xMEMS Labs, Inc. has announced the extension of its µCooling fan-on-a-chip platform to high-performance optical transceivers used in Artificial Intelligence data centers. This advance introduces the industry´s first in-module active thermal management solution specifically designed for the dense, heat-intensive environments of ultra-fast optical networking hardware, including 400G, 800G, and 1.6T optical transceivers. The µCooling system, originally developed for the compact spaces of mobile devices, enables highly localized, targeted cooling directly within these transceivers, a domain often overlooked by traditional data center cooling approaches.
Conventional data center cooling systems are typically engineered to dissipate heat from large scale, high-power processors and graphics units—components with thermal design powers in the kilowatt range. However, these systems often fail to adequately address the thermal hotspots found on much smaller, but critically important, components such as digital signal processors (DSPs) embedded inside optical transceivers. As data rates and component densities continue to rise to meet the demands of Artificial Intelligence workloads, these transceiver DSPs can operate at 18 watts TDP or higher, resulting in significant reliability and performance concerns due to heat accumulation that large-scale cooling infrastructure cannot efficiently mitigate.
By integrating µCooling technology directly into the module, xMEMS provides an innovative solution for thermal management at the device level. This advancement is particularly salient for next-generation Artificial Intelligence infrastructure where minimizing downtime and maximizing hardware reliability are essential. The new application of µCooling aims to extend product lifespans, maintain stable performance during high-throughput operations, and ultimately help hyperscale data center operators manage increasing thermal loads associated with higher-speed networking hardware. The expansion of fan-on-a-chip technology represents a proactive step in evolving data center cooling strategies as network speeds and component densities push the limits of traditional thermal management methodologies.