This invention relates to the field of water-cooled electronics and to water-cooled servers in particular.
Rack mounted servers employ processors and supporting devices mounted on printed circuit boards. High-power chips mounted on the printed circuit boards are typically sold as packaged devices that require large heat sinks. The packaged devices and the heat sinks occupy considerably more space than the original die contained within the packages.
FIG. 45 of U.S. Patent Pub. No. US 2021/0343690, the entirety of which is hereby incorporated by reference, illustrates a computer system comprising multiple laminate blocks partially immersed in a cooling liquid inside of a tank. Extruded copper elements having cooling fins are shown. The laminate block comprises a two-sided laminate assembly and a single-sided laminate assembly.
FIG. 36 of U.S. Patent Pub. No. US 2021/0343690, the entirety of which is hereby incorporated by reference, is a block diagram of a computer system comprising multiple circuit assemblies, each circuit assembly comprising independently operable clusters of components, also known as tiles. The use of redundancy is described, including switchable components and redundant switchable components. A power distribution device is shown, operable to power up or power down switchable components as commanded by a system controller. A test/monitor chip in each circuit assembly detects component failures by monitoring bus activity during operation.
Embodiments of the invention are directed to server configurations having increased power density and improved manufacturability.
In accordance with a first aspect of the invention, a computer module includes a substrate with redistribution layers on a first side and on a second side. The redistribution layers include thin film conductors and thin film dielectrics, and selected thin film conductors have a half-pitch of 2 μm or less. Electronic components are flip chip mounted on the substrate at connection points provided by the thin film conductors. Spaces between the components may be filled with a filler material. After back-grinding and polishing operations a polished planar surface extends across each side of the substrate, the planar surface coincident with the back side of the flip chip mounted components. Copper sheets are bonded to the polished planar surfaces on each side of the substrate using a thermal interface material (TIM). The TIM may be a die attach film, or a composite of multiple layers and may have a thickness in the range of 1-50 μm. A copper base is soldered to each of the copper sheets to form a three-sided enclosure in the shape of a rectangular prism, the enclosure being sealed against water intrusion. A sheet of material forming a splash guard may be positioned at the open end of the sealed enclosure. A portion of the substrate may protrude through the open end of the enclosure for connecting to the motherboard using a connector or a socket attached to the substrate or to the motherboard, this portion of the substrate including thin film conductors and no mounted components; terminals of the connector may be connected to selected ones of the thin film conductors on the substrate. The electronic components may be selected from bare die, chiplets, stacked devices, and low-profile packaged devices. Stacked devices may include a chiplet, an interposer or a bridge device. The flip chip components on the first side of the substrate may be mounted in a mirror image of the flip chip components mounted on the second side of the substrate. The electronic components mounted on the substrate may be organized in tiles arrayed on each side of the substrate. Each tile may be operable as an independently operable cluster of components. Each tile may include at least one processor, at least one memory device, at least one communication device and at least one sensor. Each tile may include redundant components for replacing failed or failing components. Each tile may further include a test/monitor chip for monitoring bus activity to determine failed or failing components. Each tile may also include a power distribution device which may be used to power up or power down selected components. Each tile may be networked with one or more neighboring tiles. Each tile may be operable at an average power level in the range of 200-500 watts per square inch on each side of the substrate.
In accordance with a second aspect of the invention a water-cooled server may include multiple computer modules that are operable when partially immersed in a tank of water. Each module may be configured similarly and operate similarly to computer modules as described above in accordance with the first aspect of the invention. The water-cooled server may include separators between the computer modules, and each separator may comprise a wire structure such as a wire frame. The water-cooled server may include a motherboard having a socket or connector for connecting each computer module to the motherboard.
In accordance with a third aspect of the invention, a method for manufacturing and deploying a water-cooled server may include: fabricating computer modules that are operable while immersed in water, each computer module comprising a three-walled copper enclosure in the shape of a rectangular prism; providing inside each module enclosure a substrate having attached electronic components; arranging the electronic components in tiles, the tiles extending across each side of each substrate; arraying the computer modules inside a tank with separators between them; coupling signals and power on each computer module to corresponding terminals on a motherboard; coupling signals and power on the motherboard to external signals and power using front or rear panel connectors; circulating cooling water between the modules at a velocity in the range of 3-24 inches per second; and, operating the water-cooled server at a power density in the range of 500-1500 watts per cubic inch of tank volume. The method may also include: providing redundant components in each tile; providing a test/monitor chip and a power distribution device in each tile; monitoring the health of selected components in each tile using the test/monitor chip and replacing failed or failing components with redundant components using the power distribution device, under command of a system controller; adapting to changing workloads using agile reconfiguration by employing the power distribution devices to invoke different sets of tiles to execute different workloads as required; and, providing lifecycle support by replacing failed or failing electronic components with redundant electronic components as required to maintain a predetermined system specification.
The accompanying drawings, which are incorporated into and constitute a part of this specification, illustrate prior art and examples of embodiments. The examples of embodiments, together with the description of example embodiments, explain the principles and implementations of the embodiments.
Embodiments of the present invention are directed towards tiles, including the following tile embodiments. Each tile may be operable as an independently operable cluster of components. Each tile may include at least one processor, at least one memory device, at least one communication device, and at least one sensor. Each tile preferably includes redundant components, a test/monitor chip, and a power distribution device. Redundant components are provided for each mounted component that could fail. All originally-mounted components that could fail as well as redundant components are switchable between a powered-up state and a powered-down state using the power distribution device, under command of a system controller. The system controller is connected to all yield-related mounted components via a serial bus and maintains a status for all such components. The powered-down state may be a zero-power state or a low-power state. Transitions between powered-down and powered-up states are preferably slow-ramp transitions to avoid injecting noise during the transitions. The test/monitor chip is coupled to system buses and monitors the activity on the system buses to determine if a mounted device has failed or is starting to fail. Information is shared between temperature sensors and the test/monitor chip and the system controller because imminent failure may be signaled by a localized increase in temperature. Each tile is networked with one or more neighbors for sharing information and for system recovery by powering down failed tiles that are not recoverable using redundancy, while maintaining system connectivity between surviving tiles.
Embodiments of the invention are also directed to agile reconfiguration. In one embodiment, agile reconfiguration is directed to the ability to apply redundancy to recover from faults, and to provide workload adaptation, and to provide graceful reconfiguration rather than degradation over a life cycle.
In one embodiment, the dimensions of the water-cooled server 30 are a width of 19 inches, a height of 9 inches and a length of 36 inches. It will be appreciated that these dimensions are exemplary and that the actual dimensions may vary from those shown in
The method may also include one or more of providing redundant components in each tile; providing a test/monitor chip and a power distribution device in each tile; monitoring the health of selected components in each tile using the test/monitor chip and replacing failed or failing components with redundant components using the power distribution device, under command of a system controller; adapting to changing workloads using agile reconfiguration by employing the power distribution devices to invoke different sets of tiles to execute different workloads as required; and, providing lifecycle support by replacing failed or failing electronic components with redundant electronic components as required to maintain a predetermined system specification.
In accordance with another aspect of the present disclosure, a method for manufacturing a computer module may include providing a substrate; fabricating redistribution layers having a half-pitch resolution or 2 μm or less on a first side and a second side of the substrate; mounting a plurality of flip-chip components on each of the first side and the second side of the substrate; disposing a filler material between the plurality of flip-chip components on each of the first and the second sides of the substrate; back-grinding and polishing to create a polished planar surface extending across the substrate at the backside of the flip-chip mounted components on each of the first and the second sides of the substrate; bonding a first metal sheet to the polished planar surface on the first side of the substrate and bonding a second metal sheet to the polished planar surface on the second side of the substrate; and, attaching a metal base to each of the first and second metal sheets.
The attachment of semiconductor components to substrate 61 in
Embodiments of the water-cooled server described herein can achieve an average power density of around 1 kilowatt per cubic inch of server tank volume, as will be further described. For comparison, the 4-GPU IBM Power AC922 server model 8335GTW has dimensions 17.4×3.4×33.3 inches. It is water cooled using cooling tubes with a flow rate of around 1 gallon per minute and has a maximum power consumption of 2,300 W. The maximum power density is 2,300/1,970=1.2 watts per cubic inch. The difference in power density between this recent state-of-the-art server and the water-cooled server 30 illustrates the utility of the computer architecture. A compaction factor for electronic systems is closely related to power density. Assuming the same chips are used, the total power dissipation will be the same and the volume will be inversely proportional to power density. Accordingly, a compaction factor approaching 800× may be achievable for a computer system having the architecture described herein compared with a conventional system employing glass-epoxy printed circuit boards with assorted electronic packages and assemblies mounted thereon, including heat sinks where necessary. Thus, variations of embodiments described herein may be advantageously applied to electronic systems where space is at a premium or aggressive cooling is required.
The following calculations are provided in support of the power density claims; they relate to
The junction temperature of a high-powered device mounted on a substrate 61 in a computer module 30 will now be calculated. In an embodiment the TIM material 66b is die attach film ESP7660-HK-DAF from AI TECHNOLOGY. The high-power chip under consideration is the VEGA 10 GPU measuring 22×22 mm and having a power dissipation of 300 watts. The cross-sectional area available for water flow along the length of water-cooled server 30 is 5 mm×215 mm×56=60,200 mm2 or 93.3 in2 from
Assuming a water inlet temperature of 40° C. a junction temperature of 112° C. is achievable (40+70+2); this is for one of the highest-powered chips that may be used. This attractive result is a consequence of providing a cooling path with low thermal resistance from chip to cooling water. No customized heat sink is required over and above the standardized thermal architecture that is provided for all chips mounted in a computer module 30. The tight thermal coupling of semiconductor components to cooling water also means that hot spots on a die will be less problematic. Table 1 also shows that the temperature drop across the copper sheet is minimal, so the use of brass or another metal instead of copper will have little significance if improved mechanical properties become important. Since reliability is increased for cooler electronic systems, systems employing similar cooling embodiments will tend to have higher reliability than other systems that may allow the junction temperature to rise to around 150° C. for example.
The example of the VEGA 10 being satisfactorily cooled provides an estimate of areal power density in embodiments of the present disclosure. This chip dissipates 300 W over an area of 23×23 mm, assuming a border of 1 mm around mounted components. This converts to an areal power density of 366 W/in2. Accordingly, embodiments of the present disclosure may support an areal power density in the range 200-500 W/in2.
There is a limit to heat transfer across a copper-to-water interface; it can be calculated using a convective heat transfer coefficient. This coefficient varies with water velocity as well as surface roughness, viscosity, and other complex factors. Accordingly, adjustments to the thermal design may be required when the coefficient becomes known for a particular set of materials and a particular operating scenario.
Manufacturability of computer modules and water-cooled servers described herein is enhanced by the fact that the electronic structures are regularized. Greater automation is achievable because of the regularized structures. For example, die-level components may be assembled onto a large substrate using a single pass of a precision pick and place machine, as opposed to a mix of manual and automated placements of packaged parts, daughter boards, isolating enclosures, and heat sinks. Similarly, the thermal environment of embodiments described herein provides such strong cooling for all components in a computer module that many conventional rules relating to thermal design may become unnecessary.
As will be understood by those familiar with the art, the invention may be embodied in other specific forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. Likewise, the particular naming and division of the members, features, attributes, and other aspects are not mandatory or significant, and the mechanisms that implement the invention or its features may have different structural construct, names, and divisions. Accordingly, the disclosure of the invention is intended to be illustrative, but not limiting, of the scope of the invention.
While the invention has been described in terms of several embodiments, those of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that the invention is not limited to the embodiments described but can be practiced with modification and alteration within the spirit and scope of the appended claims. Another embodiment may comprise a computer module having a greater or lesser number of substrate mounting surfaces for example. Other embodiments may have different overall sizes and form factors for the computer module 41 and the water-cooled server 30. The description is thus to be regarded as illustrative instead of limiting. There are numerous other variations to different aspects of the invention described above, which in the interest of conciseness have not been provided in detail. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the claims.
The invention has been described in relation to particular examples, which are intended in all respects to be illustrative rather than restrictive. Those skilled in the art will appreciate that many different combinations will be suitable for practicing the present invention. For example, the teachings may be applied to other water-cooled electronic systems, especially those with space limitations or aggressive cooling requirements. Other implementations of the invention will be apparent to those skilled in the art from consideration of the specification and practice of the invention disclosed herein. Various aspects and/or components of the described embodiments may be used singly or in any combination. It is intended that the specification and examples be considered as exemplary only, with a true scope and spirit of the invention being indicated by the following claims.
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