Improving the Thermal Performance of Liquid Metal Thermal Interface
Materials: The Role of Intermetallic Compounds at the Gallium/Copper
Interface
XD Zhang and YX Dong and YZ Du and L Yang and WG Ma and BY Cao, ADVANCED
MATERIALS INTERFACES, 12 (2025).
DOI: 10.1002/admi.202500041
Room-temperature liquid metal has been widely used in electronic
packaging due to its high thermal conductivity, but its thermal
performance is strongly impeded by the dominated thermal boundary
resistance between liquid metal and solid material. Here, first an
order-of-magnitude reduction of thermal boundary resistance (from 1.11 x
10-7 (m2K)/W to 6.94 x 10-9 (m2K)/W) is reported
by self-synthesizing the intermetallic compound at the liquid
gallium/solid copper interface. This significant thermal transport
improvement is attributed to the conversion of heat carriers from
phonons to electrons, and bonding force from van der Waals force to
metallic bond, which is thoroughly analyzed by the microscopic phonon
and electron diffuse mismatch models, complemented by molecular dynamic
simulations. Chip application demonstrates that brushing liquid metal
assisted by the intermetallic compound can surprisingly obtain the
equivalent interfacial temperature difference (10.2 degrees C) to that
of InSn solder welding (8.3 degrees C), which is much smaller than that
of the conventional oxidation method (30.1 degrees C). This study
provides a comprehensive understanding of electron/phonon transport at
Ga/Cu interfaces and facilitates the giant thermal transport enhancement
of liquid metal thermal interface material.
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