DocumentCode :
3369792
Title :
Differentiating the roles of IR measurement and simulation for power and temperature-aware design
Author :
Huang, Wei ; Skadron, Kevin ; Gurumurthi, Sudhanva ; Ribando, Robert J. ; Stan, Mircea R.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Univ. of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA
fYear :
2009
fDate :
26-28 April 2009
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
10
Abstract :
In temperature-aware design, the presence or absence of a heatsink fundamentally changes the thermal behavior with important design implications. In recent years, chip-level infrared (IR) thermal imaging has been gaining popularity in studying thermal phenomena and thermal management, as well as reverse-engineering chip power consumption. Unfortunately, IR thermal imaging needs a peculiar cooling solution, which removes the heatsink and applies an IR-transparent liquid flow over the exposed bare die to carry away the dissipated heat. Because this cooling solution is drastically different from a normal thermal package, its thermal characteristics need to be closely examined. In this paper, we characterize the differences between two cooling configurations-forced air flow over a copper heatsink (AIR-SINK) and laminar oil flow over bare silicon (OIL-SILICON). For the comparison, we modify the HotSpot thermal model by adding the IR-transparent oil flow and the secondary heat transfer path through the package pins, hence modeling what the IR camera actually sees at runtime. We show that OIL-SILICON and AIR-SINK are significantly different in both transient and steady-state thermal responses. OIL-SILICON has a much slower short-term transient response, which makes dynamic thermal management less efficient. In addition, for OIL-SILICON, the direction of oil flow plays an important role by changing hot spot location, thus impacting hot spot identification and thermal sensor placement. These results imply that the power- and temperature-aware design process cannot just rely on IR measurements. Simulation and IR measurement are both needed and are complementary techniques.
Keywords :
heat sinks; heat transfer; infrared imaging; laminar flow; temperature sensors; HotSpot thermal model; bare silicon; cooling configurations; copper heatsink; forced air flow; hot spot identification; infrared measurement; laminar air flow; package pins; secondary heat transfer; spot location; steady-state thermal responses; temperature-aware design process; thermal sensor placement; transient response; Cooling; Energy consumption; Energy management; Infrared imaging; Optical imaging; Packaging; Petroleum; Power measurement; Semiconductor device measurement; Thermal management;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Performance Analysis of Systems and Software, 2009. ISPASS 2009. IEEE International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
Boston, MA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-4184-6
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ISPASS.2009.4919633
Filename :
4919633
Link To Document :
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