
NVIDIA Introduces Liquid-Cooled GPUs for More Sustainable and Efficient Computing
Nvidia made an interesting revelation at Computex, stating that it is transitioning to liquid-cooled graphics cards. The developers claim that the liquid-cooled version of their A100 compute card uses 30% less power than the air-cooled version. Furthermore, this is not a one-time activity. Nvidia will deploy liquid-cooled cards in other applications, such as in-car systems.
Read more: A quarter of the world’s internet users’ infrastructure is vulnerable to cyber-attacks.
According to Nvidia, storage systems worldwide consume 1% of total electricity. As an outcome, such technologies, especially liquid-cooled graphics cards, will have a significant impact on the field. Consider saving one-third of this same power supply. It will not only reduce power usage but will also benefit the environment.
Not only graphics cards, but also CPUs, storage, and networking devices, use electricity and require cooling. Nvidia, on the other hand, says that GPU-accelerated systems would outperform CPU-only servers.
Read more: Coming Soon: Vivo to launch Vivo T2X with an AMOLED display
Liquid-cooled systems are not revolutionary. It’s been used in a variety of applications, including supercomputers and bespoke gaming PCs. The reason for this is that liquid absorbs heat more effectively than air. Furthermore, when a liquid becomes hot, it is much easier to transfer heat elsewhere so that it can cool down. The air-cooling system must cool not just the device’s entire body but also the specific components.
In this regard, Nvidia’s solution may become more “mainstream,” as it would not require oceans to cool graphics cards and other components. As a result, we anticipate that more GPUs will enable liquid cooling in the coming years.
For the latest Sci-Tec News Follow BOL News on Google News . Read more on Latest Sci-Tec News on oldsite.bolnews.com.
Read More News On
Catch all the Sci-Tech News, Breaking News Event and Latest News Updates on The BOL News
Download The BOL News App to get the Daily News Update & Follow us on Google News.