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Generative Design for Direct-to-Chip Liquid Cooling for Data Centers

Zheng Liu

Year
2026
Access
Open access

Abstract

Rapid growth in artificial intelligence (AI) workloads is driving up data center power densities, increasing the need for advanced thermal management. Direct-to-chip liquid cooling can remove heat efficiently at the source, but many cold plate channel layouts remain heuristic and are not optimized for the strongly non-uniform temperature distribution of modern heterogeneous packages. This work presents a generative design framework for synthesizing cooling channel geometries for the NVIDIA GB200 Grace Blackwell Superchip. A physics-based finite-difference thermal model provides rapid steady-state temperature predictions and supplies spatial thermal feedback to a constrained reaction-diffusion process that generates novel channel topologies while enforcing inlet/outlet and component constraints. By iterating channel generation and thermal evaluation in a closed loop, the method naturally redistributes cooling capacity toward high-power regions and suppresses hot-spot formation. Compared with a baseline parallel channel design, the resulting channels achieve more than a 5 degree Celsius reduction in average temperature and over 35 degree Celsius reduction in maximum temperature. Overall, the results demonstrate that coupling generative algorithms with lightweight physics-based modeling can significantly enhance direct-to-chip liquid cooling performance, supporting more sustainable scaling of AI computing.

Keywords

eess.SYcs.LG

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