Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

25
Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs Ayman Dorrah, Jeff Nicholls and Miaofei Mei

description

 

Transcript of Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Page 1: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Ayman Dorrah, Jeff Nicholls and Miaofei Mei

Page 2: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

• Introduction/ Motivation

• Architecture

• Thermal Model

• Modeling of Solids

• Modeling of Fluids

• Solution Procedure

• Results

• Example results

• Comparison between BE and TR methods

• Conclusion

• References

Agenda:

Page 3: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

• There is demand for ever increasing powerful integrated circuits, but interconnecting

the components on a 2D chip has poor scalability, so the semiconductor industry is

moving towards 3D IC stacks.

• One of the challenges of engineering 3D ICs is designing for heat dissipation.

• Heat sinks are incapable of cooling the middle of a stack.

• Liquid coolant flowing through microchannels in between the layers of ICs is a

scalable solution for the heat problem.

• A thermal model of the 3D IC stack and microchannel system is presented.

Introduction/ Motivation:

Page 4: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

• A compact model based on the work of Sridhar et al.

• Spatial dimensions are coarsely discretized, leading to large speedups. Time is

discretized through finite differencing.

• The model is solved using Backward Euler and Trapezoidal Rule methods.

Architecture:

Page 5: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Thermal Modeling of solids: Conservation Law

Page 6: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Thermal Modeling of Solids: Equivalent Circuit

Page 7: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Thermal Modeling of Fluids: Conservation Law

Page 8: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Thermal Modeling of Fluids: Equivalent Circuit

Page 9: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Thermal Modeling of Fluids:

• Boundary Conditions Dirichlet BCs at Channel’s Inlet and Neumann BCs

everywhere else.

• C is a diagonal matrix and G is an asymmetric block-tridiagonalmatrix

Page 10: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

• Input stack file (.stk) -> equivalent circuit -> G, C, B

• Solution computed using Backward Euler:

• ..and Trapezoidal Rule:

• With 400,000 nodes, 600 timesteps, solution takes ~ 7 mins

Solution Procedure (Solver):

Page 11: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

TR Ringing

Page 12: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

• Try to solve:

• Exact solution for nth time step:

• Numerical solution:

• For :

Numerical solution approaches zero but flips between positive and negative.

TR Ringing: Stability Analysis

Page 13: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

• Smoothing attempts to correct ringing:

While (smoothing):

Calculate xn+1

Generate improved estimate for xn

Use improved estimate to recalculate xn+1

• Repeated for multiple timesteps after a change in the input

Smoothing

Page 14: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Smoothing

Page 15: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Example Results

• The test case is composed of the layers

(7 mm long by 10 mm wide)

• Initial temperature was 20 ◦C. The

active silicon was producing heat at a

constant 50 W/cm2. A hotspot produced

between at 50 W/cm2, 250 W/cm2 and

450 W/cm2 of heat. The microchannels

were 50 µm wide by 100 µm tall. The

incoming coolant was 26 ◦C. Coolant

velocities of 1.62 m/s, 0.81 m/s, and

0.405 m/s were simulated.

• The test case was simulated until t = 0.6

s with both BE and smoothed TR using a

timestep of Δt = 0.001 s.

Page 16: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Example Results

• Temperature over time in the middle of the die:

Page 17: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Example Results

Page 18: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Example Results

Page 19: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Example Results

Page 20: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Results: Comparison Between BE and TR methods

Page 21: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Results: Comparison Between BE and TR methods

Page 22: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Results: Comparison Between BE and TR methods

Page 23: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

• Presented a compact model capable of efficiently simulating thermal effects in 3D

microchannel cooled ICs

• Model demonstrates/extends the applicability of the equivalent circuit approach

• Trapezoidal Rule suffers from “ringing” in simulations with fast transients

• Smoothed Trapezoidal Rule is a good way of reducing ringing and improving

simulation accuracy with minimal time overhead

Conclusion:

Page 24: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

References:

Page 25: Thermal Modeling of Fluid Cooled 3D ICs

Thanks! Questions?Email: [email protected]