Abstract

Large thermal gradients represent major operational hazards in microprocessors; hence, there is a critical need to monitor possible hot spots both accurately and in real time. Thermal monitoring in microprocessors is typically performed using temperature sensors embedded in the electronic board. The location of the temperature sensors is primarily determined by the sensor space claim rather than the ideal location for thermal management. This paper presents an optimization methodology to determine the most beneficial locations for the temperature sensors inside of the microprocessors, based on input from high-resolution surface infrared thermography combined with inverse heat transfer solvers to predict hot spot locations. Specifically, the infrared image is used to obtain the temperature map over the processor surface, and subsequently delivers the input to a three-dimensional (3D) inverse heat conduction methodology, used to determine the temperature field within the processor. In this paper, simulated thermal maps are utilized to assess the accuracy of this method. The inverse methodology is based on a function specification method combined with a sequential regularization in order to increase accuracy in the results. Together with the number of sensors, the temperature field within the processor is then used to determine the optimal location of the temperature sensors using a genetic algorithm optimization combined with a Kriging interpolation. This combination of methodologies was validated against the finite element analysis of a chip incorporating heaters and temperature sensors. An uncertainty analysis of the inverse methodology and the Kriging interpolation was performed separately to assess the reliability of the procedure.

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