Look at an AthlonXP with a Palomino core. Surface area: 128 square millimeters. Throw in an Alpha PAL8045 and some AS3.
The heat from the core must come out of those 128 square millimeters to get anywhere. Right? Right. The heat goes from the CPU core to the AS3, which passes it to the Alpha's built-in copper heat spreader, and on to the pins, where it's transferred to the air.
Now let's say we managed to extract the Alpha's copper heatspreader from its base, and attached it to the CPU package, again with AS3 as an interface. Has anything changed? Nope, the contact area between the CPU core and the heatspreader is still 128 square millimeters.
Next, we dose up the top of the extracted heatspreader, now attached to the CPU package, with AS3, and re-fit the rest of the Alpha heatsink to it. Instead of having the copper heatspreader impact-forged into the aluminum, we now have an extra layer of AS3 impeding thermal transfer. This additional layer was not necessary before, but it is now, because the heatspreader and the heatsink have been separated. Thermal resistance goes up.
If you look at AMD's builder's guide, they say to avoid using thermal grease due to pump-out problems as the core and heatsink expand and contract at different rates, gradually pumping thermal grease out of the interface. This is one reason why AMD uses phase-change thermal compound (thermal bubblegum stuff)... it resists pump-out. However, it's good for just one use. The use of a copper heatspreader over the core would solve this problem by
1) making the "end-user's" access point (the junction between IHS and heatsink) large, so low-quality thermal grease will still be able to get the job done and pump-out will take a long time
2) making the end-user's access point a junction between two similar materials (both metal, probably both copper) so the expansion/contraction rate is the same or close, reducing pump-out tendencies greatly.
And of course, the IHS would pretty-much eliminate the possibility of a user pulling the CPU's core right off the substrate due to sticky PCTC adhering it to the heatsink, or cracking the core by exerting force on the heatsink instead of just the clip during installation/removal.
I understand that Intel now recommends thermal grease after confirming that pump-out is not a problem between a P4 IHS and a heatsink, lending some credibility to my speculations. What's between the IHS and the actual CPU core, where the initial heat transfer takes place...? I don't know either, but I'm sure Intel has carefully selected it, whatever it is, for its ability to stay between the core and the IHS for the duration of the warranty period.
Ok, enough of my ramblings... someone else go now 😀