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TI Home » TI E2E Community » Support Forums » Digital Signal Processors (DSP) » C6000 Multicore DSP » Keystone Multicore Forum (C66, 66A, AM5) » Passive Heat Dissipation for C6678
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    Passive Heat Dissipation for C6678

    This question is not answered
    Josh King
    Posted by Josh King
    on May 01 2012 18:54 PM
    Prodigy160 points

    Hello,

    I am working on a custom board with a single C6678. I am looking for a way to use passive cooling to keep the temperature stable. Do you have any suggestions for heat sinks that would not require an external fan? Are there any other alternative approaches that could be used to reduce the heat generated by the DSP?

    Thanks,

    Josh

    6678 Thermal
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    • Bill Taboada
      Posted by Bill Taboada
      on May 02 2012 14:06 PM
      Expert8180 points

      We don't have a standard heat sink for the C6678.  Realistically the cooling solution that you will need will depend heavily on the environment in which the device will be housed and amount of power that the device is consuming.  You should calculate the power requirements with the spreadsheet found on the website and review the information in the Thermal Design Guide for Keystone Devices.  This should give you enough information to start looking at heat sink solutions. 

      If you need more help, please reply back. If your question is answered, please click  Verify Answer 

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    • Tom Johnson16214
      Posted by Tom Johnson16214
      on May 03 2012 09:20 AM
      Expert5710 points

      Josh,

      There is no single answer to this question.  The thermal solution must be adapted to your system requirements.  Thermal models are provided on the C6678 web page to support this modeling.  Modeling will be required for a definative answer.  Additionally, the simple ThetaJB and ThetaJC values are contained in the datasheet to support first-order approximations.  You can use the Power Estimation spreadsheet (also on the web page) to estimate the maximum heat dissipation for your application.  You will then need to identify a heat dissipation solution such as a heat sink that will suffice for the airflow available (whether forced or convective).  This is discussed in more detail in the Thermal Design Guide for KeyStone devices on the C6678 web page.

      Tom

       

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      Please click the Verify Answer button on this post if it answers your question.

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    • Bogdan Vacaliuc
      Posted by Bogdan Vacaliuc
      on May 03 2012 15:20 PM
      Prodigy20 points

      Hello Josh,

      You may consider Graphite Foam for this application.  See:

      Koppers KFOAM (http://www.kfoam.com/mainsite/material.htm)

      Poco Graphite (http://www.poco.com/tabid/95/Default.aspx)

      Both of these are licensees of technology developed at ORNL:

      http://www.ornl.gov/adm/partnerships/success_stories/led_foam.shtml

      Best Regards,

      -bogdan

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