NASA Goddard has entered into a collaboration designed to enhance the science, technology, engineering and math capabilities within two Historically Black College and University institutions over the course of a three-year program. Professors and students from Alabama A&M University and Tuskegee University will be building a library of electronic designs for future … [Read more...]
Iron-based HTS show Unexpected Electronic Asymmetry
While investigating iron-based HTS, researchers from Kyoto University and the Japan Synchrotron Radiation Research Institute found that its electronic properties were different in the horizontal and vertical directions and provide the strongest evidence yet of electronic nematicity in HTS. The study used the parent compound barium iron arsenide and measured electronic … [Read more...]
Hot-Water Cooled Supercomputer
The first commercially available computer system that is cooled with hot water rather than air was unveiled at the Leibniz Supercomputer Centre in Munich. The IBM iDataplex system removes heat 4,000 times more efficiently than air-cooled systems using a new form of IBM’s hot-water cooling technology. It cools active components in the system such as processors and memory modules … [Read more...]
Electronics Cooling June Issue Now Online
Don’t miss out on the June 2012 issue of Electronics Cooling, which includes feature articles on hot spot dissipation, spray cooling , metal foam-PCM heat storage technology, and much more. If you would like to receive your free copy of Electronics Cooling click here to subscribe. Read the June 2012 issue here. Download your copy of the June 2012 issue here. … [Read more...]
Designing Heat Sinks When a Target Pressure Drop and Flow Rate is Known
Forced convention air cooled heat sinks and liquid cooled cold plates are quite pervasive in their use in electronics cooling applications. While there can be significant debate on whether to air or liquid cool a particular component, the approach a thermal engineer would adopt to design both components is essentially similar. Parallel plate fins are the most common geometry … [Read more...]
- « Previous Page
- 1
- …
- 212
- 213
- 214
- 215
- 216
- …
- 338
- Next Page »