Immersion cooling has long been discussed as a potential solution for future server cooling, and it seems like SSD makers are starting to get on board with the same idea. Polish company Goodram Enterprise has introduced a 123TB QLC SSD, first spotted by TechRadar, that is designed specifically to be submerged in coolant.
The drive is not the largest SSD in the world (the largest so far is 245TB) , nor is it the first enterprise SSD to be immersion cooled. But it might be the largest SSD yet to boast native immersion cooling support.
The drive is known as the DC25F QLC, and comes in E3.S and E3.L form factors. The drive is capable of sequential read speeds of up to 14,600 MB/s and 3,200 MB/s sequential write speeds. Random 4K reads in IOPS are rated at 3000K, and equivalent writes are rated at 35K. The drive takes advantage of QLC NAND flash to achieve its massive 123TB capacity.
Swipe to scroll horizontally Goodram DC25F series Form factor E3.S / E3.L H/W Pfail Tantalum Capacity 122.88 TB Endurance (5 years) 0.3 drive writes per day Sequential Read / Write 14,600 / 3,2 00 MB/s 4K Random Read / Write 3000 / 35 K
Goodram also has a plethora of other smaller-capacity SSDs that are also officially designed to work in server environments with immersion cooling. These include M.2 2280/22110 drives, E1.S drives, and U.2/U.3 drives using either QLC or TLC NAND flash. All of its immersion cooling drives have passed tests with Shell's S5X and Chevron's Synfluid PAO 4 dielectric fluids.
Immersion cooling isn't a new idea, and conventional SSDs can technically be used in immersion cooling. Goodram's drives are special in that they offer official support for the cooling method. The company has tested its drives in dielectric fluids and equipped them with various protection features to ensure its SSDs will work well and last for years while submerged in coolant.
Submerging servers in coolant is a thermal management strategy that's been used on and off for decades, but has recently enjoyed renewed consideration as a mainstream upgrade to conventional data center liquid cooling. Today's datacenter cooling systems are becoming overwhelmed with the heat generation of modern AI-focused GPUs, driving cooling costs through the roof, and it's only going to get worse as new generations of GPU and CPU hardware emerge.
SSDs don't usually need immersion cooling in isolation, but Goodram's immersion-cooled SSD stands ready to plug into the servers of tomorrow's data center if or when immersion cooling becomes more popular.
Stay On the Cutting Edge: Get the Tom's Hardware Newsletter Get Tom's Hardware's best news and in-depth reviews, straight to your inbox. Contact me with news and offers from other Future brands Receive email from us on behalf of our trusted partners or sponsors
Follow Tom's Hardware on Google News, or add us as a preferred source, to get our latest news, analysis, & reviews in your feeds.