Intel Core 2 Duo E7300 BX80570E7300 User Manual

Product codes
BX80570E7300
Page of 128
 
Thermal Metrology 
 
 
Thermal and Mechanical Design Guidelines   
 27 
Thermal Metrology 
This section discusses guidelines for testing thermal solutions, including measuring 
processor temperatures. In all cases, the thermal engineer must measure power 
dissipation and temperature to validate a thermal solution. To define the performance 
of a thermal solution the “thermal characterization parameter”,  (“psi”) will be used. 
3.1 
Characterizing Cooling Performance 
Requirements  
The idea of a “thermal characterization parameter”,  (“psi”), is a convenient way to 
characterize the performance needed for the thermal solution and to compare thermal 
solutions in identical situations (same heat source and local ambient conditions). The 
thermal characterization parameter is calculated using total package power.  
Note:  Heat transfer is a three-dimensional phenomenon that can rarely be accurately and 
easily modeled by a single resistance parameter like . 
The case-to-local ambient thermal characterization parameter value (
CA
) is used as a 
measure of the thermal performance of the overall thermal solution that is attached to 
the processor package. It is defined by the following equation, and measured in units 
of °C/W:  
CA
 = (T
C
 – T
A
) / P
D
 (Equation 1) 
Where: 
CA
 
=  Case-to-local ambient thermal characterization parameter (°C/W) 
T
C
 
=  Processor case temperature (°C) 
T
A
 
=  Local ambient temperature in chassis at processor (°C) 
P
D
 
=  Processor total power dissipation (W) (assumes all power dissipates 
through the IHS) 
The case-to-local ambient thermal characterization parameter of the processor, 
CA
, is 
comprised of 
CS
, the thermal interface material thermal characterization parameter, 
and of 
SA
, the sink-to-local ambient thermal characterization parameter: 
CA 
= 
CS
 + 
SA
 (Equation 2)
 
Where: 
CS
  =  Thermal characterization parameter of the thermal interface material 
(°C/W) 
SA
  =  Thermal characterization parameter from heatsink-to-local ambient 
(°C/W)