Computer Cooling Methods
Computer Cooling Methods
Jump to: navigation, search Computer cooling is the practice of relieving heat, a potentially damaging byproduct of operation, from electronic computers.
A stock AMD heatsink mounted on to a motherboard. A computer system unit's many components produce large amounts of heat during operation, including, but not limited to integrated circuits such as CPUs, chipset and graphics cards, along with hard drives. This heat must be dissipated in order to keep these components within their safe operating temperatures, and both manufacturing methods and additional parts are used to keep the heat at a safe level. This is done mainly using heat sinks to increase the surface area which dissipates heat, fans to speed up the exchange of air heated by the computer parts for cooler ambient air, and in some cases softcooling, the throttling of computer parts in order to decrease heat generation. Overheated parts generally exhibit a shorter maximum life-span and may give sporadic problems resulting in system freezes or crashes.
Contents
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1 Causes of heat build up 2 Damage prevention 3 System cooling o 3.1 Air cooling 3.1.1 In desktops 3.1.2 In high density computing 3.1.3 In laptop computing
3.2 Liquid submersion cooling 3.3 Waste heat reduction 3.4 Conductive and radiative cooling 4 Spot cooling o 4.1 Passive heat sink cooling o 4.2 Active heat sink cooling o 4.3 Peltier cooling or thermoelectric cooling o 4.4 Watercooling o 4.5 Heat pipe o 4.6 Phase-change cooling o 4.7 Liquid nitrogen o 4.8 Softcooling 5 Cooling and overclocking o 5.1 Heat sink lapping o 5.2 Use of exotic thermal conductive compounds o 5.3 Use of rounded cables o 5.4 Airflow optimization 6 References
o o o
7 External links
After several years of use, the dust on this laptop CPU cooler has rendered the computer unusable due to rapid overheating. In operation, the temperature levels of a computer's components will rise until the temperature gradient between the computer parts and their surroundings is such that the rate at which heat is lost to the surroundings is equal to the rate at which heat is being produced by the electronic component, and thus the temperature of the component reaches equilibrium. For reliable operation, the equilibrium temperature must be sufficiently low for the structure of the computer's circuits to survive.
Additionally, the normal operation of cooling methods can be hindered by other causes, such as:
Dust acting as a thermal insulator and impeding airflow, thereby reducing heat sink and fan performance. Poor airflow (including turbulence) due to friction that reduces the amount of air flowing through a case, possibly causing stable whirlpools of hot air in certain areas. Poor heat transfer, e.g. due to a lack or poor application of thermal compounds.
Software showing Temperatures, Fan Speeds and Voltages are within threshold. It is common practice to include thermal sensors in the design of certain computer parts, e.g. CPUs and GPUs, along with internal logic that shuts down the computer if reasonable bounds are exceeded. It is however unwise to rely on such preventative measures, as it is not universally implemented, and may not prevent repeated incidents from permanently damaging the integrated circuit. The design of an integrated circuit may also incorporate features to shut down parts of the circuit when it is idling, or to scale back the clock speed under low workloads or high temperatures, with the goal of reducing both power use and heat generation.
[edit] In desktops Desktop computers typically use one or more fans for heat management. Almost all desktop power supplies have at least one fan to exhaust air from the case. Most manufacturers recommend bringing cool, fresh air in at the bottom front of the case, and exhausting warm air from the top rear. If there is more air being forced into the system than being pumped out (due to an imbalance in the number of fans), this is referred to as a "positive" airflow, as the pressure inside the unit would be higher than outside. A balanced or neutral airflow is the most efficient[citation needed], although a slightly positive airflow results in less dust build up if dust filters are used. With recent researches and studies, some companies are making noiseless computers. [edit] In high density computing Data centers typically contain many racks of flat 1U servers. Air is drawn in at the front of the rack and exhausted at the rear. Because data centers typically contain such large numbers of computers and other power-consuming devices, they risk overheating of the various components if no additional measures are taken. Thus, extensive HVAC systems are used. Often a raised floor is used so the area under the floor may be used as a large plenum for cooled air and power cabling. [edit] In laptop computing Laptops are typically made to rest on a solid surface. Unfortunately a flat surface is the least desirable angle to dissipate heat, lower temperatures are achieved by a chimney effect when a laptop is set at an angle from horizontal. It is important to note that laptops are neither designed for nor should they be used on surfaces or in spaces which impede the free flow of air, and heat damage and/or thermal shutdown/slow-down may occur. Laptop stands are accessories which, besides raising the laptops screen to another height, are also meant to reduce airflow restrictions.
electrically conductive, it may be necessary to insulate certain parts of components susceptible to electromagnetic interference, such as the CPU.[1] For these reasons, it is preferred that the liquid be dielectric. Liquids commonly used in this manner include various liquids invented and manufactured for this purpose by 3M, such as Fluorinert. Various oils, including but not limited to cooking, motor and silicone oils have all been successfully used for cooling personal computers.[2] Evaporation can pose a problem, and the liquid may require either to be regularly refilled or sealed inside the computer's enclosure. Liquid may also slowly seep into and damage components, particularly capacitors, causing a computer that initially functions to fail after hours or days immersed.[citation needed]
This involves attaching a block of machined metal to the part that needs cooling. An adhesive may be used, or more commonly for a personal computer CPU, a clamp is used to affix the heat sink tight over the chip, with a thermally conductive pad or gel spread inbetween. This block usually has fins and ridges to increase its surface area. The heat conductivity of metal is much better than that of air, and its ability to radiate heat is better than that of the component part it is protecting (usually an integrated circuit or CPU). Until recently, fan cooled aluminium heat sinks were the norm for desktop computers. Today many heat sinks feature copper base-plates or are entirely made of copper, and mount fans of considerable size and power. Heat sinks tend to get less effective with time due to the build up of dust between their metal fins, which reduces the efficiency with which the heat sink transfers heat to the ambient air. Dust build up is commonly countered with canned air, which are used to blow away the dust along with any other unwanted excess material. Passive heat sinks are commonly found on older CPUs, parts that do not get very hot (such as the chipset), and low-power computers.
Since TEC's are active heat pumps, they are capable of cooling PC components below ambient temperatures, which is impossible with common radiator cooled watercooling systems and heatpipe HSF's.
[edit] Watercooling
Main article: Water cooling While originally limited to mainframe computers, computer watercooling has become a practice largely associated with overclocking in the form of either manufactured "kits" or in the form of DIY setups assembled from individually gathered parts. Lately watercooling has seen increasing use in pre-assembled desktop computers, most notably Apple's Power Mac G5.
above the boiling vessel. This system is totally passive and requires no pumps or compressors.
[edit] Softcooling
Softcooling is the practice of utilizing software to take advantage of CPU power saving technologies to minimize energy use. This is done using halt instructions to turn off or put in standby state CPU subparts that aren't being used or by underclocking the CPU.
This is less of a problem with new computers that use Serial ATA which has a much thinner cable.
Supply cool air to the hot components as directly as possible. Examples are air snorkels and tunnels that feed outside air directly and exclusively to the CPU or GPU cooler. For example, the BTX case design prescribes a CPU air tunnel. Expel warm air as directly as possible. Examples are: Conventional PC (ATX) power supplies blow the warm air out the back of the case. Many dual-slot graphics card designs blow the warm air through the cover of the adjacent slot. There are also some aftermarket coolers that do this. Some CPU cooling designs blow the warm air directly towards the back of the case, where it can be ejected by a case fan (for example Arctic Cooling's Freezer 64 Pro). Air that has already been used to spot-cool a component should not be reused to spot-cool a different component (this follows from the previous items). The ATX case design can be said to violate this rule, since the power supply gets its "cool" air from the inside of the case, where it has been warmed up already. The BTX case design also violates this rule, since it uses the CPU cooler's exhaust to cool the chipset and often the graphics card. Prefer cool intake air, avoid inhaling exhaust air (outside air above or near the exhausts). For example, a CPU cooling air duct at the back of a tower case would inhale warm air from a graphics card exhaust. Moving all exhausts to one side of the case, conventionally the back, helps to keep the intake air cool.
Fewer fans strategically placed will improve the airflow internally within the PC and thus lower the overall internal case temperature in relation to ambient conditions. The use of larger fans also improves efficiency and lowers the amount of waste heat along with the amount of noise generated by the fans while in operation. For a rectangular PC (ATX) case, a fan in the front with a fan in the rear and one in the top has been found to be the optimum configuration. [citation needed] Fans in the side panels tend to add turbulence to the internal airflow precluding excess heat evacuating from the case.
[edit] References
1. ^ Tom's Hardware - "Strip Out The Fans", 9 January 2006, presented as 11 web pages.
2.
^ oilcooledcomputer.com
Online Heat Sink Performance Calculators Tom's hardware test: What happens when the processor heat sink is removed General CPU Cooling Information CPU Cooler Rules of Thumb
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