The AI-driven demand for compute power has data centers looking to squeeze more from every rack of GPUs. One consequence? Bacterial outbreaks. The liquid for liquid-cooled chips is a mixture of water and a substance that inhibits bacteria growth. To run the chips hotter, data center managers can change the mix to include more water, which absorbs heat better, but leads to nasty contamination that clogs the flow. To solve that, they flush the system, which can mean shutting down a rack for five…
Why this update matters
This developing story is relevant for readers tracking technology because it reflects fresh changes from the original source and signals where attention is shifting next.
Key details
The report was collected automatically and prepared for publication with a newsroom workflow that focuses on clarity, search visibility, and quick understanding.
Readers should review the original source for direct statements, official notices, and any later corrections or additions as the story evolves.
Related coverage
Continue reading with more reporting from the same topic cluster.