Boffins in the US have developed a microchip fan with no moving parts that
operates silently and generates enough wind to cool a laptop computer.
The solid-state fan, developed with support from the US National Science
Foundation (NSF), is touted as the most powerful and energy efficient fan of its
size.
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The device produces three times the flow rate of a typical small mechanical
fan and is one-fourth the size.
RSD5
is the culmination of six years of research by Dan Schlitz and Vishal Singhal of
Thorrn Micro Technologies when they were NSF-supported graduate students at
Purdue University.
"The RSD5 is one of the most significant advances in electronics cooling
since heat pipes. It could change the cooling paradigm for mobile electronics,"
said Singhal.
He explained that RSD5 incorporates a series of live wires that generate a
micro-scale plasma (an ion-rich gas that has free electrons that conduct
electricity).
The technology brings an elegant solution to the heating problems that have plagued the industry
Juan Figueroa National Science Foundation
The wires lie within uncharged conducting plates that are contoured into
half-cylindrical shapes to partially envelop the wires.
Within the intense electric field that results, ions push neutral air
molecules from the wire to the plate, generating a wind. The phenomenon is
called corona wind.
"The technology is a breakthrough in the design and development of
semiconductors as it brings an elegant and cost effective solution to the
heating problems that have plagued the industry," said Juan Figueroa, the NSF
officer who oversaw the research.
The technology has the power to cool a 25W chip with a device smaller than
one cubic-cm and can someday be integrated into silicon to make self-cooling
chips, according to the researchers.
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