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Fighting fire with fire
Author(s) -
Susmit Biswas,
Mohit Tiwari,
Timothy Sherwood,
Luke Theogarajan,
Frederic T. Chong
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
ISSN - 0163-5964
DOI - 10.1145/2000064.2000104
Subject(s) - hot spot (computer programming) , thermoelectric cooling , heat sink , provisioning , reliability (semiconductor) , active cooling , nuclear engineering , materials science , thermoelectric effect , tec , power (physics) , chip , environmental science , mechanical engineering , automotive engineering , electrical engineering , water cooling , computer science , engineering , telecommunications , thermodynamics , geology , physics , ionosphere , operating system , geophysics
Local thermal hot-spots in microprocessors lead to worst-case provisioning of global cooling resources, especially in large-scale systems where cooling power can be 50~100% of IT power. Further, the efficiency of cooling solutions degrade non-linearly with supply temperature. Recent advances in active cooling techniques have shown on-chip thermoelectric coolers (TECs) to be very efficient at selectively eliminating small hot-spots. Applying current to a superlattice TEC-film that is deposited between silicon and the heat spreader results in a Peltier effect, which spreads the heat and lowers the temperature of the hot-spot significantly and improves chip reliability. In this paper, we propose that hot-spot mitigation using thermoelectric coolers can be used as a power management mechanism to allow global coolers to be provisioned for a better worst case temperature leading to substantial savings in cooling power. In order to quantify the potential power savings from using TECs in data center servers, we present a detailed power model that integrates on-chip dynamic and leakage power sour-ces, heat diffusion through the entire chip, TEC and global cooler efficiencies, and all their mutual interactions. Our multi-scale analysis shows that, for a typical data center, TECs allow global coolers to operate at higher temperatures without degrading chip lifetime, and thus save ~27% cooling power on average while providing the same processor reliability as a data center running at 288K.

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