TI teams with NVIDIA to bring efficient power distribution to AI infrastructure
Texas
Instruments (TI) announced it is working with NVIDIA in the development of
power management and sensing technologies for 800V high-voltage direct current
(HVDC) power distribution systems for data center servers. The new power
architecture paves the way for more scalable and reliable next-generation AI
data centers.
Why it matters
With
the growth of AI, the power required per data center rack is predicted to
increase from 100kW today to more than 1MW in the near future.1 To power a 1MW rack, today’s 48V distribution system would
require almost 450lbs of copper, making it physically impossible for a 48V
system to scale power delivery to support computing needs in the long term.2
The
new 800V high-voltage DC power-distribution architecture will provide the power
density and conversion efficiency that future AI processors require, while
minimizing the growth of the power supply’s size, weight and complexity. This
800V architecture will enable engineers to scale power-efficient racks as
data-center demand evolves.
“A
paradigm shift is happening right in front of our eyes,” said Jeffrey Morroni,
director of power management research and development at Kilby Labs and a TI
Fellow. “AI data centers are pushing the limits of power to previously
unimaginable levels. A few years ago, we faced 48V infrastructures as the next
big challenge. Today, TI’s expertise in power conversion combined with NVIDIA's
AI expertise is enabling 800V high-voltage DC architectures to support the
unprecedented demand for AI computing.”
“Semiconductor
power systems are an important factor in enabling high-performance AI
infrastructure," said Gabriele Gorla, VP of System Engineering of NVIDIA.
"NVIDIA is teaming with suppliers to develop an 800V high-voltage DC
architecture that will efficiently support the next generation of powerful,
large-scale AI data centers."
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