(Image credit: ISCT)


  • Heat flow is altered inside chip components instead of removed after buildup
  • Phonon motion is limited through nanoscale surface patterning
  • Ultrafast lasers enable nanoscale patterning at industrially relevant speeds

Today, most electronics rely on heat sinks, fans, or liquid cooling because the components inside chips conduct heat in fixed ways.

A new method designed by Japanese researchers lets engineers control how fast heat escapes from a material, rather than just trying to remove heat after it builds up.

The work describes a laser-based fabrication method that modifies how heat moves through thin silicon and silica films by directly shaping their surfaces at the nanoscale.

Altering heat transport at the chip component level…

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