Specification Sheet
Thermal Management Specifications
118 Intel
®
 Xeon
®
 Processor E5-1600/E5-2600/E5-4600 v2 Product Families
Datasheet Volume One of Two
increments. On-Demand mode may be used in conjunction with the Adaptive Thermal 
Monitor; however, if the system tries to enable On-Demand mode at the same time the 
TCC is engaged, the factory configured duty cycle of the TCC will override the duty 
cycle selected by the On-Demand mode.
5.2.4 PROCHOT_N Signal
An external signal, PROCHOT_N (processor hot), is asserted when the processor core 
temperature has reached its maximum operating temperature. If Adaptive Thermal 
Monitor is enabled (note it must be enabled for the processor to be operating within 
specification), the TCC will be active when PROCHOT_N is asserted. The processor can 
be configured to generate an interrupt upon the assertion or de-assertion of 
PROCHOT_N. Refer to the 
Intel® Xeon® Processor E5 v2 Product Family Processor 
Datasheet, Volume Two: Registers
 for specific register and programming details.
The PROCHOT_N signal is bi-directional in that it can either signal when the processor 
(any core) has reached its maximum operating temperature or be driven from an 
external source to activate the TCC. The ability to activate the TCC via PROCHOT_N can 
provide a means for thermal protection of system components. 
As an output, PROCHOT_N will go active when the processor temperature monitoring 
sensor detects that one or more cores has reached its maximum safe operating 
temperature. This indicates that the processor Thermal Control Circuit (TCC) has been 
activated, if enabled. As an input, assertion of PROCHOT_N by the system will activate 
the TCC, if enabled, for all cores. TCC activation due to PROCHOT_N assertion by the 
system will result in the processor immediately transitioning to the minimum frequency 
and corresponding voltage (using Freq/SVID control). Clock modulation is not activated 
in this case. The TCC will remain active until the system de-asserts PROCHOT_N.
PROCHOT_N can allow voltage regulator (VR) thermal designs to target maximum 
sustained current instead of maximum current. Systems should still provide proper 
cooling for the VR, and rely on PROCHOT_N as a backup in case of system cooling 
failure. The system thermal design should allow the power delivery circuitry to operate 
within its temperature specification even while the processor is operating at its Thermal 
Design Power. 
With a properly designed and characterized thermal solution, it is anticipated that 
PROCHOT_N will be asserted for very short periods of time when running the most 
power intensive applications. An under-designed thermal solution that is not able to 
prevent excessive assertion of PROCHOT_N in the anticipated ambient environment 
may cause a noticeable performance loss. 
5.2.5 THERMTRIP_N Signal
Regardless of whether Adaptive Thermal Monitor is enabled, in the event of a 
catastrophic cooling failure, the processor will automatically shut down when the 
processor has reached an elevated temperature (refer to the THERMTRIP_N definition 
in Section 6, “Signal Descriptions”). At this point, the THERMTRIP_N signal will go 
active and stay active. THERMTRIP_N activation is independent of processor activity 
and does not generate any Intel®
 QuickPath Interconnect transactions. If 
THERMTRIP_N is asserted, all processor supplies (VCC, VTTA, VTTD, VSA, VCCPLL, 
VCCD) must be removed within the timeframe provided. The temperature at which 
THERMTRIP_N asserts is not user configurable and is not software visible.










