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The World's First CPU Liquid Cooler Using Nanofluids

An anonymous reader writes "CPU water cooling may be more expensive than air cooling, but it is quieter and moves the bulk away from your CPU. It's also improving, as Zalman has just demonstrated with the announcement of the Reserator 3. Zalman is claiming that the Reserator 3 is the world's first liquid cooler to use nanofluids. What's that then? It involves adding refrigerant nanoparticles to the fluid that gets pumped around inside the cooler transporting the heat produced by a CPU to the radiator and fan where it is expelled. By using the so-called nanofluid, Zalman believes it can offer better cooling, and rates the Reserator 3 as offering up to 400W of cooling while remaining very quiet. The fluid and pump is supplemented by a dual copper radiator design and "quadro cooling path," which consists of two copper pipes sitting behind the fan and surrounded by the radiators. The heatsink sitting on top of the CPU is a micro-fin copper base allowing very quick transfer of heat to the nanofluid above."

3 of 79 comments (clear)

  1. Nanoparticles? Pshaw, son: by Hartree · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We've been using Dihrdrogen Monoxide for cooling for decades. And it has angstrom size particles!

    Is this guy claiming his way is better because he's tossing something the relative size of beach balls into his kiddie ball pit?

    ( ;) for the humor impaired.)

  2. I love Slashdort! by For+a+Free+Internet · · Score: 5, Funny

    I like reading articles that are actually paid advertisements! Whithout Slashdort, which I like to call the "Facebook of the Internet," how would I know what to buy? Dice Holdings is my GOD!

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  3. They *may* be on to something by arielCo · · Score: 5, Informative

    As ridiculously shallow as the TFA is, there is some work on nanoparticle-liquid suspensions:

    http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S135943111200511X

    Nanoparticles in Thermoelectric Power Plant Cooling Fluids

    Nanoparticle Additives Boost Industrial Cooling Systems (That Means Saving Energy)

    I'll try to make sense of it (can someone more competent provide a Cliff's-notes version, please?).

    Meanwhile, sorry to rain on the bash party.

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