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1st-of-its-kind ‘cooling chip’ could prevent AI smartphones from overheating — with 1st devices launching in 2026

The “xMEMS XMC-2400 µCooling” chip aims to keep future smartphones from overheating as they become more powerful.

For the first time, scientists have packaged a miniscule silicon chip with a cooling system designed to “actively” keep smartphones cool — rather than relying on “passive” cooling and thermal throttling. The “xMEMS XMC-2400 µCooling” chip is just 0.04 inches (1 millimeter) thick — slightly thicker than a credit card — and is designed to be fitted into ultramobile devices like smartphones and tablets.

Made in two configurations with vents either on the sides or on the top, the device can shift 2.4 cubic inches (39 cubic centimeters) of air per second while consuming minimal power and making no noise, representatives from xMEMS, a company specializing in chips for speakers, said in a statement. It also generates more “back pressure” than conventional fans, letting it be placed away from an ambient air source. There is a rising demand for better cooling as manufacturers integrate artificial intelligence (AI) into new devices. AI increases the demand for computing resources — including more processor cores and onboard memory. In theory, the more powerful future devices are, the hotter they will run.

Unlike laptops, however, smartphones don’t use active cooling systems like fans and instead rely on passive cooling — meaning the heat generated by components dissipates through features like a heat sink — a component designed to absorb any heat generated. For example, the Samsung Galaxy S24 uses a “vapor chamber” while the iPhone 15 Pro uses a large graphite heat spreader to absorb heat.

As smartphones have grown more powerful and capable of intensive tasks like 3D gaming, video editing and tapping into 5G networks, while being designed to be ever slimmer, they have become more prone to thermal “throttling.” This is when CPUs or GPUs limit power once they reach a thermal limit. The process is now so commonplace in modern-day smartphones there are even benchmarks measuring how well a device performs when being throttled. The XMC-2400 chip, however, is an “active” solution that functions like fans in computers but on a much smaller scale, and it can be stacked on top of existing components in a smartphone. The device functions differently depending on whether it has vents on the top or on the side. The side-vented chip draws in cold air from eight vents below which strikes the heat captured by the passive cooling system, such as a heat spreader, and then pushes the warm air out through side vents. The top-vented XMC-2400 chip, meanwhile, draws in air through slits on the lid to blow directly onto the heat-generating components to cool them down.

Source : https://www.livescience.com/technology/electronics/1st-of-its-kind-cooling-chip-could-prevent-ai-smartphones-from-overheating-with-1st-devices-launching-in-2026

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