Immersion cooling allows the transfer of heat source from the working fluid. This working fluid is non-conductive in nature and restricted to only four families of fluids. It includes deionized water, fluorocarbon-based fluids, mineral oil, and synthetic fluids.  Immersion cooling can be described as the practice of submerging computer components in a thermally, instead of electrically, conductive liquid. It is a method used regularly for cooling large power distribution components, such as transformers. This method is gaining popularity across the world with innovative data centers. The IT servers and hardware cooled by utilizing this method do not need fans and the heat exchange between the cool water circuit and warm coolant is usually caused by the heat exchanger. Several supercomputers with a massive density such as Cray-2, and CrayT90 require large liquid-to-chilled liquid heat exchangers for the removal of heat. In 2021, the immersion cooling industry contributes $258.6 million, and it is predicted to generate $1,855.1 million in 2030, advancing at a rate of 24.5% in the coming future. The rising penetration of the data centers, rapid usage of cloud services, and large amounts of data generation are the major factors for industry propulsion.  Moreover, the rising internet penetration, led […] read more