Immersion cooling is based on direct heat transfer from electronic components to a specially engineered dielectric fluid, eliminating the inherent limitations of air cooling. In such systems, long-term performance is primarily defined by the properties of the fluid, which enable stable, efficient, and predictable operation under high thermal loads. The thermophysical and chemical characteristics of the dielectric fluid directly determine heat transfer efficiency, system reliability, and overall total cost of ownership.
Using non-engineered or low-grade fluids leads to accelerated oxidation, contamination, and degradation of cooling performance over time. This results in increased energy consumption, higher maintenance requirements, and elevated risk of hardware failure. DCX dielectric fluids are engineered specifically for high-density computing environments, ensuring stable operation, consistent thermal performance, and long service life in both data center and mining applications.