The Data Center Frontier Show
As AI infrastructure scales from megawatts to gigawatts, liquid cooling is rapidly becoming a foundational technology rather than a specialized option. In this episode of the Data Center Frontier Show podcast, recorded at Motivair's headquarters and manufacturing facility in Buffalo, New York, DCF Editor in Chief Matt Vincent sits down with Motivair CEO Rich Whitmore to discuss the evolution of liquid cooling from its roots in high-performance computing to its central role in today's AI data centers. Whitmore explains how Motivair's decade-plus experience supporting supercomputing environments helped position the company for the current AI boom, which he describes as the commercialization of traditional HPC at unprecedented scale. The conversation explores how liquid cooling products are developed years ahead of silicon roadmaps, why manufacturing discipline and testing standards have become competitive differentiators, and how global production capacity is increasingly essential as AI deployments accelerate worldwide. The discussion also examines one of the industry's emerging technical debates: whether ever-larger "facility-scale" coolant distribution units are the best answer for AI infrastructure. Whitmore offers a unique perspective on the realities of thermal management, noting that while AI workloads can change almost instantaneously, mechanical cooling systems must still operate within the physical constraints of pumps, valves, and fluid dynamics. The interview was recorded during a Schneider Electric global media event [https://www.datacenterfrontier.com/site-selection/article/55379784/terawulfs-lake-mariner-campus-how-a-retired-coal-plant-became-an-ai-factory-prototype] that included a tour of Motivair's Buffalo manufacturing operations and the nearby 750 MW TeraWulf Lake Mariner AI campus. There, Motivair liquid cooling technologies—including CDUs, in-rack manifolds, and ChilledDoor rear-door heat exchangers—are helping support one of North America's most ambitious AI infrastructure developments. As Whitmore explains, the question facing the industry is no longer whether liquid cooling will become mainstream. That transition is already underway. The challenge now is executing at scale—and building the manufacturing, supply chain, and engineering capabilities required to support the next generation of AI infrastructure.
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