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12 Feb 2026 by Tate Asia Pacific
Liquid cooling is an advanced thermal management method that uses a liquid coolant - typically water or a dielectric fluid - to absorb and transfer heat away from high-performance computing equipment. In data centres, liquid cooling offers a powerful alternative to traditional air-based systems, especially as rack densities and power demands continue to rise.
Unlike air cooling, where heat is dissipated using airflow and fans, liquid cooling places coolant closer to the heat source, making thermal transfer significantly more efficient.


As AI workloads, machine learning, and HPC applications increase in scale and complexity, air cooling struggles to keep up. Liquid cooling, on the other hand, efficiently manages the growing thermal load while also reducing overall energy use.
There are several approaches to liquid cooling, each suited to different applications and infrastructure layouts:

As the demand for performance grows, direct-to-chip or D2C liquid cooling is becoming the dominant approach. Here's why:
Direct-to-chip cooling provides the precision, scalability, and reliability that modern data centres require - especially in an AI-first world. As more operators look to future-proof their facilities, this technology is quickly becoming the new standard.
The future of data centre cooling is liquid, and direct-to-chip systems are leading the way. Whether you're planning a new build or upgrading an existing site, now is the time to explore how liquid cooling can help you meet rising performance and sustainability demands.