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Henkel Adhesive Technologies

Henkel Adhesive Technologies

Durable TIM coating reduces heat and improves data centre switch performance

This case study looks at how durable, thin thermal interface coating reduces heat and improves data centre switch performance.
This image displays a micro thermal interface coating on a pluggable optical transceiver.

Application challenges and objectives

  • Data centre Ethernet switch manufacturers must tackle the requirement for accelerating data rates and the challenges this presents.
  • At the line card level, one obstacle to maximum performance is the heat generated by higher-wattage pluggable optical modules, also known as POMs or transceivers.
  • Traditional heat dissipation methods through metal-to-metal interfaces between POMs and their riding heat sinks are not optimal for the power output of newer transceiver designs, which can range from 10 W to as high as 35 W per module.  In a single line card, there can be as many as 32 POMs.
  • Older-generation thermal interface materials—like conventional phase change films—are not suitable because they are scraped off after multiple POM insertions and pulls.  This diminishes thermal performance and can introduce volatiles into the data centre system.
  • Because of these realities, a top switch manufacturer looked to a new, innovative solution for thermal control to reduce operating temperatures of its 20 W transceiver application.
This is an image of a server room in a data centre

Application data and testing

  • Partnering with a leading advanced heat sink manufacturer, Henkel applied its durable micro-thermal interface material (mTIM) onto nickel-plated aluminium heatsinks and tested them with the switch manufacturer’s QSFP-DD 400 GbE transceiver design.
  • The performance evaluation was conducted by placing thermocouples in four locations on the modules and one at the interface between the heat sink and the POM. Temperatures were measured for both metal-to-metal (module to heat sink with no thermal interface material) and Henkel BERGQUIST® microTIM mTIM 1028-coated heatsinks.
  • Temperature readings were taken at all five locations at initial mating (transceiver to heat sink initial contact), after 100 pulls/insertions and after 250 pulls/insertions.
This is an image of a transparent transceiver side view

Results

The average change in temperature (ΔT, °C) across all five temperature sensors was as follows:

Test data

Customer analysis validated Henkel’s internal test data, with Henkel BERGQUIST® microTIM mTIM 1028 demonstrating average temperature reductions versus a metal-to-metal interface of 3°C at initial, 7.4°C after 100 pulls/insertions and 6.4°C after 250 pulls/insertions. Based on that success, this module plus heat sink combination is now in the field, serving data centres across the globe with improved switch performance.

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