Data centre trends 2025: Vertiv predicts industry efforts to support, enable, leverage, regulate AI

  • 📰 ITWeb
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 55 sec. here
  • 10 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 53%
  • Publisher: 51%

Vertiv News

Data Centre Trends,Air-Cooling Strategies,Giordano (Gio) Albertazzi

Innovation in powering and cooling AI racks, management of energy consumption and emissions all to be a focus in the new year.

, a global provider of critical digital infrastructure and continuity solutions. Vertiv experts anticipate increased industry innovation and integration to support high-density computing, regulatory scrutiny around AI, as well as increasing focus on sustainability and cyber security efforts.

In 2025, the impact of compute-intense workloads will intensify, with the industry managing the sudden change in a variety of ways. Advanced computing will continue to shift from CPU to GPU to leverage the latter’s parallel computing power and the higher thermal design point of modern chips. This will further stress existing power and cooling systems and push data centre operators toward cold-plate and immersion cooling solutions that remove heat at the rack level.

Hybrid cooling systems, with liquid-to-liquid, liquid-to-air and liquid-to-refrigerant configurations, will evolve in rack mount, perimeter and row-based cabinet models that can be deployed in brown/greenfield applications. Servers will increasingly be integrated with the infrastructure needed to support them, including factory-integrated liquid cooling, ultimately making manufacturing and assembly more efficient, deployment faster, equipment footprint smaller and increasing system energy efficiency.Overextended grids and skyrocketing power demands are changing how data centres consume power.

We have summarized this news so that you can read it quickly. If you are interested in the news, you can read the full text here. Read more:

 /  🏆 45. in UK
 

Thank you for your comment. Your comment will be published after being reviewed.
Please try again later.

United Kingdom United Kingdom Latest News, United Kingdom United Kingdom Headlines