W. Nakayama, HEAT-TRANSFER ENGINEERING IN SYSTEMS INTEGRATION - OUTLOOK FOR CLOSERCOUPLING OF THERMAL AND ELECTRICAL DESIGNS OF COMPUTERS, IEEE transactions on components, packaging, and manufacturing technology. Part A, 18(4), 1995, pp. 818-826
This paper begins with a review of the author's personal experience in
the research field of computer cooling, It highlights the need to dev
elop foresight on the possible course of hardware development in order
to provide the package designer with appropriate heat-transfer data i
n a timely manner, A question is then raised about the immediate futur
e of the (indirect) water-cooling technology, Water-cooling has so far
proven effective in cooling high-end computers which use ECL devices
in two-dimensional packaging, The drive toward higher raw speeds of EC
L devices, however, is going to lose steam-emerging instead is the end
eavor to upgrade system performance by massively-parallel computing wh
ich requires wiring-intensive hardware. Three-dimensional packaging wi
ll meet the demand for short global wiring in systems, but will become
a commercial reality only after the establishment of methodologies fo
r its design and assembling, One of the key issues in the design of 3-
D computers is the optimum allocation of physical space for electrical
wiring and heat-transfer paths, Intimate coupling of wiring and heat-
transfer designs pose challenges to heat-transfer researchers that hav
e not surfaced in other industrial applications, Items of primary impo
rtance include: the methodology to predict how and temperature distrib
utions in a field having a wide spectrum of length scales, the local h
eat-transfer coefficients in the maze of microscale coolant channels,
the possibly large effect of extraneous factors such as irregular geom
etric features of coolant channels and conjugate mode of heat transfer
, and temperature control during assembling of 3-D structures.