Originally posted by: rgwalt
Originally posted by: Leo V
Another upcoming product using a heat pipe is the
fanless VGA heatsink from Zalman. They claim it will handle even a GeForce4 Ti4600.
Where does the heat go though? It looks like it is being transferred from one side of the chip to the other, which doesn't seem like it would do any good. Am I missing something here?
Ryan
If I'm thinking correctly (highly questionable, but oh, well) the heat is transferred to the air due to damn large surface area. Dunno how well it works, though; I have my doubts, as well.
As for heatpipes, I think they're a pretty good idea, depending on the implementation. Vaporizing liquids takes a huge amount of energy (relative to raising a liquid or solid's temperature) so the liquid that remains will stay cooler, longer, than an equivelent solid. But, you still have to dissipate the heat (thereby changing the gas back to liquid) in one way or another, otherwise the heat vaporizes all the liquid and you end up with high temperature/high pressure pipes.
In relation to solid copper pipes, I assume it's better because with solid metal, the heat spreads out evenly throughout the whole pipe, so you're looking at like <50% cooling efficiency. With a heat pipe, the gas is where most of the heat is transferred and stored, so the liquid end stays cooler relatively. You could look at a refrigerator as a heatpipe implementation with an inline compressor installed.
This is all my own theorizing, so if I'm blowing smoke, feel free to blow it away...
