[Beowulf] CPUs are not hot enough
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David Mathog mathog at mendel.bio.caltech.eduFri Apr 1 15:04:15 PST 2005
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I was musing over trends in computing, with vast amounts of power going into machines, coming out as heat, and then being dumped into the environment via equally massive A/C systems. Or at the very least, a really big fan. Wouldn't it be nice to reclaim some of that power? For the purposes of thermodynamics CPUs are basically just big resistors. Put a voltage across them, current flows, heat is generated. Imagine using the difference in T between the CPUs and the ambient environment to make more electricity. Replace the A/C with a heat driven engine that turns a generator,. Here's where the irony comes in - the CPUs aren't hot enough. room temp is around 300K and the CPUs are at most another 50K above that, giving a pathetic Carnot efficiency. Imagine if the chips were designed to run really, really, really hot. For instance, 600. At that point the heat engine could run at about 50% efficiency and one could recover about half the power that went in. Silicon doesn't actually melt until around 1700K, so there's possibly even some leeway above that. Have to use something else instead of metal for the traces though, since aluminum will have melted off at 933K. Silicon might not work at those temperatures either but there's likely some other substance that is a semiconductor at 1000K. The boot sequence should be "interesting" if it becomes necessary to preheat the CPU to a very high temperature before it can run. Obviously this is not hardware you'd want on your desk but with data centers churning along at 50 megawatts perhaps it's worth thinking about creative ways to get the maximum amount of crunch per watt. You've doubtless all seen suggestions that exotic CPUs be run at superconducting temperatures. Probably this is the first time you've heard anybody suggest they be run at incredibly high temperatures instead. And as a side benefit the next Venus lander could have a computer that will run at ambient temperature. Regards, David Mathog mathog at caltech.edu Manager, Sequence Analysis Facility, Biology Division, Caltech
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