http://www.pcworld.com/article/2896672/fujitsus-thin-heat-pipe-could-let-smartphone-chips-run-cooler.html
If parts of your phone are sometimes
too hot to handle, Fujitsu may have the answer: a thin heat pipe that
can spread heat around mobile devices, reducing extremes of temperature.
Fujitsu Laboratories created a heat pipe in the form of a loop that’s
less than 1mm thick. The device can transfer about 20W, about five
times more heat than current thin heat pipes or thermal materials, the
company said.
The technology could improve smartphones’ performance by helping cool
their CPUs and other heat-producing components, spreading that heat
more evenly across other parts of the phone.
Overheating has been an issue
with some Samsung Galaxy smartphones, and the Korean manufacturer
apparently dropped Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 810 processor from the Galaxy
S6 due to excessive heat concerns.
While heat pipes have been used in
laptops, they are uncommon in smartphones, where sheets of metal or
graphite have been used instead. Fujitsu said its pipe is the first of
its kind under 1 mm thick that can be used in thin electronic devices.
The pipe consists of a stack of 0.1mm-thick copper sheets containing
channels through which water circulates by capillary action, meaning it
will work regardless of a smartphone’s orientation. One part of the heat
pipe sits over a heat source such as a CPU, which evaporates the water.
Another part, a thermal diffusion plate, acts as a condenser, turning
the vapor back into liquid and returning it to the evaporator part.
While the heat pipe doesn’t remove the heat from the smartphone, it
might limit overheating in particular areas by spreading heat around and
reducing the temperature of the hottest spots.
“For current smartphones, we predict the surface temperature to be
reduced by several degrees, although this will vary depending on a
variety of factors such as the internal structure of the smartphone,” a
Fujitsu spokesman said via email.
The heat pipe could also reduce the frequency of automatic
restrictions that smartphone CPUs apply when temperature is expected to
rise, the spokesman added, meaning CPUs could work unhindered more
often.
Fujitsu aims to commercialize the technology, which can be customized
for different mobile device designs, by early 2018. It’s also looking
into uses in communications, medical and wearable devices. Meanwhile, it
plans to present the work at the Semiconductor Thermal Measurement and
Management Symposium (SEMI-THERM) in California next week.
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