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DIY CPU Thermal Grease, Using Diamond Dust

tygerstripes writes "The dysfunctor has spotted an impressive project over on InventGeek.com; an innovative chap has developed his own thermal compound for improved CPU cooling, using diamond dust — the best available material for thermal conduction — as the key ingredient. In spite of the quick-&-dirty DIY nature of the project, the gains in cooling performance are remarkable, especially considering the material cost was only $33. Given the price many enthusiasts will pay for a top-end cooler, it's easy to imagine this product coming to market quite soon."

6 of 210 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Diamond dust is cheap? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    not in the incredibly low grade diamonds that aren't used in jewellery. Very small, damaged stones with poor colour (the kind that don't even qualify for the 4 C's) are used in industrial settings - ex. diamond saw blades.

  2. Existing for several decades. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    This technology is not new. Diamonds have been used as heat sinks and thermal conductors for processors in sattelites since the 70s (natural diamonds in big sizes, so expensive). Since about 1992 there have been succesful efforts to sinter diamond dust (waste material from the polishing process of gemstones, and now increasingly synthethic diamonds, both are not expensive) for use in thermal conductors.

  3. Re:Diamond dust is cheap? by Enleth · · Score: 5, Informative

    Nope. Jewellery is nowadays just a little part of the worldwide diamond industry, and while it often uses natural, mined diamonds (mainly because some weird people with bucketloads of cash want to be sure that the diamond they wear is natural and mined, even though it is perfectly possible to produce a diamond of equal aesthetic value in a lab), which are quite expensive, the biggest demand for diamonds is in the tools industry. Most of it goes into production of diamond-tipped cutting tools (which are actually coated in diamond powder or small diamond shards, not made of solid crystal) for the market, the rest is used to make specialized cutting and grinding elements in machines that produce solid carbide tools.

    Just check eBay or your local hardware store for the prices of diamond-tipped tools - they're only about twice as expensive as high-quality HSS and often cheaper than good solid carbide cutters, because they're actually just HSS with some diamond powder coating, easy and quick to produce.

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  4. Slashdot or SlashMold? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    That guide was posted a while ago...

    Here is a company that sells it premixed and has been around for several years.
    http://www.innovationcooling.com/

    An idea that was recently (2 days ago) discussed on Hack a Day was using diamond stropping paste
    http://hackaday.com/2009/08/03/diamond-thermal-paste/

    Here is a reliable review of Diamond thermal paste.
    http://hardwarelogic.com/news/137/ARTICLE/2752/2008-03-03.html

    As far as just hoping on Ebay and buying your own, good luck. Finding a distributor for your dust and suspension will take you some time.

    I think the most important thing people should consider and hasn't been mentioned so far is that the equation for heat transport is linear. Changing the adulterant in the suspension will be more noticeable as the temp increases. IMHO for most people it's a total waste of materials, for some people it's a decent alternative, and for a very small number of people it's a good idea to spend the time locating materials to make a batch.

  5. Re:Finally by snikulin · · Score: 5, Informative

    Commercially available here

  6. Mod parent up! by feldhaus · · Score: 5, Informative

    There are clear shenanigans in play, that or (more likely) methodological errors.

    The type of paste you use has very little difference. Let's not forget this comparison which includes toothpaste.