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Voltage Stressing A CPU?

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Monkfish

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What I wish to understand is the short-term or long-term dangers posed to a modern CPU by increasing its supply voltage while maintaining normal operating temperatures (or even lower than normal using exotic cooing methods).

As I see it, a transistor or CPU can be destroyed by supplying a higher than rated voltage in one of two ways: the voltage itself (e.g. static discharge), or heat spikes caused by higher currents (e.g. thermal runaway).

If the chip is being cooled then how does a higher voltage actually stress the chip? Does it produce heat spikes that cannot be conducted away sufficiently quickly?

How exactly does a static discharge destroy a transistor (i.e. is it too simply heat-related at the molecular level)? How does a higher then spec supply voltage actually stress a chip?

Perhaps someone frequents this forum with a deep knowledge of transistors or CPUs?

Thanks you :)
 
Higher voltages coupled with higher speeds from the cooling of the chip will aggravate a number of failure modes.

This was first tried with the 286, over 20 years ago, overclocked at 50% higher supply voltages. The CPUs lasted about 1 month. Cooling will not mitigate the failure modes.


TTFN



 
Are you aware of any online sources that discuss these failure modes in detail?
 
Go to the semiconductor manufacturers' websites. Their reliability reports list the types of failures.

TTFN



 
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