Intel 2 Duo T7700 LE80537GG0564M Manual Do Utilizador
Códigos do produto
LE80537GG0564M
Thermal Specifications and Design Considerations
84
Datasheet
If the n
trim
value used to calculate the Toffset differs from the n
trim
value used to in a
temperature sensing device, the T
error(nf)
may not be accurate. If desired, the Toffset
can be adjusted by calculating n
actual
and then recalculating the offset using the n
trim
as
defined in the temperature sensor manufacturer’s datasheet.
The n
trim
used to calculate the Diode Correction Toffset are listed in
5.1.3
Intel® Thermal Monitor
The Intel Thermal Monitor helps control the processor temperature by activating the
TCC (Thermal Control Circuit) when the processor silicon reaches its maximum
operating temperature. The temperature at which the Intel Thermal Monitor activates
the TCC is not user configurable. Bus traffic is snooped in the normal manner and
interrupt requests are latched (and serviced during the time that the clocks are on)
while the TCC is active.
With a properly designed and characterized thermal solution, it is anticipated that the
TCC would only be activated for very short periods of time when running the most
power intensive applications. The processor performance impact due to these brief
periods of TCC activation is expected to be minor and hence not detectable. An under-
designed thermal solution that is not able to prevent excessive activation of the TCC in
the anticipated ambient environment may cause a noticeable performance loss and
may affect the long-term reliability of the processor. In addition, a thermal solution that
is significantly under-designed may not be capable of cooling the processor even when
the TCC is active continuously.
The Intel Thermal Monitor controls the processor temperature by modulating (starting
and stopping) the processor core clocks or by initiating an Enhanced Intel SpeedStep
Technology transition when the processor silicon reaches its maximum operating
temperature. The Intel Thermal Monitor uses two modes to activate the TCC: automatic
mode and on-demand mode. If both modes are activated, automatic mode takes
precedence.
There are two automatic modes called Intel Thermal Monitor 1 and Intel Thermal
Monitor 2. These modes are selected by writing values to the MSRs of the processor.
After automatic mode is enabled, the TCC activates only when the internal die
temperature reaches the maximum allowed value for operation.
When Intel Thermal Monitor 1 is enabled and a high temperature situation exists, the
clocks modulates by alternately turning the clocks off and on at a 50% duty cycle.
Cycle times are processor speed dependent and decreases linearly as processor core
frequencies increase. Once the temperature has returned to a non-critical level,
modulation ceases and TCC goes inactive. A small amount of hysteresis has been
included to prevent rapid active/inactive transitions of the TCC when the processor
temperature is near the trip point. The duty cycle is factory configured and cannot be
modified. Also, automatic mode does not require any additional hardware, software
drivers, or interrupt handling routines. Processor performance decreases by the same
amount as the duty cycle when the TCC is active.
When Intel Thermal Monitor 2 is enabled and a high temperature situation exists, the
processor performs an Enhanced Intel SpeedStep Technology transition to the LFM.
When the processor temperature drops below the critical level, the processor makes an
Enhanced Intel SpeedStep Technology transition to the last requested operating point.
The processor also supports Enhanced Multi Threaded Thermal Monitoring (EMTTM).
Table 26.
Thermal Diode n
trim
and Diode Correction Toffset
Symbol
Parameter
Value
n
trim
Diode Ideality used to calculate Toffset
1.01