1. Introduction to Agilex™ 3 FPGA Thermal Design Guidelines
2. Agilex™ 3 FPGA Mechanical Construction
3. Agilex™ 3 FPGA Compact Thermal Model (CTM) Construction
4. Power and Thermal Calculator (PTC)
5. Thermal Design Process
6. General FPGA Thermal Design Considerations
7. Design Examples
8. Heat Sinks
9. Document Revision History for the Thermal Design User Guide: Agilex™ 3 FPGAs and SoCs
A. Agilex™ 3 FPGA Product Keys and Package Drawings
1.2. Thermal Design Flow
The following figure illustrates the general thermal design flow for Altera FPGAs.
Figure 1. Thermal Design Flow

Altera recommends that you conduct a system thermal analysis using the Power and Thermal Calculator (PTC) and compact thermal model (CTM) as early as possible in the design cycle to ensure that there is sufficient cooling for the maximum predicted heat dissipation in the targeted application. FPGAs do not have a rated thermal design power; a given FPGA can be used with various designs, where each has unique power dissipation characteristics. Altera also recommends that you allow some margin in your cooling design — this can prove useful when subsequent design or application changes result in greater power dissipation than initially anticipated or estimated.
Note: For some low power applications, if the ambient temperature and board temperature are low and there is sufficient air flow, considerable heat may pass directly from the FPGA through to the circuit board and a heat sink may not be required to cool the Agilex™ 3 device.