1 research outputs found
Ultracompliant Heterogeneous Copper–Tin Nanowire Arrays Making a Supersolder
Due
to the substantial increase in power density, thermal interface
resistance that can constitute more than 50% of the total thermal
resistance has generally become a bottleneck for thermal management
in electronics. However, conventional thermal interface materials
(TIMs) such as solder, epoxy, gel, and grease cannot fulfill the requirements
of electronics for high-power and long-term operation. Here, we demonstrate
a high-performance TIM consisting of a heterogeneous copper–tin
nanowire array, which we term “supersolder” to emulate
the role of conventional solders in bonding various surfaces. The
supersolder is ultracompliant with a shear modulus 2–3 orders
of magnitude lower than traditional solders and can reduce the thermal
resistance by two times as compared with the state-of-the-art TIMs.
This supersolder also exhibits excellent long-term reliability with
>1200 thermal cycles over a wide temperature range. By resolving
this
critical thermal bottleneck, the supersolder enables electronic systems,
ranging from microelectronics and portable electronics to massive
data centers, to operate at lower temperatures with higher power density
and reliability