

Infinidium is redefining data center efficiency by integrating cooling, energy recovery, and power generation into a single contained system designed for high-density compute environments.
The Vortex Vacuum Chamber uses a passive, self-driven airflow architecture that dramatically reduces reliance on traditional mechanical cooling systems and eliminates the need for liquid or water-based coolants.
By managing airflow and thermal containment at the chamber level, cooling complexity, infrastructure overhead, and mechanical failure points are significantly reduced.
Within the contained system envelope, waste heat generated by high-density compute is captured and reused through a multi-stage recovery process rather than being discarded.
Recovered thermal energy is directly converted into usable electrical power and redistributed to support GPU operations, transforming waste heat into an active energy resource.
Integrated axial flux power generation and switched reluctance drive systems are embedded directly within the chamber architecture.
These systems convert recovered thermal and kinetic energy into real-time supplemental electricity that is consumed internally, reducing dependence on external power sources without requiring dedicated energy storage.
Onsite power requirements are supported through a combination of internal energy recovery, rooftop solar, and small-scale omnidirectional wind generation.
This integrated approach enables flexible off-grid or hybrid deployment while improving long-term energy cost stability and operational resilience.
PUE is redefined through Infinidium’s contained architecture, where passive cooling and internal energy reuse challenge conventional efficiency limits.
By treating waste heat as a usable input rather than a loss, the system is engineered to establish a new global efficiency benchmark well beyond traditional data center models.
Infinidium’s modular system design enables rapid deployment within existing buildings with minimal retrofitting, significantly reducing development timelines compared to conventional data center construction.
The contained architecture also reduces overall facility footprint and infrastructure requirements.
The chamber’s open radial configuration is designed to support future automation, enabling robotic inspection, maintenance, and assembly within the compute environment.
This architecture positions Infinidium for scalable, autonomous operation as data center demands continue to evolve.

Infinidium's proprietary system can be customized for any type of Server, ASIC Miner, PCIE, GPU or CPU to replace traditional racks and computing power supply.
