Computer Cooling

Computer cooling is required to remove the waste heat produced by computer components, to keep components within permissible operating temperature limits.

Components that are susceptible to temporary malfunction or permanent failure if overheated include integrated circuits such as CPUs, chipset, graphics cards, and hard disk drives.

Components are often designed to generate as little heat as possible, and computers and operating systems may be designed to reduce power consumption and consequent heating according to workload, but more heat may still be produced than can be removed without attention to cooling. Use of heatsinks cooled by airflow reduces the temperature rise produced by a given amount of heat. Attention to patterns of airflow can prevent the development of hotspots. Computer fans are very widely used to reduce temperature by actively exhausting hot air. There are also more exotic and extreme techniques, such as liquid cooling.

Many computers are designed to sound an alarm or switch off if certain critical internal temperatures exceed a specified limit.

Cooling may be designed to reduce the ambient temperature within the case of a computer e.g. by exhausting hot air, or to cool a single component or small area (spot cooling). Components commonly individually cooled include the CPU, GPU and the northbridge chip.

Read more about Computer Cooling:  Generators of Unwanted Heat, Damage Prevention, Mainframes and Supercomputers, Air Cooling, Liquid Submersion Cooling, Waste Heat Reduction, Heat-sinks, Peltier (thermoelectric) Cooling, Liquid Cooling, Heat Pipe, Phase-change Cooling, Liquid Nitrogen, Liquid Helium, Soft Cooling, Undervolting, Optimisation of Cooling

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