Similar Articles |
|
Military & Aerospace Electronics November 2007 John McHale |
Purdue Researchers Demonstrate New Chip-Cooling Technology Researchers are taking a new approach with a new technology that uses tiny ionic wind engines that they say might dramatically improve computer chip cooling-a constant challenge for military and commercial electronics designers. |
Technology Research News May 19, 2004 |
Nanotube Sparks Could Cool Chips Researchers from Purdue University and have found a way to use carbon nanotubes to ionize air and generate minuscule air currents that can be used to cool computer chips. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics August 2006 John McHale |
Purdue Researchers Look at Nanotechnology to Reduce Computer-Chip Heating University researchers are looking to mitigate electronic systems heating problems through the use of carbon nanotubes. They have created carpets of microscopic nanotubes to enhance the performance of heat sinks to help keep future chips from overheating. |
The Motley Fool October 30, 2006 Jack Uldrich |
IBM to Chips: Cool It! Big Blue's new chip-cooling technique could keep Moore's Law on track. IBM's system, while not yet ready for commercial production, is reportedly so efficient that officials expect it will double cooling efficiency. |
InternetNews July 7, 2010 |
IBM Testing Hot Water to Cool Servers IBM researchers in Switzerland are standing server cooling on its head, using water as warm as 140 degrees to cool processors that have an unusually high safe operating temperature. |
IEEE Spectrum June 2011 Eliza Strickland |
Thermoelectrics Get Cooler Start-ups are advancing solid-state cooling systems |
BusinessWeek October 4, 2004 Stephen H. Wildstrom |
Those Superfast Chips: Too Darn Hot Cooling today's fastest chips is becoming a challenge in even the biggest desktop towers. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2009 Willie D. Jones |
Intel-led Team Demonstrates First Chip-Scale Thermoelectric Refrigerator An integrated thermoelectric device cools a hot spot on a much larger chip |
PC Magazine May 31, 2006 Sebastian Rupley |
A Puny Pump The arrays of fans and heat sinks that cool today's computer chips are headed for extinction if researchers at Purdue University get their way... New Babybot behaves like a 2-year-old... |
Military & Aerospace Electronics May 2008 Courtney E. Howard |
Hot components and cool enclosures Systems architects and integrators are tackling the issues of military electronics survivability with clever chassis designs. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics May 2006 J.R. Wilson |
The great cooling dilemma: conduction, convection, or liquid Today's most advanced cooling technologies are starting to take center stage. |
PC World June 14, 2008 Tom Mainelli |
How to Build a Superfast, Superquiet PC, Part 1 Building a PC that is quiet, fast, and affordable. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics July 2005 John Keller |
Is cooling the central design issue of our time? The pace of improvements in integrated circuitry is outstripping our ability to remove unwanted heat. And engineers are starting to quip about some of the dilemmas that new cooling approaches may create. |
Chemistry World March 5, 2012 James Urquhart |
Simulating Your Way to a Better Supercapacitor Researchers have used computer simulations to elucidate how supercapacitors are able to store electric charge. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics May 2007 John Keller |
Temperature's Rising: Designers Face Myriad Options to Cool Electronic Systems More electronic and electro-optic systems mean more electric power, and increasing heat that engineers must get rid of. Today's choices include convection, conduction, and liquid-cooling options. Tomorrow's choices will be more complex. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics June 2005 John McHale |
Purdue Researchers Create Miniature Cooling Device Mechanical engineers have developed techniques for modifying household refrigeration technology with small devices to cool future weapons systems and computer chips. |
InternetNews May 4, 2010 |
Chip Sales Rise, Leaving Second-Half Unclear Chip sales were up at a time when they normally take a breather. So what will happen when they are supposed to rise? |
Popular Mechanics February 2007 Joel Johnson |
How to Cool Down Your Computer: Tech Clinic Leaving the case open while you run your computer draws more bugs in dust and outweighs any cooling benefits. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics March 2006 |
Heat Sinks Deliver High Performance in Low-Airflow Conditions Advanced Thermal Solutions is offering maxiFLOW heat sinks for cooling ball grid arrays (BGAs) and other hot components in restricted air-flow conditions. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics April 2006 |
Heat Sinks for Low-Airflow Conditions Advanced Thermal Solutions has introduced maxiFLOW heat sinks for cooling ball grid arrays and other hot components in the restricted air flow conditions typical of today's condensed electronic packages. |
IEEE Spectrum November 2008 Monica Heger |
IBM Tests Heating Homes With Data-Center Waste Heat Cooling computers with hot water is a step toward zero-emission data centers |
IndustryWeek February 1, 2004 John Teresko |
Helping Electronics Keep Their Cool New thermal-management technology doesn't need cooling fans, say Georgia Tech researchers. |
PC World March 2004 Stan Miastkowski |
Quiet Your PC: Easy Ways to Cut Computer Noise The main sources of noise are motors and spinning components such as the hard drive, CPU fan, case cooling fans, and power supply fan. Tips on quieting your computer. |
InternetNews July 11, 2007 Andy Patrizio |
IBM Big on Cooling The Coolers Cooler chips are nice, but IBM is helping put the air conditioning chillers on ice with a new cooling system. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics May 2008 |
Vette Corp. Offers Liquid Cooling for High-Power Electronics Components Electronics cooling specialist Vette Corp. is offering Aluma-Cop liquid cooling for insulated gate bipolar transistors (IGBTs). |
Military & Aerospace Electronics July 2009 |
Parker Offers Liquid Cooling for High-Power Electronic Thermal Management Parker Hannifin is introducing a two-phase liquid cooling system for electronic thermal management and heat removal from high-power electronics. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics July 2007 Ben Kuster |
CFD Analysis Delivers Impressive Savings for Electronics Thermal Design Computational-fluid-dynamics software is an invaluable thermal-analysis weapon for the electronics design arsenal. At VT Miltope Corp., it saves weeks of development time and thousands of development dollars-even on small projects. |
Chemistry World May 2, 2007 Richard Van Noorden |
Ionic Liquids' Etch-A-Sketch Surprise UK chemists have discovered how to draw and erase pictures on the surfaces of ionic liquids. |
PC World July 2006 Eric Dahl |
Faster Dual-Core Processors Both AMD and Intel launch new processors... Business notebooks go wide screen... Wi-Fi gets tiny... Better CPU cooling... |
Military & Aerospace Electronics May 2009 J.R. Wilson |
Electronic thermal management is heading to the wall Systems designers who are used to boosting electronic system performance by adding ever-more transistors may have to rethink their design approaches. |
IEEE Spectrum December 2007 Joshua J. Romero |
Carbon Nanotubes Take the Heat Off Chips Purdue scientists find flexible filaments best. |
Chemistry World May 22, 2011 Simon Hadlington |
Materials 'sandwich' superconducts Scientists in Japan have made a 'superconducting sandwich' from two materials are not superconductors in isolation. The technique could be used to make electronic circuits with extremely low power consumption, the researchers suggest. |
Food Engineering January 10, 2006 |
Air heat exchanger Air/air heat exchanger provides cooling and environmental protection in industrial enclosures requiring internal cabinet cooling using ambient air. |
The Motley Fool June 4, 2009 Anders Bylund |
Intel Has Wind in Its Sails Intel is getting much more serious about netbooks and handheld gadgets. The semiconductor titan is buying device software specialist Wind River Systems. |
InternetNews June 4, 2009 Andy Patrizio |
What Does Intel Want With an OS Vendor? Intel makes chips. Why does it need an embedded operating system developer? Perhaps because of its new-found emphasis on embedded products. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics February 2008 |
Nextreme Offers Electro-Optics and Microelectronics Cooler for Military Applications Nextreme Thermal Solutions is introducing the Ultra-High Packing Fraction (UPF) OptoCooler thermoelectric module for cooling and temperature-control requirements for electronics, medical, military, and aerospace applications. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics May 2008 Michael R. Palis |
Advances in thermal management techniques for chassis design A new approach to thermal management involves separating the ambient environment and the operating electronics to keep out contaminants. A convenient way to do this is using compact air-to-air heat exchangers. |
The Motley Fool August 31, 2009 Anders Bylund |
This Tech Sector Is Back With a Vengeance Don't miss the boat when the semiconductor market recovers. You're already lagging, but there's plenty of growth left if you invest today. |
InternetNews June 4, 2009 Sean Michael Kerner |
Intel Buys Wind River for Embedded Software Intel is acquiring embedded software developer Wind River for $884 million. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics September 2005 Ram Rajan |
Solving thermal-management challenges in military and aerospace applications Higher system performance -- often coupled with faster and hotter processors, and denser packaging -- can be two major nemeses for the chassis designer. |
Scientific American October 2008 Steven Ashley |
Cool Polymers: Toward the Microwave Oven Version of the Refrigerator Getting a bigger chill out of polymers that respond to electric fields. |
PC Magazine March 7, 2008 Loyd Case |
The Coolest Install two cooling fans in your PC. |
Chemistry World June 20, 2010 Jon Cartwright |
Carbon nanotubes boost battery power Researchers in the US claim to have created electrodes from carbon nanotubes that can make lithium-ion batteries some ten times more powerful than conventional models. |
InternetNews April 6, 2007 Clint Boulton |
Dave Driggers, CTO, Verari Driggers discusses the challenges of power and cooling in today's datacenters. |
InternetNews May 5, 2006 David Needle |
Be Cool and Save Your Data Center HP says a holistic approach to energy savings in the data center will cut costs. |
CIO March 1, 2003 Christopher Lindquist |
Low-Heat Laptops You won't be able to use your laptop as a portable coffee warmer anymore, if technology from Sandia National Laboratories goes mainstream. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics October 2005 |
Method of heat removal is critical in design Far too often cooling is an afterthought in the design of the latest "black box" and by the time it is parameters such as power, volume, and weight are all at a premium. |
CIO January 1, 2007 Robert Mullins |
Throw Cold Water on Data Center Costs IBM will license its technology for cooling servers with water instead of air to Panduit, a global networking and electrical manufacturer, hoping to encourage adoption of IBM energy-saving techniques for data centers. |
PC World July 18, 2002 Kuriko Miyake |
Hitachi Shows Off Cool New Notebook Laptop uses a water-based system to keep cool instead of a fan, causing it to make less noise. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics January 2006 Randy Banton |
Evolving COTS cooling for military environments A new 6U infrastructure for air cooling and conduction cooling which is extensible to 3U systems, spray-cooling and liquid-flow-through cooling systems, will enable broader use of commercial off-the-shelf systems. |