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200 points rbanffy | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source
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lorenzohess ◴[] No.45655889[source]
Summary:

> Rather than allowing heat to build up, what if we could spread it out right from the start, inside the chip?... To do that, we’d have to introduce a highly thermally conductive material inside the IC, mere nanometers from the transistors, without messing up any of their very precise and sensitive properties. Enter an unexpected material—diamond.

> ... my research group at Stanford University has managed what seemed impossible. We can now grow a form of diamond suitable for spreading heat, directly atop semiconductor devices at low enough temperatures that even the most delicate interconnects inside advanced chips will survive... Our diamonds are a polycrystalline coating no more than a couple of micrometers thick.

> The potential benefits could be huge. In some of our earliest gallium-nitride radio-frequency transistors, the addition of diamond dropped the device temperature by more than 50 °C.

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kulahan ◴[] No.45656776[source]
Fifty Celsius is an insane drop.

It sounds like the most important part of the article (and another cool quote) is this:

>Until recently we knew how to grow it only at circuit-slagging temperatures in excess of 1,000 °C.

So basically, the big breakthrough was low-temp growth of a diamond lattice. Very cool they can do it at such a low temperature. It must be a crazy low temp - probably under 100C?

replies(2): >>45657044 #>>45657067 #
1. beautifulfreak ◴[] No.45657044[source]
The article says 400C