Personally ,with the experience I've gained so far while making LED grow lights ,
when it comes to Thermal Interface Materials ,the first of all the rest characteristic I look for is how easy it is
to apply the TIM in a really thin layer ( 1/10 of millimeter= 100 microns ,being the thickest layer for my standards).
I do not pay so much attention to the thermal conductivity or any other characteristic,as to the "ease of application ".
For example :
Equation : Thermal resistance of an interface material
Rθ TIM = t / (k* A)
Where:
t is the thermal interface material bond line thickness (BLT) (m)
k is the thermal conductivity (W/m-K)
A is the heat source contact area (m2)
A for Vero 29 LED COB arrays =
~ 0.001 m^2 ( 31.8 mm x 31.8 mm )
Paste "X" is really easy to apply into a layer of 50 microns (
0,00005 m ) and has a thermal
conductivity of
5 W/m-K
Paste " Z " is really a PITA to apply into a layer of 150 microns (
0,00015 m ) and has a
a thermal conductivity of
15 W/m-K (!!!)
Rth X = 0.01 °C/W
Rth Z = 0.01 °C/W
Paste X has the same thermal resistance of paste Z ,because it can be applied into a layer of 1/3 of thickness than the Z paste layer.Although paste Z has 3x times higher thermal conductivity,than paste X has . ...
But then ,WTF do I know ?
That's only my POV ...
Still ,my favourite TIM remains
Arctic Silver 5 ....
The only paste I've tested and used ,that can be applied into a really thin -thinner than thinnest -
layer ...
Only downside so far ,is that it needs about 200 hours ( approx 10 days ) of curing before COBs will be "put on duty " ...
Cheers.