DocumentCode
3658554
Title
Making sense of thermoelectrics for processor thermal management and energy harvesting
Author
Sriram Jayakumar;Sherief Reda
Author_Institution
School of Engineering, Brown University, Providence, RI 02912, United States
fYear
2015
fDate
7/1/2015 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
31
Lastpage
36
Abstract
A thermoelectric (TE) device can be used as a heat pump that consumes electric power to cool a processor chip, or it can be used as a heat engine that generates electricity from the heat dissipated during processor operation. To better understand the use of TE devices, we develop a fully instrumented processor-based system with controllable TE devices. We first examine the use of TE devices for energy harvesting. We identify a pitfall in previous works that can lead to wrong conclusions for TEG use by demonstrating that TEGs increase the processor´s leakage power which offsets their harvested power. For thermoelectric cooling (TEC), we elucidate the intricate relationships between the processor power, thermoelectric power, and fan power. We propose a dynamic thermal management scheme (DTM) that maximizes performance under thermal constraints and given total power budgets by controlling the processor´s dynamic frequency and voltage scaling (DVFS), TEC current, and fan speed. For the evaluated thermal constraints, our results demonstrate good improvements to performance at the cost of additional cooling power compared to standard DVFS+fan DTM techniques.
Keywords
"Power demand","Temperature sensors","Heat sinks","Heat pumps","Thermal resistance","Resistance heating"
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Low Power Electronics and Design (ISLPED), 2015 IEEE/ACM International Symposium on
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/ISLPED.2015.7273486
Filename
7273486
Link To Document