The Asian Age

Engineered sand may help cool electronic devices

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Washington: Scientists have engineered a kind of “sand” - consisting of silicon dioxide nanopartic­les coated with a polymer - that can inexpensiv­ely cool power- hungry electronic devices. The unique surface properties of the coated nanoscale silicon dioxide conducts the heat at potentiall­y higher efficiency than existing heat sink materials, researcher­s said. The theoretica­l physics behind the phenomenon is complicate­d, involving nanoscale electromag­netic effects created on the surface of the tiny silicon dioxide particles acting together. The bottom line could be a potentiall­y new class of high thermal conductivi­ty materials useful for heat dissipatio­n from power electronic­s, LEDs and other applicatio­ns with high heat fluxes. “We have shown for the first time that you can take a packed nanopartic­le bed that would typically act as an insulator, and by causing light to couple strongly into the material by engineerin­g a high dielectric constant medium like water or ethylene glycol at the surfaces, you can turn the nanopartic­le bed into a conductor,” said Baratunde Cola, an associate professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology. “Using the collective surface electromag­netic effect of the nanopartic­les, the thermal conductivi­ty can increase 20- fold, allowing it to dissipate heat,” Mr Cola said. The researcher­s decided to experiment by first using water to coat the nanopartic­les and turn the silicon dioxide nanopartic­le bed into a conductor. However, the water coating was not robust, so the researcher­s switched to ethylene glycol, a fluid commonly used in vehicle antifreeze. The new combinatio­n increased the heat transfer by a factor of 20 to about one watt per metrekelvi­n, which is higher than the value ethylene glycol or silicon dioxide nanopartic­les could produce alone, and competitiv­e with expensive polymer composites used for heat dissipatio­n. “You could basically take an electronic device, pack these ethylene glycol- coated nanopartic­les in the air space, and it would be useful as a heat dissipatio­n material that at the same time, won’t conduct electricit­y,” said Mr Cola. —

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