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Immersion cooling is a thermal management technique, often applied as an IT cooling practice, by which electronic devices and IT components, including complete servers and storage devices, are submerged in a thermally conductive but electrically insulating dielectric liquid or coolant. Heat is removed from the system by circulating relatively cold liquid into direct contact with hot components, then circulating the now heated liquid through cool heat exchangers. Unlike many other applications, water cooling cannot be used as normal water is electrically conductive and will break electronic components. Fluids suitable for immersion cooling have electrically insulating properties to ensure that they can safely come into contact with energized electronic components.

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  • Immersion cooling (en)
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  • Immersion cooling is a thermal management technique, often applied as an IT cooling practice, by which electronic devices and IT components, including complete servers and storage devices, are submerged in a thermally conductive but electrically insulating dielectric liquid or coolant. Heat is removed from the system by circulating relatively cold liquid into direct contact with hot components, then circulating the now heated liquid through cool heat exchangers. Unlike many other applications, water cooling cannot be used as normal water is electrically conductive and will break electronic components. Fluids suitable for immersion cooling have electrically insulating properties to ensure that they can safely come into contact with energized electronic components. (en)
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  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Asperitas_AIC24_Immersion_system.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Natural_Convection_Circulation_by_Asperitas.png
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Network_Device_immersed_in_synthetic_single-phase,_Liquid_Coolant.jpg
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Single-phase-immersion-cooling-diagram.png
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Single-server-immersion-cooling.jpg
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  • Immersion cooling is a thermal management technique, often applied as an IT cooling practice, by which electronic devices and IT components, including complete servers and storage devices, are submerged in a thermally conductive but electrically insulating dielectric liquid or coolant. Heat is removed from the system by circulating relatively cold liquid into direct contact with hot components, then circulating the now heated liquid through cool heat exchangers. Unlike many other applications, water cooling cannot be used as normal water is electrically conductive and will break electronic components. Fluids suitable for immersion cooling have electrically insulating properties to ensure that they can safely come into contact with energized electronic components. (en)
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