cooling - What is the gum like thing on the heat sink?

05
2014-04
  • LWZ

    See the attached picture. What is the gum like thing? Should I replace it with thermal paste? Thanks!

    enter image description here


    Update

    Thank you guys! I replaced it with new thermal paste and my laptop is not burning anymore! This particular thermal pad is quite thin, maybe about 1 mm, so I just replaced it with thermal paste. See the temperature below! (I don't know why it doesn't detect GPU temperature).enter image description here

  • Answers
  • Darth Android

    Those are known as Thermally-Conductive Pads, and are used as the equivalent of thermal paste. They're usually made from wax or silicone, and become very soft and pliable when heated up.

    They're not as good as thermal paste, but they are less messy and much easier to deal with, so this makes them a good choice when heat transfer efficiency doesn't have to be perfect. For this reason, it's generally recommended that you replace them with thermal paste if you're removing and reapplying the heat sinks and thermal paste will work well at the location (There may be conductivity or spacing issues which make thermal paste a bad choice).

  • user88311

    That would be a thermal pad, they are placed there to allow heat to travel more easily out of whatever chip it was placed against.

    Probably should add that they are also used when a perfect seal isn't possible, I.E. A space more then 1mm between chip/processor and cooling system.

    So if doesn't look like it was compressed much, may want to replace it with another pad instead of compound.

    Also they happen to be used when needing to cool silicon chips, as you can't use something like silver based thermal compound on something that doesn't have such things as copper heat spreaders on them already.

  • AthomSfere

    It is a thermal pad / thermal paste.

    It does exactly what something like Arctic Silver 5 does, but its less effective.

    It is also easier for a machine or layperson to apply, so that why factories use it. Its fool proof, cheap, and does what it needs to.


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  • greyDrifter

    I have just popped the case off of a hp pavilion dv2310us to replace its motherboard. It has an integrated graphics card (which I believe is toasted), between the graphics processor and hdd (130+ deg F).

    The graphics processor has a nice blob of thermo past sitting there with no heat sink or heat pipe. Is this paste serving any purpose? Looks like the there is an open plane from the fan to the chip, and a few quarter inches punched out of the aluminum 'shield'.

    Is this normal? is the paste serving a purpose?


  • Related Answers
  • pavium

    The purpose of thermal paste is to provide a better thermal contact beween a processor (for example) and a heatsink.

    If there's no heatsink or heat pipe, the paste is not serving any purpose.

    Although I'm not entirely clear what you meant by the reference to

    an open plane from the fan to the chip, and a few quarter inches punched out of the aluminum 'shield

  • CarlF

    I would expect that if there is thermo paste but no heat sink, the heat sink fell off and is in the case somewhere. I can't imagine a modern graphics chip without at least a small heat sink.