Bitcoin Miners Adopt Liquid Immersion Cooling

Overclockers first explored liquid immersion cooling in the early 2000s, and select makers of servers adopted it for datacenters. Now, Bitcoin miners are turning to immersion cooling systems as they promise to eliminate overheating of cryptocurrency mining machines and maximize their earnings.

"The immersed equipment runs faster without overheating," said Nishant Sharma, founder of mining consultant BlocksBridge, in an interview with Bloomberg. "It looks like a fish tank with machines inside it. Sooner or later, all big miners will be doing large-scale immersion mining."

For example, Riot Blockchain, a Nasdaq-listed cryptocurrency miner from Texas, recently announced plans to develop the industry's first large-scale immersion-cooled Bitcoin mining facility with 46,000 mining machines. The facility will consume a whopping 20 MegaWatts of power. Meanwhile, some miners used liquid immersion cooling back in 2018.

These days numerous cryptocurrency farms employ immersion cooling systems to lower temperatures of their mining machines, maximize their performance, and increase earnings per machine (which are quite expensive). Immersion cooling cools all components of a system and does not require large and complex equipment like industrial air conditioners or liquid cooling systems. However, this does not mean that immersion cooling is easy (or cheap) to deploy or service. Meanwhile, usage of immersion cooling allows the installation of additional mining machines into the same building to maximize their performance, two factors that offset all possible downsides of this method for cryptominers.

Anton Shilov
Contributing Writer

Anton Shilov is a contributing writer at Tom’s Hardware. Over the past couple of decades, he has covered everything from CPUs and GPUs to supercomputers and from modern process technologies and latest fab tools to high-tech industry trends.