- All Posts
- Design Drives Performance: Why Infrastructure and Liquid Cooling Must Evolve Together
Design Drives Performance: Why Infrastructure and Liquid Cooling Must Evolve Together
Data centers are pushing the limits of what traditional cooling can handle. As rack densities rise and workloads intensify, infrastructure design is the deciding factor in performance, scalability and efficiency.
Every data center is different, but the principle remains the same: infrastructure drives cooling. Rack density, workload type, location and form factor all determine what’s possible. Air-based systems have served for decades, but with AI, HPC and hyperscale deployments accelerating, they’re beginning to hit physical and thermal limits—particularly when working with 50 to 100kW racks or deploying in space-constrained environments. That’s where liquid cooling becomes essential.
Liquid cooling systems enable significantly higher heat removal in less space, giving operators a path to scale without compromising performance. But none of this works in isolation. Thermal strategy must be embedded into infrastructure planning from the start. High-powered racks demand robust integrated thermal systems. In compact or edge deployments, traditional air cooling may be physically unviable. Retrofitting is possible—but not ideal. When cooling is baked into the design, not bolted on afterward, systems can be optimized for density, serviceability and energy performance.
The key is co-design. Electrical, mechanical and architectural elements must be aligned to accommodate liquid cooling technologies—whether that’s ensuring structural loads can support rear-door heat exchangers or routing space for coolant distribution units and piping. Cooling should no longer be seen as an isolated MEP decision. It’s a foundational part of facility strategy.
From a sustainability perspective, the shift has added benefits. Liquid cooling enables better power usage effectiveness and opens doors for heat recovery strategies These are critical design considerations that impact layout, energy systems and long-term ESG goals.
Smart implementation requires foresight: selecting the right cooling approach for your density and footprint, integrating it with power and controls and designing for maintainability. While upfront costs may be higher, the payoff comes through lower energy usage, improved uptime and future-ready capacity.
Cooling can’t be an afterthought anymore. As AI, HPC and edge computing reshape the landscape, thermal and infrastructure design must evolve in lockstep.
Explore Other News
Powering People and Projects: Travess Herrington’s McKins…
For Travess Herrington, becoming an electrician wasn’t a random career move — it was a continuation of something much…
Designing for an Energy-Constrained Future: Four Forces R…
The world’s demand for artificial intelligence is accelerating faster than any other technological cycle in modern hi…
Designing for Density: How to Maximize Cooling, Power and…
The electrical environment around us is becoming increasingly high-demand. From AI to electrified transportation to c…