%2520and%2520alternatives.doc+eutectic+g alinstan+geratherm&hl=en&client=firefox-a
    http://64.233.187.104/search?q=cache:llknBUqBdLgJ: hydrogen.physik.uni-wuppertal.de/publications/rsi7 3031564.pdf+eutectic+galinstan+cooling&hl=en&clien t=firefox-a
    http://www.geratherm.com/en/technologie_galinstan

    Those were what was pulled up from a Google query of "galinstan cooling". Had you used the suggested search topics that I gave, you'd have found the same things I did. It solidifies at -4 deg F. Don't you think that it would work rather well in place of mercury in a cooling capacity?

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  107. Okay, but it's solid at room... by Svartalf · · Score: 1

    And it's violently reactive with pretty much everything in existence. Not useful, and not what they're using. I know for a fact that it's not.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  108. I prefer liquid silicon cooling by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

    NO CARRIER

    --
    Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
  109. No, but it'll work with copper... by Svartalf · · Score: 1

    It will pretty much tin the surface and that's it... If you leak the metal, then YES, it's a real problem. The resultant amalgamation of Aluminum or Magnesium when exposed to water will produce a lot of heat and Aluminum or Magnesium Hydroxide.

    I didn't say it wasn't whack (But then, isn't water, oil, alcohol, Liquid Nitrogen or Fluorinert cooling whack too?) it was just that it was feasible and usable for some applications.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  110. Not very toxic. by mbessey · · Score: 2, Informative

    'How toxic is this "Galinstan" compared to mercury?'

    Not very toxic at all. That is kind of THE POINT in replacing mercury in thermometers, after all.

    From the MSDS
    Inhalation: The extremely low vapor pressure of Galinstan makes absorption through inhalation negligible.
    Ingestion: No adverse health effect has been observed or reported. Galinstan passes through the digestive system without effect.
    Skin: Skin oils may be reduced through continuous contact.
    Eyes: Direct contact with the surface of the eye may cause irritation. Eye protection is recommended when potential direct eye contact is possible.

    So don't take a bath in it or anything.

    -Mark

    1. Re:Not very toxic. by Strontium-90 · · Score: 1

      I also took a look at the MSDS (the one available on the company webpage) and I'm still a little bit skeptical. (FYI, IAAC (I am a chemist)) From the MSDS: "Special hints concerning hazards for the human and environment: So far as the usual regulations of industrial hygiene are adhered to, the product handling does not involve any appreciable risk." It seems like this is being marketed outside of the usual industrial hygiene settings. Also from the MSDS: "Instruction for the physician: Any specific measures to be taken are not known. Carry out a symptomatic therapy." It seems to me that they don't entirely know *what* this stuff will do in a biological setting. It appears that metallic Ga, In, and Sn (that's Gallium, Indium, and Tin... the components of Galinstan... geeze, what an uninventive name) aren't particularly toxic. But when ingested and exposed to digestive acids, I don't know that all of these metals will remain in their metallic states. Basically, although ingesting this may be safer than drinking a thermometer's worth of mercury, I don't think I'd call it "safe". For things that are used around my kids, "not ver toxic at all" isn't so reassuring.

    2. Re:Not very toxic. by badmammajamma · · Score: 1

      It also wouldn't be the first time a company said something was safe that wasn't. No, that never happens...

      --
      Any man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood. -- H. L. Mencken
    3. Re:Not very toxic. by joto · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I don't know why you absolutely want your kids to take apart your computer and eat the contents. I'm sure you have other toxic things in your house too...

      (Ever wondered what you use in your dishwasher? Or what some of the stuff in your garage does?)

      "Not very toxic at all" is quite comfortable for me. Of course, I also want to know how it reacts in case of fire, if it destroys my floor if it ever leaks out, if it's environmentally friendly, etc.. But according to the MSDS I shouldn't need to worry about any of those...

    4. Re:Not very toxic. by mbessey · · Score: 2, Informative

      I'm guessing that you don't have much experience with reading MSDSs. As these sorts of sheets go, this one is very reassuring. The constant references to "industrial hygiene" are in there because they're marketing this stuff as a component to go into finished products. In normal circumstances, consumers will never come into direct contact with it.

      Most of the "safety" instructions are things like "wash your hands after handling", "don't pour this into your eye", etc. I suspect that isotonic Saline solution is probably the only thing you'll find that has a less scary MSDS. And maybe not even that - if you drink enough Saline, you'll vomit, which wouldn't happen with Galinstan.

      The instruction to "carry out symptomatic therapy" is standard boilerplate for these kinds of documents. Normally, no treatment would be expected to be necessary, but if someone shows an allergic reaction (for example), a doctor should know to treat that as just what it seems to be.

      And as far as digesting the stuff goes, neither Indium or Gallium is appreciably attacked by weak HCl, so no worries on that score. You might absorb some Tin through your stomach, but the amount you could possibly absorb would be really small, and Tin isn't very toxic, either (they do line food cans with it, you know).

      -Mark

    5. Re:Not very toxic. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Tin isn't very toxic, either (they do line food cans with it, you know).

      Not to mention its use in toothpaste until they changed the abrasive so that sodium fluoride could be used. Stannous Fluoride
  111. Coolant Leak by prurientknave · · Score: 1

    I can't wait for viruses to create star trek like coolant explosions on personal computers.

    OMG TECH SUPPORT BOMBAY! the liquid metal coolant exploded and peeled off half of my face!

  112. No, you need contact... by Svartalf · · Score: 2, Informative

    MHD pumps work via the Lorentz Force and therefore need electrode contact with the fluid at right angles to the magnetic field.

    Keep in mind, that most MHD pumps are at best 30% efficent, so you'll need a little more juice to move something like Galinstan. The only problem with using traditional pumping with something like that is that it wets every surface except things coated with Gallium Oxide and it alloys with most all metals to some small or large extent (You flatly do not want to expose Aluminum or Magnesium to this stuff, it'll rot it like Mercury does...). The only decent pump is going to be a MHD pump or an inductively driven Tesla style pump to begin with. Anything else will get contaminated with the pumped liquid or expose it to eventual oxidization...

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    1. Re:No, you need contact... by gr8_phk · · Score: 1
      " therefore need electrode contact with the fluid at right angles to the magnetic field."

      No offense, but that's not true. You can wrap a series of coils along the length of a pipe in a 3 phase configuration (i.e. ABCABCABCABC). There should also be a ferrous material between each phase to help the field get into the pipe radially. It also helps to run a ferrous rod down the middle of the pipe (liquid all around it) to help pull the flux in. By applying a 3-phase current in the phases, you induce circular currents in the fluid while also producing some radial magnetic flux. This results in pushing the fluid down the pipe. It's similar to an induction motor. The field moves down the length of the pipe - one set of coils per cycle and there is slip between that speed and the fluid velocity. The best part is that you can select any non-magnetic material that won't react with the fluid to make the pipe and coat the core rod.

      I recall reading about a nuclear power plant that used one of these to pump liquid sodium coolant for several decades without maintenance for the pump. Why would it need maintenance? It's just a bunch of coils. And the efficiency of a pump isn't much concern when you're attached to a power plant ;-)

  113. Site slow... by Pantera61 · · Score: 1

    Dang. Site won't load up because it's being /.

    1. Re:Site slow... by dfm3 · · Score: 1

      Dang. Site won't load up because it's being /.

      Yeah, I bet their server couldn't handle all the extra traffic, and it overheated...

  114. Real men use phase change coolers by bradbury · · Score: 1

    Real men use phase change coolers as defined by Drexler and Henson in US Patent #4,759,404 also briefly discussed in Section 11.5 of Nanosystems . That is because the heat capacity of solids going to liquids is higher than that of liquids going to gases. Of course the engineering of a system to circulate nanoscale ice cubes within ammonia (or methanol or ethanol) and refreezing the water back into ice cubes in the "condenser" is slightly more difficult than the engineering required for heat pipes.

    1. Re:Real men use phase change coolers by joto · · Score: 1
      Real men use phase change coolers as defined by Drexler and Henson in US Patent #4,759,404 also briefly discussed in Section 11.5 of Nanosystems . That is because the heat capacity of solids going to liquids is higher than that of liquids going to gases.

      Nah, real men doesn't like these newfangled nanotech thingies. Real men like it simple and robust. A suitably manly solution is to just drop the computer into liquid nitrogen.

    2. Re: Real men use phase change coolers by bradbury · · Score: 1

      The LN2 approach has been done. I believe it has been documented on /. if not elsewhere. It is 40+ year old technology (my father used to bring home LN2 from the lab to play with when I was a child). Of course really *real* men cool their CPUs with H2 ice-cubes circulating in LHe. They still meet the solid-to-liquid vs. liquid-to-gas phase change criteria which LN2 does not.

  115. heh by lcde · · Score: 1

    "Ahh mercury, sweetest of the transition metals"

    --
    :%s/teh/the/g
  116. other eutectic alloys? by stereoroid · · Score: 1

    Galinstan(TM) has already been mentioned, but what about Low 117, aka AIM 47, CerroLOW 117, Indalloy 117, or Ostalloy 117?
    - Bismuth 44.7%
    - Lead 22.6%
    - Tin 8.3%
    - Cadmium 5.3%
    - Indium 19.1%

    melts at 117F (47C). If that's too low, this site has other variations. Low 136 (58C) has no Cadmium, which has to be a good thing for safety in this application, eh?

    --
    (this is not a .sig)
    1. Re:other eutectic alloys? by stereoroid · · Score: 1

      Ah: one small problem. Here's a small-quantity pricelist. 25 pounds of Low 136 costs $2374, but you could buy in bulk: $19,105 gets you 250lb (4000oz), which makes it $4.77 per ounce. How much do you need per heatpipe, say 3-4 ounce? Anyone fancy setting up shop? 8-)

      --
      (this is not a .sig)
  117. Incorrect. by HaloZero · · Score: 1

    That is not 'they stuff to which [I] refer'. It's called Fluorinert [PDF DataSheet]. Fluroinert has a typical boiling point of about 215 degrees Celcius. 3M developed it, and this Hampton Research company apparently resells it.

    --
    Informatus Technologicus
    1. Re:Incorrect. by bugnuts · · Score: 1

      Ah, thank you. I thought he was referring to Novec 1230 (couldn't find it on preliminary search until I entered "halon alternative").

      I had investigated this as a coolant since it's non-wetting, thus leaks wouldn't damage components.

    2. Re:Incorrect. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "He" ... "You" ... you know who I meant. :)

  118. Re:Um, details? It's probably a sea engine. by Tacky+the+Penguin · · Score: 1

    ... how the pump actually works (it's magnets! doesn't count) ...

    It's probably a sea engine:
    http://www.rexresearch.com/emships/empship.htm

    It works like magnetohydrodynamics (MHD) in reverse. Another way to think of it is as a rail gun with a liquid projectile.

    A magnetic field is applied to a tube full of liquid, and electrodes are used to cause current to flow perpendicular to that. The result is a net force perpendicular to both the magnetic field and the electric current.

    The actual sea engine uses alternating current, but the principle is similar.

  119. Re:But.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You simply voice your concerns to the govenor of California, and get him to deal with it through the 'usual' channels.

  120. Unlike US designs? No liquid sodium? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about this US design. Not a research reactor,
    graphite moderated and used masonite(!) for part
    of the radiation shield (since we're talking about
    flammibility). Far from a research design, in fact
    it was the longest running US reactor, period:

    http://b-reactor.org/hist-toc.htm

    I can't find the PDF with the schematics of various
    systems right now, but it's worth looking up.
    The link is an HTML version of the original, written
    by Westinghouse IRRC. It's scary, IMHO! Huge
    enviromental disaster too.

    Or how about this US design. The FFTF (Fast Flux
    Test Facility):

    http://www.tri-cityherald.com/tch/local/story/2893 364p-2929039c.html

    Notice the date... and it actually wasn't decomissioned
    until just last year. This was a sodium cooled reactor,
    also at Hanford where "B" reactor was. And half a dozen
    more really scary dangerous reactors. And Plutonium
    processing. And single wall waste tanks (that leaked
    into the ground water) that no one is really sure what
    they contain _exactly_...

  121. Re:That's a little too much... poisonous! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As far as I know galium ( and alloys ) should be extremly poisonous.

  122. like Windows Safe Mode by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't liquid metal cooling a feature of any PC as long as it gets hot enough?

  123. This could mean... by Eternal_Flame · · Score: 1

    We might see G5 powerbooks yet ;)

    From what I know, the only thing thats holding Apple back from using the new high-performence IBM PPC processors in a laptop is the tremendous amount of heat they produce. Could this be the solution?

    --
    ~You laugh because I'm different, I laugh because I'm insane~
  124. Re:Uhm... Pay attention here... by stienman · · Score: 1

    Sodium's not liquid at room temps or anywhere near water's boiling point.

    That's true. Anywhere near boiling water Sodium is more explosive than liquid.

    -Adam

  125. Re: site is already slow... 404 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    404 for now.
    Sorry...

    So, there is a solution for cooling x86 technology anyways...

  126. Doesn't touch certain things... by Svartalf · · Score: 3, Informative

    It wets the surfaces of anything, including glass and plastic, but stuff like Gallium Oxide. A thin coating of GaO2 is present in the new non-mercury thermometers so you can actually read them.

    All in all, it's obnoxious, but it's not anywhere near as bad as NaK alloys or liquid Na- there's a good reason why they abandoned that stuff as it'd attack almost anything in existence in short term. Same goes for Mercury- save that it's pretty damn toxic in addition to being an aggressive metal.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    1. Re:Doesn't touch certain things... by Muhammar · · Score: 2, Informative

      Gallium is really expensive material. Something like $1200-1500/1kg for a common grade Ga metal.

      Galium-indium or Galium-tin liquid alloys have density values around 6kg/L. Since galium makes the major portion of these alloys, a pint of the liquid metall will cost around $4000.

      By looking at their pictures they will need loads of it (to go through the pipes and through the heat radiator) so the whole thing is going to be pretty dear.

      --
      I doubt that we will ever figure out - and I suspect that even if we did figure out we couldn't do much about it
  127. No cad, but the lead's a safety hazard... by Svartalf · · Score: 1

    One almost as bad as the Cadmium. Worse yet, you have to maintain 136 deg F or hotter or it solidifies. Galinstan's about the only one that's liquid at room temp and is non-toxic and boils at around 2000 deg F.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  128. The problem is... by Svartalf · · Score: 1

    ...that a CPU would cook at 100 deg C. Most of them are rated to about 150-160 deg F. The reason why one uses water is that it's cheaper than the alternatives, has the highest heat capacity and specific heat for the amount of trouble you have to go through to use it.

    Nice idea, but it won't work out the way you think it will- the water will heat up to the failure point of the CPU before ever hitting the boiling point- unless you lower the vapor pressure of the system, and then you've got issues with that as well. (The reason that you don't see water based refrigeration systems is not that water's a bad refrigerant- it's just that it's swept volume is exponentially higher than Freons, etc. posssess.)

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  129. I was thinking about computers that use by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    VACUUM TUBES!
    IBM701 is cool, it used CRTs for memory!

    Su Sai, preserving karma, such as it is

  130. Yep... by Svartalf · · Score: 1

    It's NOT going to be cheap. Though I wouldn't expect that you'd need a pint of this stuff to achieve your desired cooling system. I'd think you could use something along the lines of about 200-400g of the alloy and get a decent cooling system. Not cheap, by any stretch of the imagination, but it could allow you to quietly air-cool some hot CPU or GPU all the same.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  131. That is kind of silly. by Noose+For+A+Neck · · Score: 1

    Why not just use a liquid-vapor phase evaporative cooling cycle?

    --

    Software piracy is victimless theft.

  132. Acetone by Alex+Belits · · Score: 1

    I am writing this response on the box with two Athlons, cooled by acetone thermosyphons (thermosyphon is a heat pipe without a wick -- it relies on gravity instead of surface tension).

    Actually the box where Firefox is running, is a 1u server with both thermosyphons squeezed into 1.75", and I am sitting in front of an ancient P3-450 that I use as a "thin client".

    --
    Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
  133. Redundant? by oldosadmin · · Score: 1

    (burning karma)

    I LOVE it when I have the 10th post and I'm redundant. Wow, I must try awfully hard. Good job, mods. Keep slashbotting.

    --
    Jay | http://oldos.org
  134. Here's one reason why it might be a bad idea by Scud · · Score: 1

    http://alsos.wlu.edu/information.asp?id2=1857&past =2

    Fermi I was a Liquid-Metal Fast-Breeder reactor (LMFBR) that had part of its core melt down when a cooling pipe was obstructed by a metal plate that broke off.

    Since the cooling medium was liquid sodium, which "reacts" with air or water, any breach of the reactor would likely be followed by a fire or explosion.

    And since it was a fast-breeder it contained weapons-grade plutonium. Any explosion could be followed by low-level nuclear detonation.

    How likely this is is subject to debate, so don't take it as a sure thing.

    And we make our containment building pretty tough so there's no guarantee that the reactor would be breeched either.

    But since Detroit was nearby (downwind?) hence the book and the song...

    Proponents of nuclear power will tell you that only two rods out of its 100 melted. What they don't say is that several rods warped, making them hard(er) to remove (there are no control rods in a LMFBR so you moderate it by removing fuel rods) and these remaining fuel rods were in danger of melting as well.

    It was a pretty close call.

    Keep in mind that Chernobyl "only" lost some of its rods, nor did it have a nuclear detonation either. In any case, you wouldn't want to live next door :)

    http://www.nuke.hun.edu.tr/english/links/lmfbr.htm l

    --
    I dream in binary.
  135. Re: scitoys.com is a rip-off by macraig · · Score: 1

    After checking out their liquid-metal pages, I happened to visit their magnets page; I couldn't believe how much they were charging for neodymium magnets. Jeez... call or surf to All Magnetics in Anaheim, CA, and you can get those same magnets straight from the horse's mouth for a fraction of what scitoys.com is demanding. If scitoys' liguid metal pricing is as unfair as for their magnets, go somewhere else to get the stuff.

    I only know about the magnet pricing and All Magnetics because I bought a magnetic cat door recently, anf the mfr. wanted $15 apiece for extra collar triggers (cheap little plastic shell with a magnet, that would eventually break apart and disgorge the magnet). I decided I could make better for less, and I did.

  136. my thoughts on liquid metal cooling by pmorcos · · Score: 1

    I had thought of this along with a friend/colleague last year and ended up concerned about specific heat.
    I had calculated that a gallium/Indium ratio of 75.5%/24.5% which has a known melting point of 15.7C and density of 6.35 would have a specific Heat of .08 cal/g-C (at 25C) and thermal conductivity of 0.11 cal/s-cm-C. Water has a specific Heat value of 1.00! But it's thermal conductivity is 2 logs lower at 0.015. All in all, I decided that they cancel themselves out. The elctromagnetic motor may be the key to MOVING the heat and giving one that 1/2 log or better difference in cooling.

    BTW...It's a little annoying to see people questioning the usefulness of such a device and questioning whether it is "overkill". It is not overkill as the "typical" high-end cpu generates 100W of power in an area the size of your pinky finger's nail. by definition, the more transistors they pack...the higher it will go. Water and fans and aluminum/copper heatsinks just aren't going to cut it during this next log increase in transistor density.

    Also, nickel should tolerate the mixture fairly well. At least long enough to for today's throw-away computer society. I don't know about you guys but I swap my setup every 8 months! :(
    my first two cents on slashdot.

  137. Correct by ciphertext · · Score: 1

    You are right. The American submarine nuclear powerplants that have been blessed by the Navy's review process, do not include liquid sodium (or sodium/potassium mixture) coolants. I don't believe that there are any liquid metal cooled designs still commissioned either. All of the designs are liquid water cooled designs. Amazing how the sealed units are placed in the hulls of the submarines. The main problem with having a sodium metal cooled reactor design on a naval vessel is the violent reaction that sodium has when exposed to water. If the Nuclear Regulatory body for the U.S were to operate at the same efficiency and with the same practice as the regulatory agency for the DON then we would have a workable nuclear power option. The DON definitely knows what it is doing when it comes to reactor design approval! I'm not familiar with Soviet Naval vessel reactor designs. I do know that they had issues with fuel cell design and control. But, I was never aware of issues surrounding the reactor's cooling process.

    While some might argue that a desktop wouldn't be exposed to water, the sodium could leak and be exposed to water. Not a safe situation.

    --
    To know is to have knowledge....to understand is to be enlightened.
  138. That'd be seriously erroneous by Tau+Zero · · Score: 1
    In the case of a cooling system, the heat flux will be higher than with water or alcohol (heatpipe...). The specific heat's waaay lower, but the thermal conductivity (as in the rate the heat's absorbed or dissipated...) is much, much higher.
    Heat pipes work by phase change. The thermal conductivity of your gallium alloy doesn't matter much, because it's competing against a thin layer of water or alcohol absorbed on a metallic wick. As a bonus, when the liquid evaporates it can travel to the cold end with almost no pressure loss, meaning next to zero temperature drop.

    Convection just hasn't got anything on phase-change heat transfer.

    --
    Time is Nature's way of keeping everything from happening at once... the bitch.
  139. Liquid Metal Research Experience by TySmith · · Score: 1

    As part of some research work I was doing for the Spallation Neutron Source (http://www.sns.gov/) here in Oak Ridge, I ran across a lot of information about the nature of liquid metal cooling systems. I will try and list them for you all: 1) Magnetically driven pumps are inefficient, on the order of about 1% total pump efficiency 2) Liquid Metals (especially Mercury) have cavitation problems with use traditional centrifugal pumps. 3) Liquid metals are not as terribly corrosive as you all have suggested. Mercury and GIT (a eutectic alloy of Gallium, Indium and Tin) will operate for a very long time in Stainless steel. 5) A GIT alloy is probably the best bet for a design utilizing a liquid metal. If it were to be allowed to come in contact with the chip (I.E. reduced overall thermal resistance) it would form an oxide layer with excellent heat transfer capabilities. I would Love to see some people do some research into this problem as it seems to me to be very interesting. I am in the middle to using GIT to enhance the function of a sensor I am working on and already it has yielded heat transfer far superior to any type of ceramic or oxide mixture.