The Data Center Frontier Show

Superconducting the AI Era: The MetOx Approach to Data Center Power

Mar 24, 2026
Bud Vos, CEO of MetOx, leads a company making high-temperature superconducting wire for power and grid uses. He explains how HTS can replace bulky copper infrastructure, enable much higher power density, and shift systems to higher current at lower voltage. He also discusses integration with liquid cooling and how smaller HTS footprints ease permitting and campus delivery challenges.
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ADVICE

Start With A Clean Sheet For HTS Designs

  • Design data centers with HTS from a clean slate to capture combined savings in cabling, distribution, and cooling.
  • Vos recommends holistic blueprints that integrate HTS cooling (liquid nitrogen) with rack liquid-cooling strategies.
INSIGHT

Higher Current Lower Voltage With HTS

  • HTS reverses the trend toward higher voltage by enabling higher current at lower voltage, simplifying distribution equipment.
  • Vos explains this reduces complexity in distribution gear and pairs naturally with liquid cooling strategies in AI data halls.
INSIGHT

Lossless Delivery Cuts Thermal Load

  • HTS cables are effectively lossless and do not generate resistive heat during power delivery, reducing heat load on cooling systems.
  • Vos notes superconductors still require liquid nitrogen cooling but eliminate cable-originated heat inside the hall.
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