CUSTOM HEAT SINK, PERFECTED FOR YOU.

Table of Contents

AI Server Rack Cold Plate: GPU Heat Removal, Materials & Design Data

AI server rack cold plates are used when air cooling cannot control GPU and CPU heat density. A well-designed cold plate moves heat from the chip into coolant, while controlling pressure drop, leakage risk, material compatibility, and rack-level serviceability.

Custom Cold PlateIs for AI Server

What Is an AI Server Rack Cold Plate?

An AI server rack cold plate is a liquid-cooled metal plate mounted on high-power chips such as GPUs, CPUs, ASICs, switch chips, or power modules. Coolant flows through internal channels and carries heat away from the server.

In AI racks, the cold plate is not only a thermal part. It is also a fluid, mechanical, sealing, and reliability component. A poor design may cool well in a lab test but fail in rack deployment because of excessive pressure drop, leakage risk, poor flatness, or coolant compatibility issues.

Item Typical design point Why it matters
Cooling target GPU, CPU, ASIC, switch chip AI workloads create dense heat sources
Cooling method Direct-to-chip liquid cooling Shorter thermal path than air cooling
Common materials Copper, aluminum, stainless steel Affects conductivity, weight, cost, and corrosion
Internal structure Channels, microchannels, skived fins, manifold flow Controls heat transfer and pressure drop
Connection Tubes, manifolds, quick connectors, CDU Determines rack integration and maintenance
Key tests Leak, pressure drop, flow, flatness, thermal test Controls deployment reliability

AI Server Cold Plate: How Does It Remove Heat from GPUs and CPUs?

An AI server cold plate removes heat by placing liquid flow close to the heat source. Heat travels from the chip package into the cold plate base, then into coolant through the internal channel surface.

The basic heat path is:

 
GPU / CPU → TIM → cold plate base → internal channels → coolant → CDU / heat exchanger
 
Heat transfer stage What happens Data to check
Chip to TIM Heat leaves the chip package TIM type, thickness, contact pressure
TIM to cold plate Heat enters the metal base Flatness, material, base thickness
Cold plate to coolant Heat transfers into liquid Channel geometry, flow rate, wetted area
Coolant to CDU Heat leaves the server Pressure drop, connector loss, coolant temperature
CDU to facility loop Heat is rejected outside the rack Heat exchanger capacity and water temperature

Practical rule: the target is not just lower temperature. The target is lower thermal resistance at a pressure drop the rack cooling loop can support.

GPU Cold Plate Heat Removal: What Internal Structure Matters?

GPU cold plate heat removal depends on how much internal surface area contacts the coolant and how evenly coolant reaches the hotspot area.

For high-power GPU modules, simple straight channels may not be enough. Designs often use parallel channels, split-flow structures, microchannels, or internal skived fins to increase the wetted surface area above the heat source.

Internal structure Thermal effect Limitation
Straight channels Simple and robust Lower surface area
Parallel channels Lower flow resistance Flow distribution must be controlled
Microchannels Higher heat transfer area Higher pressure drop and clogging risk
Internal skived fins High surface area near hotspot More process control required
Split-flow design Sends cooler fluid to hotspot first More complex manifold design
Jet impingement Strong local cooling Higher pressure drop and complexity

Practical rule: smaller channels and denser fins can improve heat transfer, but they also increase pressure drop. The design must balance both.

Monolithic Cold Plates for AI vs O-Ring Sealed Cold Plates

Monolithic cold plates for AI are designed to reduce joints and sealing interfaces. They can be made by processes such as vacuum brazing, friction stir welding, diffusion bonding, or precision CNC structures depending on material and channel design.

O-ring sealed cold plates are easier to assemble and inspect, but elastomer seals can become a risk under long-term thermal cycling, pressure cycling, and service conditions.

Factor O-ring sealed cold plate Monolithic / welded / brazed cold plate
Sealing method Rubber seal + screws Metal-to-metal joining or integrated structure
Leakage risk Depends on seal aging and assembly quality Lower seal-interface risk
Maintenance Easier to disassemble Usually not designed for disassembly
Pressure capability Depends on O-ring and screws Often stronger when process is well controlled
Internal channel flexibility Good Depends on joining process
Best use Low-to-medium pressure, serviceable designs High-reliability AI server cold plates

Practical rule: monolithic designs are worth evaluating when leakage control, compact structure, and long-term reliability are more important than easy disassembly.

Server CPU Cold Plate Solution: Copper, Aluminum or Stainless Steel?

A server CPU cold plate solution can use copper, aluminum, stainless steel, or coated metal depending on heat load, coolant chemistry, weight, cost, and corrosion requirements.

Copper is usually selected for high heat flux areas because it has much higher thermal conductivity. Aluminum can reduce weight and cost but needs careful coolant compatibility. Stainless steel has much lower conductivity and is usually used only for special fluid or corrosion conditions.

Material Typical thermal conductivity Weight Cost Best use
Copper ~390–400 W/m·K Heavy Higher GPU cold plates, high heat flux CPUs, compact hotspots
Aluminum ~160–205 W/m·K Light Lower Larger plates, cost-sensitive systems, aluminum loops
Stainless steel ~15–20 W/m·K Medium Medium Corrosion-focused or special fluid environments
Coated copper High Heavy Higher High performance with corrosion control
Coated aluminum Medium Light Lower Lightweight server cooling with compatible coolant

Practical rule: choose copper for thermal performance near dense chips. Choose aluminum when weight, cost, and system material compatibility are more important.

Server Cold Plate for High Heat Flux CPUs: What Data Should Engineers Check?

For a server cold plate for high heat flux CPUs, total power is not enough. The same 500 W can be easy or difficult depending on heat source area, hotspot map, coolant flow, and maximum temperature limit.

Engineers should compare cold plates using the same test conditions. A thermal resistance number without flow rate, inlet temperature, and heat source size is not useful.

Data point Why it matters Example
Chip power / TDP Defines total heat load 300 W, 500 W, 1000 W-class module
Heat source size Defines heat flux 35 × 35 mm package
Hotspot map Guides channel placement Center or edge hotspot
Coolant inlet temperature Defines thermal headroom 25°C, 35°C, 45°C
Flow rate Affects heat transfer L/min per cold plate
Pressure drop Affects pump and CDU design kPa at rated flow
Maximum temperature Sets design target Case, junction, or surface limit
Mounting pressure Controls TIM resistance Screw torque or spring load

Practical rule: compare thermal resistance and pressure drop together. A cold plate that cools well but creates too much pressure drop may not be suitable for rack deployment.

Custom Cold Plate for Cloud Computing Hardware: What Should Be Customized?

A custom cold plate for cloud computing hardware should be designed around the full server layout, not only the GPU or CPU package.

Cloud and AI hardware require repeatability, serviceability, low leakage risk, clean internal channels, stable connectors, and predictable pressure drop across many servers.

Custom item What to define Why it matters
Contact area Chip size, package outline, keep-out zones Prevents poor contact and local overheating
Channel layout Serpentine, parallel, microchannel, split-flow Balances heat transfer and pressure drop
Inlet / outlet Connector location and tube routing Affects assembly and maintenance
Mounting holes Screw locations and pressure limits Protects chip package and TIM contact
Material Copper, aluminum, coating Affects performance and corrosion
Surface flatness Contact surface tolerance Reduces interface resistance
Leak test Pressure and holding time Controls field failure risk
Cleanliness Particle and residue control Protects pumps, valves, and microchannels

Practical rule: for cloud hardware, a cold plate is part of the rack cooling architecture. It must match the server layout, coolant loop, CDU, manifold, and maintenance method.

Server Cold Plate Technology: Flow Path, Pressure Drop and Reliability

Server cold plate technology is mainly about balancing heat transfer, flow resistance, manufacturability, and reliability.

A more aggressive flow path may reduce chip temperature, but it can also increase pressure drop. A low-pressure design may be easier for the pump, but it may not cool the hotspot enough.

Design factor Improves May increase
Higher flow rate Heat transfer Pump power and pressure drop
Smaller channels Heat transfer area Clogging risk and pressure drop
More turbulence Heat transfer coefficient Flow resistance
Thinner base Lower conduction path Mechanical deformation risk
Better flatness Lower TIM resistance Machining cost
Larger connector Flow capacity Space and serviceability limits
Higher leak test pressure Reliability confidence Process time

Common reliability checks

Test item Purpose
Leak test Check sealing and pressure integrity
Pressure drop test Verify flow resistance
Flow distribution test Confirm each channel receives coolant
Flatness inspection Ensure chip contact quality
Dimensional inspection Confirm mounting and connector fit
Thermal test Verify performance under load
Corrosion compatibility review Reduce long-term coolant loop risk
Cleanliness control Prevent particles entering the loop

How to Request a Custom AI Server Cold Plate Quote

For a custom AI server cold plate, send both thermal data and mechanical constraints. A drawing alone is not enough if the supplier does not know flow rate, coolant, pressure drop limit, or chip power map.

Required data Example
Chip type GPU, CPU, ASIC, switch chip
Heat load 500 W, 800 W, 1000 W-class module
Heat source size Package size and hotspot map
Maximum temperature Case or junction temperature target
Coolant type DI water, water-glycol, dielectric coolant
Inlet temperature 25°C, 35°C, 45°C
Flow rate target L/min per cold plate
Pressure drop limit kPa or bar at target flow
Mounting layout Screw holes, spring load, keep-out zone
Plate size limit Length, width, height
Material preference Copper, aluminum, coated metal
Quantity Prototype, pilot run, production

Practical rule: if the project is still in the design stage, send the chip power, available space, coolant condition, and target flow. A supplier can then recommend channel type, material, joining process, and test plan.

FAQ

What is an AI server rack cold plate?

An AI server rack cold plate is a liquid-cooled metal plate mounted on GPUs, CPUs, or other hot chips. It transfers heat into coolant for high-density server cooling.

Why are cold plates used in AI servers?

Cold plates are used because AI GPUs and CPUs produce high heat density. Direct-to-chip liquid cooling removes heat more efficiently than air cooling in dense racks.

What is the difference between a GPU cold plate and a CPU cold plate?

A GPU cold plate often needs a larger custom layout and hotspot-focused channel design. A CPU cold plate is usually more socket-based and standardized.

Are monolithic cold plates better for AI servers?

They can reduce seal-interface risk and improve structural reliability. However, they may increase machining or joining cost, so the choice depends on channel design and volume.

How do you reduce pressure drop in a server cold plate?

Use parallel flow paths, optimized channel width, split-flow layouts, and smooth inlet/outlet transitions. The goal is enough heat transfer without overloading the pump or CDU.

What data is needed to design a custom AI server cold plate?

Send chip power, heat source size, maximum temperature, coolant type, inlet temperature, flow rate, pressure drop limit, mounting layout, available space, material preference, and quantity.

Need Custom Thermal Solutions ?

Free Design Support

Rapid Quoting

24h Quick Quotation

Free Thermal Evaluation

Sample MOQ for 1 pc

Send your 2D/3D CAD files (STEP, IGS, PDF) for a rapid technical review and quote.

Need a Custom Thermal Solution for Your AI Project?

Submit your CAD drawing or thermal requirements. Our engineers provide a rapid thermal evaluation within 24 hours.

About Ecothermgroup

Custom Heat Sink Manufacturer

At Ecothermgroup, we do more than manufacture heat sinks; we provide end-to-end thermal engineering solutions. Backed by over two decades of manufacturing expertise, we partner with your engineering teams to solve complex thermal challenges. Whether you require a critical design review or a rapid shift from prototype to mass production, we ensure your high-power systems achieve optimal thermal performance with maximum cost-efficiency.

Our Service

Sample MOQ for 1 pc

Free Custom Design

Free Thermal Analysis

Best Price Guaranteed

24 Hours Feedback

Custom Heat Sink Types

custom zippered fin heatsink

*Reliable Thermal Transfer for Power Supplies and Telecom.

*Efficient Thermal Management for 1000W+ AI Chips.

custom vapor chamber heatsink

*Ultra-thin, High-Performance Heat Spreaders for Compact Spaces.

custom skived fin heatsink

*High-Density Skived Fins – Up to 3 Meters in Length.

You can find ECOTHERM On :

Related Insights

Featured Case Studies

CFD thermal contour map showing temperature distribution for 3800W EV charging cold plate
  • Application: 800V EV Charging Station

  • Heat Load: 3800W | Thickness: 12mm

  • Technology: Friction Stir Welding (FSW) + CFD Simulation

Latest Engineering Insights

Scroll to Top

contact Ecotherm

We are available to assist you via email. Please don’t hesitate to get in touch, and we will respond to your inquiry as soon as possible.


Email:  support@ecothermgroup.com

Follow us on YouTube | TikTok | LinkedIn
Stay connected with us for updates, news, and more!


Please fill out the form below, and we will get back to you as soon as possible.

Get a Custom DFM Review & Quote

Please email your 3D CAD files (STEP/IGES) and project details. Max attachment: 50MB

support@ecothermgroup.com

100% Secure & Confidential | NDAs Supported | MOQ: 1 Piece

support@ecothermgroup.com

Contact Ecotherm

Please upload your design or requirements, and our experts will provide a precise cooling solution tailored to your needs.