• Channels
Part Inventory
Go
 
powered by:

 
  • Quick Poll
What Social Networking site do you use the most?



VOTE VIEW RESULTS
Previous Polls

Premium Content

New Signal Chain Technical Papers from Texas Instruments:

 

 

 

Software Lends A Helping Hand


Roger Allan

October 12, 2006

Print
Reprints Comment Subscribe

It's becoming more commonplace to run software simulations of electronics device designs and packaging for thermal analysis. PCs contain the speed and graphical user interfaces that allow for complex heat simulations at relatively low cost. Software simulations are possible at the device level, the pc-board level, the packaging level, and even the system level. Hotspots on device die and pc boards are more predictable.

Companies like Cadence Design Systems, Flomerics Ltd., Gradient Design Automation, Magma Design Automation, and Mentor Graphics offer advanced software products that let designers complete transient simulations quickly enough for electrical and thermal design considerations to occur concurrently. Today, device and package designers use these products early in the design cycle to ameliorate heat issues that may crop up later in the device production process. Studying thermal issues early in a chip's design-to-production cycle minimizes overall production costs.

Software tools aren't heat-management solutions on their own, though. Understanding the thermal/fluid physics of a device's model and its placement on a pc board, in a package, and within a larger system is still a cumbersome and inaccurate process. Nevertheless, software tools and the development of thermal-simulation software standards are getter better, which lends a huge hand to design engineers.

Software tools can only help in understanding and predicting heat patterns and flows. They don't show how heat can be removed, which is ultimately the job of a cooling system and its components.

Average (0 Ratings):

Subscribe
Subscribe to Electronic Design and start receiving more articles like this one
Filed Under:

Check for price and availability on Source ESB:

Go
powered by  
    There are no comments to display. Be the first one!
You must log on before posting a comment.

Are you a new visitor? Register Here
Acceptable Use Policy

Sponsored Links