Nature Communications (Jan 2025)

Liquid-infused nanostructured composite as a high-performance thermal interface material for effective cooling

  • Rui Cheng,
  • Qixian Wang,
  • Zexiao Wang,
  • Lin Jing,
  • Ana V. Garcia-Caraveo,
  • Zhuo Li,
  • Yibai Zhong,
  • Xiu Liu,
  • Xiao Luo,
  • Tianyi Huang,
  • Hyeong Seok Yun,
  • Hakan Salihoglu,
  • Loren Russell,
  • Navid Kazem,
  • Tianyi Chen,
  • Sheng Shen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-025-56163-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Effective heat dissipation remains a grand challenge for energy-dense devices and systems. As heterogeneous integration becomes increasingly inevitable in electronics, thermal resistance at interfaces has emerged as a critical bottleneck for thermal management. However, existing thermal interface solutions are constrained by either high thermal resistance or poor reliability. We report a strategy to create printable, high-performance liquid-infused nanostructured composites, comprising a mechanically soft and thermally conductive double-sided Cu nanowire array scaffold infused with a customized thermal-bridge liquid that suppresses contact thermal resistance. The liquid infusion concept is versatile for a broad range of thermal interface applications. Remarkably, the liquid metal infused nanostructured composite exhibits an ultra-low thermal resistance <1 mm² K W-1 at interface, outperforming state-of-the-art thermal interface materials on chip-cooling. The high reliability of the nanostructured composites enables undegraded performance through extreme temperature cycling. We envision liquid-infused nanostructured composites as a universal thermal interface solution for cooling applications in data centers, GPU/CPU systems, solid-state lasers, and LEDs.