Enhanced cooling in mono-crystalline ultra-thin silicon by embedded micro-air channels

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Abstract

In today's digital world, complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) technology enabled scaling of bulk mono-crystalline silicon (100) based electronics has resulted in their higher performance but with increased dynamic and off-state power consumption. Such trade-off has caused excessive heat generation which eventually drains the charge of battery in portable devices. The traditional solution utilizing off-chip fans and heat sinks used for heat management make the whole system bulky and less mobile. Here we show, an enhanced cooling phenomenon in ultra-thin (>10 μm) mono-crystalline (100) silicon (detached from bulk substrate) by utilizing deterministic pattern of porous network of vertical "through silicon" micro-air channels that offer remarkable heat and weight management for ultra-mobile electronics, in a cost effective way with 20× reduction in substrate weight and a 12% lower maximum temperature at sustained loads. We also show the effectiveness of this event in functional MOS field effect transistors (MOSFETs) with high-κ/metal gate stacks.

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APA

Ghoneim, M. T., Fahad, H. M., Hussain, A. M., Rojas, J. P., Torres Sevilla, G. A., Alfaraj, N., … Hussain, M. M. (2015). Enhanced cooling in mono-crystalline ultra-thin silicon by embedded micro-air channels. AIP Advances, 5(12). https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4938101

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