The HyperCool direct-to-chip system from ZutaCore is designed to cool up to 120kW of rack power without requiring a facilities modification. Credit: Nataliya Sdobnikova ZutaCore has launched a liquid cooling system called HyperCool that can handle the forthcoming Nvidia GB200 Grace Blackwell superchip without modifications to the data center or the rack – a common requirement of liquid cooling. Grace Blackwell is a gigantic chip with 400 billion transistors and five components: two Blackwell GPUs, a Grace CPU, and two I/O chips. Its power draw is believed to be over 1kW, making air cooling an extreme challenge. ZutaCore claims to have the industry’s first dielectric cold plates to support this new platform, featuring the ability to cool 120kW of rack power with little or no modifications to current real estate, power, or cooling systems. (Read more about dielectric cold plates and other immersion cooling methods.) For contrast, air cooling taps out at about 30 kW and is no longer viable for cooling the system. And liquid cooling usually means some kind of piping has to be installed in the facilities, but ZutaCore claims that isn’t necessary with its system. ZutaCore’s technology can cool the NVIDIA GB200 Superchip with a single cold plate, “delivering an industry-first waterless direct-to-chip liquid cooling solution,” said Erez Freibach, co-founder and CEO at ZutaCore, in a statement. “This breakthrough frees AI data center owners and operators from the risks associated with water-based cooling, empowering them to deploy the processing power needed for compute-intensive workloads like generative AI without the fear of leakages.” ZutaCore says HyperCool can be implemented in new or existing data centers to deliver 10 times more computing power, a 50% reduction in total cost of ownership, 100% heat reuse, and reduced CO2 emissions. There is a small but growing ecosystem of servers certified to work with HyperCool, including models from Dell Technologies, ASUS, Pegatron, and SuperMicro. In addition to its offering for the GB200 Grace Blackwell Superchip, ZutaCore previously unveiled HyperCool support for older Nvidia H100 and H200 GPUs. Separately, ZutaCore announced a strategic OEM agreement with UNICOM Engineering, a Dell Titanium Partner, to deliver warrantied HyperCooled AI servers for the H100 and H200 GPUs. ZutaCore also announced that a global AI-as-a-service provider has already chosen its HyperCool direct-to-chip liquid cooling for AI servers with deployments starting in Q3 2024. Related content news Pure Storage adds AI features for security and performance Updated infrastructure-as-code management capabilities and expanded SLAs are among the new features from Pure Storage. By Andy Patrizio Jun 26, 2024 3 mins Enterprise Storage Data Center news Nvidia teases next-generation Rubin platform, shares physical AI vision ‘I'm not sure yet whether I'm going to regret this or not,' said Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang as he revealed 2026 plans for the company’s Rubin GPU platform. By Andy Patrizio Jun 17, 2024 4 mins CPUs and Processors Data Center news Intel launches sixth-generation Xeon processor line With the new generation chips, Intel is putting an emphasis on energy efficiency. By Andy Patrizio Jun 06, 2024 3 mins CPUs and Processors Data Center news AMD updates Instinct data center GPU line Unveiled at Computex 2024. the new AI processing card from AMD will come with much more high-bandwidth memory than its predecessor. By Andy Patrizio Jun 04, 2024 3 mins CPUs and Processors Data Center PODCASTS VIDEOS RESOURCES EVENTS NEWSLETTERS Newsletter Promo Module Test Description for newsletter promo module. Please enter a valid email address Subscribe