Airsys launched the next generation of its LiquidRack rack-level liquid cooling platform on April 20, targeting mid-density AI, data center, telecom, and edge environments. The product addresses a gap that has widened as operators outgrow air cooling but face the capital intensity of full immersion or direct-to-chip systems. Airsys introduced the platform at Data Center World 2026 in Washington, DC and is now accepting candidates for pilot deployments.
Airsys designed LiquidRack to integrate cooling functions directly at the rack rather than requiring large centralised liquid infrastructure. The platform uses up to 80% less dielectric fluid than immersion systems, cutting fluid handling complexity while enabling higher rack density. A cassette-based architecture supports both retrofit and new-build environments, letting operators deploy incrementally without facility-wide redesign. The system also recovers stranded power in retrofit environments by reducing cooling overhead and localising thermal management at the rack, reclaiming provisioned power that conventional cooling overhead was consuming.
The Gap Airsys LiquidRack Liquid Cooling Fills
As rack densities climb past 30 to 50 kW in AI deployments, air cooling hits its practical ceiling, but full immersion remains out of reach for a large portion of the operator market. Airsys targets precisely that middle tier: operators who have outgrown air but cannot yet commit to full immersion infrastructure. Unlike immersion systems that submerge multiple servers in a shared tank, LiquidRack keeps thermal management at the rack level, removing the need for complex facility-wide piping or large capital outlays upfront. Why liquid cooling is now a power strategy rather than just a cooling choice is a dynamic this product directly addresses.
The cassette-based design also matters for operators managing mixed-density environments, where some racks run at 10 kW and others push toward 50 kW. Deploying a facility-wide immersion system to cover the full range is economically impractical when only a portion of the floor requires high-density cooling. LiquidRack lets operators apply liquid cooling selectively at the rack level, scaling deployment as density requirements grow rather than committing to a complete infrastructure overhaul before the workload justifies it. That incremental approach significantly lowers the barrier to entry for operators who know liquid cooling is inevitable but need a financially viable path to get there.
Why the Timing Works in Airsys’s Favour
The liquid cooling market is consolidating fast, with Trane Technologies completing its LiquidStack acquisition and Ecolab acquiring CoolIT signalling that major industrial players are moving aggressively into the space. Most of that capital and attention has flowed toward hyperscale-grade immersion and direct-to-chip systems serving the top tier of the market. Mid-density operators, which represent a significant share of the overall data center market by facility count, have been largely underserved in that consolidation wave. The cold plates versus immersion debate remains active across the industry, and rack-integrated solutions that reduce the binary nature of that choice are gaining traction as density requirements continue climbing across colocation and enterprise environments.
Airsys brings over 30 years of thermal architecture experience across air, liquid, and hybrid cooling systems, which gives LiquidRack credibility beyond a startup product launch. The company operates across 16 global locations with over 1,000 employees, providing the support infrastructure that enterprise operators require before committing to a new cooling architecture. Positioning LiquidRack as a practical bridge rather than a full replacement for existing systems lowers the adoption risk for operators evaluating their options. For a market segment that needs to act on density now but lacks the budget or timeline for a full transition, that framing makes the product genuinely useful rather than aspirational.
