[Leapfrog: First Look]
Thermal-Monitoring Tools Become Hot Commodities In High-End CPUs
High-peformance temperature sensors and fan controllers give designers a better handle on heat management.
Roger Allan
ED Online ID #14888
March 1, 2007
Copyright © 2006 Penton Media, Inc., All rights reserved. Printing of this document is for personal use only.
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With high-end CPU and graphics-processor feature sizes
shrinking to 90 nm and
less, pressure mounts to find ways to manage the heat. Recognizing this, Standard Microsystems Corp.
(SMSC) has unveiled a suite of six temperature sensors and two fan controllers
specifically targeting such designs.
The EMC1402, 1403, and 1404 sensors offer interrupt capabilities, while the
EMC1422, 1423, and 1424 add system
interrupt capability. The 1402 and 1422
are dual temperature sensors; the 1403
and 1423 are triple temperature sensors;
and the 1404 and 1424 top out as quad
temperature sensors.
The EMC1422, 1423, and 1424 use
pull-up resistors on the SYS-SHDN and
ALERT pins to shut down temperatures
between 77°C and 112°C, enabling system shutdown where software can't be
overridden. The resistors are common
10% tolerance parts whose values
(depending on the shutdown temperature)
can be 4.7, 6.8, 10, 15, 22, and 33 kΩ.
All six temperature sensors operate
from 3.3-V supplies and are accurate to
within 1°C for external diode temperatures and 2°C for internal diode temperatures. The ICs are compatible with the
System Management Bus (SMBus), and
advanced features like beta compensation and resistance error correction support 90-nm and 65-nm CPU diodes.
Another feature, automatic diode-type
detection, targets complex environmental monitoring applications.
KEY BENEFITS
While other IC temperature sensors have offset registers
that do some fine-tuning for accuracy
reasons, SMSC's temperature sensors
eschew this feature, saving engineering time. Also, temperature measurements
are automatic and accurate.
Since there's no need for additional
temperature switches for critical thermal
events, the component count is reduced
as well. Multiple remote measurements
are possible for thermal troublespots on
dual-inline memory-memory module
(DIMM) cards, wireless cards, TV tuners,
and graphics processors.
Three important measurement techniques drive the sensor family's performance: auto beta correction, resistance
error correction, and anti-parallel diodes.
Beta correction compensates for temperature measurement error found in
processors with line widths of 65 nm
and lower. It eliminates software configuration for many different remote and
processor diodes.
Resistance error correction automatically counteracts the effects of temperature-reading error from series-resistance
and substrate diodes and/or pc-board
trace errors (Fig. 1). Also, the proprietary
anti-parallel diode technology allows two
remote temperature monitors to occupy
two pins previously used for one monitor.
"Beta compensation and resistance
error correction are two major sources of temperature measurement error," says Mitch Polonsky, SMSC's
product line marketing manager. He points to Intel's own published data regarding the firm's Pentium 4 CPUs to support his
assertion (see the table).
HIGH-PERFORMANCE FAN CONTROLLERS
The
EMC2101 and 2102 fan controllers work with the SMBus. The
basic 2101 suits simple and flexible general-purpose advanced
temperature-measurement requirements. The thermally
enhanced 2102 integrates linear fan control, four temperature
sensors, and hardware-shutdown circuitry in a small form factor.
The EMC2101 single-fan driver offers either a pulse-width-modulated (PWM) or a 1-mA linear output. It has two temperature sensors—an internal sensor accurate to within 1°C and an
external sensor accurate to within 2°C. Resistance error correction up to 100Ω is available, as are auto beta compensation
and configurability overtemperature limits. The 2101 can
accept an external temperature input, too.
"Accepting external inputs like those from hard-disk drives
(HDDs) is a very important feature that's not available in general-purpose fan controllers," says Polonsky. The 2101 is
designed for applications such as embedded fan control, PWM
control, inexpensive fan control, LCD TVs, and VGA cards.
Targeting thermally enhanced fan control, the 2101's closed-loop RPM-based fan control ensures that the fan temperature setpoints are met. This is important for avoiding resonant points in
enclosures and maintaining the right speed in aging fans. An integrated 600-mA linear fan driver provides power-up flexibility by
allowing a start from 0%, 60%, 75%, or full speed.
In addition, the 2101 provides hardware-configured thermal
shutdown and three external 1°C temperature sensors for
diode temperatures between 60°C to 100°C. This chip also
offers beta compensation, resistance error correction, and programmable temperature limits for an ALERT output pin signal.
The temperature sensors join a growing market for temperature sensing as projected by market analysis firm Databeans. The
company expects the 2005 market of $674 million to expand by
a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of up to 11% by 2011,
reaching $1.956 billion. These sensors will be used in a number
of applications, the largest of which in 2005 was computers.
The EMC1402 and 1422 temperature sensors are housed in
eight-pin mini small-outline package (MSOP) cases while the
1403, 1404, 1423, and 1424 come in 10-pin MSOP cases (Fig. 2). They range from $0.60 to $1 each in OEM quantities. The
EMC2101 fan controller has an eight-pin MSOP or small-outline
IC (SOIC) package, while the 2102 comes in a 28-pin quad flat
no-lead (QFN) package. They cost $0.95 to $1.75 each for OEM
quantities. Sample quantities of all chips are available.
SMSC • www.smsc.com
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