If there's one topic that's guaranteed to cause a heated discussion amongst PC enthusiasts, it's thermal paste. From how much to use, to what shape you apply, everyone has their own opinion on what's right and wrong. A team of material engineers in Texas reckon they have the best answer as to what paste is best, though, and it's a new liquid metal colloid.
Your average thermal paste is a colloid—a liquid with solid particles in suspension—with tiny grains of aluminium oxide and/or zinc oxide being mixed into silicone. It's perfectly decent stuff and unless you're really into overclocking, you don't need anything else. However, in recent years, so-called liquid metal has become the favoured option for high-end cooling.
"That trend isn’t dissipating anytime soon, so it’s critical to develop new ways, like the material we’ve created, for efficient and sustainable cooling of devices operating at kilowatt levels and even higher power."
: Keep your chip chill.
: Classic, quiet cooling.
The rate at which something is cooled is primarily affected by two things: the temperature difference between the hot thing and the coolant, and the path of resistance to the heat flow between them. If the latter is quite high, the coolant's temperature needs to be lowered to ensure that the heat flow is high enough. Drop the thermal resistance rummy noble and you don't need to have coolant as cold.
For data centres, that means you can reduce how much energy is used to pump coolant around and the team estimates that its new thermal compound can knock up to 5% off the energy required. That doesn't sound like very much but if one scales it across the entire industry, those savings would really add up.
Right now, the material isn't manufactured on any commercial scale but the research team estimate that the material cost rummy satta for its Galinstan/AIN colloid could be as low as 50 cents per gram. I don't how expensive the process is but it seems to me that this could be one research project that could actually be used in the real world soon.