Thermal Management
Electrical Requirements
Traditional thermal interface materials have always
provided electrical isolation at the expense of thermal
resistance. Electrical isolation requires the use
of dielectric materials within the construction,
and exacts a tremendous cost on the thermal performance
of the interface material.
The performance of the
interface material can be greatly improved by eliminating
the dielectric materials and including only conductive
materials in the formulation. Since microprocessors
provide electrical
isolation of the die within the package, computer
system designers are often able to choose from
a variety of lower thermal resistance interface materials.
Computer system designers may consider thermal
interface materials that provide dielectric strength for densely
populated circuit boards.
As circuit designs become
increasingly dense, system designers may utilize
electrically isolating thermal
interface materials to ensure that a
misplaced interface does not short out the system.
When evaluating electrically isolating materials,
the dielectric strength should also be considered.
The material must withstand the worst case voltage
spikes possible in the system to
guarantee system dependability.
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