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- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump abstract "The thermal copper pillar bump, also known as the "thermal bump", is a thermoelectric device made from thin-film thermoelectric material embedded in flip chip interconnects (in particular copper pillar solder bumps) for use in electronics and optoelectronic packaging, including: flip chip packaging of CPU and GPU integrated circuits (chips), laser diodes, and semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOA). Unlike conventional solder bumps that provide an electrical path and a mechanical connection to the package, thermal bumps act as solid-state heat pumps and add thermal management functionality locally on the surface of a chip or to another electrical component. The diameter of a thermal bump is 238 μm and 60 μm high.The thermal bump uses the thermoelectric effect, which is the direct conversion of temperature differences to electric voltage and vice versa. Simply put, a thermoelectric device creates a voltage when there is a different temperature on each side, or when a voltage is applied to it, it creates a temperature difference. This effect can be used to generate electricity, to measure temperature, to cool objects, or to heat them.For each bump, thermoelectric cooling (TEC) occurs when a current is passed through the bump. The thermal bump pulls heat from one side of the device and transfers it to the other as current is passed through the material. This is known as the Peltier effect. The direction of heating and cooling is determined by the direction of current flow and the sign of the majority electrical carrier in the thermoelectric material. Thermoelectric power generation (TEG) on the other hand occurs when the thermal bump is subjected to a temperature gradient (i.e., the top is hotter than the bottom). In this instance, the device generates current, converting heat into electrical power. This is termed the Seebeck effect.The thermal bump was developed by Nextreme Thermal Solutions as a method for integrating active thermal management functionality at the chip level in the same manner that transistors, resistors and capacitors are integrated in conventional circuit designs today. Nextreme chose the copper pillar bump as an integration strategy due to its widespread acceptance by Intel, Amkor and other industry leaders as the method for connecting microprocessors and other advanced electronics devices to various surfaces during a process referred to as “flip-chip” packaging. The thermal bump can be integrated as a part of the standard flip-chip process (Figure 1) or integrated as discrete devices.The efficiency of a thermoelectric device is measured by the heat moved (or pumped) divided by the amount of electrical power supplied to move this heat. This ratio is termed the coefficient of performance or COP and is a measured characteristic of a thermoelectric device. The COP is inversely related to the temperature difference that the device produces. As you move a cooling device further away from the heat source, parasitic losses between the cooler and the heat source necessitate additional cooling power: the further the distance between source and cooler, the more cooling is required. For this reason, the cooling of electronic devices is most efficient when it occurs closest to the source of the heat generation.Use of the thermal bump does not displace system level cooling, which is still needed to move heat out of the system; rather it introduces a fundamentally new methodology for achieving temperature uniformity at the chip and board level. In this manner, overall thermal management of the system becomes more efficient. In addition, while conventional cooling solutions scale with the size of the system (bigger fans for bigger systems, etc.), the thermal bump can scale at the chip level by using more thermal bumps in the overall design.".
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump thumbnail Thermal-bump-substrate.png?width=300.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump wikiPageExternalLink fine-pitch-copper-pillar-flip-chip.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump wikiPageExternalLink index.cfm?objectid=C55AF2CE-D1A3-1153-5E9522117EE0826C.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump wikiPageExternalLink www.aptostechnology.com.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump wikiPageExternalLink www.kns.com.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump wikiPageExternalLink www.mcnc.org.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump wikiPageExternalLink www.nextreme.com.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump wikiPageID "16437835".
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump wikiPageRevisionID "590040805".
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump hasPhotoCollection Thermal_copper_pillar_bump.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump subject Category:Electronics_manufacturing.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump subject Category:Emerging_technologies.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump subject Category:Semiconductors.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump subject Category:Thermodynamics.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Abstraction100002137.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Act100030358.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Activity100407535.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Application100949134.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Conductor114821043.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type EmergingTechnologies.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Event100029378.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Material114580897.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Matter100020827.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Occupation100582388.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Part113809207.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Profession100609953.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Relation100031921.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Semiconductor114821248.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Semiconductors.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Substance100019613.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Technology100949619.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type Use100947128.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump type YagoPermanentlyLocatedEntity.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump comment "The thermal copper pillar bump, also known as the "thermal bump", is a thermoelectric device made from thin-film thermoelectric material embedded in flip chip interconnects (in particular copper pillar solder bumps) for use in electronics and optoelectronic packaging, including: flip chip packaging of CPU and GPU integrated circuits (chips), laser diodes, and semiconductor optical amplifiers (SOA).".
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump label "Thermal copper pillar bump".
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump sameAs m.03y1whf.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump sameAs Q7783038.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump sameAs Q7783038.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump sameAs Thermal_copper_pillar_bump.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump wasDerivedFrom Thermal_copper_pillar_bump?oldid=590040805.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump depiction Thermal-bump-substrate.png.
- Thermal_copper_pillar_bump isPrimaryTopicOf Thermal_copper_pillar_bump.