It's slightly misleading to call them passive, since server heatsinks depend on high airflow from a bank of fans that feed directly into them - they just don't happen to be directly attached. The servers I've seen even have airflow guides to help force the air from those fans through the heatsinks.Servers, workstations use passive coolers for years ;-) they just increase surface area by thin fins
Because passive cooler doesn't work itself. At certain point, heat doesn't spread further.It's slightly misleading to call them passive, since server heatsinks depend on high airflow from a bank of fans that feed directly into them - they just don't happen to be directly attached. The servers I've seen even have airflow guides to help force the air from those fans through the heatsinks.
It can when everything is setup to facilitate natural convection as much as possible and you don't mind the huge heatsinks required to get there on larger loads. The good old CM212+ can passively keep up with about 60W of load when mounted fan-side parallel to the table in an open-air bench if you don't mind the CPU being around 80C.Because passive cooler doesn't work itself. At certain point, heat doesn't spread further.
yes, it can work if you have large surface...such as fins commonly found on radiators, passive heatsinks.It can when everything is setup to facilitate natural convection as much as possible and you don't mind the huge heatsinks required to get there on larger loads. The good old CM212+ can passively keep up with about 60W of load when mounted fan-side parallel to the table in an open-air bench if you don't mind the CPU being around 80C.
Not really that large: 110W is only 2x 60W which my 212+ can handle passively, so you'd only need something about twice as big. The real challenge is moving heat away from the core and distributing it evenly throughout the entire fin stack fast enough as the speed at which heat can be moved around is the second biggest limiting factor of conventional HSFs after form factor constraints.Imagine how large passive cooler would you need for Ryzen 5950X @ 4.3GHz ~110W