3 min read

ZutaCore Named One of the Hottest Products at GTC!

ZutaCore Named One of the Hottest Products at GTC!

Showcasing the Industry’s first dielectric direct-to-chip liquid cooling cold plate for NVIDIA GPUs

A month has flown by since NVIDIA GTC 2024 and all eyes were on ZutaCore®’s waterless, direct-to-chip liquid cooling and the media was no exception. CRN summed it up the best when they declared that our support for NVIDIA’s H100 and H200 tensor GPUs was one of the hottest products of the show!  And we couldn’t agree more.  Support for the world’s most advanced GPUs is a significant development in the industry and it’s all part of our plan to drive sustainable AI in data centers throughout the world.  

If you were not fortunate enough to attend the show – check out the picture of our H100 and H200 cold plates And yes, they do cool the hottest processors and GPUs! Our HyperCoo® technology has already been proven to cool the most powerful processors of 1,500 watts and beyond and at GTC 2024, these NVIDIA GPU cold plates were showcased throughout the show floor in Boston Limited, Hyve Solutions, and Pegatron booths.  Here’s what Data Center Frontier had to say in their post-show wrap up story:IMG_0827

“At the chip-level was Zutacore at the GTC and made a significant impression with their direct-to-chip, waterless, two-phase liquid cooling system that has been designed for AI and HPC workloads. Partnering with a broad selection of vendors, from Dell to Intel to Rittal to bring their cooling technology to those companies’ HPC and AI solutions, Zutacore could be a standard bearer for how direct-to-chip cooling solutions will impact the industry.”

                                                                                                              David Chernicoff, Data Center Frontier

Here are a few picture highlights from the show.  Keep in mind that our direct-to-chip, waterless liquid cooling solutions are not just innovative. They are absolutely essential in today’s rapidly advancing technological landscape. By providing support for these powerful NVIDIA GPUs, ZutaCore is at the forefront of facilitating unprecedented computing power while ensuring environmental sustainability.

IMG_0848


Our Co-founder and CEO Erez Freibach speaking with 
storage review.com at the Boston Limited booth proudly showcasing ZutaCore’s support for the Nvidia H100 and H200 GPU. 

IMG_0857


Pegatron demonstrated Intel’s 4th Generation Xeon Scalable Processor Platform “Eagle Stream” being cooled by  ZutaCore’s HyperCool technology.

 

IMG_0859 

The Hyve Solutions Polaris platform was shown being HyperCooled up to 1500 watts and ZutaCore’s H100/H200 cold plates were also on full display.

 

 

ZutaCore’s CEO Goes Live at the Show:  Take One!

Jordan Ranous from StorageReview.com stopped by to meet with our CEO and Co-Founder Erez Freibach at the Boston Limited booth and he posted a video interview of the meeting titled “Boiling a GPU to Cool it! ZutaCore DIRECT-TO-CHIP Liquid Cooling.”  Their discussion shed light on how direct-to-chip liquid cooling challenges conventional cooling methods and offers a sustainable and efficient solution for the high-performance demands of modern technology. You can watch the full video at this link. 

SDX Central was also on hand to cover our NVIDIA GPU announcement.  As Erez told reporter Emma  Chervek, “Each Nvidia GPU can consume up to 700 watts of power, which will challenge data centers that are already struggling to control their heat, energy consumption and carbon footprint. HyperCool was designed specifically to solve these problems and has already been proven to cool the most powerful processors of 1,500 watts or more and currently for 100 kW per rack of computing power.”  You can read the full article here.

 What Analysts are Saying

We know it…our customers know it….the media knows it……but it’s always nice when the analyst community recognizes the innovation you are bringing to the industry.  Here is a quote directly from Peter Rutten, Research VP at IDC regarding our support for NVIDIA GPUs. 

“Two-phase direct-to-chip liquid cooling technologies have significant advantages, which is why we’ve already seen growing traction from CPU chip manufacturers. With the worldwide AI server market expected to reach $49B by 2027, this announcement from ZutaCore supporting next generation GPUs designs is a significant milestone in the industry.”

                                                                                                        Peter Rutten, IDC

 Next Stop:  Data Center World DC

The heat in the data center is not the only thing that never stops – neither do we!  You can catch ZutaCore this week at Data Center World DC on April 15-18th and Data Center Nation, Milan on April 17th with our partners - Chatsworth Products, Mactronics, and E4 Computing.    Don’t miss our very own Tony Medler presenting alongside Samuel Rodriquez from Chatsworth Products in a 30-minute solution spotlight titled “How Liquid Cooling is Changing the Landscape of Data Centers.” on Thursday, April 18th at 11:00am EST in DC.

To learn more about how ZutCore is changing the landscape of the data center with our direct-to-chip liquid cooling solution, download our eBook.

At OCP, it’s all about the Dielectric Cold Plate Modular Data Center

2 min read

At OCP, it’s all about the Dielectric Cold Plate Modular Data Center

Come See ZutaCore's Booth, Download our White Paper, and Watch our Panel Presentation As we prepare to attend the 2024 OCP Regional Summit in Lisbon,...

Read More
Waterless, Direct-to-Chip Liquid Cooling Comes to NVIDIA GPUs

2 min read

Waterless, Direct-to-Chip Liquid Cooling Comes to NVIDIA GPUs

At GTC 2024, ZutaCore to showcase H100 and H200 waterless dielectric cold plates supporting 1500W The direct-to-chip liquid cooling ecosystem just...

Read More
Data Center Sustainability: How to Save the Planet

4 min read

Data Center Sustainability: How to Save the Planet

Data Center Sustainability: How Two-Phase Direct-to-Chip Liquid Cooling Can Save the Planet According to the MIT Lincoln Laboratory, data centers...

Read More